pjthompson: quotes (quotei)
Random quote of the day:

“Some must live with the consequences of what they didn’t dare do.”

—Wieslaw Brudzinski, quoted in Geary’s Guide to the World’s Great Aphorists, ed. James Geary



Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Laurel and Hardy, Ariana Grande, or the Salvation Army Band. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)

Random quote of the day:

“My actions are my only true belongings: I cannot escape their consequences. My actions are the ground on which I stand.”

—Thich Nhat Hanh, The Heart of Buddha’s Teaching

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Lucy and Ethel, Justin Bieber, or the Kardashian Klan. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: quotes (quotei)

Random quote of the day:

“A lot of human behavior is based on the belief that consequences always happen to someone else.”

—James A. Hetley, Twitterfeed, 10/12/12

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Lucy and Ethel, Justin Bieber, or the Kardashian Klan. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: quotes (quotei)

Random quote of the day:

“We seek the truth, and will endure the consequences.”

—Charles Seymour, Life Magazine, October 18, 1937

 consequences4WP@@@

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

 

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: astronomer (observing)

Jun 6
I do have the sweetest cat on the planet: I open her mouth, drop her thyroid pill in, and she swallows it. This morning, she even purred.

Jun 6
Anyone who tells me what I should do is probably full of horsesh*t.

Jun 8
Riding the back of a flying dragon defies the laws of physics, but it’s become an entrenched fantasy trope. And hey, dragons aren’t real, PJ. My own solution to the Dragon Problem was painfully ludicrous, and I’m the only one who thinks dragon-riding is a problem, so I should just give it up.

Jun 8
To think I once got really excited and emotionally involved by beauty pageants.

Jun 9
I suppose it could be construed as unprofessional that I am sitting at my desk popping my gum loudly.

Jun 10
I’m in the process of reinventing myself yet again, always a slow and painful process, but more so because I am so distracted. I wonder who I’ll wind up being this time?

Jun 10
Jawdropping map: The 74 school shootings since Sandy Hook. http://on.mash.to/1s4lz2O 

Jun 11
Bwoogity. I got rid of the Piers Anthony books a lifetime ago. I read them in junior high and thought something was off about them even then. Now Marion Zimmer Bradley is going into the recycling bin. I won’t inflict her on any library sale or Goodwill. Blech. http://tinyurl.com/kqhh9k5  and http://tinyurl.com/cf2uv3a 

Jun 12
A swarm of bees/wasps came in my mother’s bathroom window today. The beeman is on his way. WTF.

The bees had formed a colony in our attic. They are gone now. And we caught the wasp nest just in time. Life is exciting.

The “hilarious” part is that Mom sat there for 20 minutes wondering what that buzzing sound was. Flies, maybe. Thank God, no stings. We got lucky, considering she’s half-blind. She recognized the danger and got out of harm’s way in time.

The bees were back by evening. The bee man will be returning in the morning and my mom is sleeping on the futon.

Jun 13
The bees dealt with again this morning, vents sealed. Hopefully this will do it. I’m so stressed I’ve got hives. *rimshot* Gotta laugh. It’s a ridiculous situation. Terrifying in retrospect but we bumbled our way through.

Jun 13
Whatever you love has consequences.

Jun 14
Someone egged my car last night. The neighbor’s car next to it was untouched. Just because I’m paranoid doesn’t mean they aren’t out to get me. It’s a late model banged up Honda Civic and the neighbor’s car is spiffy and new. Such is life.

Jun 14
Dr. John Dee has shown up as a character in so much recent spec fic that he’s practically become a new fantasy trope.

Jun 15
That was fun. I sat on a cloth garden chair and kept right on sitting until I hit the ground. Guess I shouldn’t have let it winter outside.

Jun 16
Mom fell on the way to the door to let the medical transport guy in. She said she was okay and went to dialysis but it scared the crap out of me. Dealing with all this over the phone at work while the neighbors help her is nausea-inducing.

guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt guilt

Jun 17
I was typing in my mother’s insurance company and spell check came up with “trickster.” Which is pretty appropriate now that I think about it.

Jun 17
Products I would like to see: InstaMan, for all your hefting and moving needs. Just add water!

Jun 19
If you describe yourself as having “clarity and courage” perhaps what you have is “smugness and self-absorption.”

