Everyone needs their own space. Isn’t that what serial killers always say?

Whether it’s the token man cave, hammock in the backyard, or porcelain throne, solitude is important. Epecially if you’re pushing or rubbing one out. But I digress….As writers I think that’s one thing we can agree on. Also, for me, it’s one thing—an important thing—I need to survive and be successful. I’m not speaking monetarily here in terms of success; success of the soul and the imagination. 

I am the type who cannot do focused writing without being in my space. Sure, I can scribble on notepads at work and while driving and during epic dance-offs, but I can never be that person who escapes to a beach or a soiled motel room to write their masterpiece. To really sit down and write my stories I MUST sit my ass in this sweet, sweet, black, leathery chair.

Note the (firm) butt indentations

 

The writing habitats of famous authors astound me. Oh, to have Thoreau’s cabin at Walden Pond. Virginia Woolf’s Monks House, Stephen King’s attic office (which I feel may be suitably haunted) in Maine, Hemingway’s Key West Home…

Been there, bitches.

 

 

However odd, grandiose or even plain, all writing spaces are different and you do what you can to make it yours. 

My writing space is a simple office downstairs in my home. I hesitate to describe the style since I cannot be trusted to decorate. But if my office were a Match.com profile it would read…

Sultry brick orange walls, and one chocolate brown one. Cluttered like crazy.  If you like bookcases filled to the brim, a case of vinyl, and a phrenology skull, then I’m for you. I have a map of Montana stuck to one wall, inspiration for my current work-in-progress. I like to surround myself with photos that make me giddy and remind me of where I’ve been.

God, if that doesn’t turn you on, nothing will.

And so here’s a little peek at mine (no touching):

 

Skulls and zombies. Life is complete.

 

CAT IN A CHAIR

Book boner.

 

 

Since I showed you mine, show me yours.

I want to see your space. The photos. The inspirations. The books on the shelf, shrunken heads on display, cats asleep in chairs (c’mon, we’re all writers, we have cats, people!), whiskey bottles lining the trash.

If you’re comfortable sharing, send me a snapshot of your favorite space, the one that best describes it, and I’ll feature them on my next blog.  

Email to: julia.archer@gmail.com.

 

I have a piece up at Connotation Press (Thanks to the uber-fab Meg Tuite!) for this month of May. It’s actually a video reading of my flash fiction “An Ordinary Broken Heart”. Or if you like to do things the 1930s way, feel free to read it instead.

What no one tells you about video readings is that they are tricky bastards. 

Now I’m not shy. The camera is my friend. I like to ham it up on occasion. 

Yet having to read anything more than 200+ words and make it all the way through without so much as a stutter is challenging. I won’t pretend it isn’t.

Over two days, I went through numerous clothing changes, switched positions, changed inflection, to get it just right. Basically, I fumbled my way through it like a drunk freshmen on prom night, slurring my words and grasping for bra straps. The worst part of all of it is nearly making it all the way through the reading and then it all goes FUBAR with one misread.

So many takes. So many tries. Much cursing ensued.  And because of all these video-reading shenanigans I thought a blooper reel was in order. 

Enjoy it here: 

And again, big, for-real-real thanks to Connotation Press and Meg Tuite for not forcing me to wear a paper bag over my head as I read. Thank you!

This blog post is on nemesis words and it’s all because of this one Instant Message Chat between myself and my equally obsessed spelling fiend of a Cousin. Pardon the lack of grammatical placement even though I know your blood is boiling.

Calling someone a “white ass cracker” never felt so right.

The Cousin: ugh for the life of me i cant spell albuquerque right on the first try EVER

Me: hah i can never spell rthym

GAH

Rhthmy

sonofa—

 The Cousin: rhythm

 Me: that’s my nemesis word

here let me try

albuqueque

SHIT

 The Cousin: YES ITS SO HARD

to spell

ha

honestly my nemesis word is accidentally

or is it accidently

OMG i can never remember

 Me: no u had it right

you know, i think ill do a blog post on nemesis words

And there we have it. This little chat evidences the torment we feel when words are needed to be spelled but they just won’t come. At least on the first try. The words that continuously haunt us. We may be damn good spellers we’re nothing when it’s a showdown between misspell and donkey punch.

