Sunday, February 28, 2016

"The world was never meant for one as beautiful as you" (from Vincent sung by Don Mclean)

I've had a lot of discussions over my lifetime about success and all the trappings that go a long with it. Most define success in the sense of monetary legacies left to ones family, like the Winchester fortune that allowed a woman to continue building on her house, even when the new space made no sense to anyone but the heir. But not all of those who influenced the world gained success in their lives while they were here on Earth, yet their legacies live on even though they died as paupers.

Let me go deeper into my thought process here, but before we go, here's a lunch sack with some food in case we get separated and a flashlight, because the dark recesses of my mind where we're going to delve can be pretty scary at times....

I have always heard that old saw "Be careful what you wish for, because you just might get it". That's what happened to some of the "success stories" from my era like Samuel George Davis Jr - who everyone knew as "Sammy Davis Jr", a brilliantly talented gentleman who was a singer, dancer, actor, musician and impressionist. He started his career at the tender age of three in vaudeville with his father and one of his father's friends. He lost his left eye in a car accident in 1954 and often used that injury as a joke in his act. He made millions throughout his lifetime, but because of extravagant spending habits and poor management of his finances by his financial advisors, he died 15 million dolars in debt, mostly to the IRS. Despite his rise to the top in a pre-Civil Rights for blacks era that is still looked upon as an example of what can be achieved even when faced with hatred throughout ones life for nothing more provocative than the color of ones skin, he is also one example of those who achieve their life's wish, but still don't leave that monetary legacy for the family. There are many such "successful with their wish for fame but not successful at managing money" stories that one can find, especially in this era of being able to look up everything on the internet, but I'm just going to move on to the next type of artist. (I'll leave a link at the bottom of this post should you wish to look at Sammy and some of the others I'm going to mention in closer detail, okay?)

I've also heard about those who were brilliant talents during their lifetimes, but who didn't gain any sort of fame while they were still with us. My mother-in-law, in particular, loved to bring up these people as examples of why I needed to "stop goofing around with writing" and put my energy into things that truly mattered - like caring for her son and any offspring we produced. In her humble opinion, anyone who had children to raise had no business indulging in any form of art that would never see any monetary achievement in the real world.

One of her favorite subjects in this "live your dreams and die in poverty" speeches was the man who inspired the title for today: Vincent Van Gogh. I thought everyone knew the story of this marvelous talent whom modern psychologists are still trying to figure out, as he was brilliant, but also a prime example of mental illness in his short 37 years on the planet. His paintings have inspired the artistic endeavors of millions of artists and musicians, yet the critics of his time thought him unbalanced. Because his work was very different from what was popular at the time, he never found the critical acclaim while he was alive that would have made him a wealthy man, and when he purportedly shot himself in the chest with a revolver (which was never found) and walked to a hospital, where he died 23 hours after the shooting with the bullet lodged next to his spine, he was also penniless.

So now comes the question that keeps me awake some nights and sometimes causes me to walk away from my writing - at least until the characters become so adamant that I complete their stories that I am forced to sit and write for my own sanity.

Which is better "success"? To gain the material wealth that would have convinced my mother-in-law that I was "successful" in my writing career, or to leave behind the work, perhaps to be later discovered by a future generation as a hidden talent that escaped the critical acclaim of the time, yet left a learning legacy for them to follow?

From my current status, I am as poor as a church mouse, but still occasionally getting a marvelous thrill when my work is mentioned, even in passing, in someone elses speech about following ones dreams. (One of the book covers from Northern Bard Publications was mentioned by an author who had one of the models at his talk in an axample of "how to catch the eye of your readership by showing the characters you're writing about". I didn't get to see it, but she was very pleased that we were both mentioned despite the fact that I haven't become a "New York Times Best Seller" - which involves getting bookstores to put out the books of indie publishers so that the books can be sold in the confines of a brick-and-mortar store instead of just online as Kindles, Nooks and such.)

