Month: December 2007

Catapult

Today Link’s class had a talent show. There were the requisite short piano pieces and songs. There were, naturally a couple of kids with enough trophies to make the whole class jealous. There was even a girl in full jazz costume who could do backflips. There were also kids who showed card collections or simple drawings on binder paper. One kid demonstrated a card trick, but his need for a flat surface meant that all the audience could see was his back. Link decided that for his talent he was going to demonstrate the milk carton catapult he built in cub scouts. He stood up there and told about it. The looks of polite interest disappeared once Link started flinging marshmallows into the audience. The audience surged to their feet waving arms and shouting “Over here!” Link’s was the only talent where everyone stood up and cheered.

Link sat back down, grinning from ear to ear. I’m so glad he got the chance to be really cool.

Ongoing Shipping

The work of Schlock shipping does not end with our two large shipping days. There is a lull right after, but then the errors and damaged books begin to make themselves known. I’ve been very pleased with this shipping experience so far. I’ve gotten many messages from happy customers whose books arrived with no trouble. It has even been a pleasure to deal with the customers who’ve had problems. They’ve all been very courteous and it pleases me to be able to solve the problem in a way that makes them happy. Thus far only three books have come back to us, two with incomplete addresses and one lacking a customs form. They’ve gone back out. The remaining problems are all one of three things, An incorrect sketch (only two of these), only one book sent when there should have been two (around 5 of these), or postal service mangled books (about 10 so far).

Once the kids are off at school, I plow through my email. I exchange messages to identify books that need to be redrawn and re-sent. I process any new orders that have come in (3-6 new orders per day right now, It’ll slow down in January.) Then I print out all the postage and package up the books. At less busy times of year I’ll just let my mail carrier pick them up at the house, but right now I’m driving things to the post office. This gets the packages out a little faster and it is no extra trouble for me because I need to be checking our PO box daily anyway. All of this takes an hour or two depending on the number of orders. Experience tells me that it takes about 6 weeks after a big shipment for all the problems to surface.

One thing that I feared for this mailing has not materialized. I’ve yet to have someone who ordered via Media Mail email me in a panic because they wanted their books for Christmas. This makes me glad because once things are in the mail system I have no control over how fast they go. It is odd that some books arrive in Australia before other books arrive in Connecticut, but it is true.

Blocked

I have many friends who write novels. I’ve never written one. I’ve started several, but never come close to completing a draft. Today it feels like I’m just not cut out for novel writing. I have a cool character and a cool main idea and a cool setting. I even have some ideas about the main conflict. But when I sat down to write an outline so that I could start drafting it went something like this:
Chapter 1 Cool Character!
Chapter 2 Cool Character arrives in Cool Setting!
Chapter 3 Cool Character meets ancillary Characters!
Chapter 4 – 13 Um… some stuff happens, not sure what, but I have vague ideas.
Chapter 14 Climactic chapter that I’m sure will be Cool! …if only I can figure out what it is for certain.
Chapter 15 Epilogue in which I tie off all those loose ends… once I know what they are.

I wanted to write this now. I wanted to create a book for Link the way I made one for Gleek. But I’m afraid that the ideas won’t connect properly until long after Link ceases to need it.

Sigh. I should probably go back to turning blog entries into essays. At least there my brain seems wired correctly to make useful connections between seemingly unrelated events.

Winter Gardening again

The days have gotten really short. I find myself noticing sunsets with dismay because it means there will be no more daylight until a full hour after I get up the next morning. Usually my craving for daylight and growing plants doesn’t settle in until after the holidays are over. This year it’s hit me a little early, so I’ve already started to take action. Last year I combated the emotions by digging up bulbs from my yard and planting them in pots. It was nice to have growing things inside, but not one of them bloomed. I want live flowers in January. This year I’ve decided to go the time honored route of paying for someone else to correctly force the bulbs. Today I bought an oriental lily. It has one big white bloom and a dozen buds. I also bought a little campanula plant. It is also white because apparently the only plants available this time of year are either white or poinsettas. I think that at the beginning of January I’ll find places selling potted hyacinths and tulips that will have bright colors. I’ll buy those then. For now I’m happy to have the smell of wet earth, live plants, and blooms where I can wander past and enjoy them.

