why we write.

September 12th, 2011 § 3 Comments

the nicest thing ever was written to me.

so last night, i wrote that blog about the future [i do those a lot] and i was pretty pleased with it. it wasn’t the normal complain-fest that normally consumes my public writings. i thought it was well done and for once i was proud of a blog i wrote. after i wrote it, i went out around campus with some friends and just made new friends and did what i always do the first few weeks of the semester.

overall, the night was wonderful and i had a lot of fun. yesterday was just a good day altogether [other than my xbox breaking but that was easily fixed].

i took this picture a few years ago. the oceanfront is sort of magical at night.

but then i got back to my room.

usually when i’m in my room alone, horrible things happen to my brain but not last night.

so here is what happened.

i was sitting in my bed watching tv and eating some late night taco bell [ a number 6 - steak baha chalupas and a soft taco] when i got a facebook message. usually i get really nervous when i get facebook messages [no idea why] so i opened it not knowing what to expect. it was from a guy that shopped at my gamestop with his friends. we’d talked a lot about world of warcraft back when i played it and him and his friends are the three nicest dudes ever and i wish nothing but the best for all three of them.

but anyway.

he sent me a message and basically the gist of it was that my writing helped him. it was comforting for him to know that he wasn’t alone in all the stuff he was dealing with and it was nice to know there was someone out there who was kind of going through the same stuff as he was.

going to be completely honest…

his message made me cry. let me clarify: i was almost to the point of weeping.  i do this writing for me to help myself cope with myself, but knowing that my awkward ramblings about life helped somebody out seriously makes all the stuff i go through entirely worth it. like, i’m entirely aware that i don’t have a hard life and that i’m an incredibly privileged individual, but we all still have our own problems.

i guess what i’m saying is this: we all touch people’s lives whether we realize it or they tell us or not. there is always someone watching you, paying attention to you, maybe even learning from you. that message made me feel like this blog is worth me keeping up with.

so thank you for reading. knowing that people read this, even if it is just a handful of friends and random people i trick with my “tags”, makes it worth it.

sleep well, folks.

-the lumberjack.

my novel.

March 1st, 2011 § 2 Comments

going out on a limb.

so i’m incredibly nervous about what i am about to post. it is from the novel i’ve been writing for the past two years. now, i haven’t written anything new or substantial in over six months, but i figured i might get a gauge of how people feel about it. this is something i need feedback on, so please do so.

a warning: some of this is nsfw [not safe for work] but it is just some language. just figured i would give some heads up.

Prologue

Saturday, December 31

It’s 4:37pm and the December sun is finally setting for the last time this year. My apartment is empty and I am alone. I open a bottle of scotch, pour it in to a glass and watch the snow fall from my apartment balcony. The air is freezing, but it’s a dry cold. The kind of cold that chills you to your very core and leaves you immobilized for a few seconds before you can catch your breath again. Luckily, I have scotch so I stay comfortably toasty.

As I watch the plethora of happy couples strolling down the sidewalk to their parties and dinners and fun, I realize that I am now 25 and I am still single, with no potential relationships in my immediate future. Another unproductive year has ended. The sun has set. The ball has dropped. I will spend the night alone; drinking.

Happy Birthday to me…

Part One: The Awkward Buildup to An Elegant Catastrophe

Sunday, January 1

Everything is too loud, too bright, and too fast this morning. The disorder of the day is a hangover. This is not the way to start off the New Year. I shouldn’t have gone to that party with Hank last night. I’m not entirely sure who is lying in bed next to me but I’m praying that it’s a female.

Resolution number one: Quit drinking.

My blinking alarm clock says that the time is now 3:47, and I assume this is in the afternoon. It only feels like its 7am…I’m just going to sleep this one off. I’ve got a big meeting tonight at the office. The worst part about the journalism profession is that weekends don’t have any meaning anymore. It’s almost like when you’re in high school and all you can do is countdown the days until summer begins and you can go to the beach and drive around and party for two and a half months without a care in the world. Then, suddenly, you get to college and summers mean working to save money for textbooks or payments on an apartment. I really need to get a promotion because being a staff writer is killing me slowly.

Resolution number two: Get promoted to editor.

I set my alarm for 6pm, roll over and go back to dreaming about what my life would be like if it weren’t the one I was living.

Resolution number three: Fix my life.

Monday, January 9

“I remember the last time I was truly happy being years ago…and not just one or two years ago, like three or four, possibly five…” I begin to drift off in to space. Today’s disorder is depression, and a lifetime supply of it. My thoughts were beginning to detach from one another and float about in my head. I could feel myself rapidly losing interest in the conversation that I myself was commanding. I look to the clock for a timely rescue but it boldly and defiantly replies with “3:12”.

I still have 48 minutes to go…fuck.

