2025: September 6: Fummer?

Homer Simpson calls that awkward month between Winter and Spring "Smarch." I don't know what the Summer into Fall equivalency would be, but we're in it. Officially Summer still, but the weather definitely smells like Fall. It is even raining, and I'm sitting up stairs listening to the pattering and dripping from under a blanket, post 5-mile run, post shower, post oatmeal. We need the rain so badly. Yesterday I walked over the river and saw a college student taking a photo of the pipes and old pilings on the riverbed, visible through the shallow water, and I imagined explaining to him the history of current and past Washington Street bridges and ferries, but that would have been weird and awkward. Although maybe not as weird or awkward as the time I was watching a eagle from the same bridge and asked a passing high schooler if they wanted to see an eagle and the stranger danger reflex closed their face down so fast as they hurried on by. 

The view from the Washington Street Bridge, complete with goose, and car tire exposed by the low water levels. You can see why I'm happy about the rain. I actually got caught in it running this morning, and considered sheltering under a tree canopy, but then I saw the very fit twenty-something who'd steamed past me a few block back had stopped up ahead, sheltering herself, and so I kept right on plodding past her for my final half-mile, showing her how it was done.

I actually planned to show you this photo of a tree, but, as you see, writing is generative and I distracted myself into a different direction. 

There's always that one tree that turns well before the others, as if to taunt us that winter is coming. Or tease us with a preview of the fall colors that will precede the cold bare season. Recreation Park. Yes, that's what the park in my neighborhood is called. Although everyone just says Rec Park. 



2025: August 30: My last typepad post

 I've copied my last typepad post exactly here. With the addition of the photo that wouldn't load over there because typepad is too tired and just wants a long nap. 


Well now I know why typepad has been so annoying to use lately.

I can't believe it lasted this long, to be honest.

So this will be the last post here.If you haven't already, follow me on over to sandy983.blogspot.com.

And in the meantime, I'm trying to figure out how much of my content at typepad to save, and in what kind of format. I'm tempted to just throw it all to the winds of ephemera, but the historical chronicler in me can't quite do that. Yet the I-don't-have-the-energy-or-storage part of me just can't be bothered archiving it all properly or figuring out a user friendly export system  (I looked at some and I don't know how much of my soul I need to give them, or even what I get in return), so I don't know. I have this fear that Sept 30 is a ruse and I'll wake up tomorrow and it will all be gone and it won't really matter because we're all dust in the wind anyway. 

Here is your last typepad photo, which will probably take 5 tries and 15 minutes to load.

Yup: attempts one through three: "Sorry this file doesn't look valid." I'm not going to fight with typepad on our last day together, so just come on over to blogspot (which isn't exactly a new platform itself), and I'll have it waiting there for you.

[And here is the photo typepad didn't want you to see:

Seen through an open door next to my massage person's rooms. I'm not sure if the intention is to give attitude, or to tell me to watch mine. 


2025: August 23: Almost the end of my writing class

 I am heading into Week Ten, the final week, of my summer writing class and if it wasn't that I'm moving on to a whole two years of writing classes, I'd be very sad that this summer's course is over. It broke my writing open and I haven't had a chance to put it back together yet. The course was called Voice in Fiction: Style, Dialog, and Point of View, which means we focused on what writing teachers call "craft." I learned that I know very little about these things, and that it's ok, as long as I stop and think about them now and then. 

Ella tried to teach Michael to knit while she's here, and his frustration at not understanding how the small movements build into a bigger whole, and our inability to describe to him how we each understand the flow of the yarn (me: it's a set of loops from top to bottom. him: what?), that's how I'm feeling about writing right now. I want to do the knitting equivalents of Fair Isle and cable and lace in my writing, but I haven't yet quite absorbed what I have to do on a word-by-word, stitch-by-stitch basis.

For the last class our teacher has asked us to answer a whole set of questions about our writing, one of which is "if it were an animal, what kind would it be." (This sounds cheesy, I know, but I trust her because all of her exercises have taken me in unexpectedly useful places). My aspiration is to cat (smooth, sleek, composed, playful, elegant, puffed up when danger approaches) but I think I'm really looking at crow (hopping around frantically in the middle of the road banging primitive tools together while making croaky noises).  Which is fine. Fall semester is here and I'll be back to my daily routines and unpacking and playing with everything I've learned. 

Here are two photos from my walk this week:

A healthily chonky woodchuck

I mean, it's not not true. Not-regulated-enough capitalism got us into this mess.


2025: August 17: Quiet Time

 It's been a quiet week here, which is nice for us. Yes, it is stressful watching the world go to shit, but here we seem to be in a pocket (spatial and temporal) of calm. Yes, Ella is here for a week or two before she heads off to New Haven to start her Yale career, but she's chill and easy to have around. Yes, Michael is gearing up for the start of university classes next week, but he's been practicing zen and the art of teaching. Yes, I've been watching a chipmunk eat the ripe cherry tomatoes in the garden, but what are you going to do? 

And because you've probably seen enough cat photos to last you a while, here is one more from Santa Barbara.

Michael stalking a heron on a morning walk along the breakwater. 


2025: August 10: Tile

That's right, tile. As in I wish I'd taken more photos of all the tilework in Santa Barbara to show you. Or to use for inspiration when I cover both the inside and outside of my house with pretty tiles.  Here are the two photos I did pause to take while I was admiring all the decor. 