As I noted for my husband when he recently opened one of my credit card statements and blew a gasket about how much money I've spent trying to get Northern Bard off the planning board and into the money-making status that his mother taught him was the only measure of success, I've made a bet on myself that I can eventually make enough in book sales to pay off the gamble of self-publishing. Just in the past year, I've doubled my meager income from book sales from an average of $20 per year. He, of course, schooled by his mother that the only form of success that matters isn't the nickle-and-dime variety that I've been enjoying over the past 19 years, but "the big payday", is of her same opinion that I'm "wasting my time" on my writing. If I can't make enough in the next year to bring my credit card balance for the business down to zero and show a profit, I should "stop wasting time" and concentrate entirely on making money so that we can leave a financial legacy for our children to be proud of when we die...

And please don't tell me to bring up the fact that there are millions upon millions who have "hobbies" upon which they spend tons of money, tons of time, and see not even a single thin dime in return, as with his fly tying fetish. (He does "side work" for people who can't afford the professional rates charged by many in the career he's chosen, so he's making enough to support his "hobby" while helping out the poor at the same time. In order to qualify my "hobby" in his mind, I need to stop spending more money than I earn on my "hobby" in order to make it worth the time I spend at it.)

In short, my daily life at the moment is trying to balance my "struggling artist syndrome" with my "need to make the money to pay the bills syndrome", and long conversations with friends and relations about those whom I admire, but who died before they became well known, give me a constant cause to keep rethinking my chosen career. Even as I sit here this morning, writing this blog and aching in every muscle from the physical aspects of the job I'm currently holding to help pay off those bills while the characters from the current work in progress are trying to gain my attention and tell me that THIER story should matter more to me that getting the groceries and doing the laundry and catching up on yesterdays dishes, I find myself torn between the real world and the "hobby" that keeps me awake at night, seeing scenes that I should have written out during my busy day. I keep telling myself that there is a "happy medium", where I can balance out the fiscal need for money with the mental need to get these stories out of that tiny little dark space where they live and breed when I'm not watching.....

But then a little voice, sounding very much like my deceased mother-in-law, speaks up from the darkest of the dark recesses, where I firmly believe that there is a well like the one in the horror movie "The Ring" that houses all of those who have been hyper-critical of me all my life.

"How are you ever going to make money at writing when you couldn't even get a single person to show up at your first and only book signing two years ago?"

Have you ever wanted to shout out loud, regardless of any strange looks you get at the time, "Shut up, you!" in an attempt to get one of those inner voices to go away for a while?

*le sigh*

So, here is the link I promised above to assist you, should you wish to investigate some of those "struggling artists of the past" who have influenced the world around us, but not while they still lived. I'd dearly love to hear from some of you as to your opinions on whether we should concentrate on only financial success or if we should, in the interest of possibly being the voice in the desert for some artist of the future, continue to produce the works that we are driven by some inner demon to "waste time" on. I'd also love some links to some of your works, particularly if my words here have encouraged you to purge your own inner demons whether you're making money at the venture or not....

http://mentalfloss.com/article/28010/10-cultural-giants-who-died-coinless

Blessed be, my constant readers, and may you find the place where you and your demons can live together in peace and harmony.

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Perhaps I should go back to a typewriter - or a pad and a pencil - or maybe a rock and chisel....

For many years, I've blamed a lot on the moon phases. It's hard not to believe that the full moon makes people a little "loonie" when one works in retail, because all of the craziest phone calls of each month happen when the moon is full...

and the current full moon seems to be bothering my home computers.....

Last week, in preparation for the "season", I downloaded all the forms and instructions for doing my taxes, as the last paperwork (which I had been warned was incorrect in the first mailing) arrived and I want to get it over with. (I learned long ago that having someone who is busily trying to do taxes on a LOT of people doesn't always have your best interests at mind, and when we ended up owing the IRS to the point that they kept three years of refunds to pay them back for one "professional's" mistake? Yeah. I do my own now.) I tried to print it off, but there seemed to be an issue in connecting the Wifi printer to the computer, so after several attempts, I took the advice from the printer program that told me to recover some information from a couple of files that had been lost....

and it reset the upstairs computer to it's original factory settings. Luckily, I had just done my monthly backup on February first....

and discovered that, although I've been faithfully saving the backup to a single USB drive, it didn't overwrite anything that it backed up the very first time I did the backup, it's just been saving anything new that was added.