“Well Chuck, how does that make you feel?” my therapist asks. She was fresh out of medical school, but obviously had a knack for what she did since she already had a job. She’s fairly attractive, a brunette with chestnut highlights that complimented her fading tan skin, and an average build with a low cut sweater that hugged her body in just the right places. Her khakis appeared to be about a size too big for her legs, but they still fit her hips just right. She was captivating, to say the least.

She’s staring at me, attempting to figure out what makes me tick, what makes my mind act the way that it does, but most of all, she is trying to figure out what I really think of her.

“Well Stacey, can I call you Stacey? I would call you Doc but that reminds me of Bugs Bunny and I sort of hate Bugs Bunny.” I chuckled at my own sad attempt at a joke…no wonder women never stay with me long enough to get attached.

She giggles nervously. “Stacey is just fine. I kind of hate Bugs Bunny too; he tries way too hard for approval. I’m an Elmer Fudd kind of girl.” She replies, with the same nervous giggle.

Are we high-schoolers?

I like how she is opening up to me, even if it is stuff that is this nonessential. It’s weird though…which one of us is in therapy again? I look to the clock again for some solace, an end to this awkward procession…”3:14”.

God…time is such an asshole.

“See, no one ever admits they like Elmer Fudd because they’re afraid if people find out they sympathize with a mentally retarded hunter who is often attracted to cross-dressers, people will automatically assume they’re a Republican. Wait, you’re not a Republican are you?” I joke with her. I think this one was a better attempt. Maybe I just need to get warmed up. She gives a real laugh this time. Is she legally allowed to date me? Is she even allowed to morally flirt with me? I mean…she could call it…research? A case study?

Another hypothetical uncertainty.

“No! I am not a Republican! I voted Democrat in 2004, for better or worse, I’m liberal all the way. I can’t believe that after all that he lost in Ohio. OHIO! The only state he needed to win the pres…ahem. No, Chuck, wait, can I call you Chuck? Would you prefer me call you something more formal? Some of my patients don’t like me using their first name, so if you prefer something else…” she says with a nervous smile.

It’s cute how nervous I make her.

“I would be completely offended if you called me anything else, Stacey. I want us to be on a first name basis.” I say as I give the least forced smile I have given in the past four years…which was new to me. I look at the clock for the last time for the afternoon. It read “3:21”

…I want time to stop.

We sat in silence for what felt like a century before she cleared her throat and continued with the session. We touched on everything from childhood trauma: I was nearly kidnapped in the fourth grade by a neighbor before kicking him in the shin and running to my house to tell my parents, who thought I was going insane. To when I lost my virginity: tenth grade at a party to a slutty cheerleader named Shelby. We were both completely trashed [she’d had two wine coolers and I’d had four beers…I miss high school parties…] and I’d always thought she was cute. We’d started talking, which is something that had never happened before, and I went to get her another drink, when I came back, she grabbed me by the hand and led me upstairs, which pretty much meant I was getting some. We finished our drinks; her a strawberry-kiwi wine cooler and me a bottle of Bud Light, and then we started making out…and after that it was pretty stereotypical high school party-sex: drunk with a chaser of regret.

We spent a lot of time on my family and how they’re marriage was. It was pretty basic therapy stuff, from what I know about therapy from movies and TV shows I’d seen. All I know is that I would never do this for a living; I can barely take my own bullshit much less listen to someone else’s.

“Well Chuck, I’m sorry to say that our time is up for this week,” she said with a look of sincere disappointment on her face. It would only be seven days before we were scheduled to meet again. I looked deeply in to her eyes trying to find some sort of spark, some type of guidance, but sadly, all I could see in her eyes is a sign that looked like “Wait”, so I listened. I shook her hand, thanked her for the help this week, and walked out the door.

If my life had a theme it would be: Missed Opportunities.

I exit the interrogation room and get in to the driver’s seat of my birth control device of an automobile, a turquoise 1993 Hyundai Excel. Don’t get me wrong, the car has hauled my ass from Point A to Point B for years while getting 41 miles to the gallon, but I looked stupid while doing it.

The license plate should be BTHCTRL.

An ex girlfriend [if you want to call her that] thought that keying the word “prick” in to the driver’s side door would be an appropriate way to let me know she was displeased that I had broken up with her, ending our eight month relationship. She then thought that it would be acceptable to spray paint over the word in white, in case I hadn’t quite gotten the message. And then, not even a week after that happened, some idiot T-Boned me at an intersection with his truck, which might as well have been a tank, damaging the passenger side to the tune of $1500, which is more than the entire car is worth.