Choosing what to wear

This morning Kiki asked me to help her choose which coat to wear to church. In one hand she held her beautiful ankle-length cloak. In the other hand she held a nice corduroy jacket. I knew which one I would prefer her to wear. The jacket was much more appropriate to a church service. I also knew that I did not want to teach her to be a conformist dresser merely for the sake of fitting in. We had some time, so I took the chance to talk through with her the various implications of her choices in how to dress. The conversation went something like this:

Every social situation has rules about what is appropriate to wear. A swimsuit is perfect for the pool, but considered strange at school. There are reasons for the rules. Some of the reasons are about utility. (Baggy clothes drag in the water and make swimming difficult.) Some of the rules are about social conventions, mutually agreed upon norms for what is appropriate and fashionable.

The human brain is set up to categorize and notice things that do not fit the pattern or social norm. When we choose to break the social norm of dressing for a particular situation, we draw attention. The people around us must now decide why we broke the rules and how they feel about it. some of the reactions will be positive and some will be negative. The strength of the reactions will depend upon how far outside the norm we are. The other people also have to adjust their predictions of our behavior based upon how we broke the rules of dressing. We already obviously broke one set of social norms, they now have to decide what other social norms we might consider irrelevant. If they don’t have a referent for our pattern of dressing, then they become nervous or anxious. This is why costumed convention attendees get such a variety of reactions from the non-attendees around them.

After the discussion was over, I looked at Kiki and told her that she is free to break social norms in how she chooses to dress, but she should do so with an awareness of how it affects others around her. I also mentioned that one reason we dress nicely for church is to show respect to God. Kiki decided not to wear the cloak, which would have really stood out. Instead she wore her mushroom earrings ala the Nintendo Mario games, which are still very non-standard for teenage girls at church. I was pleased with her balance of individuality and conformity, but had she chosen to wear the cloak to church, I would have let her. After all, I let Gleek go to church with two bird Christmas ornaments perched on top of her head and that looked way stranger than a cloak would have done.

Adapting to babies

A couple of days ago I had a phone conversation with a friend who is still working to adapt after having her first baby. The conversation started me thinking about my experiences making the same sort of adjustment. I did not keep a live journal back then, so I can’t look it up. I can just do my best to assemble the fragments of memory floating in my head.

When I had my first baby I was at a transitional point in my life. I was 22 years old and just finishing college. Up until that point I had spent the majority of my life as a student. I was finally ready to shed school and do something else. Babycare slid right into the vacuum left behind by schoolwork and classes. I was emotionally ready to dive into a completely new endeavor. And dive I did. I immersed myself into motherhood. I remember feeling as if I’d finally gotten to the best part of my life. It was hard, but so joyful that I did not mind. I spent hours holding my baby and documenting every small step of her growth. My experience with the next three babies was much different. I kept expecting to find that joyful glow, but it was not as easy to find. My life was not as primed for transition as it was with the first baby. I had acquired things that I had to sacrifice to tend to the needs of the new infant. The joy was there, but not constant.

I’ve often heard people say that after the third child, one more hardly makes an impact. That was not true for me. Adjusting to four kids was by far the hardest. I think it was because I was really able to see what I was giving up to bring the child into the world and nurture him. I had begun doing the business accounting. I watched the baby and the accounting compete for my limited attention and energy. I watched my parenting of the other kids slide into survival mode as I struggled to keep everything above water. It was all made harder because Howard was so much less available to help than he had been for the other babies. His Novell job was siphoning off about 60 hours per week with an even larger percentage of his energy and enthusiasm. Schlock Mercenary demanded another 20-30 hours per week. I honestly do not comprehend how we all carried the load that we did. It was a long, hard pregnancy and a long, hard slog for the first months of Patches life as I attempted to establish a new equilibrium.

I remember people coming to visit me with my new baby. They would coo over the baby and talk to me. They all expected me to have that new-baby glow. I remembered having that new-baby glow with Kiki and wondered what was wrong with me that I did not feel that way. There were definitely joyful times, but they were interspersed with times when I could see clearly the cost in time and energy that was not spent on other important things. I remember feeling guilty that Patches did not get the same unadulterated love and adoration that Kiki received at the same age. I worried that my stress and tears would somehow be communicated to him and that he would be hurt by it. I worried that I would never be able to bond properly with him.

It did not turn out that way. I gave him what I had available at the time. Some days I gave him joy and adoration. Other days he merely got carried while I tended to other needs. It did not hurt him. Nor did it hurt him for me to hand him off to someone else for awhile so that I could refill my reservoirs of energy. As I recovered, and as he got older, I had more and more to give. There was more energy for joy and laughter. I slowly realized that love for a child does not have to start with a new-baby glow. Lasting love for a child is like love for anyone. It is built moment by moment, service by service. For the first six weeks it is all built by the mother (or father. Dads build relationships too.) From the moment the baby first smiles, that changes. Suddenly the relationship becomes a mutual construction.

