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Discombobulated Pensivity in the Double-Wide of Life
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19th-May-2013 04:41 pm - Sadly, about WorldCon....
I have to sell my membership.  Email if interested, it's cheaper and a juicy deal!
19th-May-2013 12:29 pm - Teeter totter
When the surgeon told me recovery would be a zigzag, not a straight line, I believed him but I don't think I accepted just how wild the swings would be. I'll have a couple of days where I feel normal except for some pain at the surgery site, and then I might go 5 days of feeling absolute crap-emotionally, physically, and intellectually. Then slowly build back up to feeling pretty good. That's been the last couple of weeks, in fact. I still have scabs on the wound and pain under the skin, so healing is happening but not finished.

Yesterday and today I'm feeling pretty good, and I've been wanting to work on my sewing. I worked on some planning when I first starting feeling better after surgery, and now I have the energy to do some harder work.

But not actually manipulating fabric and thread with my machine just yet. I've been working on tracing patterns and fitting them to my size and shape. This is an important step and one I've been working on learning to do better since I first made a blouse back when I was a teenager and then couldn't button it up the front because it didn't fit.

Because I'm fat I have trouble anyway--lots of patternmakers just don't make very good patterns for fat people. Some don't make any at all. The ones that do often make shapeless clothing or styles I don't like (I've had a lot of trouble finding a jacket pattern in a style I like). Then because of where I carry most of my fat (bust and abdomen) I'm also not a good match for some of the "plus-sized" patterns because they aren't cut for my body type even if they are my "size." I can never make a new garment "straight out of the envelope." (Most sewing patterns come printed on very thin tissue paper, carefully map-folded and stuffed into an envelope; others are overprinted onto a giant sheet folded and stapled into a magazine, then you trace off all the purple-lined or red-lined pieces to make the dress or skirt you want.) I have to compare measurements (mine to the pattern pieces) and usually need at minimum what's called an FBA - full bust adjustment - to any tops. Sometimes I need an inch or so more at the waistline (since I don't really have a waist, just a torso with a belly in the front), or half an inch less at the shoulders (I have slightly narrow shoulders compared to my other measurements). And Just because the designer wanted the hem of the top or skirt in a certain place doesn't mean that's where I want it! Sometimes I want more length, other times less; I know what length top looks the way I want, and where I want my skirts to end. I also add pockets to any skirts, pants, or dresses that don't have them.

So I trace. I have tracing paper, I unfold the pattern tissue or pull the paper out of the magazine, and I adjust as I trace. I might trace over the smaller size at the shoulder and then ease the line out to the larger size at the bustline, or the waist. I might trace the sides of a shirt longer so it's more of a tunic (using an architect's T-shaped straightedge to extend the lines). I might shorten a sleeve, or change the curve of a hem (I like shirts slightly shorter at the sides and longer in front and back, and I have a French curve ruler that helps me do that). I've lowered and raised necklines depending on what I need: work-appropriate versus party clothes (but it always has to cover the top of my industrial-strength bras). I might need to slice down a bodice from top to bottom and insert an extra wide piece of paper (you can't always get the extra room you need just by adding to the side seams).

Then I compare the traced, adjusted pattern pieces to either a similar piece of clothing I already have, or to myself--I might pin pieces together into a mock-up. Sometimes I go so far as to make the garment up in cheap fabric, either real muslin or an old sheet (I keep old, ripped sheets just for this use). I might need to make more adjustments to the pattern pieces. I write the changes right onto the traced pieces, and cut off some or tape on some paper so things fit better.

All this before I ever lay out the fabric, find my scissors, and start cutting! In the last couple of weeks I've traced two new patterns. One is a lightweight jacket and the other is a tunic. There's a dress pattern I'd like to trace, too; may work on that later today.

Later this week I go back to the surgeon for the post-operative check up on my left ear surgery, and a discussion about whether I need surgery on the other side. I'm voting yes. Despite feeling a lot better, I still have some symptoms that I think are attributable to the problems with my right ear. And on the specialized CAT scan, my right ear was actually in worse condition than the left--I chose to have the surgery on the left first because that's where I was having the most symptoms.

I'd rather have the surgery and be sure it's fixed. I don't want to find out a year from now, after working my way back to normal strength and stamina, that my right ear is messing things up still or again. Of course if the surgeon adamantly insists I don't need it, I won't have a second surgery--but that would only be because he thinks I'm as healed as I can get, and that would be great news.