Jun 20
Ironic (and unfortunate) Twitter juxtaposition. http://twitpic.com/e6kxdg 

Jun 20
On the 24 hour Dodger station Mom never knows if she’s watching a replay or a live game, and the she thinks the commercials are also games.

Jun 21
Sometimes I think white people are purposely stupid when dealing with a person with a Latin accent. A lady at the donut shop asked why the whole wheat bagel was more expensive than the others. “It’s 9 grams,” said the clerk. The lady kept repeating “9 grams?” like it wasn’t perfectly clear and making the clerk also repeat herself several times. Finally I turned to the lady and said sharply “It’s because it’s heavier!” That shut her up. I smiled at the clerk & said, “Perfectly understandable to me.” The clerk laughed, gave me my receipt and said, “Thank you for everything.”

I think people do this because it’s a power trip, an attempt to assert (pseudo) authority over someone because of language differences.

Jun 22
Here’s one of our new Patty O’ Chairs. Please note: it is not cloth. It has lovely cushions which I was too lazy to bring outside.

pic.twitter.com/H4hlA1mhkS

And here’s the new bench that goes with the chairs.

http://tinyurl.com/o39ehcr

Sturdy is GOOD. The literature said it will weather to a “nice grey.” And yes, it’s very comfortable and easy to get up from. Mom had no trouble. Nor did I. They are Strathwood Gibranta if you want to look for them elsewhere.

Jun 24
Here’s a thing I don’t get: “My team just won a big game! I’m going to go out and destroy things to celebrate!”

Jun 25
The Rasta Bus I passed three miles earlier passed me as I waited for a light on Main Street. There’s a metaphor there somewhere.

Jun 25
Life is a lot like Faery: once you enter it, you can’t go back. You must go through it.

Which is the premise of one of my novels. God and the fairies know if it will ever be written.

Jun 26
I think I’ve got outrage fatigue.

Jul 15
One of the downsides of having someone in to stay with my mom while I’m at work: snooping.

Jul 16
Min disappeared for hours and we thought she’d gotten out. I combed the neighborhood for her. Finally we heard her scratching from the underside of my mother’s giant recliner. She’d gotten trapped when Mom put the footrest down. All three of us were traumatized.

Jul 16
An epiphany this morning listening to NPR about living with teenagers: caregiving is like living with a toddler and a teenager at the same time.

Jul 17
Trust is a fragile thing, and when you have an unreliable 93-year-old narrator, it’s sometimes mighty difficult to know the truth.

Jul 23
Isn’t the idea of in home care to take the burden off rather than add more stress? Did I miss a memo? We recently received a grant from the VA allowing us 12 hours of help a week but it has problems of its own.

Things could be much, much worse. June was hellish. This month things are looking up. But there are always complications.

One of the nice/complicated things: a very nice, mature, solid replacement to a snooping, manipulative, thievish sort, but with scheduling conflicts. I’m going to ride it out and let next month take care of itself because I’m exhausted and can’t take more time off and because it’s not a perfect world.

Jul 23
Proof that there is a God: http://tinyurl.com/pp7dd9e 

Jul 25
So Mom fell in her bedroom today when she was alone. Not hurt, thank G–, but the neighbor who came over to help took the opportunity to lecture me about having someone stay with her full time. “We don’t have the money. What do you suggest we do?” “Oh, well, it looks like you’ve got a situation,” she said. Indeed, we do have a situation. Mom and I will have a talk tonight about using her medical alert button next time she falls rather than calling the neighbor. I work a half hour away so it’s difficult to get home to her in a timely fashion.

People are real free with the lecturing and advice, whether they have experience with caregiving or not.

Jul 25
I used to think I was a good judge of character but recent events have shown me that may be an illusion.

Jul 27
Thunder, lightning, and downpour. What are these things?

Rain pouring down, all the windows wide open, and fans going at full blast. We are not use to humidity. It sucks.

Poor Minnie is hiding under the bed. Every thunder strike is followed by sirens. We Californians really don’t know how to drive in the rain.

Turns out the sirens were due to a lightning blast a couple of miles away at Venice Pier. One killed, several injured. In fact, today 9 people were struck by lightning on Venice Beach CA, and a man and a girl hit by a plane forced to land on Venice Beach FL.

