2025 January’s Downhill Slide

Until today, I hadn’t updated this blog in 2 years. 2024 was a blur with lessons about why we don’t put people on pedestals, personal health concerns, and odd moments of clarity. 2025 already feels like 3 years in as many weeks but also that it’s going by too fast.

In the coming weeks, a minor goal is to devote more time (which would be any time) into actually naming my poetry chapbook and working on the poem order. January in my day job is always hectic and that’s going to extend into February this year with new projects I hadn’t anticipated.

Anyway, if you’re still here, thanks for sticking around despite my long absence. I hope that everyone’s 2025 is going well (or as well as it can under any adverse circumstances) and that my fellow Americans remember to wear black for mourning tomorrow. Our country’s democracy is sounding its death rattle and Martin Luther King, Jr.’s dream shouldn’t be forgotten.

Writing Prompt: Comfort food

Daily writing prompt
What’s your go-to comfort food?

I can’t find or even really make my comfort foods anymore. They taste of my grandfather’s impossible, magical, garden in summer, homemade sauces that still have fresh and dirt in the flavor notes, and meatballs made from his raised hares.

Or they taste like my mother’s chicken pot pies and casseroles, or chicken and dumplings that singed my tongue due to my impatience. Fried okra, fried chicken, and greens or green beans. Pink Stuff. And no one’s version, even mine, will do anything but pale in comparison.

There are more lost examples of these old comfort foods, tied to memories, some happy, many bittersweet, even more tragic.

Memory, nostalgia, and grief are my comfort foods. I eat them regularly when I sit with my coffee and a blank document page. Then I pour out my veins and tear ducts to create something I hope is bigger than myself. Something that might make the ancestors proud. Food is fuel, after all.

Disco in Space

I’ve had Space Cowboys on my mind, courtesy of a recent re-watch of Cowboy Bebop. The anime has a special place in my heart. I love the characters and the music choices. I’m not sure why disco comes to mind when the series relies on jazz and different musical genres. Cultural and social freedom, as well as revolution, are indicated by disco, which thematically fits with the series, even if the upbeat sounds might not.

Upbeat and revolutionary. Disco brought together people who weren’t supposed to be together in underground spaces, forbidden clubs, at a backdrop of criminal enterprises. The past meets the future, in the present (of the time) that the series was initially aired. We want to be more than our questionable circumstances, even more so now.

“See you Space Cowboy!” has the yesteryear feel of “tune in next week” to see how our enterprising adventurers are going to survive by their wiles, wits, and weapons at their disposal. The world feels more and more like that, recognizing that the first world areas are just catching up to what everyone else has seen, experienced, and had to overcome for some time. Are we all satisfied with others’ attempts to fix our community’s social, climate, or political woes?

Do we continue to bitch about the problems on our doorsteps or do we actually pitch in where we have influence? Or do we try to half-ass it and force change like we’re on some race for a bounty that everyone is clamoring for? There’s no monetary gain at the end of the journey, so our motivation has to be intrinsic. Like it or not, that’s really all the crew of the Bebop actually have. They’re rarely going to make more than it takes to have pepper beef for months and do the equivalent of duct taping the ship back together.

That’s life as I know it too. Simple food, good friends, music that you have to hear so that you don’t lose heart or forget who you are. And if ivory towers get destroyed along the way, well, that’s just an added bonus for living life as fully as having little left to lose permits us. If space is where the rich will go, what does that say about the planet we call home? It might be a boring dystopia, but it’s a dystopia nonetheless, with (at least in my case) the American Dream as the intended utopia. The nation lost the thread long before I was born, and I’m just doing what I need to keep my family and hopefully my community surviving, if not thriving.

Let’s put some music on and dance, even if the world decides to fall around our ears. Maybe we’ll see the stars again.

Writing Prompt: “What’s Your Dream Job?”

What’s your dream job?

I don’t dream of jobs. That being said, I do dream of positions in terms of direction and how I contribute to society. I’ve always felt fulfilled in roles that allow me to solve problems and be helpful. I seek those kind of jobs that have enough structure and clear systems to make sense, but offer room for creative thinking. I need the job that allows me space and refills my cup so that I can create on my own terms outside of work.

I dream of jobs that do not take without giving, and that can stop at the end of the workday. I like to work hard but I want energy to still play hard at the end of the day, so that I have a life outside of the hours I’ve sold to my employer. I had dreams when I was younger to work under my own terms, write and paint at home, with only my adventures to new places while traveling to drag me away from the artist’s single-minded devotion to craft.

