Month: November 2010

Pleasantness found at book signing

I’ve been to many book signings. Often I am there as support crew for Howard. Sometimes I’m running a table and committing commerce. Many times the signings were attached to conventions. Most of these signings have been fairly high-energy events with significant attendance. Tonight was my first signing not attached to a convention where I was the one sitting behind the table. Crowded signings are interesting and exhausting. This one was quiet and pleasant, which was exactly what I needed.

I did not expect the event to be crowded. I certainly did not expect people to turn up looking for me. They didn’t with the one exception of Eric Stone who lives near the store. He was kind enough to stop by and say hello for a few minutes. Despite the lack of customer traffic, I enjoyed myself. I got to talk publishing and life with four other authors. I got to talk books and business with the store owners. I got to be Sandra instead of Mom for just a little while.

I did spend some time pondering the fate of Hold on to Your Horses as I sat there with my stack of books. The project is now two years old, which is middle age to old compared to the shelf life of most books. This is one of the advantages of being my own publisher. I can continue to promote the book for as long as I wish. It does not need to succeed financially right out of the gate. So I’ll probably continue as I have been, promoting it when opportunity presents. It is nice to not have to feel that new-book urgency. Hold Horses and I are comfortable with each other. If there are additional picture books in the future, then Hold Horses will ride along with those promotional opportunities as well. I still love the project and I am glad that I did it.

The rest of my week will not be spent on writer/author things. I’ll be working on book layout, online store maintenance, and mom stuff. I think it is going to be a good week with less hectic in it.

Anxiety, Sabbath, Things To Do, and Faith

I was talking with a friend about anxiety yesterday. He has a newly acquired panic disorder. I have waded through the murky waters of self-diagnosed anxiety disorder until I reached a place where it no longer qualifies as a disorder. I found my way through by using the geysers of anxieties as indicators of sub-surface emotional pressure. Then I stalked around in my own brain looking for where to dig for the things I was suppressing/repressing. It is an interesting thing, studying your own mind. I do it all the time. I react to things and part of my brain says “That’s interesting. Why did I do that?” I think this is one of the reasons I like Sir Terry Pratchett’s books about Tiffany Aching. They explore the concept of having second, third, and fourth thoughts where each layer considers the one before it.

The self-examination is often useful, like this morning when I was able to see that I was feeling upset and my conscious mind kept trying to create reasons to explain it. I changed clothes multiple times and was still dissatisfied with the end result, but my feelings had nothing to do with the clothes and everything to do with uncertainty about other things. Once I could see the problem for what it was, I was able to tell Howard. He hugged me and told me it will all be okay, which didn’t solve anything, but made me feel better. Feeling better did lead to some solutions.

Other times this looking at my own thoughts just adds extra layers of chaos to whatever experience I am trying to sort. At such times I wish my brain would just shut up.

I have not been doing a very good job of keeping the Sabbath as a day of rest. Lately it has been a day of household things I did not get to during the week which are now urgent. So Sunday has been a bit too full of laundry, dishes, and de-cluttering. It has also become a day full of To Do since I am arranging the church Christmas party and I have dozens of people to talk to, who are more readily available on Sunday when I know they are not at work. My Sunday refuge from To Do has been missing for months.

There are voices in my mind which tell me that this represents a failure on my part. These voices chatter and insinuate that the very fact that I am so busy also represents a failure. If I were just more capable I would get things done more efficiently. Alternately my hectic life represents my failure to estimate what I am capable of doing. I have failed to say no. I’ve failed to slow our lives down to a sane pace. The list of failures is long, and these voices will latch on to just about anything as evidence of failure.

It just now occurs to me that this flailing around to explain my sense of failure is rather like this morning’s upset. The feeling exists and my brain is trying to explain it. The feeling is coming from someplace deep that I can’t see through the cloud of distraction. I wonder what I have buried that I now need to dig up. I also wonder when I’ll find the time to go digging.

Environmental factors were huge in bringing my anxiety down to a controllable level. In my case the disorder was triggered by long-term financial stress followed by a large financial blow. The anxiety was greatly relieved when we were able to make solid steps toward restoring our finances. My current emotional struggles will be greatly relieved when I am able to reduce the length and weight of my average daily To Do list. I think this is coming. I’m working toward it even though I’m a little afraid to believe that I am capable of accomplishing it. Success is hard to see through the chaff cloud of small failure thoughts.