As I drive home to my apartment, I think about the new woman in my life and I wonder how long it will take me to scare her off. I’ll give her a month, but only because she sees me only once a week for an hour at a time. Maybe I’ll just give up on women and become celibate…

I’ve heard the clergy is nice…

I arrive at my apartment and sit in the parking lot for fifteen minutes. I don’t want to brave the frigid January temperatures quite yet so I listen to the radio until the commercial break. The radio show is just mindless political banter between the radio host and an ignorant caller. The caller thinks that the government was foolish for stepping in to assist in the genocide in Darfur. I believe that the caller is the only person outside of those committing the genocide that thinks this. It’s crazy what people will do for ten minutes of airtime.

I stare out of my windshield and consider buying a car with a working heater. It’s bad that it might be colder inside my car than the frigid -8 degree weather outside. I can see the cold outside. It’s almost like those scorching summer days when you can watch the heat sizzle off of the pavement and you just know that the road has to be at least 200 degrees hotter than Hell. It’s kind of like that, except its cold instead of hot, and it sucks worse.

I finally make up my mind to get out of my car and go grab some lunch [the radio show took a major downward spiral after the conspiracy theorist caller. It mostly just turned in to a “bash the government/defend the government” argument, which was stupid].

The 100-yard walk to my apartment door takes what feels like an Ice Age [but is actually a little more than sixty seconds]. I kick open my door, SWAT Team style, take off my coat and throw it over the top of the fading red sofa in the center of the living room. My coat lands right on my roommate Hank’s face.

“M-M-M-M-Monster Kill!”

“Dude, do you always have to kick the door open? This isn’t a movie or Resident Evil or anything; this is real fucking life, just open the goddamn door, like a normal human being.”

“Dude, Hank, whatever man. I kick the door in everyday because it’s cool. You’re just jealous because when you do it, you look like a tard. I however, look like a total badass.”

Hank has been my roommate since we were at Tennessee University. I was from a beach resort town in Virginia and he was from some place I’d never heard of in Wisconsin on a football scholarship, so naturally, we hit it off. Since we graduated last year we decided to move to the same city and start our careers there, until we could find ourselves a girl to settle down with. Usually we are in sync with each other pretty well, but today Hank is being an ass clown…I really am a total badass.

I make a ham and cheese sandwich for lunch, sans crust, because I still eat like an eight-year old.

that is all for now.

that is all i’m putting up right now. that is just a bit through the first chapter or so.

-the lumberjack

thinking ahead.

February 25th, 2011 § 3 Comments

sorry in advance.

i’m sure you’re all getting annoyed with how personal the site has become lately, and for that i apologize. not sure which direction i’d like to take it as far as concepts and topics go. i’d really like more writers.

anyway, i’ve been thinking a lot about what i want to do after i graduate. there aren’t a lot of jobs out there and even less for people who decided to major in political science and journalism [granted, it almost seems like i want to work for like the washington post or npr or something] but i remain hopeful that there is something out there for me once i leave the halls of wesleyan.

here is what i’m thinking…

a quick note: these are both for the long term and the short term.

teaching – it’s true, i hate kids. i hate kids that are younger than me and i hate kids my age. but i love english and i think i’d make a really interesting english teacher. if there is only one thing i’ve learned while at wesleyan, it is that there are an overwhelming [and depressing] number of 18-21 year olds that have no idea how to use the english language to convey thoughts. i mean, all of them can write sentences, but those sentences are terrible. i also think i might swear more than is allowed in public middle/high schools so i might need to teach at the college level.

i also thought about teaching journalism or government to high school kids. might as well contribute to the things i studied.

gamestop – this is a “if nothing else in my life works out and i have no other option” option. i mean, i do enjoy working at gamestop [for the most part] but i don’t want to be that guy who is in his thirties and is only an assistant manager or manager of a gamestop. now, if i working the corporate side and doing something like that, i’d hate myself a little less.

your reward for getting halfway through - a kitten.

journalist – this is something i’d really like to do. i kinda want to work for a newspaper but i really want to work for a magazine. i think working for like a music magazine [like alternative press] or a video game magazine [like gameinformer] would be totally legit. those are two things i’m really passionate about and know a lot about so making a career out of writing about them would be a really great way to spend my life.

author – this is the be-all-end-all career choice for me. to get paid to write novels would make me the happiest boy in the world. however, to do so, you need to be good at writing [i'm decent] and have an iron will in the face of publishers who will daily tell you that your book sucks. my will is that of wet cardboard when it comes to rejection. i also get frequent bouts of writers block…which sometimes last for months [like 12 of them in a row].

those are all the things i want to do. thats it. nothing else sounds interesting or fun and i didn’t just go to college for four years and pay almost $80,000 to do something boring and stupid.

that’s it for today.

- the lumberjack.

panic attack.