Because the factory settings don't include ANY of the programs I've added, such as the newest anti-virus, the printer, the newest internet modem, etc.....

suffice to say that I've had a long week reinstalling everything I've been using the upstairs desktop for. And then, yesterday, when I tried to update Windows 8 to Windows 8.1 (which I had been using before the "recovery"), nothing wanted to update. I've had to bite the bullet and install Windows 10 this morning.

So, while that was all happening upstairs, I came downstairs to the laptop to do a few things while waiting for the installations and such to finish. The laptop has been running like a champ with the exception of a couple of days when it didn't feel like connecting to the internet.....

until this morning, when, instead of opening the internet to my normal page, it opened something totally unexpected in the form of a brand-new looking Internet Explorer page. (I kept having issues with Google Chrome, so I uninstalled it for a few days to see if there was just a minor glitch in Chrome.) Since I'm normally looking at Google search, I was a little thrown by the regular Microsoft page. Then, when I was able to load Google, I was unable to get the page to load because of "script errors" - and it was locked on my daughter's sign in page, even though she only used my laptop a couple of times and the last time was over two years ago.

Between the upstairs desktop and the downstairs laptop, I'm starting to feel like an IT Tech with a serious static electricity issue, as I haven't managed to touch either computer for the past 5 hours without having something go totally bonkers.....even though, between the two computers, there is a weather station that tells me that my heat and humidity ratio is exactly right for the machines to be able to run at their max without harm.

I'm not sure whether the weather station is programmed to lie or if I can seriously blame this latest computer glitch on the moon. It may just be that I've started editing the historical romance that I started in a notebook while pregnant with my daughter and, since it was begun well before there was such a thing as an internet and no real "home computer" short of a word processor, it wants to be finished in another medium....

But I suspect that's not it. "Fireblossom and the Dream Weaver" was quite content to be put into the computer between other novels to the point that I'm only about half-way through the rough draft in the notebooks and, with all the history I was trying to include, it's grown to over 400 pages already.

Maybe it's that I intend on doing what Stephen King calls "killing my darlings" that everything is suddenly not working well for me? Maybe Max, Amy, and the natives outside of Portsmouth, New Hampshire WANT a 1000 page plus book for me to have to try to market when it's done?

Let's see once this full moon has started waning.

Perhaps it's just the moon phase.....

Thursday, February 11, 2016

I'm too young to be this old!

I'm sure there are ladies who read this blog who would gladly agree with that statement, especially those who are going through that ever-popular bane of the female existence: Menopause!

Yes, I'm THAT old, and have been having mild to moderate experiences with some of the 34 symptoms that all the doctors have been telling me about - and asking about when they see me each year. For those who don't know the list of 34, here they are in no particular order:

1. Hot Flashes - one of the most popular in all the jokes about menopause. One minute, you're comfortable. The next, you're visiting a tropical island with the sun beating down on you - and you haven't done anything to cause that temperature change.

2. Night Sweats - similar to the above, but waking the subject from a comfortable sleep for that sudden trip to the Bermuda Triangle.

3. Irregular Periods - which needs no real explanation, does it? In my case, I've been able to count out four weeks from one month to the next to be able to know almost to the exact day when my next visit from Mother Nature is going to come ever since I had an ovary removed and the other fallopian tube cut and cauterized in 1993 after my fourth miscarriage. And then I skipped past the "normal day" in December....and then did it again in January, finally getting my "visit" on January 24 - and then again on February 3rd. (I just spent an entire day being poked, prodded, having blood drawn and undergoing an ultrasound, as the last "visit" is still going on....to the point that I'm even having a dizzy spell as I sit here typing this. Later, I need to get squeezed in to see a specialist to go over what all of the poking and prodding shows.)

