Sunday, May 31, 2020

The Corners We’ve Turned

...in the Year of the Panicky Demick. A not-so metaphorical State of the Apocalypse.


I would have had a post out days ago but Blogger refused to accept my photographs. I like my blog illustrated, like a magazine. It helps break up my text, provides a sort of sidebar while illustrating my main thesis and...look, I like my pictures, all right?

I’d wondered if this was the end. I was even thinking of making a post to that effect: “Blogger won’t take my image uploads, so stay tuned until I figure out another platform, which is probably never, because frankly this thing wasn’t that much fun to begin with. Just in case, and most probably, Goodbye.”

At last it occurred to me to attempt uploading photos using the new Blogger interface that I’d tried a month ago and found detestable, a load of change for changes sake that didn’t fix the problems with formatting and required a learning curve figuring out where all the buttons were, besides. Sure enough, New Blogger took my photos just fine. I could try and learn to endure New Blogger, but it doesn’t work with my smart quotes plug-in.

Therefore, I’ll be flipping back and forth. Trust me, I don’t hate the big tech companies, Microsoft and Google in particular, because it’s cool.

Not even halfway through and we’ve seen the sun set on so much this year.

One of the sharpest corners weve had to navigate is the fate of the Blue Porch Kitty Committee. Its a sad tale that requires its own post, but the prĂ©cis is we’ve been brushed harder by the darkness than I expected this year, even knowing we had to euthanize elderkitty Otis, even knowing we’d been getting by far too long without incident regarding the outdoor feral colony that called our front porch home.

What was once a steady complement of nine cats, then eleven cats, is down to six. Angel has been so depressed by the poisoning deaths of his fellow toms Ginger and Spooky he refuses to re-enter the very yard he grew up in. We have some kittens in the garage that may yet grow up to fill out what’s left, but we’ve contacted the local cat shelter and we hope they get around to taking them away soon, as well as fixing as many of the un-fixed cats we still have around.

We found the opening through our foundation under our porch where the cats were getting in to have their babies. After a couple of winters without incident we’ve had to fish one dead kitten from the crawlspace, as well as the body of Ginger Tom, who needed a dark and lonely place to die. Heartbreaking and unsanitary are a heck of a combo. 

We already knew we had to renegotiate how we handled the feral colony we inherited with this house in 2016. We used to leave part of the skirting under our porch open so the cats would have a safe place to go in the event one of the many dogs running loose in our town made an appearance. Again, we were renegotiating. If they needed shelter they could duck through the cat door we’d installed in the side of the garage.

Last week all that wood latticework, much of it rotten or soon to be, was torn out. My wife raked decades of debris from under the porch, including one entire newspaper dated 1981. My son then went underneath to make sure both vent/access squares in the main foundation were covered. 

This bit of home improvement alone was a milestone. But the party being over for the Blue Porch Kitty Committee weighs heavy on our hearts. It’s not a mere metaphor; for years we enjoyed a festive atmosphere among the animals lounging about our porch. With the deaths of Ginger Tom and Spooky, who were kittens only two years ago, chasing each other around the poplars in our front yard, it’s as if the music stopped, the lights came on, and it’s cleanup time. Naturally, we’ll feed and take care of who’s left. It will never feel the same, though. Because it isn’t.

This is the core group as of yesterday evening, 30 May 2020. Angel, not pictured, blessed us with his presence for the first time in a while, but he refused to come into the yard. He used to be one of the most aggressive eaters and never missed a meal. I couldn’t even tempt him with chicken.

Today, the last day of May 2020 will be the last night my son spends here at our house. He’d quit a deteriorating situation just as the lockdowns were getting going this spring. My wife and I never thought to ask if he was looking for something else, especially as there didn’t seem to be anything else with all the restrictions in place due to the pandemic panic.