Looking back, I can see the hard times, the struggles, the adjustments. I’m not eager to go back and do them again, but I am very glad to have them in my store of experience. If nothing else I can talk to my friend on the phone and understand what she is going through. Sometimes I can even find words that help.

Anthology Builder

My sister is starting up a really cool business called Anthology Builder. It is still in beta testing, but people can already go there to look around and buy stuff. The idea is to provide a place for people to create an anthology filled with stories that they selected. The authors get paid each time one of their stories is used in an anthology. The stories are all reprints of things that have been published elsewhere. At the moment all the stories are either Science Fiction or Fantasy, but Nancy hopes to get writers from all genres.

Once the site is out of beta, Howard will be blogging about it on the Schlock site. If you go now, you can say you got there first. If you’re a reader you should go build your own anthology. If you’re a writer you should check out the guidelines to see if your work can be sold there.

As yet none of my writing qualifies for submission. I’ve only sold one story and it has yet to see print let alone being ready for reprint. But in the future I’m hoping to participate in this great idea. (Yes I could probably lean on my sister to let me in, but I want to see this work for her. The last thing she needs is some obvious nepotism right from the get-go.)

Christmas Coordination

Some people turn gift wrapping into an art form. Each gift is carefully boxed and wrapped with crisply folded paper. The package is then embellished with ribbons, bows, tags, or other forms of decoration. These packages then are stacked around the tree in picturesque piles. I admire people who put so much care and thought into the presentation of presents, but I am not one of them. I do try to wrap the paper around nicely, but I can’t be bothered to find boxes for everything. As a result the packages are often oddly shaped. I don’t use tags either. I write directly on the paper with a sharpie marker. My children accept this as normal present wrapping protocol. In fact, they take it one step further and use the sharpie to draw all over the wrapping paper. This year Gleek spent a long time carefully outlining christmas trees in black. Patches drew maps on the presents he wrapped. One year Link carefully drew a picture on the outside of the package of the gift that was inside the package. These scrawled-upon, lumpy packages are not beautiful, but they make me smile.

Most of our gifts are wrapped at this point. The tree is surrounded. I frequently look at the and engage in my regular December occupation of reviewing in my mind who is giving what to whom. It is my job to make sure that all of these little people have plans for what to give each other. It is my job to accumulate those things and then help them wrap. It is also my job to balance the distribution of presents so that there are no cries of “Not Fair!” on Christmas morning. Because of this, I know what is in each package under the tree. I even know what is in most of the packages to me. On Christmas morning comes I’ll be delighted by the gifts. Surprises for the grown-ups have to be rare on a tight budget, because Howard and I discuss what would be the best use of Christmas funds.

Last year we traveled to my parent’s house for Christmas. That was really fun and we all enjoyed it. This year we are staying home and I am glad for the less frantic pace. I’m also glad not to have to haul piles of presents 800 miles in the car only to haul them all back again a week later. This will be a smaller and more peaceful Christmas than last year. But we’re not to the holiday yet. We have one more week before the holidays can begin in earnest. Four more days of school. I’m not sure who is counting them more avidly, me or the kids.

Band Concert

The band concert went far better than expected. After the last concert, I decided that I would not take all three younger kids with me again. But Howard needed to work late and the church party made all of my usual babysitters unavailable. So I resigned myself to hauling everybody, but resolved to do some things differently.

In the car on the way over I led a discussion about appropriate public behavior. We talked about not running in the halls. We discussed how we do not shout to our friends across the room mid-concert. We talked about how to be respectful the the performers and the other audience members. I then carefully defined some terms. “Stay with me” is not the same as “I can still see Mom so I’m okay.” It means that the children have to be close enough to touch. This is particularly important in the dark parking lot.

As soon as we arrived I handed out suckers from the stash of candy in my purse. I planned to provide a steady stream of snack food in the hopes that this would help the kids to sit still. It worked great for Link. Patches is still so small that he can’t see with the seat folded down, so he perched on the edge of the still folded seat. This, of course, led to falling into the seat crack multiple times. But he kept it pretty low-key, so I let it slide. Gleek also perched on the edge of her seat. She was completely absorbed by the music. She loved listening and identifying familiar tunes. How she did so mystified me because some of them were pretty hard to recognize. We were three quarters of the way through Waltz of the Flowers from the Nutcracker before I figured out what it was. After the beginning orchestra performed, Gleek became fascinated with the creak her seat made when she wiggled it just so. She turned to me eyes wide, “Mom! It sounds just like a violin!” Um…yeah it did actually sound like the violin’s we’d been listening to. I need to take her sometime to hear a professional violinist play. As each group came up and performed Gleek would decide which instrument she wanted to play. She is now planning to learn violin, flute, ocarina, cymbals, drums, harp, and piano.