Wait. What?

Now I’ll admit it. I’m a grammar Nazi.

The Raptor really brings this message together

I pride myself on being a damn good speller, I can spell superfragilisticexpialidocious in one fell swoop, and know the difference between there-their-they’re like a BOSS, but I’m not afraid to admit there are words out there that stump me. Everyone has a word nemesis. If you don’t then you’re a LIAR LIAR PANTS ON FIRE. Maybe it’s only one lone word that sneaks up from the depths to claim your linguistic soul or maybe it’s a few.

Either way, sometimes my brain can’t wrap their synapses around phrasing or proper I-before-E etiquette.

So as I do most nights, I’m throwing shame out the window (along with my bra because who needs that?) to confess the words that give me pause and give me tantrums like a three-year-old.

Rhythm (I got this down now)

Carribean            Caribbean

Supposedly or Supposebly

Judgemental   I always add that damn E

Cemetary   Cemetery

I have about four big ones that occasionally pop up. It’s not too bad but it baffles the mind why I’m still not able to log these down to memory. Luckily, I keep a copy of The Elements of Style handy and randomly give it a read whenever I need to refresh my skillz skills. In fact, I flog myself with it daily.

As a handy side note, Googling “spelling photos” made me look at waaaaaaaay more photos of Tori Spelling than I’d like to. Although now I really want to watch the Lifetime classic “Mother, May I Sleep with Danger?”

“I’d rather stay celibate, thank you.”

 So I implore you, good writers and fellow heathens, what’s your nemesis word? Confess it here on my blog and I promise I won’t touch you in inappropriate places.

 “Don’t tell anyone how weird I am!” is the phrase I screamed out of my pimp ass ride – a 2008 Toyota Sienna Minivan – while cruising down the streets of Los Angeles last weekend.

RAWR

My manager and amateur badass chauffer-slash-tour guide – was a trouper and put up with me during the trek into Los Angeles to show me the sights. I was there for business but calling it that seems so wrong considering how much goddamn fun I had. So let’s call it a “business-pleasure extravaganza” for the sheer sake of naming things creepily.

It was my first time in LA and my manager, being a good sport, offered to drive me into Beverly Hills to see Rodeo Drive and the surrounding area. I saw. I gushed. I marveled who-in-the-hell-lives-here? at the gaudy and gorgeous houses and thanked my lucky stars I didn’t have a mortgage payment anywhere close to these people.

The sights of LA made me giddy. I snapped what I could, nearly getting my arm taken off by another car as I stuck it out the window to blindly shoot. I’ll take that commitment to the bit, folks.

National Geographic just called dibs.

Aaaaand complex commenced

Am I hungry or aroused? Hungry or aroused...

 Then one of us had the sparkling brilliant idea to find the Hollywood Sign. “It’s just up the road,” were the fateful words. After arguing with Siri for nearly ten minutes, getting directed to a place called Hollywood Sign COMPANY (Bad, Siri, bad!), and nearly mowing down two kids on bikes, we finally caught a glimpse of the white blocked letters.

Let’s just say we worked that minivan. Hard. Three wrong turns and blind corners later we stumbled upon it high on a hill, with houses and a neighborhood reminiscent of the movie Laurel Canyon. I kept expecting Christian Bale to come bounding out of the Hollywood Hills to throw himself into my arms but sadly he likes screaming at people instead of making out with me.

I got my million dollar shot and then we were outta there.

Boom, bitches

And so we were finished. Done with the sightseeing. Done with the fun. Imagine my horror and shock to realize that driving into LA and out of LA took nearly four hours. My panic face set in.

Yeah. Kinda like this.

From there our destination was Santa Monica, where a smug hotel clerk handed me a room key card inquiring “Only one key?”

 Let’s just say my hotel room key provided hours of entertainment.

Perverts.