Besides, we knew boredom would get to him long before the lack of cash-flow became an issue. And so it came to pass he was interviewing via webcam with a company out of Kansas. They took all of one hour after the interview to make their offer. It’s the kind of respectable, living wage with benefits his father never knew, and he’ll be doing it at age 23

He will, of course, have to move back to Colorado Springs. The seats are out of the back of the van and we’re moving him there tomorrow. Cynthia and I will be empty nesters again for the first time since January 2017, when he moved in with us for lack of opportunities in the Springs. Now the polarity has reversed. He learned his trade here, but the money is over there. 

It is at once a cause for joy and mourning. I’m going to miss having my son around, even if we only talked to each other maybe twice a week because we both prefer to do our things at our computer workstations, his thing being electronic music composition and video game level modding. (He was also out of town a lot on his last job. Hell, out of the entire San Luis Valley. That says something right there. He could not stay.) His moving out the first time in 2016 as we left Colorado Springs for Monte Vista was a prime cause of my writer’s block that year. I didn’t know it until he moved in with us in Monte in 2017, and I was making coherent sentences again.

We’ve had some lovely pre-sunset Golden Hours, with a few post-sunrise Golden Hours that made me glad I was awake for them.

For what its worth, I do not expect to suffer from that kind of block again. I’m not the same man I was in 2018, let alone 2016, and thank God for that, too. Despite the melancholia stinking up this post it must be understood that, with the obvious exception of Blogger, all of these changes had to happen. Otis T. Cat was old and I would have had him put down sooner if I’d known then what I understand better now. We’d enjoyed a smooth ride with the feral cats outside for years. We knew we had to clean out and close up under the porch. The murders of Ginger Tom and Spooky, as well as the stillborn kittens, forced us to do something we should have done last year, if not the year before that.

Meanwhile, the great social experiment in how much suffering governing bodies can inflict upon vast populations in the name of a so-called emergency continues. It’s obvious this Chinese Coronavirus isn’t stacking bodies, nor will it ever outside of the nursing homes several governors and health officials have forced actual sick people into for safety. But the governors and the local health officials are enjoying themselves too much. So what if one business after another goes under? So what if families go bankrupt? 

So what are we going to do about it? 

I, for one, have had all worry and care about this stupid panic bludgeoned out of me. I’ve come to appreciate that there was much good among the bad this month, and that’s where I’ll put my focus. I got my old laptop up and running again. I finished reading some books I’d put off. Best of all, I solved the problem of integrating Agnes’ and Elyssa’s backstories and made massive progress with my novel. Thats a post all by itself which I hope to get around to tomorrow.

With respect to those who have taken personal hits from the Great Pandemic Panic of 2020, I can’t help smiling to think that, for all everyone’s hollering about in the media, including and especially the Internet, it’s been nothing more than a minor inconvenience for me. Passages and transitions, changes as painful as they were inevitable, are how I’ll remember this year. It just so happens that all the notable, life-altering corners turned since Otis T. Cat’s passing in March were turned this month.

I’m grateful to be here for it. That said, I’ve lost all enthusiasm with arguing about wearing a mask in public. I miss my cats; I’ll miss my son. I still have a novel to finish. I can only do so much. 

Don’t miss the kittycats for the trees. Back by poplar demand!

All photographs Copyright © 2020 by Lawrence Roy Aiken. All rights reserved.

Saturday, May 30, 2020

Writerly Banter With Screenshots

Once again, arguing with screenshots about writing, because it’s an easy post.


This screenshot was posted on a Facebook page called Writers About Writing. Like a lot of these things, it serves as a jumping-off point for a self-interview and reflection on process:




I don’t have a giant crate, just a stack of clean hardcover journals in the children’s shrine bookcase downstairs, and a larger pile of spiral notebooks from back in the day that I’ve ripped the written pages from to transcribe digitally. I might use the notebooks if I ever find myself outside the house for extended periods—they exist to stave off boredom while waiting in doctors’ offices, auto repair shops, etc., more than anything. 

Where I live, the nearest doctor I can afford is 200 miles away in Colorado Springs. I can walk home from the auto shop here in Monte Vista. It is therefore likely the notebooks and hardbound journals will go unsullied until one of my children, or, more likely, someone from the thrift store does something with them. 


