Making music

I am a musician. Not professional, but maybe a little bit more than an amateur. I play several instruments, one in a very large concert band, another more eclectic sort with a few other people. It’s fun, cathartic in many ways, and it entertains others (usually). I’m lucky to have the ability and thankful beyond anything my parents made me stick to my saxophone lessons when I was younger.

I encourage people to play, especially if they learned an instrument when they were much younger, but then gave it up after high school or college. I tell them, “It’s like riding a bike!”. And it is. Your muscles never forget how to play.

I know. I stopped playing regularly for several years once I got out of college. Ok, I stopped completely. For nearly ten years. Then one day I moved to a new place, and there was my old saxophone sitting in the back of a closet. I had completely forgotten that I used to play it, and play it quite well, actually. So I decided it was time to play again.

I pulled it out, put it together, found a still-sealed box of reeds in the case, and tootled a bit on it. I was very, very rusty. I kept thinking I couldn’t play it anymore.

So back into a closet it went. But it stayed in my mind. For weeks, then months. I didn’t take it out, but I was very aware it was there. Finally, I did some digging and found a community band that didn’t need auditions, that would take anyone that wanted to play. So I signed up and went to my first rehearsal with them.

The band director gave me some music, and it looked like Greek to me. I was sitting there, holding my saxophone and trying to finger out the notes once again, but I had to think hard to remember what valves to close. One of my fellow saxophonists saw what was happening and told me not to worry.

“You’ll remember how to play the very moment the director raises his baton. Your body remembers. You’ll see! It’s like riding a bike! You never forget.”

He was absolutely right. The very moment the band started playing, my body just took over and the music came out, as if I’d never stopped.

So, if you’re someone who played a lot in high school and/or college, and really, truly enjoyed it, it’s not too late to start up again. Dig that old instrument out of the closet, put it together, find a band and go play again. You’ll remember how to play. Trust me.

It’s like riding a bike.

 

2/365

A challenge!

So, here’s the thing. I’ve gone nearly half a year without posting, when I said I would be posting regularly. Turns out I was full of it. As usual.

Now in an effort to change this bad, bad habit of procrastinating basically forever, I am challenging myself, based on an example set by a friend of mine who himself was challenged to write 365 blog posts in one year, that is, one every day. Surely I can do a post a day! I don’t think there’s a minimum number of words as such, but I won’t cheat by writing too little. I hope.

Anyhow, tonight is the first post, number 1 of 365 daily posts, that will likely be mostly boring, mundane reports on my life, what I’m doing, et cetera. (My spelling checker doesn’t know what ‘et cetera’ is? Interesting.)

I figure this will be a good way to improve my writing skills, if nothing else. Writing and writing and writing is the best practice to get better at it. It also won’t hurt my typing skills to be practicing so much either! Then again, I just participated in NaNoWriMo for the third time (and won for the third time!) so you’d think my skills in both departments would be adequate, at the very least.

So for now, once again, here is my first post mostly about nothing. I am confident that my future postings will be more entertaining/informative/educational/slightlylessboring…. Well, I’ll do my best, at least!

Until next time… (tomorrow!!)

Seriously, just too busy

I know, I know, I was supposed to be writing here regularly and well….I have no excuse.

At least I have been working on my novels, as well as taking a stab at writing a few short stories. Nothing of any great import, but fun, and good exercise.

I also got involved in a major film production here in my little town, and that has proven to be a major time-suck. But a gloriously fabulous time-suck. So much fun, and I’m learning about a whole new kind of writing. I ended up being the point guy for expanding the production’s social media presence, and as a result, I know more about Twitter and building a follower list than I ever expected to. But it means that I now have the skills to do the same for my own Twitter account as I build an audience for my writing.

I’ve also become the webmaster for a couple of websites, and I may have a bee-line on some decent income doing writing and research as a free-lance assistant. That will definitely help stretch the savings a great deal. HUGE deal!

Then there’s the busyness of day-to-day life and the fact that it’s gardening season again and I’m spending time in the back yard hacking away at the soil and destroying weeds. But I love doing that almost as much as my writing.

And then there’s Star Trek Online. Enough said there, I think.

I won’t make a promise that I’ll write more here, but I want to.  So I will. Just that. No promises, just doing. But I’m going to write about more than just writing. Be warned. I’m very opinionated.

