Health, Lancient History, Religion, The Book, Women Worth Knowing

Why I Quit Writing, and Whose Fault it is I Started Again


Clearly, I am really excited about this book and I warn you that I will be more insufferable than usual when it drops. Before it comes out, I suppose I should tell the story behind the acknowledgment, which goes like this

Lane would like to acknowledge her professor of Biblical literature, who said she was the worst writer he had ever read, and suggested she had a future as a fry cook. Ding! Order’s up!

When I started college, I went in as part of an honors program based entirely on my SAT scores and a written exam. For the first three semesters, I worked out chunks of my basics in this accelerated program, taught by a handful of professors. In particular, there was one professor I really respected and liked. We’ll call him Ned because he liked to be called by his first name only. No, his name was nothing like Ned.

So, enjoying Ned’s style of teaching, I took every class I could from him, and we had a little mutual admiration society going. He told me how great I was and I told him how great he was. And this went on for a couple of years. I went a semester without taking any of his classes, then I begged to be allowed into one of his graduate level courses, and was so far over my head I couldn’t even see the surface. I was so far out of my element, I didn’t even know what questions to ask. I dropped that class withering from embarrassment, and took another from him the next semester.

That semester, there was a bit of a misunderstanding during our evening student-teacher conference. That is, I may have misunderstood the candlelight, the interest in my personal life, and the hand on my knee. And having misunderstood that, I may have caused some offense. I don’t know. What I do know is that after this conference, our student-teacher dynamic changed drastically, and I went from being his star pupil, to something quite opposite.

I didn’t take any classes from him for a year, having changed my major, then went back to my original degree plan and got very excited to see that Biblical Literature was an offering for the upcoming semester. And, cool, Ned was teaching it. I signed up.

Right up front, I will tell you that this was very soon after my conversion to Christianity, so I probably was starrier-eyed than average about the topic. My writing on the subject was less “bible as literature” and more “BIBLE AS GOD’S POETRY.” However, it was still good enough writing that I was doing well. This isn’t arrogance. I write good papers. I do. I even use spell check and look at the grammar, unlike when I blog. And, Ned’s commentary was positive–sometimes confused by my exuberance, but positive. Then came the Final.

I had asked Ned about his lesson plan a couple of times. I felt (and feel) that the Bible could not be taught as an anthology. I maintained that you wouldn’t teach chapters of Candide or Moby Dick out of order, and without assigning the the whole book, which was what Ned had done with the Bible. We would read a gospel, then go read a few chapters of Leviticus, then read one of Paul’s letters, then read some particular Psalms, then read a bit out of Genesis. All this without any particular history of where it was written, when, and for what audience–all important things.

So that’s what I wrote my Final on. I gave a couple of paragraphs on the topic, then wrote about that. Arrogant? Highly likely. Off topic? Totally. Did I expect to fail the Final? Yes. Were my other scores high enough that I didn’t care? Also yes. Arrogant? I’ll say it again, highly, highly likely.

I expected to fail because I was off topic and hadn’t answered the Final beyond making a short point. What I did not expect was a D, and a handwritten–very angrily handwritten diatribe that bled over the entire cover page and into the margins of my exam book, telling me what a self-righteous little prick I was (okay, maybe I half expected that), and that I was the worst writer he had ever read. He wrote that I had gone from being a shining light among my peers, to being nothing. Less than nothing. I couldn’t write. I had lost it. I was no good, and was never going to amount to anything. He was disgusted and didn’t know me anymore. If this was what I was going to turn in, I should give up right then.

I almost did.

Did I mention this was my second to last semester? I had two finals to go, and I nearly quit college that night.

Fortunately, I was a zealous little baby Christian, and as crushed as I was, I was also a self-righteous prick, so I convinced myself to keep going. Happy to tell you that I aced my other two exams (both writing, and one of them came back with comments that I was the most original writer to ever sit that particular exam.) I also had the presence of mind to ask two unrelated lit professors to read the exam I had written for Ned (sans Ned’s commentary, of course) and I got back healthy commentary from them. Yes, it was uppity, but it was also good writing, and I had answered the Final question as well as stating my case and making my point with good backup. Both of them said they would have marked it a B.

But…after that semester, I quit writing for several years. I did. I quit writing poetry. I quit writing prose. I could barely manage a thank you note. The comments on that Final came down with a block that ruined me for…let’s see. Four years. I did not write for four years.

