Monthly Archives: July 2009

wheelchair

 

Also, here is a brief essay that I wrote about a typical day.  I originally posted it in January.

 

A Broken Laptop

by Mercedes M. Yardley

 

Her son pulls eight keys from the keyboard.  Her daughter finishes it off, making it a nice and even twenty.  This slows the writer down some.

The telephone rings.  It is her best friend.  “What are you doing?”

“Writing a story.”

“Me too.  I’m sending you an email.”

She reads the email while still on the phone and they laugh.  But nothing is written.

She’s gotten adept at maneuvering around the missing keys, slamming extra hard on the ‘x’ and the ‘j’ where even the soft, fleshy black knob is missing.  She shifts with her right pinky.  She never uses straight caps.  Too difficult.

Her daughter crawls by, her face dirty and her pigtails a splendor.  She has something filthy and leggy in her mouth.

 “Go for your dreams,” her mother tells her on the phone.  “I’m proud of you.”

“Thanks, Mom.”

She’s writing a story about loss.  All of her stories are about loss, even though she thinks of herself as an optimistic person.  For the most part. 

“I believe in hope,” she whispers while she writes.  “I do, I do, I do.”

The phone rings again.  It is her son’s school.  He has Williams Syndrome and his heart threatens to stop and he had started the descent into kidney failure before.

“Something’s wrong,” they tell her.  “I think he needs to go to the hospital.”

She leaves the laptop running, the words aligned to the left and precariously unsaved.  She is calling around desperately to find a car that can take her to pick up her child.  A friend agrees to get her, but only after fifteen minutes of fixing her hair.  The writer has tears down her face by the time she gets to the school.  Her daughter’s pigtails blow in the wind like banners.

Her son had a dirty diaper that soiled his school uniform.  No eyes gouged out, no seizures.  He was screaming, though, and they thought that meant medical attention.  She hands the teacher fresh clothes and sneaks out before he can see her.

She’s back at the laptop.  How to convey this thought, this feeling?  How exactly would she feel if her husband had been long dead?

She calls him at work.  “I miss you.  How are things?”

He has dimples and she can hear them through the phone.  “Good.  How’s the story coming?”

She hangs up.  Switches stories.  She’s writing about her son’s condition.

It hurts.  The bus comes. She tucks her fussy daughter under one arm, helps her son off the bus with the other.  She chases him down the street as he makes his routine break for the mailbox.  As always, she emerges victorious.

Time for snacks.  Chicken nuggets shaped like dinosaurs.  Milk in sippy cups.  Her son pushes his sister into the fireplace made of rock and she splits her lip.  The writer spends half an hour trying to get blood out of the tiny white shirt.  It is new.  It was for pictures.

“It’s strange getting older,” her brother says on the phone.  She knows he’s still in bed, if that is what you call it.  He sleeps on top of the covers.

“Just wait until your friends start calling you to tell you that their children died,” she answers.  He is silent.

The laptop is unplugged.  She didn’t see who did it.  She plugs it in, reboots and finds out that she has lost several paragraphs.

Her husband comes home.  There’s no dinner, but he wasn’t expecting any. They make it together.  Bath time.  Story time.  Bed time.  For them, but not for her.

She stares at the screen, spreads her fingers over the keys like she’s playing the piano.  Types tentatively.  Types with more force.  Types like it is the very thing that will save her.

1) Post ten of any pictures currently on your hard drive that you think are self-expressive.
2) NO CAPTIONS!!! It must be like we’re speaking with images and we have to interpret your visual language just like we have to interpret your words.
3) They must ALREADY be on your hard drive – no googling or flickr! They have to have been saved to your folders sometime in the past. They must be something you’ve saved there because it resonated with you for some reason.
4) You do NOT have to answer any questions about any of your pictures if you don’t want to. You can make them as mysterious as you like. Or you can explain them away as much as you like.

 

Day One.

stark tree

Shock Totem Cover
Two of them, and they’re both positive reviews.  Hooray! 

The first is by Cate Gardner.   You can read her review here.

The second is by Steven Pirie. His review is located here.