The rest of the trip went smoothly. I rubbed elbows with some hippie folk, crashed Santa Monica Pier and had the best Butter Lettuce salad from the Hungry Cat. Seriously. It was orgasmic. Doves cried.

Oh wait. Did I say “rest of the trip went smoothly”? Strike that from the record.  Let me backtrack for one minute. The trip went well until I climbed into a cab that was waiting to take me to the airport. Let me break this down for you. Muslim cab driver (okay, fine), on a time crunch (20 minutes), waxing philosophic about God (ohsweetbabyj).

Yeah. You know my panic face? I’m making that now.

For 15 minutes I sat, white-knuckled and gripping the oh-shit handle as Cabbie weaved and darted through traffic because by god he had to get me to the LA airport in under 20 minutes to go back to Santa Monica to pick up a $120 fare. Apparently I was only worth $35. This did not boost my self esteem.

Then the religion talk kicked on.

Again…the face.

His monologue revolved around a man who borrowed his cab once only to never returned it and how vengeance would be exacted one day.  This moral was confusingly followed by him telling me that “god” is not found anywhere except your heart. At this I did give him a head nod and mused agreement because who am I to be an asshole, not to mention the fact that I pretty much believe that statement.

When he dropped me off two thoughts went through my mind:  As a writer, I was thankful for this experience…as a human being, nothing felt better than my feet touching sweet, sweet concrete.

So this ended my journey to the West Coast. A cab ride founded on faith and a little bit of fear. I will never live in Los Angeles. I like my easy life in Phoenix.  But one thing is for certain…

I want to put the ocean in my pocket. Every single day.

 

