- Effortless. (Calvin and Hobbes) http://t.co/faQpmT6h #
- Two existing books the thing I'm writing reminds me of: The Wee Free Men; The Road. #
- One of my buddies said last week, "the Occupy Movement won't affect serious change until someone on one side or the… http://t.co/ccFWzfrm #
- XKCD does it again. (Money) http://t.co/EzDYIypu #
- Streets ahead. (“Six seasons and a movie”) http://t.co/t4Cv7dTD #
- Best video I've seen on the Occupy movement – http://t.co/xxUyZkZh #
- This has been a surprise: my eighth-or-so-NaNoWriMo, and easily the most difficult. And that's counting the one… http://t.co/J8qL1XVZ #
- Relevant: Why Humans Procrastinate – http://t.co/f46rPSx1 #
Tweets for the week of 2011-11-20
- Playing D&D With Porn Stars: 100 Random Weird Historical Events http://t.co/dL6X6pb7 #
- The stuff going on at (or to) Occupy protests in the U.S. should, regardless of your politics, terrify the average… http://t.co/aDnuPHXY #
- Article: "In essence, you need to be a tall, dark, handsome, Vitruvian Man from a good school who still has wound up… http://t.co/Ir3fT9sp #
- My noble hound. http://t.co/RMw9qsd0 #
- A good story is about True things, even if it's not about Real things. #
- Earned my 'daughter cut her own hair with safety scissors' badge today. Could have done without. #
- Portal 2 vs Alphonse Mucha http://t.co/VtcikFmH #
- Okay, #nanowrimo present for you. WD-40 for your brain. Apply to any scene that refuses to move. http://t.co/fZ4n1MyX #
- .me is a perfectly serviceable top-level domain… Hmm. http://t.co/nZhToDYL #
- "We're really good at this–at having conversations that end–possibly because of the excruciating amount of time we… http://t.co/Qbu8cmCl #
- If you're reading this, your affected by this. http://t.co/2FXR6XMC #
- American Censorship Day – Stand up for ???? ??????? — http://t.co/Bka71Wtc #
- More on SOPA, in easy to understand video form: http://t.co/HMGMXacd #
- Just looking at this picture drive my pulse up. Nope. Nope nope nope. http://t.co/GzN4jYt2 #
- Maybe we should go back to the good old days when ketchup counted as a vegetable, too. http://t.co/6joz34f9 #
- For #community For #horsebot3000 http://t.co/QNaT7UYa #
Tweets for the week of 2011-11-13
- Steven Colbert nuclear explosion http://t.co/WG3fbAlW #
- We are the #NaNoWriMo http://t.co/gsWNgFf9 #
- Free nerdy crochet patterns: Nerdigurumi! – Boing Boing http://t.co/DRatIOtZ http://t.co/zXHjiltB #
- Random Average: Life in a Wormhole: War Dec…oration #eveonline http://t.co/STj39OlW #
- Doing Write: Drifting to success http://t.co/1ICRMGrs #nanowrimo #
- Random Average: Life in a Wormhole: Run for the Rorq #eveonline http://t.co/BCrbC4JB #
- You want some feedback, GMail? How's this: I don't want to see the "Send Feedback" popup every sodding time the page loads. #
- Little known fact about the Publishing World: Agents talk to their Query Letter inbox. At least, @daphneun does. #adorable #worrisome #
- Daniel Solis: Wordcount Jumble http://t.co/25RxFa16 #
- xkcd: Occulting Telescope http://t.co/w1ykDwUC #
- Renewable Energy: http://t.co/MN0gwYaW #
- Eagles Are Turning People Into Horses: The Movie http://t.co/pnx8J1wN #
- At 0:50, I got goosebumps from scalp to ankles. No joke. http://t.co/YnqwByNc http://t.co/paMBbwdJ #
- "That terrible mood of depression of whether it's any good or not is what is known as The Artist's Reward." – Hemmingway #
- I was reminded today, while discussing the prose styles of the minotaur, that I really ought to read more Hemmingway. #
- When someone says 'Kids won't understand' what they mean, what they're trying to say is '*I* don't understand.' – http://t.co/C0ql6j4C #
- For Veteran's Day: Over The Top – Blackadder Goes Fourth – Final Scene http://t.co/vrBQEUbA – the blackest of black comedy. #fb #
- Anyone ever completely forget to show up for a Jury Duty summons? (Or, you know, put it in your calendar on the wrong frakking day?) #bugger #
- Something I'm personally thankful for: I don't know or care about anything Skyrim related. I'm quite sure my November couldn't take it. #
- Random Average: Life in a Wormhole: A Flurry of Activity #eveonline http://t.co/HtUGRVB3 #
- Presidential Candidates Explained via Dungeons and Dragons Character Sheets – http://t.co/n5p1T7kj #
- Vox Google-y Eye http://t.co/M35oDHvv #
- Bear McCreary plays BSG's "Prelude to War" for Accordion Orchestra http://t.co/Zlt3otKv — the percussion bits are especially brilliant. #