As an adult, I definitely need stability for contribution outside my own worlds, many of which were born out of trauma and bad events. I get mental sunshine with every problem I solve, or the person I help. I craft moon shine (or moonshine) out of my thoughts put to paper or canvas. There has to be balance. I don’t think I’d be satisfied with a full-time writer or artist position, however, there’s a part of me that still would like the chance to try. I think I would need to know that what I was doing offered something essential for society. I’d be volunteering more if I felt that wasn’t the case.

The day job that funds my life and my creative investments without taking everything else is the dream job these days. Retirement one day might be nice, but I know that’s asking for a lot. I dream of not dying at work, for an employer, who gives perhaps two shits about me, and that’s only if they’re a halfway decent company. I dream of not leaving with regrets. But I am no longer in my twenties, even if I can’t quantify the two decades that passed between 21 and 41. Wisdom I can pass on, however, is that we work to live; we do not live to work. Don’t lose sight of that, even if the years fly by faster than you’re anticipating.

2023 is a Whirlwind So Far

I’ve honestly never been one to think New Year’s resolutions are all that useful, so I’ve been focusing more on sustainability and what’s healthy for me this time around. My household has been a bit of an anomaly – those rare individuals who haven’t had the virus of the pandemic hour once, let alone multiple times as many Seattleites have.

My day job, I’d hardly call it a career at this point, is in flux. I feel both liberated and in limbo. I’m stepping into a new roll in February, I’m just not sure what it’s going to look like. I know already that I’ll be happier than I am now. I’ve taken back my creativity and I’m writing more.

I’m 9 poems and a few paragraphs into the New Year. I’m smiling more often, and engaging in true conversation with the people I care about. I feel whole again. Never stay in a position where your cup isn’t being refilled. I’ve told it to so many people; it just took me forever to figure out that this was happening to me. I’m seeking out chances to be happy and to be at a table of my own choosing.

If I can dream big impossible goals into life, can this also be the year that no bigot is given quarter or a measure of power? Literally anywhere? I don’t care if they solved the cure to cancer, made the most amazing company in the world, or wrote songs to make angels weep at their beauty. Put them back in isolated romper rooms where the only damage they can cause is to a lego structure of their own making.

I started in poetry so I suppose it’s fitting I am circling back to it while I get my breath and writing cadence for fiction back. How about the rest of you? How is the price of eggs in your corner of the world? I’m too exhausted to want to panic about what may happen with our supposed faulty supply chains. If this continues, I may look and sound more vegetarian by summer whether I want to or not. I’ll do what I can and not worry about the rest. I guess that’s all any of us really can do.

Life and Travel and The Great Evaluation

Maybe others can relate to this: Lately, I’ve been feeling like color is slowly seeping in to a dark, gray, landscape and I’m a plant getting ready to bloom. Seasonal changes aside, the first two years of the pandemic, especially working in the healthcare / health and wellness industry, have been numbing. I’m actually planning trips again, and looking forward to new ventures. Hermits on the mountain in groups of people – six feet apart when possible, that’s how I think all of this feels.

(I could speak about masking in a different context as a neurodivergent person, and how I laugh at the idea that a piece of fabric worn for 30 minutes is somehow oppressive given what society demands of me both in and out of pandemics, but I think that’s a different essay deserving of its own space.)

And we’ve all become reflective as a result. What matters in life to us as individuals? What haven’t we done that we want to still do? Are we doing work that feeds our soul and lets us live after the day is done, or not? It’s not the great resignation, in my mind, it’s an evaluation. A measuring stick. Anubis holding the scales of your heart with a leaden feather to offset. Is your heart light enough?

For so many people, it isn’t, and the question then becomes: how do I fix it? Is the answer unionizing at a current workplace to demand better treatment, better pay? Is it seeking another career, another career field? Comfort may not be enough. Change may be the answer. That is the answer that many people are reaching. Taking work out off its pedestal, and sizing it down in importance, is the first answer I’ve arrived at. I prefer life in proper balance over “work/life balance”. I work to pay my bills and hopefully give me some sense of appropriate satisfaction, not to be the center of my life. If anyone’s eulogy for me focuses on my job, I’ve not lived life.

To correct this unhealthy imbalance, I’ve started with small steps, opening toward the light a petal at a time. I’m taking my first flight ever at a much later age than most achieve this goal to visit friends whose absence in my life has been painful. I moved to somewhere with at least a somewhat functioning public transit system that goes to the airport for a reason. I am going to make use of it, starting this year. Two trips this year, one for friends, one for family. Next year, who knows?

