tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36770289.post3500511532153325817..comments2024-01-20T20:11:51.589-07:00Comments on Telling Secrets: Me, I Like the CrustMartihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04492242951732140223noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36770289.post-6067585813789714082011-01-13T17:25:16.937-07:002011-01-13T17:25:16.937-07:00I'll have to check out that website. Sounds cr...I'll have to check out that website. Sounds crazy, I know, but I was in a situation the just the other night where I could've used all four of those items at once. . . .<br /><br />I actually find myself more on the nutty side when I'm <i>not</i> writing. I feel out-of-sorts, all dragged down, burdened with some phantom weight that nags at me constantly. When I'm writing (actively and consistently), I find I have more energy and desire to accomplish everything else in life--work, hobbies, ministry, everything. I've taken that as a given sign that this is what I'm designed to do. It's what I'm made for, that's all. . . .Scott Fieldsnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36770289.post-44370931529918261812011-01-11T12:21:59.235-07:002011-01-11T12:21:59.235-07:00I thought that might catch your attention. :) It ...I thought that might catch your attention. :) It combines hula hooping with dancing, but with custom hoops that are made for your height and build. The hoops usually have a combination of a showy tape, like a pretty vinyl or metallic, and a grippy tape like the gaffer's tape that stagehands use at theaters and concerts. If you want to know more, you can check out Hoop City at www.hoopcity.ca, where I'm known as CircularPraise. There are tons of videos there and on YouTube and Vimeo too. I post exclusively to Hoop City, but a lot of hoopers post at the other sites as well.<br /><br />As for the writing, one thing I've started doing again is journaling each morning. At the moment my journal entries are more like brain dumps for my ongoing mental to-do list, but the exercise is still getting me back into a daily writing routine. Perhaps in the near future, the morning session will evolve into something more than journal padding. I also think that as I finish some of these other projects, my inner procrastinator/avoider will have to turn to writing to fill the vacancies my sewing, jewelry, crocheting, etc., formerly occupied.<br /><br />Regarding the "nut case" question: I'm in my mid 40s, so I never can tell whether my moods are hormonal or related to whatever's on my plate at a given moment (literally or figuratively). I do know that when I'm working on a story, I tend to float between the "real" world and the one I'm building for my novel, and it can be disconcerting to those who don't know the reason for my sudden conversational tangents.TraciBhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01060016951190175207noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36770289.post-4451704760328467082011-01-11T12:03:20.533-07:002011-01-11T12:03:20.533-07:00Thanks for leaving comments!
Brownie pan: Availa...Thanks for leaving comments! <br /><br />Brownie pan: Available from the SkyMall catalog (gateway to many a "unique" gadget for the kitchen or elsewhere) for just $39.95. Add to your order a Draco Malfoy wand for your evil side, a pendant of Arwen Evenstar necklace for your dear wife, and a litter-box designed to look like an end table for your cat. You'll be set.<br /><br />What you say about recognizing what activities work best at different times a day, to the extent that you can manage these things, is wise. In thinking about this more I can picture being one of those people who just has a regular ol' 9-5 job - rather than one focused on word-wrestling and mission-mobilizing - and save those latter activities for other times of the day. Basically pursue my "vocation" (calling) during the times when people pursue their avocations (hobbies) and treating my job like just a job. After so many years of full-time "ministry" that would be an adjustment but it might be just effective, for the ministry stuff. I wonder. <br /><br />Meanwhile, I feel like a homeschooler: I get my work done in record time and with minimal bureaucracy to wrangle. So, mixing work and play, as long as I know I'm getting enough of each, seems to be working well. <br /><br />The more I've developed my creative side the more of a nut case I have become, though. Have you guys found that true as well? By nutcase I mean "unpredictable and unreliable, moody, and someone prone to hypochondria and self-absorbtion." Apparently these are typical traits for writers. <br /><br />Making time to write - consistently or not - does help. Do you find the same? Even if I just have one day a week that's not like the others and includes some premium time/space to play with the words in my toybox. Maybe it's the same time of day and week all the time, maybe it's not, but it comes. When I bind myself into a commitment to keep a thorough journal, writing everything down all the time, that stresses me out. So as rich as journaling is I'm pretty sporadic with it. <br /><br />The fact that I have a 10-hour a week job editing and managing our ezine isn't quite enough, but I'm glad I've got it and that it runs along so nicely with a team and deadlines and feedback and stuff. Not many writing projects are like that. <br /><br />Traci: Hmm, hoop dancing...?Martihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04492242951732140223noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36770289.post-3173984318853644142011-01-11T07:01:22.964-07:002011-01-11T07:01:22.964-07:00I like the crusts too. To me they have more flavo...I like the crusts too. To me they have more flavor than the middles. :)<br /><br />I'm a night person in a day job world, so I do what I can whenever I can. Sometimes that means I run late to the office because I get into a project right after my morning Bible reading instead of just having breakfast and going to work; sometimes it means I get less sleep than I should because I'm on a roll with something at 10 p.m. and want to finish it. Thankfully, my boss is lenient and I'm on salary, so as long as the work gets done, he's okay with my flexible arrival time.<br /><br />What I haven't found a good groove for yet is a regular writing time. I have several other interests that vy for my attention and desk space, so I'm still figuring all this out. I know it's just a matter of planting backside in chair and fingers on keyboard, but when - that is the question.<br /><br />As for errands (bank, gas station, etc.), I'm blessed to have a work schedule that includes four 9-hour days and a 4-hour day. So when noon rolls around on Fridays, I can leave the office, run all my errands and spend the rest of the afternoon practicing my hoop dancing or doing whatever strikes my fancy.TraciBhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01060016951190175207noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36770289.post-17472198918805878292011-01-10T18:11:37.374-07:002011-01-10T18:11:37.374-07:00Another cruster!
I love the outside crust of a Fr...Another cruster!<br /><br />I love the outside crust of a French baguette or an Italian loaf; I love the edges of a pan of brownies (hey, were do I GET one of those things?); and I, too, operate best on the fringes of the day.<br /><br />Well, maybe not so much so in the mornings. I was born a perennial night person. I find that even on nights when I'm sagging with exhaustion, I still get buzzed to tackle some late-evening project. I'm able to work well in the mornings too, those rare times when I can summon the strength to rise at a reasonable time (doing the late-night thing doesn't help this much). It's nice to focus on something for a while before the day can begin unloading its customary distractions on me. <br /><br />And no, it doesn't always step in time with everyone else's schedules. For me, it's helpful to categorize work according to the appropriate time of day. Conferencing, interacting, and communicating in the here-and-now is reserved for normal working hours, just to be reasonable. The "me" stuff--or at least, the "me alone" stuff--I save for my periods of isolation late at night or early in the morning. I know I'll always have enough tasks of this sort that I won't have a problem filling that time when it rolls around.<br /><br />- ScottScott Fieldsnoreply@blogger.com