Guest Blogger for the month of April is Meg Tuite. I’m so excited to feature her here because her writing is so frickin fantastic and I want to share it with all I can. It’s honest, brazen and hilarious. That’s what I look for in a writer — never mind a guy — a sense of humor. And Meg Tuite has it. Plus, she wrote me a super sweet Valentine’s Day poem and I’ll never be the same.

~~~

I get dumped out of a car in front of the Holiday Inn in the Holidome. My head wants to roll off its neck like a bowling ball into a gutter. If I could just suck down one beer in front of this garish hotel I might be able to cheerfully make it through. My boyfriend, Dennis, finds this all amusing and pretty much shoves me out of the car. He spends Sundays looking through the want ads circling potentially humiliating jobs for me. Fuck him! He’s got a drawer full of cash in his dresser. Dennis manages a few of the major bars on Rush Street in Chicago, while my friends and I drink for free. He thinks I need to get up everyday and get dressed. “Have a good time, Michelle. I’ll pick you up in a half hour,” he says with a smirk, and speeds off. I’m left outside in the wind.

I walk into a huge atrium with an old, gray piano player, large, fake plants and a migraine-fested palette of hot pink and turquoise pulsing from the walls, tablecloths and streaks of circus-sun hoofing it in from the skylight above. Stabs and pokes of memories of last night snicker at me with remnants of upside-down watermelon shots, the decayed molars of a coked-up corpulent hyena-guy, vagrant conversations with vagrants about nothing and wrists tied to the bedpost.

I attempt to walk a steady line toward the yawning, endless counter with businessmen in suits checking in and out. I look down to see what Dennis has dressed me in. It’s all black and looks washed and ironed. Dennis likes to iron, in his underwear, in front of the TV while he screams at football players. This image is usually a fond one. Today I hate him.

A lady, about eighty, with a hairball coughed up on her head, sits me down at a table in the employees’ lounge with papers to fill out. The lines on the paper are arrogant. They are smugly assured that my life will parade itself out with panties around my ankles and showcase me as a wrist-flicking puncher of time-clocks. Hairball lady whispers to Blue eye shadow lady that I have a college degree. They both nod and think this means something.

Dennis is ecstatic when the phone rings and they tell me I’ve got the job. He picks me up and swings me around. He takes me to breakfast and loudly orders a huge entrée. When the food arrives he lines his five beverages up side by side, OCD style–coffee, chocolate milk, orange juice, lemonade and apple juice. He chugs a few with a chaser of four ibuprofen. His barreling voice bombards deep into the ears of the waitresses, patrons and me. He gulps his drinks with his pinky up and lives with some kind of mayoral hard-on in his head. He gorges his plate of huevos rancheros. I study the mound of beans, eggs and green slop that he shovels in and suddenly see the inside of his intestines. I am sick now and can only drink coffee. I remember that I stole a hundred dollar bill from his drawer this morning while he was in the shower. I am starting to feel better about things.

Blue eye shadow lady measures me for my Holiday Inn costume. “How lucky,” the woman says. They had an employee who wore the exact same size. The woman goes in the back somewhere and comes out with two rumpled turquoise skirts with matching vests and two evil blouses. The blouses are neon stripes of flamingo pink and turquoise with fat bow ties attached to the shirts. Darts slash out on either side of the boob area. This particular fabric does not seem to wrinkle even when balled up. “Panty hose are mandatory,” she says. “A little tip for you, young lady.” Blue eye shadow winks. “Wear comfortable shoes. You’re going to be on your feet all day.” I look down at Blue eye shadow’s shoes. She is stacked in black stiletto heels at least four inches high. She clicks away from me and says, “See you Monday, Michelle. 6:45 AM, prompt.”

I work the seven to three shift at the Holiday Inn, Monday through Friday. I am set up at the front desk. I am forced to look over Hairball’s shoulder for a week to attempt to learn the trade. As soon as I arrive each day a line of cheap suits are waiting to check out. They smack their lips and look me up and down in my polyester train wreck and say “mmm, mmm, now isn’t she cute? Are you new on the job, pretty thing?” they ask. I huddle next to Hairball squinting and punching in codes and swearing to myself. I look up at a bald one and say, “Oh no, can’t you tell? I’m a regular, old veteran at this,” as Hairball tsk, tsks me, and has to void out yet another mis-punch on the cash register.

Heidi is the reservationist. She has worked in the Holidome for three years. She has her own office. She is chubby and sarcastic and hates this place as much as me. We become fast friends. She keeps a bottle of vodka locked up in her bottom desk drawer so Mrs. Feldenheim will never find it. Mrs. Feldenheim is a Nazi. She is the general manager of the hotel. She is about 6’2 and skeleton ugly with a long rod up her ass.

Heidi and I sit next to each other at the weekly meetings. About twelve employees are sitting in a conference room that sports the same antagonizing motif. I have gone through countless Advils just to make it through. Heidi and I have already snuck a few drinks before the meeting. Mrs. Feldenheim is pacing back and forth as she talks. She is proud of the Holidome. She thinks this is a career. She tells everyone how lucky he or she is to have these important positions. It is a tough job market out there and if everyone works with his nose to the grindstone (she actually says this) then everyone will be set for life. Heidi kicks me under the table. I start snickering. “You think this is funny, little smart mouth,” Mrs. Feldenheim asks me. I wait for her to continue and then punch Heidi back and sit more erect in my chair with my hands folded pretending to listen.

“You people need to take this seriously. I am now in the position I have always wanted to be in.” Heidi whispers to me, “yeah, like straddling some lounge act with a whip in her hand.” Mrs. Feldenheim continues. “I now have THIS many applications,” (she flings her arms out wide) “for THIS many jobs.” (She pinches her fingers together). Heidi raises her hand. “Mrs Feldenheim? I have seen most of the applicants. How many of them actually speak English?” Mrs. Feldenheim glares at Heidi as she kicks me again.

Dennis is pushing me to quit the job. It wasn’t his intention for me to enjoy it when he first shoved me out of the car at the Holidome. He assumed I’d drop it like I did the rest of the crappy jobs I’d had after a week or so. I was now going on three months without missing a day. It was approaching Christmas and everyone wanted time off except for Heidi, who was Jewish and needed the cash, and myself. I always hated the holidays anyway and I’d get paid double-time for working Christmas day. Dennis has a huge family and he loves the holidays, being the politician-in-his-pants kind of guy. He wants me all sparkly and by his side. I like pissing Dennis off. His job-hunting prank blew up in his face. Maybe when I finally quit this job, because it is only a matter of time, he will stop selling me out and let me pillage his dresser drawer, the penny-pinching ass, and live the life I was destined for. The nightlife.

Christmas day arrives. I check out ten suits at the counter. These are the really cheap ones that can’t afford to take off the holidays, or they’re having affairs and don’t want to go home. The good part is that five out of ten of them give me a bottle of wine as a present. They feel sorry for me and I play it up. I shouldn’t have to work on Christmas day. A few make passes at me and try to hustle me into meeting them for dinner or at another hotel. I am getting good at playing with their brainless heads.

Heidi is sitting up front with me today. She runs in the back whenever we need to open another bottle of wine. We go through at least three bottles before we stop answering the phone, “Holiday Inn in the Holidome, can I help you?” I’m the first one to change it. The phone rings. We are sitting up front laughing and telling stupid jokes. I pick it up. “Happy Holidays, Heidi and Michelle’s Hollow-Ass Holidome, can I help you?” Heidi is totally cracking up. The person hangs up. That happens a few times. There are a few people milling around. One fat guy keeps flirting with Heidi and me up at the counter. He thinks we’re actually going to take him on in a threesome. Of course, we lead him on for a while, because what else is there to do? The phone rings again. I am slurring by now. “Heidi and Michelle’s Hollow-Assface Holidome, can I help you?” There is silence. Then the booming voice of Mrs. Feldenheim sprays out of the receiver. “What the hell did you say?” Now, I am speechless. I look over at Heidi, smile, and says, “It’s for you.” Heidi starts singing some Hanukkah song into the phone and stops mid-line. “Shit,” she mouths to me. Her face turns a beautiful, ghastly white. I fall on the carpet and start rolling around laughing. This is too rich. My career at the Holidome has almost ended. Though, certainly not before Heidi and me book a flight to Mexico on Heidi’s excellent discount plan with some of the cash I’ve been stocking away from my boyfriend’s dresser drawer. 