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19th-May-2013 02:22 pm - The Alban Lake Bookstore
The Alban Lake Bookstore is now open. This store features all of the new titles from Alban Lake Publishing, and it also features much of the backlist from Sam's Dot Publishing, and it features many of the new and backlist titles from Nomadic Delirium Press. This means that the store has a lot of my books. Here are some links for you:
A Problem in Translation
Red Moon Rising
The Opium of the People
Seedlings on the Solar Winds
Marionettes on the Moon
The Ephemeris Science Fiction Role Playing Game
The Battle for Turtle Island: Buffalo Wars Role Playing Game
Jump to after the cut to see my prediction for the ending to tonight's episode as I feebly attempt to claw my way back to being .500 on correct guesses.

Read more...Collapse )
19th-May-2013 11:25 am - Thank you IASFM!
I did win a prize here at the Nebula Awards Banquet, but it wasn't a Nebula . . . Sheila Williams, editor of Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, gave me a nice certificate saying I won the Reader's Award for Best Poem.  That was "Future History," a triolet that appeared in the February 2012 issue.

Let me see whether the line breaks can be preserved . . .


                                   future history


They climbed the sky on a ladder of flame,
  who aimed toward the distant stars.

More than a thousand years ago -- they claimed
They climbed the sky on a ladder of flame.

Never got to Mars.  Only left their names
   there on the Moon.  Who remembers
they climbed the sky on a ladder of flame?
They aimed toward the distant stars?


                                               Copyright © 2012 by Joe Haldeman

 
19th-May-2013 10:30 am - Story Inspiration Sunday

I also blog about these things over at Book View Cafe. Feel free to comment either here or over there.

My writing process has evolved and changed over the years. I anticipate it will continue to change.

Currently, I write everything out by hand, first, then type it up on the computer. Creating fiction using this process ensures that it starts as fun for me.

I have a day job, and I’m on the computer all day long. Therefore, somewhere in my head, I’ve equated “computer” with “work.” It doesn’t matter that I use a different computer, in different parts of the house (or at a coffee shop.) Computer equates work, to me, which is the opposite of creative.

So I hand write everything first. I draft either an entire short story, or a chapter, before I type it up. One of the good things about this process means I have pretty clean first drafts. At this point in my career, the percentage of what’s on the hand written draft that makes it into the typed draft can vary between 70-98%, depending on the piece.

So what does that have to do with inspiration?

Read the rest of this entry »Collapse )Crossposted from my website. If you'd like to comment, you can do so here or there.

Glaswegian: "I'm just going to get changed into a shirt and that'll be me."

Me: "What! Your shirt is not you! You are not a shirt!"

Glaswegian: "The shirt you wear is like a promise you make!"

Me: "Gasp! No! Don't break that promise! Don't -- don't become -- "

Together: "JOHN SHIRT!"
19th-May-2013 12:11 pm - Intellectual Honesty
Boing boing has a new post that I think is intellectually dishonest.

The first commenter on the post seems to agree with me: "That was an over-the-top and misleading synopsis."

I say all this because I respect the author of the post and call him a friend and have read and enjoyed many of his works, and I visit boingboing many times a day to see what wondrous and marvelous things they have to share.  That said, we have to be honest enough to call a spade a spade.

And if I am going to call out someone else on this issue, I need to call out myself.

Which leads me back to my post a couple days ago about the new "Star Trek" movie.

Because Brianna and I saw it again.

And I was wrong.

It's actually a very good Trek movie.

The problem is that it jumps around so fast and is so complex that major plot points only get a sentence or two of screentime and if you miss them, you're lost.  But it's there.  (I did, however, notice a couple new minor plot holes the second time, but overall, my opinion went up a lot the second time.)

But my point is that, upon a second viewing, Into Darkness is a really good Trek movie, and it's between that and First Contact for which ranks Number 3 all time.
19th-May-2013 08:52 am - I love my lizard brain
I love it when a story comes together. This morning I woke up to a bird chirping and the cat batting my nose and my lizard brain kicked in and told me 2 things that happen next in the WIP. Greatest part of the whole thing is that the lizard brain let me sleep while it mulled over the plot problems. Better than an iPad my lizard brain is.
19th-May-2013 06:55 am - Books into movies
On Facebook a reader asked why none of y other books (besides The Forever War) have been made into movies . . .

Russell, so many factors are involved in "Why hasn't X been made into a movie?" that the answer has to be a helpless shrug.  Books that seem like naturals fail time and again – look at "The Great Gatsby," for goodness's sake! – and obscurities like Clarke's "The Sentinel" make history.

One factor may be that I don't care desperately enough.  Hollywood is full of writers constantly pestering producers, doing lunches, sending scripts around wholesale, and investing blowjobs real and metaphorical in pursuit of The Deal.

I'd rather just write books and hope that the Deal finds me.  If it doesn't, well, I will have written books.

Joe
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