Oh, and the film production is in the middle of its Kickstarter campaign. Please consider supporting it. It’s going to be a scary good time! It’s right here: Witch Child Kickstarter.

Laters.

NaNo NaNo!

I’m showing my age again, as I remember that old Robin Williams show, the one that got him noticed, Mork & Mindy. This is not about that show, however. I’m sure you’re devastated.

If you’ve been in the writing world for a while, or even if you haven’t, you may have heard of this little thing called National Novel Writers Month, or NaNoWriMo for short. It’s a yearly event, occurring every November, where you are challenged to write a novel. 50,000 words in 30 days. There are no big prizes to win or anything like that. It’s simply a brilliant way to get yourself to finally get that book out that you’ve been talking about to your friends and family for years. Get it down on paper, if you will.

I’m participating this year, as I did last year. I’m just about 5,000 words in after two days. I’ll likely add another 2,000 tonight, before I go to bed. It’s a significant challenge, to say the least. 50,000 words is a lot of writing. It works out to about 1,650 words a day. That’s the equivalent of writing a six to eight page term paper. Every night. For thirty days.

I took the challenge last year and won. I did my 50,000 words, and, to be honest, it wasn’t as difficult as I had feared it would be. I did procrastinate, but I still managed to get at least some writing done nearly every night. As it turns out, I can type around 2,000 words in about an hour to an hour-and-a-half.

I didn’t seem to suffer from writer’s block, but then I took a great deal of the ample advice on the NaNoWriMo website to heart. Whenever I felt I wasn’t able to continue what I was writing, I simply stopped there and started a different part of the story. I would do character sketches, scenery descriptions, back stories, until I felt the story line start tugging at me again. Then I’d plunge back in.

It’s a very rewarding thing to do. I still have much to write on my first novel from last year. It’s far from done. I have started a new one for this year’s NaNoWriMo, and it’s a more compelling story for me. I will finish this one first. It’s definitely going to be at least a trilogy. The story is good, the characters are turning out to be very interesting and the world I’ve created is amazing.

As soon as I figure out how to, I’m going to put a bug somewhere on this page to show my progress.

And if you’ve been thinking about that idea for a novel you’ve had bouncing around inside your head, maybe now is the time to finally get it out on paper. You never know what may happen after that.

As they say at the NaNoWriMo website – “The world needs your novel!”

http://www.nanowrimo.org

It’s not too late to start for this year! Go for it!

On Encouragement

I told a few of my old high school friends about my new career, and how I’m approaching it. All but two were very positive and supportive, excited by my new opportunity. Those two, however, were extremely negative. Not overtly negative, but that kind of passive-aggressive negativity you run into sometimes, when telling people about what excites you or about something new you’re attempting to do or how you’re following your dreams. Things like, “Ha, I can’t see you doing something like that. What makes you think you can pull it off?” or “Yeah, good luck with that. No one except those few lucky ones who land a big publisher can be successful writing novels.”

Now, I’m not saying that I’m looking for nothing but well-wishes, but ok, yeah, actually, I am looking for nothing but well-wishes! The time for criticism or even cynicism is after I give you a draft copy of my work and ask for feedback (if you’re lucky). Then have at it! But if I’m simply telling you I’m pursuing my dream, then you should keep your negative opinions to yourself. You don’t know me. Sure, we went to school together for twelve years or so, but that was twenty-five years ago! People do change, sometimes a lot, sometimes just a little. But you don’t know me now, not that well.

I firmly believe in encouraging creativity, no matter who it is, whether they demonstrate talent or not. Many of the things that people do don’t have to have some kind of ‘natural talent’ backing them. For example, I play the saxophone. I do not have a ‘talent’ for music. I’ve had to study hard and practice a great deal to learn everything I know. The only musical talent I suppose I have is that I’m not completely tone deaf. And really, that’s all you need! Anyone can learn just about anything if they try hard enough and practice it.

Now, I also may not have a ‘talent’ for writing, but I can learn to do it. I think I can learn to do it well, even. I’m an avid reader and I have a pretty good handle on what works. I know what I like and I understand how to write it. I also know that many people like the same kinds of stories that I do, so I would expect they might like what I write. And that’s all you need.