4, Loss of Libido - um.....yeah. Kind of wishing that this would hit the man in my life, but.... *laughing*
5. Vaginal Dryness - and this one I won't even comment on....  *smile*

6. Mood Swings - Let's not go here, either. I'm not sure I should put in writing where I want to wrap the chain from my mood swing at times, in other words......

7. Fatigue. (And I just thought I was pushing myself too hard....)

8. Hair Loss or Thinning - and to my husband, I'm truly sorry for all the hairy sandwiches I've put into your lunch pail over the past couple of years. No matter how I roll up my hair into a baseball hat, this is becoming a bigger problem each morning. (Maybe I should consider just shaving my head?)

9. Sleep Disorders - as if the insomnia I've suffered through my whole life isn't disruptive enough?

10. Difficulty Concentrating - now, where was I going with this?

11. Memory Lapses - I think, therefore I can't think......lol

12. Dizziness - as opposed to my normal dizzy self?

13. Weight Gain - which, obviously, wasn't just because I was sitting behind a desk? (I went back into a more physical job to combat this one, so it doesn't NEED to happen if one is diligent.)

14. Incontinence - No comment.....

15. Bloating - Again, no comment......

16. Allergies - I've always been allergic to all kinds of things, so this isn't new.

17. Brittle Nails - again, I just thought I was having to trim off "torn spots" because of the job I've been doing.

18. Changes in Body Odor - Ahah! Again, I thought I was imagining that my deodorant was failing me!

19. Irregular Heartbeat - So this doesn't have anything to do with the Pulminary Arterio Tachycardia I was diagnosed with in my mid-twenties?

20. Depression.

21. Anxiety

22. Irritability.

23. Panic Disorder - all four of these I've thought came with the vagina, as I've had all of these since before Mother Nature decided that I really was a woman and needed the breasts to pop out.....

24. Breast Pain - and here I've been blaming my Shih Tzu/Pomeranian for standing on the nipples when I wake up with them hurting.....or I've been joking that I must have stood on one myself when sliding out of bed still half asleep.....

25. Headaches - again, different from the ones I get from stress every day how?

26. Joint Pain - another "Ahah", as I've been insisting that the arthritis I have from being less than kind to my hands when I was younger is simply getting worse.

27. Burning Tongue - which I thought was because I overdid the spice in that last batch of Jambalaya and my husband insisted was the andouille sausage, so is he going through menopause, too?

28,. Electric Shock Sensation - and once again, I thought that this had no relation to my menopause, as we get the electric shock sensation every winter until I get the humidifiers filled and working.

29. Digestive Problems - Another one of those "symptoms" that I had written off to other issues, such as the bad habits I got into while working a desk job.

30. Gum Problems - which was another thing I wrote off to genetics. My dad had all his teeth pulled when joining the Navy to fight in Korea, as that was one of the ways that the Koreans "punished" those captured on the battlefield. Mom also had bad teeth. So when I went for dentures due to all my teeth breaking into bits when I was 50, I just thought I was like my parents, not that I was beginning menopause....

31/ Muscle Tension - as opposed to the pains from working too hard?

32. Itchy, Crawly Skin - it's NOT a psychosomatic reaction to seeing a tick on my husband or dog? Imagine that!

33. Tingling Extremities - With nerve damage from a back injury, this has also been ongoing for 20 years now.....

34. Osteiporosis - seeing my mom "shrinking" because hers is so severe that she has developed a hump, I was again writing this off to genetics....

If any of you would like to see this list without my commentary, the link is here: http://www.34-menopause-symptoms.com/  In the meantime, I'm out of work until Monday because my latest visit from Mother Nature doesn't want to end, I've been horribly light headed for several days (which worries the doctors when they hear that I have to climb ladders on the job), and there is talk of beginning me on hormone therapy.

Maybe it's time to pull out the soundtrack for Menopause, The Musical and start learning some of the songs while I'm being kept home until the medroxyprogesterone that I was prescribed yesterday takes effect.

And of course, I have a new adult coloring book that I recently purchased that can entertain me for a while while I watch some of the cartoon that I've been getting on dvd and blue ray for my grandkids....