Jul 28
I suppose it’s too late to cry, “Foul!” on spoilers for The Big Lebowski, a movie I’ve always meant to see.

Jul 28
Discuss: “All depression has its roots in self-pity, and all self-pity is rooted in people taking themselves too seriously.” ― Tom Robbins

“All” is a bit broad. Some depression has roots in brain chemical imbalances and that cannot be said to be a character flaw. There’s a constellation of causes for depression. Self-pity and taking oneself too seriously may be two.

Perhaps Mr. Robbins is a dick.

Jul 30
My latest Etsy obsession: http://tinyurl.com/n3d9l5w 

Jul 31
The whole “Unfriend a Man” thing? http://tinyurl.com/jvos6l9  I can’t think of anything more boring than being surrounded only by women. Besides, when has reverse bigotry ever solved anything? When has blaming an entire half of the species because of the actions of a few led to anything other than Elliot Rodger? If you want to live in an estrogen-only environment, more power to you. As for me, I prefer a more varied hormonal environment, with give and take and the possibility of dialogue. Keeps life interesting.

Aug 2
Mom’s confusion tonight is too vast for 140 characters but too exhausting for anything larger.

All the perky caregiver advice experts make my ass burn.

Aug 4
A lifetime ago I read Malamud’s “The Magic Barrel” and adored it. Gave me the warm fuzzies. I read it yesterday for the first time since. I barely remembered it and when I was done I thought, “Why did this loom so large in my young imagination?” I mean, I liked the story, but it wasn’t the epic turning point it had been back then. And I remembered it as much more romantic, less downbeat. Could it be that I myself was more romantic and less downbeat? One must draw the conclusion that it is possibly so. Maybe the reason it loomed so large was because for the first time I saw one could be a fabulist and still considered literary, an important distinction for me back then.

Aug 4
I just learned that my cousin, the one who was going to stay with Mom while I had surgery, passed away in her sleep last night. Shock and sorrow.

She was diabetic and had COPD, and about five or so years ago, successfully fought off breast cancer. But when she realized her health had deteriorated to the point where she’d have to go to an assisted living situation, she decided she wouldn’t take her meds anymore. Her independence was everything to her. She wanted that last bit of control, I guess.

She wanted peace. She was done. She wanted to go be with her husband, the love of her life, who passed when he was only 35. She didn’t have an easy life. I hope she found that peace she was after.

Aug 5

To make the week even more perfect I am currently sitting in the jury room at the L.A. Metropolitan Courthouse.

Aug 5
I’ve gotten to the age where when I think back to how long it’s been since I did X activity the answer is often a bit frightening.

I’m also so old I have no shame. I am wearing my steampunk bifocals (reading glasses over my distance glasses) in the jury room. I’d take a pic but, alas, no pictures allowed in the jury room.

However, in a couple of weeks I will have grown up glasses at last and my army of reading glasses will go into the recycler.

Aug 7
Much easier feeling compassion for someone’s life once they’re dead, much harder when confronted with the irritations of day to day living. I guess we always assume they’ll always be around to irritate us, no matter what our head tells us about the impermanence of life.

Aug 8
I am not a responsible adult. Whoever put me in charge of this household made a HUGE mistake.

Aug 8
A death in the family, jury duty, and two days of stomach virus. I am D-O-N-E with this week.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: quotes (quotei)

Random quote of the day:

“…the supernatural is found in all cultures, and it cannot be effectively eliminated with rationalistic incantations such as ‘extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.’  The paranormal is part of the human condition, and its repression has consequences.”

—George P. Hansen, The Trickster and the Paranormal

Disclaimer:  The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: quotes (quotei)
Random quote of the day:


"First you guess. Don’t laugh, this is the most important step. Then you compute the consequences. Compare the consequences to experience. If it disagrees with experience, the guess is wrong. In that simple statement is the key to science. It doesn’t matter how beautiful your guess is or how smart you are or what your name is. If it disagrees with experience, it’s wrong. That is all there is to it."