To get back to that part about positive encouragement: there are many, many stories on the internet that tell of someone who felt they had a modest talent at something, but since they’d been encouraged in the past by someone important to them, they’d pursued that interest until they’d mastered it, and went on to achieve great and important things. But they readily admit that if that person had given them negative or dismissive responses, they’d have probably given up or pursued something else. I feel that way about my saxophone. It’s a huge part of me, and a powerful means to help me control stress. I enjoy creating music a great deal, and I can’t imagine my life without it.

Think about that the next time someone you know, be it an old friend from your younger years or a child you happen to know, maybe even your own children. Positive encouragement costs nothing and you don’t know how important that thing may be to them. It might be the world to them, and you’d be crushing a dream. That dream might lead to something wondrous.

Think about it.

Oh, and if you are a current close, personal friend and think I’ve gone off the deep end, then have your say. That’s what friends are for.  But think carefully to be sure it’s really necessary.

And be gentle, please.

You what??

That was the reaction I expected my immediate family to have when I told them I was retiring at the age of 45 to write novels full time. It’s not an unreasonable reaction, to be sure, as I’ve only ever written one novel (so far) and it’s not even finished yet. And who retires at 45 except lottery winners or wunderkind business tycoons after they’ve made their first billion?

But that isn’t going to stop me. I’ve been thinking about this for a very long time, and I honestly hadn’t planned on doing it right now. I’d always had it in the back of my mind that I’d someday, in the far nebulous future, retire from my work-a-day job (probably around the age of 65 or so) and then I’d get to write full time.

Life has a funny way of slapping you upside the head, some days. I think that’s what happened here.

My job situation changed in a way that has allowed me to gracefully step away from the work-a-day world with enough financial resources to live at my current comfort level for the next three years or so, allowing me to write full-time.

And can I write? I don’t know. But I’m going to find out. And I’m not going to look back 25 years from now and regret not making this move. Worst case scenario? I go back to the 9 to 5 world. My skills don’t get old. I can step right back into it if I have to.

I’m going to use this blog to chronicle my attempt to write, publish and sell my own works. Sci-fi and fantasy novels for now, who knows what I’ll branch into later. But I would be pleased if this blog ends up being a resource for future writers who also make this daring move.

We’re in the midst of a renaissance in self-publishing, a way for writers to become successful without having to have a big publisher. A minor-league or entry-level, if you will, for publishing your work.

I’ve heard of individuals who make a nice living writing books and selling them on Amazon and other ebook platforms. Nothing huge, $20k, $50k, $80k a year, etc. I’d be happy with any of those amounts.

So, check back, see what I’ve blogged about the process. Today I’ve started looking at Amazon’s program, trying to figure out how it works, what I can expect, what I need to do to get things rolling.

But first, I have to finish a book. It is a lot of work. I have no illusions about that. I’ll be covering those aspects as well, especially editing, re-writing, etc.

And as to my family? They are supporting me 100%. Even my dad gave me a touching gift and note, completely at odds with what I expected from a man who’s worked in the corporate world his whole life and subtly poo-poo’d people with creative talents. Which is why I love him so. He’s only gruff on the outside.

See you around.

Common fallacies, rebutted again and again and again….will they never ‘get it’?

In his post, Slapping Interstellarmachine around, Zerowing21 demolishes quite clearly and thoroughly the fallacy of the idea that everything must be taken on faith that cannot be observed directly.  He also does a decent job of demonstrating that all ideas and beliefs are not equally valid.  These are tactics the creationist and ID crowd use all the time in their specious ‘arguments’ for their ideas.  All ideas are not all equally valid.  Some ideas are highly unlikely and shouldn’t get as much weight as those with good evidential support.  Some ideas are just stupid.  Anyway, he says it much better than I do.

Science is so very cool…

Check out this video:

It shows a water droplet falling onto a carbon nanotubule surface that is perfectly hydrophobic (water resistant), so much so that the surface tension of the droplet is enough to keep it in a tight ball and allow it to bounce!  I especially like the sequence showing two droplets colliding and merging…

Another Symphony of Science production

I love these songs, done with the Autotune software and emphasizing science and reason using the voices of some of the brightest lights in science. This one, ‘The Poetry of Reality’, is my second favorite, after the original one done with Carl Sagan called ‘Glorious Dawn’.

You can find many more videos at the Symphony of Science website.