- Rewatched BSG miniseries a few days ago. First thing Baltar says when things start to get bad? "There must be some way out of here." #
- Hey internet, is there a phrase for the reverse of pursed lips? When you tuck your lips in over your teeth and press them together? #
- … and don't pull a @DaphneUn and tell me "there's probably a word for it in German." Yes, they have words for things. Still not helpful. #
- I've settled on 'primmed', as in "she primmed her lips and pressed them together". Thanks, @glossaria! #
Tweets for the week of 2011-11-06
- http://t.co/2PnyE6HU Dogs > Humans. #
- Alternative Literature (http://t.co/Q5DeYQUb) – A fine commentary on today's snake oil bullshit. #
- QotD: All that time DMing paid off in the vast trivia I've accumulated and good public speaking skills born of a cultivated lack of shame. #
- This makes me sad, and a little angry. I forgot how lucky I am that my family was awesome. #fb http://t.co/nnK58CiJ #
- Random Average: Life in a Wormhole: Eager Defenders #eveonline http://t.co/OrFSZVkt #
- DORK TOWER, Monday, October 31, 2011 | Dork Tower (http://t.co/2EadHboq) – The Evolution of Embarrassment. #
- Is that a battleship in your pocket, or are you just happy to see me? http://t.co/ye9s9dWC #
- #nanowrimo inspiration: http://t.co/HiLBnGgn #
- Random Average: Life in a Wormhole: Moa Constrictors #eveonline http://t.co/QXnt40ik #
- D-PAN ASL Music Video "We're Going To Be Friends" by the White Stripes. http://t.co/VbRWeS9J #
- Everytime I look at the new GReader and GMail, I'm more convinced Google's design team was told "We have too many users; fix that." #
- Joss Whedon on why he writes strong female characters http://t.co/Qyf10Osj #
- The most miserable task to undertake as a writer is recreating scenes you really, really nailed the first time. Back up your stuff, people. #
- Writers Are The 99% http://t.co/GYZ4twTp #
- Too sleepy to get any work done in my lovely, comfy, corner-of-my-office chair. Makeshift standing desk + netbook = win. #
- Plus vs Twitter http://t.co/2scvoqc0 #
- What's with not showing me how many characters I have left for my tweet, twitter? #
- Random Average: Life in a Wormhole: Tower Tweaks #eveonline http://t.co/B7hXWPRw #
- this isn't happiness™ (Penny for the Guy?) http://t.co/bXY8o24n http://t.co/dVZkJSUs #
- After six months of using one at my dayjob, I'm finding a standing desk at home to be an excellent tool for writing focus. #
- By "tool for writing focus", I mean to say "thing that keeps me from dozing off in my big comfy chair." #
- One other downside to the standing desk — much less useful after you stub your toe at 3am and damn near loose a toenail. #
“Toss it in the Water”
Things have been a little quiet around here. Let me see if I can explain why:

I don’t want to imply that when you have a small human to take care of, you can’t get anything else done, but I (at least) tend to let non-essential systems atrophy. Navel-gazing (which, I will be honest, is often what this blog is about) drops off tremendously, twitter accumulates a cobweb or two, the elliptical machine gathers some dust, our front yard…
My god, guys; the front yard. Seriously. If it weren’t for the pallet of wine-in-a-box I sent the planning committee last Christa McAuliffe Day, I’m pretty sure I’d be able to paper our family room in letters from the HOA.
None of that implies I’ve had nothing going on. On the contrary, I’ve been a busy little beaver, even on the internet, just not here. Contracted writing gigs. The slow push towards book publication (more on that soon(tm)). Basically, since I don’t find I have the mental bandwidth for rumination and musing aloud, I focus on concrete writing tasks meant to ensure that I’m hitting the keyboard every day. For instance, I’ve been writing articles for a number of gaming sites and, when said sites are inevitably swept under by a wave of spambots and turned into the internet equivalent of a Brood Mother from Dragon Age, I come back to my gaming related blog and write stuff there.
Indirectly, that’s what I wanted to talk about.
Four months ago, as the little man started to release us from the iron grip of Infant Sleep Schedules, I took a look at what I’d been writing since his arrival and found that examples were a little thin on the ground.