Gleek’s level of excitement kept rising as the music continued. She was less and less able to be a passive observer. Her feet began to pound rhythms against her seat. Her hands wanted to clap along. More than anything she wanted to sing out loud along with jingle bells. I’d intended for us to all duck out at intermission since Kiki’s group was the first one to play. However I noticed that people were ducking in and out constantly. After each group there would be a surge of people leaving and others coming in to wait for their child to perform. I decided that we would give up our seats to some other family and we’d be gone before the kids were terribly over stimulated. Link and Gleek were a little disappointed to leave early. They were enjoying the performance. But I wanted to leave while I still had the energy to be nice about it. (Helping Gleek manage her energy was getting exhausting.)

It was the right choice. We got home and still had an hour for the kids to wind down. Or at least that was the theory. The chose to “wind down” with a rousing game of Monster Fight, which involves all of them pretending to be monsters and play-fighting over territories in our family room. Since they were playing happily I let the game continue until bedtime when all the monsters had a snack and crawled into their beds for the night.

Holiday Events and Armored Bones and Zodiacs

This has been a week of cleaning up messes. During the two weeks of book shipping I do not have time or attention to spare. This means that the fridge accumulates left overs. The piles of dirty laundry grow exponentially. The dishes don’t get out of hand, but the garbage does because we start eating food that can be microwaved in 2 minutes or less. I’ve spent the last couple of days cleaning up after all of that. Things are beginning to be more organized. Bloggable things accumulated during that time as well. So in the interests of cleaning up, here is a hodge podge of subjects:

At this time of year it seems that every organization feels a need to commemorate the Holidays. This means that my calendar is quickly cluttered with events that other people have scheduled me to attend. Naturally this leads to some conflicts. This year for maximum convenience three major events were scheduled in exactly the same time slot on the same day. This evening from 6:30-8:30 there will be Patches’ preschool concert at a nursing home, Kiki’s band concert, and a church congregation party. All of these events are for the whole family. In some ways this simplifies my planning. We can not make all of these events, so we’ll go to the only one that has course credit attached. Band concert here we come!

I grew up believing that crusts are more nutritious than the center of bread loaves. I still didn’t eat them, but I felt vaguely like I ought to. Then I grew up and learned to make bread from scratch. That was when I figured out that the only difference between bread crusts and bread is how thoroughly the bit of dough is cooked. If anything the crusts are less nutritious because they’ve been cooked more. Ever since I’ve felt vindicated in removing the crusts from my sandwiches. I even remove crusts from the sandwiches of my kids even though part of me decries this as wasteful. I have never once told a child that crusts are better for them. However somebody must have imparted this particular myth because one day I walked into the kitchen to hear Gleek very seriously telling Patches that he should eat his crusts because they would give armor to his bones. I tried to counter this piece of folklore with some scientific fact, but the kids would have none of it. They all like the idea of having armored bones. Alas this fascination with armored bones has not increased crust consumption. Instead they just speak of it very seriously when they leave the crusts on their plates.

One day Link came to me to ask very seriously which constellation he was. I was a little confused because I was pretty sure that he wasn’t a cluster of stars. Further inquiry uncovered the fact that his class had been talking about the Zodiac. Other than knowing that I’m an Aquarius I’ve never paid much attention. We went to the internet and discovered that Link’s sign is Virgo. I looked up at him and told him this. His face crinkled in dismay. He’d been hoping for the scorpion or the lion. No 10-year-old boy wants to have some girl as his symbol. I told him to wait a moment and I looked up the Chinese zodiac. We quickly discovered that Link was born in the year of the ox, as was I. He thought it was really cool that we were both Oxen. I breathed a sigh of relief that the Chinese zodiac had provided a more acceptable symbol for my boy. I remember my own dismay at being an ox when I learned about it as a child. I wished for the year of the horse. But now I’m glad to be an ox with Link because it turned the day into a happy one. For kicks we looked up the rest of our family. Link cackled with glee to learn that one sister was a snake and the other was a pig. But the highlight was discovering that Howard was born in the year of the monkey. Link practically danced with delight because he knows Howard thinks monkeys make everything funnier. Link ran off to tell his dad about the delightful discovery.