I picked up the pen again–rather, I had a PC by then, and I started banging things out on the keyboard again, after getting involved with the community at TTP. Actually, I started again through round-robin style stories with the girls on TTP. Then, Laura Christian (who is a fantastic writer, and should be offered a book deal–publishers? Laura Christian. Look her up.) and I started writing fiction together, and I started crafting again on my own.

I started writing about religion and philosophy, and I was still insufferable (may still be insufferable–don’t tell me if I am, okay? I promise I’ll figure it out.) but I was writing. And I haven’t stopped since.

So, absent the desire to name any other names on this book jacket (I’m saving that for when we publish a particular item), I thought, “What a great time to remind myself and other people that nasty criticism isn’t the end of the world, and that no matter what anyone tells you, you can still chase down a dream. Ding! Order’s up!”

You might read our book and think I am the worst writer you’ve ever read. I don’t know. It ain’t Shakespeare. But whatever you think, do keep this in mind: If you are ever in a position to destroy someone’s confidence and try to trample their dreams from a position of authority, remember that most people would have told you the professor’s name and maybe more interesting gossip. Not everyone is so reticent in their vengeance as I.

All that said, I would like to thank Laura, Irene, Darice, Jez, Suz, Amber, Sunshine, and especially Nicole for helping me get back up on that horse. And I would like to thank Pamela Dean for writing the book that set my imagination on fire, and Martha Brockenbrough for writing the book that made me wonder if I could do it, and C.S. Lewis for everything good that has ever happened in my literary world. Without Lucy Pevensie, none of this would ever have been. Of course my thanks to my family, who share my time with the computer, and to my imaginary celebrity boyfriend, whose drug abuse and subsequent 12 stepping led to the website TTP, which led me to you all. Thank you.

Family, Lancient History

Ki-Rin and Catfish


My father and I were estranged for several years. During that period, around 1999, my mother brought my grandparents from Georgia to Texas to live with her, and I moved back home to help her with them. My uncle, Mom’s younger brother, would come visit a couple of times a year and spent one to two weeks really getting things done around the house. He helped with repairs, or installations, spent time with my grandparents, freeing up my mom from her round the clock duties, and was just a general blessing.

The last physical gift my father gave me before he left home, and before our estrangement, was a little figurine. I got it for Christmas in 1992. That was the last gift he actually went out and bought for me, though he has always put a check in my birthday and Christmas cards. It meant something to me, though, because it was a little touchstone once he was gone. It was a goofy little thing, and I wasn’t sure why he picked it for me, but I did love it.

On one of my uncle’s trips, I asked him for and received some very good advice. It was advice I wished I could have gotten from my father, but that just wasn’t to be. I didn’t know how to thank him, and since I am a crier (and an ugly crier at that), I was afraid to say words and then melt down into howls. So, I wrote him a thank you note, and waited until he was walking out the door for his flight, and I handed him the note and I gave him the figurine. I think. I may have just stuffed it in his bag. I don’t remember that. I know he told me that he didn’t understand, but that it was obviously a treasure to me, so he would treat it that way, but I don’t remember if that was in person or on the phone. It’s kind of funny that I blocked that–I think I was traumatized by my own levels of emotion. I just couldn’t think of any other way to express my appreciation, even though it made no sense. It was just a couple of years ago that I told my aunt what the thing actually was to me.

I’m not really good at face-to-face serious emotion. At least not when I am feeling it deeply. That’s why I write. I can write anything and that’s okay. You can’t see the ugly cry when I just write it down–and I cry because I love people, and I cry because I’m happy, and I cry because I am fortunate, and I cry because Mariah Carey’s boyfriend got gunned down in Glitter before he could see that she had truly made it. I just cry.

I’ve thought about it from time to time (most of the time feeling embarrassed at how silly it must have seemed to have this grown woman passing off a uni-dragon with glass eyes), and I’ve checked the internet to see how the twee little guy is doing in the rest of the world. He’s pretty popular. That makes me happy.

It makes me very happy to know that the little guy is with my uncle, a man who truly deserves to be acknowledged and appreciated, and even if no one else ever really gets it, I know what it means.

Some things going on peripheral to my world have me thinking about what we give freely, and what we expect in return. When we give, it has to be without strings, or it isn’t a gift.

If you go down to the river with some cheese and you throw it into the water for the fish, that’s a gift. Once it hits the water, it’s gone. You won’t see it anymore, and you won’t ever really know what happened to it. You don’t need to know. It was a gift. You’re happy and the fish is happy.

If you go down to the river with some cheese attached to a hook on a line and pole, and you throw that into the water for the fish, that’s not a gift. You’re happy, but some catfish is going to end up flopping on the end of your line in great misunderstanding.