“I need to get my fingers back on a keyboard,” I thought to myself. Then I sighed, because the very idea seemed kind of exhausting. What to write?
“Baby steps,” I replied to myself, then giggled madly, because… you know… ‘baby’… and I have a baby… and…
Still needed a lot more sleep at that point, I think.
Anyway, what I decided to do was just write about what I was doing in this MMO I was playing. That’s it. I found the situation I and a couple of my friends had put ourselves in to be kind of compelling and interesting and dammit even if everyone else in the world thought it was boring as hell, I didn’t.
That was the key, really; it interested me, so I wrote about it without needing to be prodded. Hell, it was something I looked forward to every day and as a result, I was putting a thousand or fifteen hundred or two thousand or sometimes three thousands words down, every day.
What I didn’t worry about at any point was is someone going to read this? Hell, I assumed that no one was reading it (except Kate, who always reads everything, because she’s wonderful). It was always kind of a surprise when anyone I knew mentioned it. One friend who didn’t play took the time to tell me that he enjoyed the stories, even if he had no intention of checking out the game. De went so far as to try to figure out why I liked the topic so much that I was writing about it every day, because it was curious.
In any case, that didn’t happen that much, and honestly, I didn’t care. Throughout the whole thing, I’ve been writing for me. Partly to remember; partly to just be writing something; mostly to entertain myself.
And a funny thing started happening.
People started leaving comments. Asking questions. Asking for more. Telling me that I wasn’t allowed to stop, and in fact needed to post more frequently.
That was kind of nice.
Then, a few days ago, I logged into a website that — if you do the sort of things that I do in that game I’ve been writing about — is pretty much the single most important website to have on speed dial.
And at the top of the page, before any of the important stuff that you actually come to the site for, there’s a note that says “Hey, if you’ve got a few minutes, you should really go read the posts being written over at this blog here,” and it was me they were linking to.
Easiest example of what that was like would be if you were really really into knitting, and you blogged about it, and one day you went to Ravelry and found a link to your little blog on the front page.

Now, I’m not telling you any of this to brag (because that would be… incredibly ridiculous) — the point here is that I wrote the thing I wanted to write and (observing the constraints of the topic) wrote it well.
That’s it.
I didn’t network. I didn’t “promote my brand.” I didn’t “find my audience”; I did a thing I enjoyed, and an audience found me.
Are We Even in the Zipcode of your Point?
NaNoWriMo is here once again, and a lot of writers are revving up their engines for another fifty thousand word sprint. I’m watching it all happen with what is, for me, an uncharacteristic silence, because it’s an interesting thing to observe. A lot of excitement. A lot of nervous energy.
A lot of people wondering if what they’ll write is going to be marketable.
What? Really?

Chuck Wendig will be the first to tell you that writer’s write, and that is absolutely true, but I want to point out what they don’t do, so they have time to write.
They don’t seek their audience. They don’t fuck around with SEO. They don’t network.
Alright: yes they do, but not while they are writing.
I don’t want to make it sound like professional writers can ignore that kind of stuff but, in my opinion, thinking about any of that (or, god forbid, if what you’re working on it “saleable”) while you are supposed to be writing is the worst. possible. thing.
When I was a kid, I used to go fishing with my dad and granddad. (I was generally terrible at it, because I over-thought it, but if I remembered to bring a book along to read I usually ended up catching the biggest fish, because I left the line alone.) One of the things that always used to confound me about river fishing in a boat was the tie-line. It didn’t matter how I pulled that line into the boat in the morning, or how I coiled it up, or how well I’d avoid disturbing that coil during the day — when we got back to the dock in the afternoon, that fucking rope would be tangled up.
I would pull at it, and frown at it, and start to work through the knots and twists, but whenever it seemed like I was making any headway, I’d look at the parts of the pile I wasn’t working on and realize that the whole situation had only gotten worse.
The closer we got to the dock, the faster I’d work (because tying up was the one cool boat-thing I got to do), and the worse it would get.
Then we’d pull up about ten feet off the dock, and my dad would look down at this colossal fuck-up I’d managed to assemble in less than ten minutes.
“Just throw it all in the water,” he said.
“But –”
“Throw it in and let it float there for a minute,” he’d continue. “It’ll sort itself out.”
So I did.
And it did.
Every time.
That’s what I’ve found in writing. Do the thing you want to do. Do it as well as you can. But don’t get ahead of what you’re doing and start thinking about what this thing will do.
It has to be before it can do anything.
Throw it out in the water. It’ll sort itself out.