~~~

Published in The Hawaii Review/Spring 2011/Issue 74

A story included in Meg Tuite’s novel-in-stories, Domestic Apparition

Meg Tuite’s writing has appeared in numerous journals including Berkeley Fiction Review, 34th Parallel, Epiphany, JMWW, One, the Journal, Monkeybicycle and Boston
Literary Magazine. She has been nominated several times for the Pushcart Prize. She is the fiction editor of The Santa Fe Literary Review and Connotation Press. Her novel
Domestic Apparition (2011) is available through San Francisco Bay Press and her chapbook, Disparate Pathos, is available (2012) through Monkey Puzzle Press. She has a monthly column, Exquisite Quartet, published up at Used Furniture Review. The Exquisite Quartet Anthology-2011 is available.
Her blog: http://megtuite.wordpress.com.

Ask anyone who knows me. I am not an active person. Bench pressing the remote control is a thing of stealth.  My husband asks me to go hiking and I reply, “I would rather cut off my own legs.”

Now this is not to say I do not like the outdoors, after all I am from Montana. I would just rather be reclining in them instead of making some sort of physical movement. I love nature. I can camp. I can shit in the woods with the best of them.

Yeah. Like this.

So naturally I drug the husband along on a hippie retreat last weekend to a little place called Spirit Falls in Pine, AZ. If the name of this cabin doesn’t conjure pictures of machete-wielding strangers and teenagers screaming then I am sad for you. (P.S. I heartily recommend these little cabins for a retreat. Uber-awesomeness).

However, this little cabin in the woods was a gem. Owned by a lovely man named Bodhi Heart (Swoon, AMIRIGHT?) he made us feel at home. He kindly explained the surrounding property and introduced us to the RV-type toilet where all our craps would gather in a little basin at the bottom and then he would “collect the contents” at the end of our stay.

 

I will eat your babies, bitches

Now this is not the point of the story – the point of the story is one of the main reasons I wanted to get away. To clear my fried mind. To read. And especially to write.

Writing was a bit daunting because (to be honest) I have a hard time performing – ahem – a hard time writing in other spaces other than my office. I can’t get the groove; feel the beat, so to speak. So this was kind of like a test.