Just because it's become obvious that I'm going through menopause, that doesn't mean I have to grow up, does it???

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Looking for a new place to work out and other tasks of an aging writer

As I approach what a lot of people call the "Double Nickles Birthday" in May - and having just discovered that my driver's license will have to be renewed for the event - I'm having a lot of thoughts running through my head and am making some decisions for my future....

One of the biggest of these, much as I hate to have to give up my "pallet workout" that helped me lose the 40 pounds I had put on due to a stressful job, is to actually LISTEN to what my doctors are telling me and seek a new position that's a little less physical. Darn. And just when I was starting to see that ever-popular "six pack" starting to show itself under the scars from last year's hernia surgery....

Let me explain this....

When I was working as a janitor back in 1997, I developed a bulge in a disc way low in my back. At the time, I considered myself in the best shape I'd ever been in, tipping the scales at 140 pounds, but I didn't know about such things as adding protein to my diet to allow the muscles to grow, so I was lighter than I am right now, but didn't have the muscle structure...

Due to severe work restrictions resulting from the damage I'd done to myself, I had to change jobs, as there was no way that being a janitor would allow me to do the light duty work that I was told would be permanent. As a result, I started working through a temp agency that eventually got me into an office position at a veterinary clinic.

And, because I wasn't as active, I quickly started putting on weight.

By the time I got into an argument with my boss that made me quit the veterinary field, I had been working desk jobs for 15 years. I was weighing in at 192 pounds and was sincerely upset with myself for letting myself get that fat. With special permission from my nerve specialist and a promise "not to overdo", I went back into retail, which eventually led to working in my current position, which requires me to do a lot of heavy lifting. I'm back down weight wise (usually 155-160), I've been adding whey protein to my diet on the heavier "workout days", but after last year's hernia surgery, I'm a little more prone to pain-filled nights when I'm pushing myself too hard.....

And my body is starting to tell me, in no uncertain terms, that I'm breaking the promise I made to my nerve specialist. I'm starting to have regular evenings in which I'm having muscle spasms again and there are spots on my belly that the doctor who did the hernia surgery is telling me may be the mesh she put in last year trying to pull free...so on doctor's orders, I'm having to reconsider my job choice, as I still have a minimum of 10 years before I retire (which is, of course, contingent on our next presidential choice, since the Social Security retirement fund I've been paying into since I first started working may well be taken away if the Republicans get their nominees into office).

Despite liking the co-workers I currently have and the fact that, instead of paying for a gym membership, the "gym" pays me, I seriously have to look at the fact that my husband, who is three years older and has all kinds of health issues creeping up on him as well, may not be able to be our primary source of income within the next 5 years....

*BIG sigh*

So, over the past week, I've re-vamped my resume, posted it on a jobs site, and am applying for positions that might still keep me more active than my receptionist job, yet allow me to back down from the "pallet workouts". I've found a few places to put in my resume that will offer the opportunity of moving up in the company, should I find the right fit, but I'm looking for your suggestions as well.

Here are my demands before I put myself into another "hostage situation" at a new company:

1) Since we're half-way through a mortgage on our current home, the job needs to be within easy driving distance of Gray - or needs to pay enough that I can pay off the house and put it on the market to move to another part of the state.

2) It needs to involve SOME physical activity, but not so much that I'll need another hernia repaired in the next six months to a year.

3) I need to be able to relax around the co-workers, as I really have become less and less interested in the stress of working for someone I dislike.

Um, yeah. I think I may as well wish for a unicorn to ride to work, right?

However, if any of my constant readers hears of a position in Maine for this soon-to-be-55-year-old, PLEASE drop me a line in the comments below, or hit me up on Facebook, or email me through The Northern Bard web site.

Of course, if you just want to "help" by making Northern Bard Publications successful, buying my books would work as well, since editing and publishing is something that fulfills all those "demands" and gives me the opportunity to work longer hours with two very sweet ladies whom I see eye-to-eye with.....

Blessed be, and welcome to all the new folks visiting my blog from other countries.