Link was supposed to give a talk in church today. I remembered this fact after I settled myself on the bench and opened the program to see his name there. We scrambled all week to accomplish the work for three Scout Merit Badges. I also had “write talk” on my To Do list for him. But once the badges were done he and I both collapsed into puddles of relief and forgot the talk. I hauled Link into the foyer in a panic, ready to coach him on giving an impromptu testimony. Howard solved the problem more sensibly by walking up to the bishopric and saying that Link wasn’t ready, could he talk next week? This is how Link and I came to be sitting in my office right after church, writing down his talk for next week.

He put together a good set of thoughts with appropriate authoritative references. I tried to help him think of personal experiences that he could also share, but Link came up dry. He was confident that prayer works, but couldn’t give any specific instances of when it did. I looked at my son and realized that he was displaying the essence of child-like faith: belief based on a feeling of rightness without visible evidence. I pointed this out to him and it made him glad.

I think I need to wield more faith in my own life. I need to use it to cut through the clouds of self-doubting chaff. I need to have faith in myself and in my own capabilities, even when I can’t see any reason for it. I need to have faith that the same processes which have helped me dig up my buried troubles will work again. I need to have faith in the inspired messages I have received. Because just as Howard told me this morning that everything will be okay, so has God been telling me over and over that I have no need to fear. Faith can be my sword and my light in dark places. Or perhaps faith is a lighted staff like the one Gandalf used when he confronted the Balrog and said “You shall not pass!” I can just see myself barring the way, defending my Sabbath from my list of Things To Do. Alternately it may be as simple as the realization that Sarah makes in Labyrinth “You have no power over me” where upon all the noisy voices slink away in silence.

I do not always have power to solve problems in the physical world, but I have great power inside my own head. I can beat back the fearful thoughts, the worries. I can turn my life into a joyful place despite the unending list of things To Do. It is not a single epic battle, more like a siege, but I can still triumph. Now where is my sword? I’ve got stuff to do.

Hold on to Your Horses book signing

I’ve been asked to participate in a book signing at Dragons and Fairytales Bookstore in Eagle Mountain Utah. The store is celebrating its first anniversary by hosting signings all week long. Monday is Children’s book night from 4-6 pm. I’ll be there and so will several other children’s authors. There will be readings and fun. Saturday is the Science Fiction and Fantasy night which is when Howard will go.

Dragons and Fairy Tales
3535 E Ranches Parkway Suite A
Eagle Mountain, UT 84005

Today I was a writer

I was feeling tired, frustrated, and a bit burned out with all the tasks on my To Do list. I resigned myself to wasting the afternoon, but for some reason picked up my current writing project instead. An hour later I have 5000 more words of rough draft and I feel better about everything.

Why on earth does it keep surprising me that writing makes me feel better about my life? Why doesn’t that knowledge make it easier for me to pick up projects when they’ve lain idle for a week? You hear me brain? You have some stupid stuck in there.

Planning ahead for vacation

I have made my big Thanksgiving plans: I plan nothing. This is not to say that I will actually do nothing. I may do many things. It may be a very busy few days, but it will only be busy if I decide, in the moment, to do many things. This Fall has been full of schedule, scrambling to meet deadlines, and updating the calendar. I need a vacation from that. So for the the holiday weekend I will not have a To Do list. Instead I will have a list of options from which I can select. Alternately I can ignore my list and do nothing.

The one caveat to this plan is Thanksgiving dinner with family. I will do some planning for that. But not today. My planning engine is burned out for today.

Snippets from the past few days

This has been a week where I danced to the tune of someone else’s piping. There were a few items that I got to schedule, but my choices were limited by the many things where I had to adhere to someone else’s schedule. On top of that were the last minute occurrences which required shifting to accommodate. All that and I’ve only reached Tuesday evening. It has been a busy two days in which I did not have time to think long and luxurious thoughts. I could only grab snippets.

