Archive for September, 2003

Crafty!

Tuesday, September 30th, 2003

I finished a craft project last night!

5 years ago on my honeymoon, I made an open-weave crochet bag using white cotton yarn (Sugar n’ Spice) and a pattern some friends gave me at my bridal shower. I liked the bag, but decided it was too open-weave to really hold anything of weight (like, books– the #1 thing I like to put into bags).

So, I bought more cotton yarn and set about making a similar bag, but using all single crochets instead of the open-weave chains that the other bag used. I kind of did it “wrong” in that instead of chain2 and sc all the way around, I forgot about the chain 2s and ended up making it more spirally (so the crochet “pattern” lines are in a slight diagonal).

And then, of course, I set it aside for a while.

And a while.

And… a while.

Well, last weekend, after I got as far on the rainbow blanket as I could, I pulled out the cotton bag start (I’d gotten about 2 inches up from the bottom, so not very far) and started working on it again. I finished it last night– it’s a bookbag with a very wide strap. It’s all white except for a single crochet edge all along the top, which gives it a “finished” look that I really like. I’ll post pics later sometime, when I pull out the camera.

I also feel good because this has actually decluttered my life a little. I now have one small skein of red yarn left, which I’ll throw into the holiday wrapping paper box, and a small amount (maybe an ounce) of white cotton yarn, which will also go into the holiday wrapping box, since I often use yarn to tie up gifts in a decorative manner.

Oh, and yesterday I did my FlyLady decluttering for the bedroom– I had set myself the task of decluttering the top of my dresser. Well, I had about 3 things to put away– that was it. That made me very happy!

Today’s mission is to dust my bedroom, which is usually no big hardship with my FlyLady duster. Perhaps I will also zap some clothes out of the closet or drawers!

I should probably also do some cleaning in the bathroom, which is kind of joined with the Master Bedroom zone. The bathroom is…. ew.

Meming the authors

Tuesday, September 30th, 2003

Using ’s list as the jumping point

Philip K Dick
Neil Gaiman
CS Lewis
JRR Tolkien
Charles De Lint
Emily Dickinson
Brian Lumley
Anne Rice
Robert James Waller
John Grisham

Neil Gaiman
J.R.R. Tolkien
Anne McCaffrey
Ursula K. Le Guin
Toni Morrison
Jane Austen
Gwendolyn Brooks
Edgar Allen Poe
H.P. Lovecraft
The Pearl Poet

Note: I had to remove some from ’s list because, while their work graces my shelves, it does so in anthologies or magazines, and not as a standalone tribute to their efforts.

I have no idea what one would do with this information to make it at all useful for anything other than making their own list of 10 authors whose work is on their shelves.

I HATE MSIE!!!

Tuesday, September 30th, 2003

Some asshat website that I went to looking for writing exercises launched 15 popups and changed my home page (in Internet Explorer) to their portal page.

And yes, I *did* tell it NO not to install or run any software from anybody ever.

I HATE MSIE!!!

I HATE MICROSOFT!!!!!!!

I wish I worked in a non-MS environment.

A story starter

Tuesday, September 30th, 2003

The first body was behind the door when we opened it.

The first body was behind the door when we opened it. Sarah shrugged and looked away, but I kept staring. Where had it come from? What was it doing here? How did it die?

There were obvious answers, of course; the body was just lying there. And where had it come from? Well, someone’s life had started somewhere (between the legs of a screaming woman to be precise), and well, it had ended here– or near enough as to not matter much.

Sarah didn’t go into the room, but I did. Those questions– yeah, I had surface answers, answers I could just shrug off in an existentialist way– but Sarah was the nihilist, not me.

The room was blue. All blue. Blue carpet (except the brown streaks where the blood had soaked in), light blue walls, a dark blue sofa. A small desk sat in the corner, a blue iMac perched atop it, humming softly.

The mouse dangled from its cord, halfway to the floor.

Which is how I saw the second body.

Sci Fi Magazines

Monday, September 29th, 2003

Well, good– I found out that UCSC, and especially UC Riverside, have collections of Analog, Asimov’s, and Science Fiction & Fantasy Magazine, covering at least the dates I personally have in my own collection.

This is a Good Thing. It means that, as I finish reading, I can remove these from my shelves and recycle them.

Went out for burgers at 99 Bottles last night. And beer. I had a Hawaiian burger and a Kona Fire Ale. John had something with garlic and bleu cheese, and ordered a beer called the “Arrogant Bastard.” It turend out to be too arrogant for him, so I made him drive home so I could finish it.

In related (vaguely) news: Last night I talked to John about me pursuing the Physics A.S. degree. Yes, every person I’ve talked to about this has said “Physics? Why?” with that kind of disgusted “I hated Physics” tone of voice. Maybe the answer for me is that I have always wondered and never understood what made things work the way they do. I’ve always known that the universe operated by the laws of physics, and that what we know of those laws is constantly changing, adapting, to fit what we actually observe. But I’ve also always felt insecure about discussing these things, of using them in my communication, in my fiction, in my writing, because I didn’t know what those laws were, what the actual science behind the laws is.

So…. I’m going to go in to Mission College this week sometime to talk with an academic counselor about this possibility. suggested that I take an aptitude or personality test of some sort, which I think is not a bad idea. I took the Myers-Briggs just before leaving SJSU, but the test administrator was a bitch and didn’t get my results back in time for me to have them evaluated for free/cheap before I left (though I think I can still do that as an alum).

If I do go to Mission to pursue this, it’ll mean 3 years of part-time school, because of all the math I’d probably need to take. I wouldn’t need to take any G.E.s for the degree, but I stopped taking math in high school, only picking up the stats course in college (don’t they call that “math for musicians” or something?) One of the things I need to discuss with a counselor at Mission is what assessment tests I need to take– they offer the math as an optional component of the English assessment, but obviously it wouldn’t be appropriate for me to take the English assessment. Also, those 3 years are pretty much set– because of pre-requisites, I wouldn’t be able to shorten it in any meaningful way, even if I decided to go full-time.

The A.S. is in Physical Science (Calculus-based), and I would pursue my degree by focusing on Physics and Astronomy, though I think I would also take a semester of Environmental Biology, just to round things out a bit. I’m looking at the chemistry options and not finding them all that exciting. Since they’re not required for the A.S., I don’t think I’d pursue chemistry.

One advantage to pursuing this kind of degree is that it absolutely would not hurt my tech writing career, if I continued to pursue that, and it would certainly help with the science fiction (which John correctly identified as my primary motivation, here, which was nice). Tech writers with a strong science background make a hefty bit more than ones without such a background. Even though there are no tech writing jobs in Santa Cruz, with a background or otherwise, it would be directly applicable to my work in the semiconductor industry, as well as if I moved more into writing for aerospace (thus realizing, in a small way, my childhood dream of working in space).

Here are some questions from the Value Exercise on SJSU’s Career Counselling self-assessment test, copied here so I can contemplate them later. Feel free to complete them (in your own journals!!!) or ponder them. They might also be useful in sketching out characters for a story.

Complete these sentences:
I am proud because I am…
I can…
I learned…
I made a difficult decision to…
I amuse people by…
I was careful about….
I repaired…
I helped someone…
I refused to…
My family is…

Set #2:
I admire the kind of person…
I think I could hardly live without…
I would like to brag about…
The main driving force in my life…
The best measure of personal success…
I could be perfectly happy if…
My greatest ambition in life…
If I were young again…
More than anything else I want…
It’s fun to daydream about…