Same cheese. Same lake. Same fish. Very different outcome. One does something for you and the fish. One does something only for you.

What are our motivations? What are our intentions?

Are we giving, or are we fishing?

Lancient History

On Ice


I am not athletically inclined in the least. My grandparents were. My parents were. My mother certainly was. She was such a great baseball player, a major league scout came to see her play. He was very disappointed to discover that Joe, was in fact, Joan. I think her having to watch me play softball was the closest she ever came to feeling disappointment in me. She always looked so sad and puzzled, watching me play.

I am such an uncoordinated lump that school teams have asked to play short a person, rather than pick me. And, a professional dance instructor asked me to stop coming to her adult beginner classes–for which I was paying–because I was holding back all the other beginners. She was sure I had other talents. She was also sure dancing was not one of them. Listen, I was so bad at kickball (kickball!) that in my 4th grade yearbook, the gym teacher inscribed, “Lane, I will never forget the day you caught that ball!” The single day, the single time I caught a ball. It surprised us both. I fell down immediately after catching it.

But, I am good at a couple of things. I am an excellent swimmer. I am powerful and fast, and I just get how that works. I understand how to make my body plow through water like a shark is after me. Maybe because I am always afraid a shark is after me. No, I’m really a good swimmer. I like to pretend I am a spy in a Bond movie, and the fate of the world rests on my being able to swim X distance in Y amount of time. James Bond is very impressed with me. Romance ensues. Hey, it keeps my mind off Jaws, okay?

I am also good at tennis. I was a demon on the tennis court when I was younger, getting in literal hours of practice in my backyard, playing against the brick wall of my parents’ bedroom (until I broke out the window–amazing that it took years for me to do it, but that speaks to my great control, I think.) That’s something else I understand, and find very satisfying, but can’t play once the temperature is above 60. I honestly can’t take the heat. That pretty much kills the sport for me. Who plays tennis in winter?

Probably my best sport has been skating, though. I forget how good I am at that. I took Thor skating today, trying to burn off the cabin fever of the last four days. It’s been a few years since I was able to skate at my own leisure because I’ve had a small person attached to my hip. But today, he was offered a 15 minute lesson, and while he was learning to wiggle backwards, I had time to give the rink a go.

I would never be a very graceful figure skater, but I am freaking fast and powerful. And, again, I just understand what I need to do to fling my body into the air and land again on these little blades. Why I can do that, but can’t manage a layup, I’ll never understand. You put me in sneakers and I am hopeless, but you put me on blades and I just get it. Still, even if I’m not doing tricks (which I love to do, and am stupidly fearless with if no one is watching) I can push and fly around the ice at (also stupidly fearless) high speeds.

I took full advantage of that today. It felt so good! I’m going to pay for it tomorrow. My knees are 40 now, and I haven’t skated full on since my early 30s. I’ve missed it. I had no idea how much.

I do own my own skates…

I do only live 15 minutes from a rink now…

I wonder if they have some advanced classes for the elderly? I’d love to be able to land jumps again.

We have good insurance.

Howling Sea Lane, Lancient History, Women Worth Knowing

Sleep Paralysis! Awesome!


I should have blogged about my night terrors years ago! Stephanie just linked me to a treasure trove of information about sleep paralysis. Sleep paralysis! Of course!

According to this site
:

Sleep paralysis is a condition in which someone, most often lying in a supine (face up) position, about to drop off to sleep, or just upon awaking from sleep realizes that s/he is unable to move, or speak, or cry out. This may last a few seconds or several moments, occasionally longer. People frequently report feeling a ‘presence’ that is often described as malevolent, threatening, or evil. An intense sense of dread and terror is very common. The presence is likely to be vaguely felt or sensed just out of sight but thought to be watching or monitoring, often with intense interest, sometimes standing by, or sitting on the bed. On some occasions, the presence may attack, strangling and exerting crushing pressure on the chest.

Thank you, Dr. Seery-Murphy. Many, many thanks!

Howling Sea Lane, Lancient History

Night Terrors


So I finished the Jenna Jameson book. It never got any happier. It’s one of those, “It ends as well as you can expect,” kinds of stories. God bless her.

I started Love in a Headscarf and am enjoying it so far. Snow days make for excellent reading. We’ll be having another one tomorrow.

I’ve had very bad nightmares the last two nights and don’t want to go to bed tonight. Normally, I love sleeping! I have very vivid, entertaining dreams, so being asleep is like going to the movies. But when I am on a nightmare tear, it’s difficult. I will probably end up sleeping on the sofa because I’m afraid to get in my bed. That’s silly, isn’t it? But I need the bad juju to go away first.

