Saturday, March 5, 2011

Flurried

It's flurrying outside. It was raining yesterday. Alright, then. I'm sure we're going to get another proper snow. It just seems likely to me.

Found $.50 on a quick jaunt to the grocery store for some things for the boys I forgot to get the other day. I'm rich! Woo hoo!

Okay, so this weekend, I'll buckle down and get the taxes done. I will. I just put it off this week because it sucks to do it. But I'll be a trooper and get it done.

33,000 words (so far. More to come)

Friday, March 4, 2011

No, I don't

I don't have insomnia tonight; rather, I dozed off earlier this evening, watching a movie, and that temporarily woke me up a bit.

It still sounds like it's raining. It's one of those desultory rains that really would rather be snow, but the temperature is not quite accommodating, so it's just raining on and on and on. That bugs me a little bit; I love storms, but ongoing rainfalls are boring. Hits me kind of the same way that endlessly howling wins irk me.

But it's a good thing; all of that rain'll rinse off the sidewalks and get the city looking pretty again, get us out from under the winter blech. I'm still amazed that spring is so close at hand.

31,000 words.

Dangerously Cute

This clip cracked me up. I love baby giggles.

30,000 words.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Marching On

March always feels like such a long month, although I'm not complaining, after the eyeblink that was February. Historically, Chicago doesn't have much of a spring or fall -- just a long winter and a short summer, but as climate change continues, spring is a bit more apparent than it used to be. All the same, one can't rule out the crazy snowstorm in May, even if it's less common than it used to be. Usually, Chicago warms up in April, then gets cold again in May. I remember a number of years ago, a weeklong stretch in April when it reach 80 degrees, before the obligatory May chill kicked back in.

I saw something on the news the other day that Cincinnati had lost one-quarter of its manufacturing jobs in the past decade. That's pretty striking, although Ohio as a whole has been hemorrhaging jobs for the past 20 years. What never gets really discussed is that the state's fortunes declined precisely at the time that the Republicans assumed dominance of the statewide politics. Coingate was surely just representative of a larger trend, but it's odd to me that Republicans claim to offer solutions to Ohio's woes by ultimately doing more of the same, and expecting different results. The recent union-busting law is red meat for red staters, but isn't going to improve Ohio's economic situation; rather, it's just another case of kicking people in the teeth because they're able to. Aside from a policy of zero taxation of the wealthy, no social services or infrastructure spending, and giving corporations absolute free rein in the state, what "plan" does the Right have for Ohio? The race to the bottom is a race nobody wants to win. And even hacking the country's infrastructure to the bone will still not make us competitive with Third World nations. Even the most destitute of Ohio workers is going to look like a Rolls Royce to a Bangladeshi worker, and companies able to play Ohio workers against Third World workers are going to win at the expense of those Ohio workers. It's a losing strategy for the proverbial little guy, which is why Ohio's continued to bleed jobs. It's a problem because that same ideology is in play across the country, and the Democrats remain cowed by it. I'd like Obama to get fired up and push another infrastructure-building plan, something far more aggressive than his last effort, and have the Republicans strenuously argue against it. Far better than sitting on their hands and letting the loonies run the asylum. You know why the Republicans haven't been jumping at the chance to run against Obama? It's because they have no good ideas -- there's only so long you can say "No taxes on the wealthy, no estate taxes, no social services, no health care spending, no cuts in defense spending" before people start saying "Umm, WHAT do you offer me, exactly? How am I better off with you in charge?" Whoever runs against Obama next year is toast. Maybe Obama will (characteristically) just coast, knowing this. But he should be bold, rather than pandering to Republican delusions.

Oh, and this is an amusing corroboration of the above:

Republicans Stampeding Toward the Cliff

28,000 words.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

The Sheening, cont'd

This amused me -- Charlie Sheen quotes as "New Yorker" cartoon captions. How meta!

Sunshine Storytime

25,000 words and counting. I'm slowing down a little as the story gets more involved and complicated, but am keeping to at least 2,000 words a day on it. I'd like to hit the upper end of the word counts, but I have the boys for the next couple of days, and that usually confines my writing time to the morning, before the boys wake up, which'll mean around 2-4,000 words a day for the next couple of days.

I'm noticing the changing light conditions more this year than in previous years. I can see Spring approaching, even though it's still cold and blustery. The character of the light has definitely changed. I don't get affected by light levels like some folks do; I stay my cheery self in fair weather and foul, generally, but I have noticed the light getting stronger, and have enjoyed that.

Still need to do my taxes; I need to get them done and sent out before the government shutdown that's probably inevitably going to occur. Sheesh.

And in other news...
Shopping Cart Handles are Dirtier Than Public Restrooms

Ack!

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

The Sheening

This is pretty amusing...

http://www.slatev.com/video/charlie-sheens-therapy-session/

*snicker*

I haven't watched "Zoolander" in awhile. That movie amuses me...

Monday, February 28, 2011

Yeah...

Now at 20,000 words. Slicing through this one quickly, which was what I intended to do.

It's sunny today, but cold. We had freezing rain last night, which we rarely get here.

This and Hathaway

I actually watched the Oscars somewhat last night. I thought James Franco and Anne Hathaway had zero chemistry onstage, so it made for a pretty contrived and dull ceremony. The effort to try to draw in a younger demographic with the younger actors didn't seem to quite gel, in my view.

18,000 words on the book so far. It's getting fun -- I feel like if Graham Greene had written a science fiction novel, it would be kind of like this effort. Bahah! Yeah, right, but it does have a kind of vibe like that to me.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

"Stellllaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!"

Ch-Ching

Not that I'm one to ever think NEWSWEEK's assessment of anything means a whole lot, but...

http://www.newsweek.com/2011/02/27/chicago-steps-out.html

...as one of Chicago's most prolific literary treasures-in-residence, I can only read the above and take great satisfaction in it.

Fatigue

I'm worn out today. Just tired. I cranked out 3000 more words on the book today, but I'm just tired this morning, for some reason. Probably because I'm thinking about my taxes, and that always wears me out. Hah.