February 17th, 2011 § Leave a Comment

i’m fine.

i finished my intro to my 15 page research paper…and then i had my first panic attack of the semester. i’m hoping it was just a one time thing since last semester i had them two or three times a week. i handle stress pretty well, but i do not handle chronic soul crippling panic attacks very well.

why so stressed, lumberjack?

well, since you asked, i’ll tell you.

  1. school – i’m actually trying this semester, since i’d love to be in an honor society before i graduate here. my classes are more work than i anticipated but they are manageable on their own. i’m having a severe case of writer’s block on the first paper i have to write for my english class, which is not how i wanted to start the semester.
  2. work - i’m working a lot more than i’d like to be. don’t get me wrong, bi-weekly $400+ paychecks are phenomenal, but it is just starting to feel like too much when coupled with the classes. once again, nothing i can’t handle on it’s own.
  3. the future - i’m about to be a senior and have absolutely no idea what i’m going to do after school. i’ve contacted gameinformer magazine [because i'm a big lame nerd] and didn’t get anything back. i’m going to wait a few months and try again, hopefully with a better resume and what not. i’m not even sure where i can find a job or even what i want to do. i remember being like…16 and not knowing what i wanted to do and people telling me that was okay, but now i’m almost 21 and still have no idea. grad school is starting to look better…atleast i’ll have a few more years to figure out what i want to do.
  4. my novel – my novel has gone nowhere in almost a year so i decided to write a short story. however, that short story sucks. i’m too critical of my writing. writer’s block makes me think i should just be a gamestop employee for the rest of my life. i’m atleast good at that.

that’s it.

if that doesn’t seem like a lot to you, well congrats on being a better person than me. and sorry for the kind of depressing post. i’ll do better next time.

- the lumberjack.

nothing elaborate.

February 16th, 2010 § 2 Comments

First things first.

Happy Mardi Gras, errrbody.

Moving on.

My post today isn’t really anything elaborate. I don’t really have an agenda or anything on my mind that I need to rant about. This is just sort of a “Hey, what’s up” kind of post.

Money in the bank.

Well, I got a job at GameStop as a seasonal hire, which meant I was only useful between the months of November-January. But something magical happened…they let me keep my job after the Holiday season had come to an end. And let’s just say that “Christmas GameStop” is a lot scarier than “Everyday GameStop”. So I work there now and love every second of it [especially when I get awesome free stuff because of it].

This is why my job is better than yours.

And I have a job at Wesleyan doing paperwork for the Political Science department. Not a bad job, I like the professors that I do work for.

This is a house of learn-ed doctors.

A few weeks ago I started my fourth semester at Virginia Wesleyan because the aspiration to transfer schools fizzled because it didn’t seem worth it anymore. I found friends at this school that aren’t backstabbing wastes of time, I found myself a lady, and I found myself an adviser for my major that actually seems to care about me as a person and as a student.

Sure, some things about the school still totally suck [most of the people, the lack of fun things to do on the weekend, most of the people] but some things have actually improved a lot since last year [my GPA, my friends, the food in the cafeteria].

This might sound incredibly stupid to a lot of people, but I’m actually glad I went to Wesleyan because it rooted out a lot of cancers from my life that were holding me back from being successful.

I am a writer, a writer of fiction.

As a lot of you may know, I have been slowly but surely writing a novel for the past 10 or 11 months. This isn’t my first attempt at writing a novel, but it is the first one that I’ve stuck with for longer than a few months [except for the one I was writing in high school that I lost when I lost the notebook it was in]. My goal has to been write about a hundred words a day or atleast 500 words a week. My main goal, however, is to finish this piece of fiction before Christmas 2010…which gives me 311 days to finish it.

I don’t know why I chose Christmas as my deadline for myself, it just felt like a good day to choose. What I might do, is make my deadline March 3, 2011, since that will mean I wrote the novel for two years…I don’t know though.

My Deadline – December 25, 2010.
Real Deadline – March 3, 2011.

I’m not releasing any details about it yet, but if you’re interested in it…ask me questions about it and maybe I’ll let you read Chapter One.

That is about it.

Well…that is all I really have to talk about. Tomorrow is “wtf wednesday” and I think Thursday there will be a review of Dante’s Inferno since I picked up a copy from work and have been playing it as much as I can [it is epic].

Thanks for the support, everyone.

Cody.


The Skyline is Burning Red

November 5th, 2008 § Leave a Comment

So, I’m petrified that I’m not going to finish a novel, EVER. I can read a novel. I can analyze a novel. I certainly have the potential to write a novel, but it feels like I’m never going to commit to writing one from cover to cover.

I can’t really commit to anything…which might be an awful character flaw. [Possibly one for a character in a novel...]

I’m pretty excited about my current project. It has a good title. It has decent dialogue. And…I hope to make it compelling. I’m just all around proud of it’s first five pages.

Anyway, that’s all for now. I’m back to writing. And feeling under the weather. =[

Cody

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