When I was growing up, my father was frequently overseas, or working nights, or away from home for weeks at a time as a consultant. When he was away, I would sleep in my mother’s room, and she would lock the door, pull the dresser in front of it, and keep a loaded pistol between the mattress and box springs on her side of the bed. Not infrequently, Mom would hear something and come up out of the bed like a jungle cat. She would scramble into her robe, grab the pistol and hiss at me not to move, and not to make a sound. And, like Bambi’s mother, she would instruct me that if something happened to her, I was to run and not look back.

Then, she would creep out of the bedroom, pistol hidden in her housecoat pocket, finger on the trigger, and prowl the hallways. If she was sure she’d heard something outside, she would go walk the perimeter of the house.

Once, when I was around 12, Dad came home early from working a night shift, and didn’t call first. When Mom heard someone rattling around in the house, going through my bedroom, she got up with the pistol. She agrees with the assessment that if my father had not said her name, she would have shot him.

As you can imagine, I grew up to be something of a scaredy-cat. For years, I had to have the sheet pulled up over my ear before I could sleep. I could not have anything hanging off the side of the bed. I could not have my hand over the top of the mattress. Once I had started refusing to sleep behind Mom’s locked door, I had to be centered, and surrounded by pillows, and I was pretty much terrified.

When I was fifteen, I was dozing in bed one night, and to this day I will swear I woke with two things in my room. I fully realize that Occam’s Razor means it is most likely that I was experiencing what was a very vivid nightmare, but I thought I was awake. Something was sitting at the top of my head, a small body with long arms and legs, my head between its bent legs, its calves against my ears. It was leaning over my face, with its long arms cradling my head. The other thing, same size and shape, same dusky gray, was sitting on my chest with its arms wrapped around its bent knees, peering intently at me.

I was too afraid to scream. Too afraid to move. Too afraid to breathe.

I did finally puff out, “Help,” in this tiny voice, and I guess that was enough to wake me up fully because the things disappeared.

The next day, I had to go to work with Mom. It was spring break and she wasn’t about to leave me at home alone, when my boyfriend lived a block away. Probably wise of her, considering. When I went to work with her, I had to sit down in the safe deposit vault of her bank. Emelil, the usual vault teller, wasn’t there, and they had a temp working.

I was still so horrified about what had happened, I told this complete stranger about it. Valerie, was her name, and she was Pentecostal, and she told me I had been visited by demons. Pentecostal Valerie commenced to praying. This was my introduction to Tongues, by the way, and I wasn’t so sure it was me who had been visited by demons. But she seemed very sure of herself, and was very certain she knew how to pray a hedge of protection around me to keep those inky varmints away, so I sat still and let her slap on my forehead as much as she wanted.

None of those particular night terrors since, although, I had another one of those waking dreams where I would swear that I woke to a man standing at the foot of my bed–same bedroom, same year. I see how people think and really believe they have had demonic visitations. I believed that of myself for years. I finally realized that when I have good dreams, where I wake up wondering where the fluffy puppy went, that I don’t think I was visited by an actual puppy, and I put two and two together. But still.

(I am very superstitious about it, to the point that I worry just talking about it will make it happen again, but I decided a long time ago not to be so spooky about everything and I just let it all hang out.)

I was 22 years old before I started forcing myself to hang a naked foot off the side of the bed at night. I still don’t like doing it, but I spent a few years forcing myself to confront that particular fear, so I will do it. Whenever I feel the fear creeping in again, I use the same tactics. I refuse to be afraid of something like that. Anyway, should something ever grab my foot, I have bigger things to worry about than that something grabbed my foot, if you know what I mean. Right? Might as well be comfortable.

I still haven’t stopped barricading my bedroom door when I’m alone at night, but I do wait until Thor is asleep, so he doesn’t see it. I know that’s ridiculous. The last time it happened, we were still in our old house. I lay awake for a long time, deciding whether or not to do it. I had to figure out if it was worthwhile. Because, if the intruder came in the bedroom windows, I couldn’t get out. But the likelihood would be the intruder coming in the back door, and then the barricade gave me a few more seconds of time to get Thor out of the house. But what if the intruder wasn’t working alone? I wished for a big, mean dog. Or even Seamus, who was like a muppet with fangs. Poor puppy!

Working on that one. But I figure that I am doing very well for myself, considering my socialized night fears. Now if I can just get over that fear of sharks in the swimming pool…