Which I frickin’ passed.

The Husband went into town leaving me alone with a laptop, a horse head, some wine, and my iPod. I put on Coconut Records, danced some jigs and I really wrote.

 

Look, ma! Times New Roman!

Along with the 4th of July Incident of 1999, this memory will be engrained in my mind for as long as I live. As writers we all know the feeling of when we dig out of that rut, grab another experience and are able to JUST WRITE. It’s a big deal for me. I’ve never been that person who can load up the laptop and head to the Starbucks. I must write in my chair. At my desk. Cat asleep on my lap. It’s my element. It’s maybe a bad habit but I think I broke it…just a little bit.

Being able to write at Spirit Falls was like popping my writer-ly cherry. I got down and got copacetic with my bad self. Came up with some great scenes for my work-in-progress. Along with chasing squirrels, it was the highlight of my trip.

Clearly it did not want what I was offering.

I realized it’s been a slow blogging month. Still, that doesn’t mean nothing happened. And what better way to get to the point and wrap the month up than with one of my favorite things. A LIST. WITH QUOTES. I have stuff I want to share with you guys.

Luckily, it’s all non-communicable so you’re safe. Read on.

“I can’t picture you in a dress.”

This quote amuses me. Said to me by a co-worker, I now picture myself as a man with a bowlegged stride to reinforce this myth. I take no offense though. This is true. Not the bowlegged stride but the dress bit. I detest wearing dresses. It means I have to shave my legs and make myself look better for all-around humanity’s sake. I’d rather wear a lumberjack’s checked shirt.

This is how my cat looks at me when I wear feminine garb.

 

“I’m beginning to understand that when we want to kill ourselves, it is not because we are lonely, but because we are trying to break up with the world before it breaks up with us.”

This gorgeous beauty is courtesy of Pam Houston’s Contents May Have Shifted, my current book-in-progress. I read this and swooned. It’s just beautiful and sad and eloquent and reinforces what a damn good writer she is. I’m a brand new fan.

 

“So Kiss the Girls took a dark turn. Can’t stop picturing snake enemas. You bitch.”

See what happens when I recommend books to people? My cousin has threatened to slap my face for this. Kiss the Girls is one of my favorite (and only) James Patterson books. Don’t let the watered down movie scare you away. This book is rife with mystery and antics that’d thrill the Marquis de Sade.  Clearly Mr. Patterson has done things with sweet milk and garter snakes that I do not want to posit.

It's the wrong hole but you get the picture.

Oh, and did I mention the snake enemas?

 

“…the character just came to me. In my eyes, he was a young, cute kid, who likes to get into trouble. Shaggy hair maybe. Cocky charm. Doesn’t fear the world. Has a way with the ladies. Especially on Valentine’s Day. Oh, is it wrong that I kind of want to date him now?”

I need to stay away from my characters.

This month I got interviewed by Susan Tepper for Fictionaut’s Monday Chat. I discuss my story “An Ordinary Broken Heart” which will soon be up in video format at Connotation Press. I will read it for you. See me stutter my way through in May.

This screenshot of my video reading really says it all.

 

 

“I can help with that, my uterus exclaims! I can give you an extension of your own self-identity.”

Love this piece “My Uterus is Trying to Exit My Body” from New Wave Vomit. It’s old but new to me. It befuddles me a bit because it challenges some of my own beliefs about my uterus but I enjoy it. And yes, I have thoughts about my uterus.

Very much.

Back in December 2011, I detailed my three goals for the year. And not to sound like a Smug Asshole but it’s only March and I’ve already nailed one of ’em.

The Glow of Smugness

Last weekend I attended a Writer’s Conference, funnily named Desert Nights, Rising Stars, at Arizona State University. I won’t bore you with lengthy exposition, after all I am not John Steinbeck, but will instead break it down fast and easy.

This sign is...so...brown.

It felt so weird to be on a college campus again. And while I’ve gone to high school here and live here now I’ve never been on the ASU campus. I watched the leggy girls in shorts traipse by and watched emo boys in flip-flops smoke in the quad and came to one realization: Man, did I feel old.