—Richard Feynman, broadcast class lecture, NOVA, “The Best Mind Since Einstein,” 1993









Illustrated version. )


Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.
pjthompson: (Default)
Random quote of the day:


“Cautious, careful people always casting about to preserve their reputation or social standards never can bring about reform. Those who are really in earnest are willing to be anything or nothing in the world's estimation, and publicly and privately, in season and out, avow their sympathies with despised ideas and their advocates, and bear the consequences."

—Susan B. Anthony, On the Campaign for Divorce Law Reform











Illustrated version. )


Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.
pjthompson: (Default)
I had plans to get a lot of revising done this weekend. Alas.

I'm at that stage of the revision where I'm cringing a lot. I breezed through chapters 1 and 2 with minimal cringing. Really, they were in pretty good shape—some horrible infodumps, but those were fairly easy to hack away at. And it afforded a good opportunity to bring an element from the ending into the front part of the ms., something that explains a key component of my worldbuilding. It's an intentional bleed through of things that are part of this Earth, the one we live in, and those things threw at least one beta off quite badly. If that was the case, I figured other readers might be thrown off, too. I remembered something that [livejournal.com profile] matociquala once said: don't save it all up for the big surprise ending if it confuses the rest of the story. Put it all out there on the page up front.

I suspect I'm paraphrasing rather badly, and from ancient memory at that, but I thought it very sound advice.

Chapters 3 and 4, however, have not been a happy experience. Not just because of more turgid infodumps (though, aye matey, thar be plenty o' those to run aground on). I found a plot hole that I hadn't noticed before. None of betas mentioned it so perhaps I finessed it, but I'm confident that if I don't fix it now it will some day come back bite me on the endpoint. I rearranged some things and thought I'd smoothed it, but I realized when rereading this afternoon that no—no, no. It's going to require me to rethink some things, work out some other things that I didn't think I'd have to bother with until the next book in the trilogy.

It's okay, it will be okay. I knew I'd have to do a certain amount of restructuring, especially the drifty middle, and I'd been positively dreading chapter 5. It was a mess when I wrote it and didn't ever get much better. Many betas choked on this chapter, as I was fairly certain they would. This rethinking may allow me to smooth that and make it less of "Main Character walks around taking a worldbuilding tour." I might actually be able to put some plot purpose into that chapter along with the ooo shiny new things.

So I'm asking myself a series of questions about this plot hole and about this worldbuilding aspect I'd ignored. I've come up with some answers already, all to the good. Other things will take more brainstorming, both conscious and unconscious. The questions are spinning around in there even as I type. I'll feed some more in as they occur. Maybe when I wake up in the morning it will all have taken care of itself. Hopefully, it won't turn into Typhoon PJ or anything.
pjthompson: (Default)
I was listening this morning to an interview with Tom Hanks and Mike Nicholls on their new black comedy, Charlie Wilson's War, which is based on real events. Charlie Wilson was a Texas congressman who in the 1980s finagled and maneuvered funding to support the mujahideen in their war against the Soviets in Afghanistan—with the help of a CIA operative, a socialite, and the "most famous belly dancer in Houston." What I found particularly fascinating was the notion of how many unanticipated consequences sprang from that action. Nicholls and Hanks said was the point of their movie, how we never know what the consequences of any of our actions will be. Two of the biggest from Charlie Wilson's war: the end of the Cold War and 9/11.

You see, the Soviets were so weakened by their defeat in Afghanistan that it bankrupted them. They could no longer hold their conquered and fractured states together, so the Soviet Union broke apart, and their client states in Eastern Europe, left to their own devices, said to hell with you and went their own way, too. This has led to so many ripples in this world, most arguably good, I think, but some very bad, very bad indeed—and none of them truly anticipated.

And 9/11? Well, of course, the guy leading the mujahideen in Afghanistan was Osama bin Laden. He took Charlie Wilson's money so he could beat the Soviets, all the while hating us and hoping for the day when he could do the same to the West. I can't think of much good that came of 9/11. Maybe your perspective is different from mine.

I found myself wondering: if we had an accurate crystal ball and could have prevented 9/11 by keeping the millions of people in the Eastern Bloc under Soviet repression and domination, by continuing the dirty, covert Cold War that affected millions of more lives around the globe, should we—could we, would we—have done it? Three thousand lives precious to their friends and family. Millions of lives precious to their friends and family. There aren't any easy answers. And what unanticipated consequences would come of those actions?