Gifts over various birthdays and Christmases. I’ve attempted making entries, but I prefer typing into a digital file I can amend.


As regards the Oxford comma, I like it. What others choose to do is up to them. Just write something I might want to read, all right?

A strong opinion? It’s robust. It’s not going anywhere. 

I
’m pleased to report the last time I lost an unsaved draft was in 1987. I was merrily typing away at a story and was close to finishing. I leaned back in my chair, thinking of saving the file when the power blinked. Hours of what felt like the best writing of my then-embryonic career were gone. 

It took another week to finish the story and I still wonder about what I lost. Suffice to say I saved after every other sentence and printed multiple draft copies as a matter of course afterward. Losing text to power outages hasn’t been an issue since.

Image source unknown. I wish I was clever enough to make something like this.


As for novelty coffee mugs, I have a drawer full of them. Dear old Dad’s seen his share of birthdays and Christmases. I generally tend to use the largest one I can put in the microwave. I had a large one before that I couldn’t put in the microwave, but used frequently, because my office is upstairs. 

As for why I don’t keep the coffee maker in my office, it’s because I don’t want to spend too much time sitting down in here. ‘Tis a far, far better thing to get up once in a while and say hi to the other people living in my house than to stay inside, only coming out to use the rest room. If I have to explain this to you, forget it, don’t worry about it, you’re better off not knowing what you miss. 

I was going to take a photo of my coffee mug drawer but this old classic makes for a better segue, especially given how much I hate myself now for even thinking of taking a photo of my coffee mug drawer. Some things should be sacrosanct.

I’ve only suffered impostor syndrome once, and that was upon the announcement my first paid writing work in 1990. I shared the table of contents with Watchmen creator Alan Moore and French comics legend Moebius. It was a lame story and I was only there because the artist who drew it wanted to show off how much pull he had with the editor. That I was never paid again for my fiction writing until 23 years later seals the case.

It's in the lower center spotlighted Taboo #4 where you'll find a couple of recognizable names. This Diamond Comics' Previews came out on 11 May 1990. I took it to show off at the same party I met the woman Ito whom I've been married for 30 years this August.


I've read enough bad fiction since then, however, that I'm not at all hung up about it anymore. I laugh to think of the editor on Grace Among the Dead and how much she complained about my use of exclamation points. Yes, I did overuse them, but she missed everything else in her obsession. After a while, you could tell there was a point in which she gave up. I was on my own for catching errors.

After a while you learn to be grateful for your forced self-reliance. It’s more than mere clichĂ©, it’s an eternal truth that if you want something done right, you must do it yourself. All of it. The great editors along the lines of Maxwell Perkins are no longer with us. We must learn a degree of self-awareness ordinary mortals rarely master. 

Last week I finished a book by a second-tier horror author published by one of the big five publishing houses. The book enjoyed rave blurbs from the likes of Clive Barker and other top-tier writers. The story was competently plotted, and a fine example of the nonsense you can get away with if your story moves fast enough. You can forgive cardboard characters and contrivances so long as something is happening.

What raised my eyebrow was the use of ALL CAPS!!!!! and multiple exclamation marks during violent confrontations. Sometimes the situation would escalate to ALL CAPS!!!! in italic. Sometimes multiple question marks were used to indicate the point-of-view character was really confused. Like, what??????

It was quite the very thing that would get you laughed out of an amateur press association back in the day. Yet here’s Mr. Tier 2 Horror Guy getting away with it, and within the auspices of a major publishing house. I think of those snobs who made their smuggy stink about self-publishing and indie publishing as it overtook the market. As if no one ever read a truly dreadful thing out of a Big Five publishing house, ever.

Which is all to say, What impostor syndrome? Ive met worse frauds. Once again, thanks to the random People of Twitter for the blog fodder. We’ll do this again sometime.



