Authorlouisa

3BT – there it is, (clean), bingo, timing

(I have technically failed at Blogtoberfest 2012 – apparently weekends are my blogging downfall and I’ve not been organised enough to schedule posts. But while I’ve not posted every day, I have posted more than normal, so that’s still a partial win – so far – in my book. :) )

1. The puppy-jump moment when Lily switches from searching for her ball to seeing it across the room.

1b. Under the hose her fur turns from black to white in seconds.

2. I like logistical problems when they’re a challenge I can get my teeth into – but they’re just as nice when they’re not really a dilemma at all, and everything just slots into place.

3. To reach the bus stop at the same time as the bus.

Whitby beach vector pic

Something I’ve been playing with today. A digital doodle-type sketch that I’ll make into some sort of fibre art/embroidery pattern one day.

World of Warcraft Pet Battles Attacking/Defending chart

When World of Warcraft announced they’d be adding the equivalent of Pokemon, POKEMON, to the Mists of Pandaria expansion pack, I vowed, VOWED, that I wouldn’t have any part of that silly nonsense. And neither would I be following the crowds down the path of creating either monks or pandas. No, no, no! NEVER!!!

So, anyway, my panda monk Jaybbles (right) has been happily leveling her cute menagerie over the past three week. I first started off with pets inspired by my real life animals – a black cat, a chicken and a pig (Mr Wiggles) to represent Lily, the tubby, grunting dog – but quickly discovered that my beloved pets would get their arses kicked in Azeroth. Now Jaybbles has got a more exotic/deadly team with which to stomp various beasties as she sees fit. However, silly Jaybbles sometimes sends the wrong pets into the wrong battles and the fight ends with loud boohooing. What Jaybbles needs is a clear chart to show her which pet is good – and bad – against what.

There are, of course, other charts out there on the web but I found them confusing so made up my own. (click the pic for the bigger, clearer version)

(I’m not 100% happy with the column headings but they’ll do for now.)

My initial plan was that this chart would be the basis for an embroidery pattern but it’s ended up being a lot more complicated than I thought it would be, so that will have to wait for now — there are critters, horny toads and goddamn foals to beat up first!

Five Things – B, beat, stick, lunch, soil

I’m toying with a variation on Three Beautiful Things – five things from my day, one for each sense, not always beautiful things but a memory of the day all the same. I’m hoping it’ll encourage me to be more varied with my 3BTs :)

1. Sight – Boron curled into my lap, then one long paw stretches out across my leg. (Lunchtime hugs from him are rare treats.)

2. Sound – well, actually not-sound: the beat of silence before the last word of the line, making the whole thing so much funnier.

3. Touch – the stick I pick up to throw for Lily is cool and smooth. It’s been stripped of bark and weathered. I don’t throw it for Lily after all; instead I take it home to put with my driftwood collection.

4. Taste – leftovers for lunch surprisingly nicer than when they were fresh. (Pasta with mackerel and peppers)

5. Smell – the soiliness of autumn.

NaNoWriMo 2012 – the planning begins

nanowrimo-paper

I’ve had a bit of tired/disrupted week this week so I’ve not been half as crafty as I was last week – hope to return to making next week but there is something else that needs some attention before too long — NaNoWriMo >> National Novel Writing Month.

I completed my first NaNoWriMo last year and loved the experience. The goal is to write 50,000 words of fiction but I hit that target on Day 11 last year, and managed more than 100,000 before the month’s end. My personal goal though had been to finish the story (because I’m quite good at waffling on but not very good at finishing things) and that didn’t happen during November – I largely put it on hold until July this year, when I cranked out another 50,000 words and finally brought it to an end. I have a huge pile of edits to make to it but overall, I’m pleased with it – and after such a positive experience, I’m keen to NaNoWriMo again next month.

Last year’s project was pretty straightforward – a chronological telling of a life story, written in the first person and while it was historical, it was comparatively recent (1957-1982) and set in an area I know well, so it was easy (and fun!) to research. I very much enjoyed finding as much accurate data as I could – down to monthly weather reports and snooping on Rightmove to get an idea of house layouts ;)

I’ve decided to go the completely opposite way this year though. As I mentioned above, cranking out words isn’t really a challenge for me so I’ve decided to play with form rather than writing a this-then-this-then-this story. That’s where the little pieces of paper in the photo come in – over the next few weeks, I’m going to use them to plan the order. There are a lot of different threads that will need pulling together, and no set order to any of it – I’m anticipating a lot of shuffling! I also have to do some other planning exercises, most critically drawing a map. To be frank, the whole idea sprung from me wanting an excuse to have to draw a map. I heart maps ;)

If you think you might have a story inside you, I’d recommend giving NaNoWriMo a go. My new mantra is to not let perfectionism get in the way of productivity and that’s what NaNoWriMo is all about. You get a huge community of cheerleaders keeping you going at it too – forums galore and local meet-ups too.

If anyone wants to be my NaNoWriMo writing buddy, my profile is at http://www.nanowrimo.org/en/participants/louisa_/

3BT – timing, working together, clap, done!

0. My fleshy radiator returns to me in the middle of the night. I am cold. He is not. Yay!

1. The fact that we can share a laugh over walrus tusks, made accidentally with a felt tip pen and pencil, in the middle of the day.

2. The crisp snap as we slap our hands together.

3. When a chore doesn’t take half as long as you think it will.