I picked up my super sweet name badge, complete with official lanyard and sat at a table. Soon I was joined by a group of fellows who would be my writer compatriots over the next few days.

The first realization I had was, Whoa, I actually have to talk about myself. I’m expected to brag. I can do it; I know it’s necessary, I just feel awkward. Yet, I did. “I write FLASH,” I loudly proclaimed, before launching into a detailed description of what flash consists of.  Note: It does not consist of nudity.

On second thought...

We had our one and only dinner, where thankfully alcohol was supplied (we are writers after all) and ate our Southwest dinner (we are in Arizona after all) and I listened to the conversation at my table. It consisted of making fun of aliens and preaching politics, both which concerned me because a) I love aliens and b) I believe politics among strangers should only be discussed if the listener is in a vegetative state, which I was not. At this moment, I was about ready to stand, flip the table over and lose my shit.

Anyway.

Skipping ahead – the classes were awesome. From 9am until 5pm I had my choice of taking prose or poetry classes on the hour, every hour. I took mostly fiction classes, listening to Robert Boswell offer extremely helpful tips on characterization or the awesome Pam Houston talk about genre-bending. Finally, I decided to take two poetry classes near the end of the conference and I was blown away.

Even though I do dabble in poetry, I don’t consider myself a poet. But Denise Duhamel’s and Valerie Bandura’s classes were astonishing. Amazing speakers and women, I consider them to be some of the most invaluable classes I took that weekend. If you haven’t heard of Denise puh-lease look her up. She is a hilarious poet. I am currently reading a book of hers called Kinky – that she autographed for me – and (waiiiiiiiit for iiiiiit) it’s all about Barbie. Um, yes, please.

The other great thing about this conference was the networking. Actually meeting writers from Arizona. While I’ve met some amazing contacts and friends on the internet they are, sadly, in other states.  The spread of people from different places and age groups was so very cool. It was also a bit overwhelming, as I looked over the crowd of eager faces, thinking in sort of a blind panic, ALL these people want to be writers? FML.

Be afraid.

But then I took hearty gulps of air and managed to calm myself.

The downside of the conference was the space. The rooms were decent size, yet were small when needing to accommodate 40 people who came to a lecture. Many people were left standing, causing classes to be delayed and staff to search for extra chairs. Also, there was a shortage of handouts (how can you not prep accordingly?), causing the staff to act dumbfounded on what to do next.

Here’s a thought. We’re at a college. Make copies, geniuses.

Harsh? Maybe. But when I’m paying 350 bucks to attend a conference like this I want a chair to sit it so I can hear the speaker. I don’t want to sit 20 feet away, nestled on a large boulder in the flower garden pretending that I’m at Walden Pond.

My other issue? I was coming down with a cold last week and it started in my throat. So basically, everyone I met didn’t get the funny, cool Jules. They got the squawking Ma’s-Roadhouse-sounding me.

Yeah. This lady. How's that for sexy?

I walked and talked in a fog, unable to express myself to full capacity. It would figure that the one time I have to interact with people, fate steps in and bends me over.

That said…I still wouldn’t trade it. I dug my invaluable time at the conference and in the writerly fashion spent way too much money on books and drank way too much coffee. It was such a great eye-opening experience to the world of writing and even my own self.

I mean, we all know how Emilio Estevez feels about writing conferences, but how about me? How about Jules?

This. This is how I feel. 

Clearly, I do not belong at the Normal School.

AWP Conference 2016 in Los Angeles…here I come.

Jules Just Likes: Volume II

Posted: February 23, 2012 in Uncategorized

Things I am liking this month include…

fun.

The new fun. CD – Some Nights.

Their sophomore album is ah-mazing. The lead singer Nate Ruess is from the now-defunct band The Format. This new album has a great beat to it. A little bit of waltzy, beatboxing, choir-y goodness. As you can tell I am not a music critic, however, the main reason I love this band is because of their lyrics. As a writer, I find them very inspiring and the emotion that comes through is great late-night writing motivation.