In the bathroom at a restaurant called Blackbird, where Michael and I had an excellent meal and did some very fun people watching. Michael said my forehead looks huge, so I guess I better work on my selfie skills. Or get bangs.

I found these along the foundation of an unassuming bank building on a side street. It took me a bit to realize they were thistles. At first I wondered if they were poppies.

Now, I'm done for today fighting with typepad. I'm playing around on a new blogging platform (well, new to me) and will unveil it as soon as I get the template a little closer to colors I like. [If you're reading this on typepad, I'm as close to the template I like as I'm going to get for now]

2025: August 3: Santa Barbara

 I do love California. 

A flat white after a morning run along the beach.

Egrets on a fence

Pelicans on a pipe

Palm tree at dusk

You get the idea. 

2025: July 26: Writing Classes

 Recently a friend told me that it was funny that I said "Michael will catch us up" instead of the more standard American phrasing, "Michael will catch up with us." I had never noticed the difference, which is the funny thing to me, because there are many phrases where I get confused because I honestly can't remember which is the phrasing or spelling I grew up with, and which is the one used by the people I currently live amongst. It has taken over 35 years for me to figure out I can remember grey vs gray because the A in grAy stands for American. 

This rambling is brought to you by the fact that I am taking a continuing education class and wanted to tell you about it, and started wondering if that phrase would make any sense to New Zealanders.  It seems that at Otago they're using the term for professional refresher type courses for doctors? I can't really tell.  "University extension"? Is that even a thing? Nope, that's an American phrase too? What do you call it if you just want to take a photography class? Do you do that at the polytech? See, I don't know anything any more. 

Annnyway. I am taking an online class through Stanford's Continuing Studies program, you know, the kind that anyone in the community can take, without having to apply to be an actual student, with no degree credit. It is called Voice in Fiction: Style, Dialog, and Point of View, and I am loving it. I am loving having a community and I am loving having a focus. I am loving it so much that I applied to their Online Novel Writing Certificate, and on Thursday I found out that I got in, so I'll be taking a course a quarter for the next two years.

This summer's course is making me think about the craft of writing. Through readings, exercises, and feedback, the instructor is having us pay close attention to the texture of language and how it helps shape and reflect meaning. But at the same time, she is all about letting go, writing intuitively and playfully. It's like training at the gym then going out and running a race just on muscle memory and letting it happen. (She didn't say that, it's just how it feels to me). 

One of the most exciting things is that I rewrote the first sentence of my book. Now, it is no "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife." (Such a deceptively simple sentence that one, yet it holds the entire book, the tension between society and the individual, and it tells you that there is in fact, no universal acknowledgement and Austen is promising us delicious conflict as a result).  But my first sentence is better than it was. I'd share it with you but I just looked at it again and there's something about it that still needs work. So, not quite yet. 

Instead, here is a thing I wrote as one of the weekly exercises. It is unpolished, but I had fun with it. "For a few days, try inventing a slew of fabulous sentences and paragraphs. As you go about your days, when something happens (either extraordinary or completely mundane), consider turning it into words right there." I wrote about the cats fighting and the scene from Romeo and Juliet just put itself in there, which is the wonderful thing about writing, how the very act is generative.

Cats are cautious until they are not. My cats fight in a studied dance at the top of the stairs, taking turns, gently reaching out with one paw to stroke, pat, bop, learning the other, as staged and serious as Tybalt and Mercutio circling in the street. Until the knife flies from Mercutio's hand, skittering into the lap of the audience member in the front row and Tybalt closes in. Until Alfie flips Ada over, clumps of white and gray fur scattering across the hardwood floors in the sunshine and the summer breeze. They break free. In this play, Mercutio never dies, 'tis but a scratch after all. He wanders away to find Romeo, together they will curl up in the sun and dream.

I have photographed so many versions of  this interaction.

Then one day the crossword clued, "do too" as "a playground retort to 'you have no idea'."  So I wrote: 

"You have no idea," sighed Eliza. She took a sip of her juice box then balanced it on the railway tie holding in the swings. She picked up three woodchips escaping into the grass and tossed them back into the play area. "No. Idea."

Rose dropped her head between her knees, wiped her grass-stained hand on the side of her flowered bike shorts.

"Do too," said Rose.

"Nuh uh," Eliza shook her head. At seven years and ten months she was one year and two months older than Rose. Eliza counted on her fingers. That was fourteen more months of karate, a whole year more of riding the school bus. Eliza was reading chapter books. Rose, on the other hand, still played with her Barbies unironically. She had no idea about anything.

This week is Figurative Writing, which it turns out I don't really do and I'm exploring why. 

Now, an experiment. My old  blogging site never let me post my own videos, only you tube. So lets see  what happens when I try: .... ok, it does let me upload from my computer... processing ... still processing... it is a 50 second video, how long does processing take... oh, we've been trained for things to be instant, I forget how much data is in a 50 second video ... still processing. I'm going to go get lunch and see what's happened when I come back... OMG I think it worked? Maybe not, because it only likes landscape... previewing my post isn't helping, I might have to publish then take all this out if it doesn't work? Oh, I think it sort of kind of works. Thanks for bearing with me. Future videos will be better in all regards.