Thursday, May 14, 2020

Fresh Baked Crow with a Side of Optimism

Takeaways from the latest teaching moments of the Current Crisis.


I nearly deleted my last post for my profound embarrassment but the lesson is too instructive to waste. I’ll go even further and point out that I’d thought this media-driven mass hysteria would be done before the end of March. That I didn’t think a lockdown of businesses and what is essentially mass house arrest of the entire First World could be prosecuted so long speaks more to my overestimation of human nature than anything. 

It’s nothing to get bitter about, though. Just “take the L,” as the young folk say, except in my case the L stands for “lesson.” I’m not losing anything. Just the people who had jobs and businesses to attend to, and are now facing bankruptcy, foreclosure, permanent financial ruin, etc. 
















Those people probably voted wrong anyway, which is why the media is keeping smugly silent about the millions of private disasters going on across the republic. If there’s one thing a lot of people have figured out, the media might not be the enemy, but they sure as hell aren’t your friend.

Meanwhile, it’s achingly apparent the people in authority declaring these lockdowns, with the occasional opening under capricious and stupid restrictions, are enjoying their power too much to give it up now or ever. Despite the occasional act of defiance on the part of small business owners, it now appears plausible some governors will attempt to cancel summer and fall, clear on through Christmas. That “second wave,” dont’cha know. We might have to do this for years until we get either a vaccine or an outright cure! Or wherever else the goalposts are moved.

They’ll get away with it, too. One lesson I’ve gleaned from this is it’s that people will put up with anything, even when they know it’s wrong, even when it hurts them. They will do as they are told and grumble most heroically about it later in hushed tones among their closest confidants. This is not a condition specific to Germans between 1933 and 1945. It is what it is. If someone ever writes an update to Charles Mackay’s indispensable Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, our Great Pandemic Panic of 2020 will make for a most illuminating chapter, with historical cross-references to back up the principles of mob psychology at work.

This rural crossroads town was barely hanging on when my wife and I moved here in 2016. The empty storefronts began filling up and everything was going great until, oh, mid-March of this year. Everyone say, “Thanks, Karen!”

















The other lesson, naturally, is never to attempt predictions on when things like this will end. This pandemic may not be entirely a hoax, but it’s been certainly hyped. This is a case of mass delusion bordering on hysteria, and there are enough people out there high on this crisis to keep it going until it stops.

I’m still deluded myself to entertain some optimism, though. People are beginning to realize there’s a class of people in charge of things who don’t merely dislike the public they’re tasked with managing, but hate them and wish them harm. As a better blogger than I puts it, real change will not occur until the Dirt People understand the Cloud People don’t like them, not one bit. It’s getting a little more obvious than normal. But, then, this is the New Normal, isn’t it? It’s what they keep telling us.

The media act as amplifiers and speakers for this class, and they like to hear the peasants/hicks/what-have-you scream as they burn, too. Most people know better than to admit they trust the same people who brought us Gulf Wars I and II starring Saddam Hussein as the New Hitler, and with Weapons of Mass Destruction in the sequel, but they still do. A minority of a minority is blinking the scales from their eyes. Maybe not enough to make a difference, but it’s more people than the day before. There will be more tomorrow.

I’ve predicted the breakdown of trust in already fragile institutions, but bureaucracies are immortal, and the cognitive dissonance of the public, their ability to forgive and very literally forget once things start more-or-less working again, is how that immortality comes to pass. A corner has been turned, but if it takes us anywhere it’s to the glum resignation of subjects of the Soviet regime standing in lines for basic items. In our case, we even have handy decals on the concrete to show you where to stand, and arrows inside the store to direct your movement in the aisles.

If I’m optimistic, it’s because I feel something really messed-up, but also exciting is going to happen. I don’t know when, there’s no telling when, but  a new “normal” is coming. Given my experience so far, the safest thing to say is it’s not going to look like anyone thinks it is, and it’s a chump’s game to speculate.

Be cool, stay safe. The old rules of this fallen world still apply.

A timeless visual parable.