Thanks for taking the time to review Shock Totem, you guys! That was very, very cool. :)

I have a dilemma:  I’m genreless.  I have no genre.  I’m currently running with the horror crowd, yes, but do my stories elicit dread?  (I mean, intentional dread, not “Oh my gosh, this writing is awful!” dread.)  I watch lame PG-13 movies with my hands over my eyes, so does this strip me of my credibility?  My main characters have wings/pointy teeth/unexplained powers, so does this cross me over into fantasy?  Adventure fantasy with inexplicable character names make my eyes roll back in my head, so am I therefore banned from fantasy?  My desert rises up and attacks with rancor, so is this magical realism?

I dunno.

I never really cared about genre before.  I write what I like, and if it sprinkles itself across the genresphere (the best way I’ve ever heard it described) then groovy.  But now we’re supposed to go out and market ourselves.  We’re supposed to be able to explain what we write in a few sentences, because the world runs on efficiency and know how.  So, uh…I’ll stick with whimsical horror until I find a better label, although I hate labels as general rule.

I find that a lot of us are pushing at our genre boundaries right now.  Horror writers branching into literary fiction, or the sci-fi writer coming into romance.  I can’t see how this is possibly a bad thing.  Isn’t writing all about stretching yourself and finding out who you really are…at the moment?  If writing is how we explore our current obsessions,why is it so hard to accept that they change?

So I had this dream.  It was a couple of years ago, and it was horrifyingly vivid.  It had to do with a couple of policemen who walked into a gas station, and the situation that ensued.  I have a dream journal where I record my more powerful dreams because it seems to exorcise them, but that wasn’t enough for this one.  I had to turn it into a story.

It was a story that I hated.  Dark and gritty with sex, bullets, and brain matter.  There wasn’t anything redeeming about it, at least not to me.  I originally submitted it to a magazine, but later pulled it because it wasn’t something that I wanted my name to be associated with.  It was too ugly, and I hated that it came out of my head.  I thought that I was ready to let it go.

Apparently I’m not.  I found myself opening the file and carving out the worst of the material.  I started adding scenes.  Suddenly it has become a ghost story, and I think it’s a story of redemption.  We’ll see where it takes me.

This isn’t a post about censorship.  I’m not altering this story (it’s called “Bells”) because I don’t want to offend others.  If you want something in the story, it should stay in the story, end of discussion.  But if it needs to go, be brave enough to cut it, even if it’s difficult.

Speaking of doing things that are difficult, I have an almost crushing workload that I need to devote myself to this week.  I’ve been putting it off because it has been so daunting.  I doubt that I’ll have much time for writing or anything else for a little bit.  I wish you well.  :)

My family has gone and I am here alone.  Even the cicadas have chosen to be silent.  I can hear the sporadic tap-tapping of my keyboard and the sound of my own breathing.  When is the last time that I listened to my breath?  I’ll tell you: it was forever ago, when I wrote “Life”.  Everybody was in bed and the house was quiet then, as well.

My family means the world to me.  They’re vibrant.  My husband will have the radio, TV, and computer on at the same time because he’s used to noise and it makes him comfortable.  My son is the same way.  He doesn’t speak but he laughs.  My daughter wants to be pressed warmly into my side at all times.  She babbles and demands and sings.  It’s sweet.  These are the sounds of happiness.

But my happiness was always found in my own space.  My brain harbors not only my thoughts, but the thoughts of countless characters, so any outside noise only adds to the cacophony.  I need a chance to be whole.  Do you know what I plan to do tonight?  I plan to curl up in bed and watch a movie.  The end.

My issue of Shock Totem just arrived, and it is absolutely stunning.  Mine has a special addition of confused,  foul-mouthed crows on the inside front cover (Thanks, Ken!), and everything is shiny and glossy.  I put it out of the children’s reach, and I can’t wait to pour through and read the stories.  That will be my reward for surviving the day.  It really looks beautiful.

My insomnia has kicked up again, and I’m not content simply to wander the house at night, but I’m also wandering outside.  I spent some time on the swings in the backyard last night, and I thought about how often I used to do that when I was a little girl.  I suppose some things never change.

There’s a slim chance that I’ll be spending tomorrow and part of Saturday alone.  My husband has a huge family reunion going on, and while I adore his family, I’m easily overwhelmed by the sheer number of them.  There’s a possibility that he’ll take the kids and leave me to write and rest, which would be the best thing that could possibly happen.  Silence?  Renewing solitude? It sounds mouthwateringly lovely.  I’d watch Pan’s Labyrinth, which I’ve been meaning to get to.  I’d work on a story about…let’s see…loss and stardust, a woman with a torn dress and a man without a head.