Spooky Season at Read Cat Bounce

We’re well into October and I’ve been remiss about speaking much about my favorite time of year – the launch of autumn into winter that happens in Seattle around this time of year. Right now, we are looking at a La Nina winter starting early.

Today’s air had a crisp chill to it and that particular clean, cold, scent that I can only prescribe to winter. It’s one of my favorite smells, heralding the time of the year that I feel most alive. I’m considering pumpkins, red leaves, and what all will look like, dusted in snow.

Right now, I’m also preparing to hunker down for NaNoWriMo next month. I will be announcing the project on November 1st with a write up and more information both here and on Patreon. You will need to become a patron to read any of the work in progress during the month of November, but a preview and some basic information about the project will be posted starting November 1st.

Currently, I am watching through Twin Peaks with the spouse (and sometimes the cats) as part of our Spooky Season celebrations. We’ve also been indulging in some horror films of the milder variety as the other Mihulec is less inclined toward *most* horror films or television. Supernatural and creepy vibes have been a good compromise there, allowing for some compromise.

Depending on schedules, I think we might indulge in one of the Seattle Underground ghost tours that we didn’t manage during our first October here in the city and that definitely wasn’t an option during the time warp that was 2020. If so, I’ll let you know how that goes and which of us had a conversation with any of the many no doubt irate, confused, or annoyed ghosts who fell to their death due to poor city planning. (It’s good to know that some things haven’t changed about Seattle, eh? *bah dum tss*)

We’ve definitely got our eyes set on a small concert with The Heebie Jeebies this week, accompanied by pizza and beer at one of our favorite neighborhood haunts. Probably with a Stephen King novel each in hand, since we’ve been both been indulging in his fiction as part of our seasonal motifs.

I’ve recently started a reread of Christine, it was my mother’s favorite Stephen King novel and frankly, she is the reason I love all things creepy from Poe to Barker. I miss her, but I like to think she knows she’s not forgotten either. Not sure what things she would have preferred to be remembered for, but I grasp on to the little things that we had in common.

And you know, in the end, Mom was right about me getting into healthcare, just not in the way she might have envisioned. Clinic management is a good career fit for me and I think she’d be proud anyway, even if I didn’t wind up doing the hands-on side of healthcare where she thought I might go. She was also right that I’m still here, plugging away at a keyboard, writing. She probably would still be equally annoyed at how many unfinished manuscripts lie in my literary graveyard, awaiting revival and completion.

Finally, a Halloween/Samhain playthrough of Dead Space is tentatively in the works, in the dark for full jump scare enjoyment. I’ll be honest, Valentine’s Day was the original holiday that those playthroughs happened, but we’re trying to swap up some of our old traditions.

What are your favorite Spooky season must-dos for the next couple of weeks? And for anyone who celebrates the remembrance of lost loved ones during this time of year, what stories are you going to tell between now and November 1st? Please feel free to comment below – I really appreciate hearing from readers.

Arthritis

Not entirely unexpected, but developing arthritis in a joint in my left hand has forced me to slow down a bit sooner than I expected with my usual tasks. I work on computers, I create on computers. I’m learning the art of slower, more gentle, typing (and gaming!) while finding new ways to function / interact.

I’m still pressing on with planning for my yearly novel project in November, although I am looking into different methods for writing while dealing with this. I may get back to some writing by hand and have it transcribed to limit the intense hours of typing after full days of typing with the day job. While braces for the joint in question help, they can’t stop what’s already happened.

For me, this all sounds less like a setback and more novel approach this way, at least to my finicky brain. If anyone has recommendations for speech-to-type software, I’m all ears and grateful for the recommendations.

Summer 2021

Photo by Georgie Devlin on Pexels.com

We all thought 2020 was going to be the worse of it, didn’t we? How wrong we were. Since February 2020, we’ve had a long list of events that belong in a dystopian thriller loudly hammering home an anti-fascist sermon to young adult readers. I’m still numb about all of it.

We have too many Americans who never learned how to function in part of a community or a society. A self-centered cancerous mass of outright villainy and narcissistic exceptionalism. I am tired. I’m sure you are too. I had to drop, at least temporarily, some of my recent writing projects due to a distaste at addressing certain topics that, after the past year and a half, cease to bring me joy.

I’ve lost a parent. I’ve gained a great-nephew. There are more promises of life on the way, and the family grows while it wanes. There’s hope and trauma and confusion all bundled up in a tapestry of exhaustion. Somehow, we’re reaching out hands to each other and rebuilding bridges.

Smoke season is insidious and deceptive this year, in more ways than one. Be careful out there.