I found myself thinking: you never know how the glass is going to splinter until the rock hits the windshield. The flaws inherent in the glass are invisible to the eye until the rock is thrown. Every moment of our lives, every decision, is a rock hitting a windshield with impact patterns splintering in all directions. We can't refuse to make decisions, because our refusal to decide also has unanticipated consequences.

Much hilarity has been made of Bush declaring himself to be The Decider. But you know what? We're all The Deciders. We just don't see such a clear-cut consequence of most of our decisions. Reality is a consensus web made up of all our attitudes and decisions. The answer is not to hide in a black hole and refuse to participate. It seems to me the answer is to act mindfully, and try to remember that everything matters.

Everything.

Frozen

Nov. 7th, 2007 02:59 pm
pjthompson: (Default)
Random quote of the day:


"It might be argued that fear was how the gods kept us in line. That fear was the direct opposite to free will. All things have two sides, after all. So on the one hand we had free will to allow us to do as we wished...and fear of the consequences serving to immobilize us."

—Peter David, The Woad to Wuin


Illustrated frisson. )
pjthompson: (Default)
You know, thyroid disease is a serious problem. Because the symptoms are easily misdiagnosed as other things, it's often ignored, which sometimes leads to tragic consequences. The thyroid effects almost every function of the body, including emotional stability, so having a gland that's off kilter and pumping bad hormones into your system is not a good thing. As someone who has had thyroid disease most of my adult life, I take this seriously and urge everyone to get regular thyroid blood tests.

However, the near oh-goody-she's-sick glee just below the surface of this article is symptomatic of a disturbing trend I've noticed in "Disease Clubs": the celebrity spokesperson. "If only someone really famous would get sick with our disease, then we'd really get publicity and funding!" And, boy howdy, Oprah trumps just about everybody.

Am I the only one who finds this weird?
pjthompson: (Default)
LiveJournal Haiku!
Your name:pjthompson
Your haiku:once when he passed
beyond the borders of his lands
so that he had been
Username:
Created by Grahame



It's a passing beyond the borders kind of day, trying to decide what I have been day, following a similar weekend. A weekend of reflection and a desire to live my life Mindfully, with Intention.

No, that's not some "leftover hippy sh*t," as an acquaintance of mine might say. It's about a desire to lead a genuine life rather than a purely reactive one. It's about wanting to do the right thing. So I guess, in a sense, it's some "leftover Buddhist sh*t." If I was only Buddhist.

But Mindfulness, now, that's a good concept. To be mindful of everything one does and says, mindful of the consequences, not just of the big things, but of the everyday things: of what I eat, how I move, where I go. Simple, really. But the hardest thing in the world. It's a thing that must start small, sometimes with external things, before it has any prayer of manifesting internally. And it's completely unsustainable. At some point, everyone screws up. At some point, everyone gives in to stress and pressure. But that's kind of the point, too. We acknowledge the screw up, take responsibility. Sometimes we keep screwing up. It is what it is. We acknowledge the stress—because denying it can really mess you up. "Yes, I am stressing," you say to yourself and try to think of small ways you can destress. If you're good to yourself this way, you can be good to others. Escape is not a sin, it's a necessity.

I heard an essay this morning by Norman Corwin in which he said that evil is like a communicable disease. We see it and we think it's all right for us to act out in bad ways, too. It spreads and spreads. But, he said, "Good is as communicable as evil." It is. And that's not just a Pollyanna concept. As Corwin pointed out, you let someone in ahead of you in traffic, they acknowledge with a wave. Most of us feel good about that. Maybe the person on the receiving end will pass on the concept further down the road.

Yeah, I know. Many people laugh at the concept of "paying forward," but cynicism is cheap. Cynicism creates nothing, achieves nothing, empowers no one. All cynicism knows how to do is destroy. I know. I've been cynical. I am trying to reform.

Mindfulness: No, I don't cross the street when the light is red, even if I can get away with it, even if my friends laugh at me. It's a small thing, a goofy thing, but it's my way of saying no to chaos and the spread of bad habits.

Lack of mindfulness: Stealing time from my employer so I can write blog entries.

We all screw up. Acknowledge the screw up, take responsibility for it. Move on.

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