***

The trees we planted 12 year ago when we moved in to this house are now mature. We finally have shady canopy over most of the yard. At this season of the year our yard is completely carpeted with fallen leaves. When we rake, we will have some truly epic leaf pile jumping. Hopefully we’ll get a couple of nice mild days to dry the leaves out and make them crackle again. Thanksgiving is a great time for raking and jumping. First I’ll need to re-locate all of the rake handles which were pressed into service as staves and walking sticks during the summer.

***

Dear Doctor,
You are a responsible medical professional and I don’t think you meant the words the way that I heard them, but no I do not want to pick a medication for my daughter based on what will “calm her down.” I like her energetic. I love the way that her brain fizzles with ideas and she learns a mile a minute. What I want is a medicine which will give her the ability to steer so that she can direct her life toward whichever bright future she chooses. It is possible that none of the medicines will provide that, in which case we will do without. The point is to help her grow strong and healthy in mind and body, not to make my life easier.

***

Had my first church Activities Committee meeting tonight. Came away from it with a new list of things to do and a list of things that I don’t have to worry about anymore because other people are going to do them. I also realized that one of the primary purposes of a church party is not the party itself, but the group effort and cooperation required to make the party work. Working together builds connections and friendships. This is what I failed to do with the Halloween party. The Christmas party is on the right track.

***

During the committee meeting, Gleek and Patch were sent upstairs with instructions to “find something quiet to do.” Before the meeting was over they came sneaking back downstairs to show me how they had made their very own worry dolls using bits of wood, feathers, string, and tissue that they rummaged from odd corners of the house. I’m not sure what prompted this action since it has been years since we lost the little bag of worry dolls given to us by their Grandma. Now Gleek has a worry doll tucked into her backpack, specifically for school. Another is tucked under her pillow. The rest are in a little pouch on her neck that she made from a scrap of fabric. Patch only made one doll, but it has its own pouch too. Gleek gave one to me. I shall have to find a special place for it to live and carry my worries away. I could use more of that.

***

Even before the gifted worry doll, I don’t have as many worries this week as I did last week. People have been buying boxed sets of Schlock Mercenary. This is wonderful because now I have the financial resources I need to manage upcoming expenses. It is one of the miracles I needed which has arrived.

***

Link had some friends over the other day. They were using a camera to make silly movies. I listened to the rowdiness and realized that my son was the instigator. He had the plan. He called his friends and made it happen. Somehow in the social lives of these boys (there are about five of them) Link is the one who organizes and calls everyone together. This is not the person I expected when I worried about my non-verbal, socially-awkward son 6 years ago. I’m happy to see how far he has come.

***

Kiki, Howard, and Gleek all make time in their day to sit in the garage and pet the cat. Then they come into the house and lint roll thoroughly to remove allergens. I love that the cat came to us. I love that we get to keep her. I love that allergic reactions have not prevented this.

***

This week the live action version of Inspector Gadget is Link’s very favorite movie. Showings have been almost daily. It may be a while before Netflix gets it back. Link deserves to have a fun movie this week. He has been working really hard on multiple scouting merit badges which have been full of character building experiences. He is feeding his brain and learning a lot, but not always in the ways that he would prefer.

***

Howard is home. He was gone for five days, but he is home now. This makes me happy. His luggage is not home yet. It decided to take a trip to New York without him and stay over for an extra day. Perhaps it took in a show or two. In theory it will arrive in Salt Lake tonight and be delivered to us. The adventures of Howard’s luggage have had no impact on our well being or happiness. He has plenty of clothes here. It’ll show up eventually. I’m too busy being happy that Howard is home to spare any of my brain for worrying about luggage.

One reason e-books cost more than you think they should

Books are electronic files before they are ever printed on paper. Publishers can just reformat the files and voila, e-book. It seems so simple, but unfortunately it is not. Each type of e-reader has a different proprietary format to which files are required to conform. It is as if each bookstore chain had different requirements before they would put the books on their shelves.

Say for example that Barnes & Noble required that all books be printed on 10 lb paper, but that the book be no more than an inch thick so that they fit on the shelves. So the layout designer drops the font size and makes the book paperback in order to meet requirements. Amazon says that books can be as thick as you want, but they must be less than 9 inches tall and the font can be no smaller than 12 points. This requires layout re-adjustment although it is theoretically possible that one layout would match both. Then the independent sellers declare that they will only carry hardback books printed on high quality paper with blue ink. The layout designers work must be done again.