I mean, how can you beat this?

And that’s alright; I found a martyr in my bed tonight/She stops my bones from wondering just who I am, who I am, who I am

Plus, his voice. Oh his voice.

You can stream the album here before you buy. You’re welcome.

 

Connotation Press

Sandy Ebner’s piece at Connotation Press. Meg Tuite turned me onto this and wow.

Just wow.

It takes a brave one to write it. And a brave one to read it.

 

Creepy Horse Mask

Can you believe that this plastic horse face is a mere $25? I expected $50, maybe even $200 to be paid for an item such as this. At a bargain steal of $25, you can bet your sweet horse mane that I snapped one up ASAP.

Why you ask?

To take photos like this.

 

I only play Crosby, Stills and Nash, so shut the fuck up.

 

 

My goal in life is to borrow someone’s Mustang and drive it while wearing this mask. Because HOWAWESOMEWOULDTHATBE?

 

Just in time for Valentine’s Day, comes a lovely guest blogger I like to call HM. But really, she’s Harley May.  Friend. Writer. Mutant Pervert. Ahem.  Here, let me pimp her for you.

Harley and I decided to write not-typical-smoochy-cutesy Valentine’s related flash and swap stories as guest bloggers. To make them semi-relatable she and I both chose two words we had to incorporate. Harley chose: BEEF JERKY and REGRET; I chose: CANDY HEARTS and HOSPITAL.

There. I think that’s all you need to know about us.

And now, HM.

~~~

A Contender Lost by Harley May

You probably won’t read this, but I need to put it out there. I’m leaving it where we met – in the study room at the library. You were so different back then, your bangs hanging in your face like a set of bars between you and the rest of the world.

I went to the hospital last week after I heard about your motorcycle accident. Your mom found me outside the waiting room where I still hadn’t worked up the nerve to walk in. She told me you were going to be okay, and asked if I wanted to see you. I felt like I was about to cry, so left.

We never said ‘I love you.’ I wish I had, but didn’t want to be the one to say it first. It was more than implied a few times, especially on the couch. Our couch. Those were honestly my favorite kind of days – with your head on one pillow, my head on the other, reading to each other.

Do you remember when we read The Human Stain? That’s when I wanted to say it most. I’d just read, “The pleasure isn’t in owning the person. The pleasure is this. Having another contender in the room with you.” You stopped rubbing your knuckle against the sole of my foot and said, “That’s what you are – my contender.”

I had to give the couch away.

You’ve moved on and she seems lovely. Younger and more glamorous and perfectly nice and I kind of hate her and want her shoes at the same time. It’s wrong of me to resent her since I’m the one who ended it. You stayed away from me so much better than I did from you afterward. That’s why it wasn’t healthy. I was just tired. Tired of fighting, tired of loving you so much, tired of wondering, tired of hurting, tired of feeling like we might explode.

It’s almost been ten months and I’m still not over you. Ten months. That’s so depressing to write on paper. So…I’m leaving town. I need to. After I left your mother at the hospital, I bought beef jerky and a box of candy hearts at the gas station. I hate those things, but wanted them because they were two of your favorite things and a part of you.

I’ll get over this, but for now, to quote our Vincent, who we read so often on the couch, “Where you used to be, there is a hole in the world, which I find myself constantly walking around in the daytime, and falling in at night. I miss you like hell.”

Several years down the road, we’ll run into each other, and I’ll be fine. We’ll pull out pictures of our kids, exchange stories, and laugh. Only deep down I’ll know that no one was ever as great a contender as you. So I’m saying it now – I love you.

~~~

I can’t explain how much I really adore the above piece. I adore HM too.

Harley May is a reader and writer of many things. She rocks the humor (and a guitar), yet has a tender heart. I am one lucky chick for getting to know her and cannot wait to read her future pieces.

Like what you hear? Like what you read? Then visit Harley’s blog or follow her on twitter @harleymaywrites. In the words of Harley, “THIS WILL BE AWESOME.”

Read my un-Valentine’s piece, An Ordinary Broken Heart, with the same prompts here.