Or perhaps I’ll go and see everybody, which could be fun in its own way.

Seriously, how could he not?  I don’t think that I’ve written a single creative work this week.  Some blog posts, a few emails.  I paid bills and entertained old friends and my father came to visit.  But My Demonic Demon Novel: A Novel About Those Darn Demonic Demons! (or, you know, whatever I’ll call it) is lying dead in the water.  Oh, I submitted some Tweet stories.  Those were fun.

My submissions count is 22.  22, I kid you not!  I’m struggling.  I want to write things of quality and *gasp* length.  I’m dissatisfied with my casualness toward some of my pieces.  But when I say, “Write better, fool!” my brain rebels and flips me off.  It has been sent to the corner to think about what it has done.

I watched The Secret of Nimh  with my children today.  I remember when I discovered that it wasn’t only a cartoon, but it was a book first!  There was so much magic in that moment.  I had to special order it from the library, and I tore into it like a starving woman.  I looked up The Secret of Nimh today and found out that the Mrs. Brisby (“Frisby” in the book) was Elizabeth Hartman’s last role before she (allegedly) flung herself from a fifth story window.  This saddens me very much.  I’m gong to rent A Patch of Blue and remember her.

something beautiful

I told you that I was struggling about how best to deal with Things of a Delicate Nature. While I was fighting this personal battle, I read this post by Aaron Polson and I thought, “Amen, brother!” Apparently I’m not the only one feeling the heat. It seems that ugliness is being spread far and wide.

I don’t know Aaron’s situation, and he was graceful enough not to say. My situation seems rather similar, and I, too, feel the desire to purge it without revealing the details or being inflammatory.  I just want to say that the sandbox is big enough for all of us, Unkind One. The success of others doesn’t diminish your hard earned success. 

 But this negative experience has been eclipsed by the behavior of the other writers and publishers that I’ve run across.  I’ve been extremely fortunate to fall in with a supportive crowd.  From great publishers (you rock, Shock Totem guys!) to friendly writers (Kurt Newton has answered every writer’s question that I’ve asked. Jay MacLarty and Carrie Harris helped me over the hurdle of my first query letter), to people who push me with challenges (Mason Ian, Matt Betts) and the blogging crowd, (Natalie L. Sin, Jameson T. Caine, Jeremy D. Brooks, Catherine Gardner and anybody else whose comments you see on this blog) I’ve been lucky.  See that?  All of these great names and links?   It’s just as I had always hoped: the lovely chases away the ugly.  And now, Unkind One, I’ve pondered it.  I’ve covered your meanness with something beautiful, and I shall never think of you again. 

Have a great night, everybody.  I know that I’ll sleep well.

Wildflowers

I went with a group of 15 to “The Secret Garden” at the Utah Shakespearean Festival on Friday.  It was wonderful, and I felt homesick for the stage.  I flirted with theatre in high school and college, enough to grow addicted to the pre-show jitters and the scent of Febreze.  Then we stayed in the family cabin, and it was fun.  Breakfast was leisurely.  We pet dogs and played on bunk beds and fought for the bathroom mirror.  Then we hiked Cedar Breaks and ended up surrounded by wildflowers.  It smelled like clean grass and rain.  It smelled like home.

I received an acceptance to Nanoism today, and a suggestion to tweak another piece and resubmit it.  I liked the suggested edits very much, to be honest.  They made me laugh.  I also forgot to send out a contract to another magazine because my father blew into town and I was excited.  But as a whole, I’m dissatisfied with my work.  I think that I could do better.

Something a bit disappointing came about, and I’m still processing it.  I can’t decide whether I want to address it or not.  I don’t leap into battles, but I also don’t stand by while people are bullies.  This is something that has been bothering me for quite some time, but it is a Thing of a Delicate Nature, and Things of a Delicate Nature require careful thought.  I try to live a life of kindness and respect.  It would be quite lovely if others would do the same.

Also, they posted an excerpt of my story “Peanut Butter Toast” from A Cup of Comfort for Parents of Children with Special Needs on Amazon.  Just search Mercedes M. Yardley and it’ll come up.  You can take a quick peek into my life, if you’d like.  :)