Each of the e-book formats must be learned and adjusted for. In theory you could pay to have an automated system to take a file and transform it into all of the formats. Automated systems save piles of time and effort, except when they do the opposite. The simple find-and-replace feature in a word processing program can easily change the name Ben to the name Lyle throughout a document. It will also change the word benefit into lylefit. A human has to scan through for errors and fix them by hand. Add in time and effort spent on the times when automated programs fail to work catastrophically for reasons unknown. If the book in question has any graphic elements, increase by 10x the level of difficulty in getting a readable result.

In order to put out a book into 5 different e-readable formats, a human must be employed to check the e-book five different times across five platforms. That human then has to tweak and correct introduced errors before the book is sold. An employed human must be paid. Until an e-book is sold in sufficient quantities to spread out the preparation cost across millions of copies, that e-book will have a price point similar to the cost of a paper book.

The printing, binding, shipping, and warehousing of paper are really the smallest part of the cost of a book.

Edited to add: I’ve had enough reasoned counter arguments posted to convince me that I am not an expert in the field of e-books. I’m going to let this post stand because it was what I thought when I wrote it.

Writer fugue and calling meetings

Writer fugue is when the worlds inside my head obscure my ability to see/respond to the things surrounding me. It would be nice if every occurrence of writer fugue resulted in pages of amazing prose, but sadly this is not the case. I did some note taking, a little bit of drafting, and lots of thinking. Sadly, the other things in my day did not get sufficient attention.

Primary among these things is arranging for an activities committee meeting so I can assemble a team for the church Christmas party. I simply can’t pull that one off solo. And yet I keep procrastinating calling the meeting. I would not mind attending the meeting. I think I’ll actually enjoy being in charge of the meeting. I know the meeting is critical, but I don’t like arranging for the meeting to exist. At this point, I’ll have to schedule it for Tuesday instead of tomorrow in order to give people enough notice.

I need some more focus and prioritization. It’s good that tomorrow is Sunday and such things are much more likely to be found there.

Scattered thoughts

Some days I stare at this white box on my screen and describing the day is hard. This is not because the day was full of exciting events, usually the opposite. My day was full of small busy things which completely filled my brain and left very little space for arranging thoughts into a pretty pattern. I had many thoughts today. My mind was much occupied while my hands and arms assembled 50 boxed sets and put them in packages. It was similarly occupied while I loaded those packages into our van and then unloaded them at the post office.

I thought much about several internet brouhahas which stirred up my circles of acquaintance. I though gratefully about the arrival of necessary miracles. I looked at the countries on the shipping forms and was amazed once again that people thousands of miles away will buy things from us. I thought about my kids, their needs and the things I need to keep track of on their behalf. I thought about Doctor Who. This last, primarily because I re-watched some episodes while packing boxes. Packing while watching was a little slower but much more enjoyable.

I intended to write when the work was all done, but my thoughts are scattered everywhere and I think I am too tired to collect them. Also, typing reminds me that my fingers are sore from building boxes. So I will do my project writing on a more collected day.

Performance Review

In the stress of packing Howard for his latest away-from-home convention, he and I had some cross-communication come to light. Unfortunately due to the packing stress it manifested in unpleasant ways. In some ways it was like accidentally elbowing someone in the gut when you really meant to vent frustration on an inanimate object instead. Everyone was sorry, but recovery still has to occur. As I sorted and settled things in my brain, I started thinking about all the roles I fill and wondering how I would evaluate my performance in them. I figured it was a useful mental exercise, and might even result in some enlightenment on my part.

I sat down and listed all the roles I fill. There were a lot of them. Then I pretended that I was my own boss and rated my performance in each role: Brilliant, Excellent, Good, Adequate, Poor, Bad, Abysmal. Occasionally I made notes like: Could be better at this if I spent more time on it. The most interesting realization I gained from the process was seeing that my personal enjoyment of a process did not directly correlate to how well I did at it. For example I feel like I’m an adequate-to-good layout designer, but a good-to-excellent shipping manager and given my choice I would hand off the shipping work to someone else while keeping the layout work. Other than that, the scores were about what I would expect. Which should not surprise me since I was giving them to myself.