Scratching the itch of creativity

I was initially thinking about a title involving “fulfilling the urge of creativity” or something along those lines, but I got home from summer camp a couple days ago and they have a lot of bugs there. They bite. Bites itch. Can’t imagine why I’m not completely out of that mindset yet, right? But I wanted to write a blog entry for two reasons.

1) I haven’t written anything in a really long time. Like, a shamefully long time. Posts have been really infrequent for a couple months now and that just ain’t cool. I might be writing for an audience of one, but it still ain’t cool. There’s not much point in having a blog if I never use it.

2) I have mixed feelings about 750words.com.

Don’t get me wrong, I love the website. It gives me extra motivation to sit down and write for 15 minutes or so, pound out a bunch of words every day and I’ve currently got a streak of about 180 days in a row. (It offers little badges for various achievements and I get a pterodactyl badge at 250.)

However! By writing 750 words every day on that website, it scratches the itch that arises every so often, an urge to write, to create something where once there was nothing. To fill the void of existence! To justify my presence in the universe! To practice hyperbole on the grandest scale!

Sometimes I use it as a brain dump; sometimes I write a bunch of random crap. Whatever the case, when I’m done, I’m satisfied. I’ve fulfilled my urge to create something. (When I look at it that way, maybe the title of this post should be “Scratching the itch of creation”, although that only brings to mind “Creation” and “procreation”, neither of which I engage in on a daily basis for 15 minutes or so.)

This isn’t an apology, per se, just an explanation of why I haven’t been using the blog as often as I have in the past and probably should in the future. I like reading what I have to write, maybe you do as well, so why not give us both a more-often-than-monthly treat? In the meantime, though, I’m off to find some ointment that’ll help soothe some of those other itches I picked up during summer camp.

NaBloWriMo, 2012: Ready……GO!!!

Much like last year, I’m throwing my hat into the mix for National Blog Writing Month (NaBloWriMo). And as an extra source of abuse, I’ll be writing on 750words.com every day. Why? Good question.

Part of my brain was tempted to join the novel-writing collective: NaNoWriMo. However, it’s a verrrrry tiny part. I’ve written random short stories in the past and that’s what they’ve been: short stories. I’m not sure if my brain is capable of pulling off a large-scale effort with a decent plot line, engaging characters, something that doesn’t involve too many poop jokes… I’m not sure if I’d be able to pull it off.

However! I don’t need to hold myself to those restrictions. I plan to spewing the proper amount of drivel on 750words.com to reach the minimum requisite for NaNoWriMo (50,000 words, so an average entry of 1666 words a day), but with random thoughts, narratives, etc. Nothing specific, just writing. To know that I can write that many words in a month sounds pretty awesome.

Admittedly, there’s a high likelihood that what ends up on that website will be drivel, so I decided to make these two sources distinct. Write at least semi-decent blog entries here every day, then I can copy and paste these words (even if it’s only a few sentences) into the collective mess that is my daily effort on the other site.

I like the sound of it, but we’ll have to see what happens. In the meantime, I’ve just decided that I should write in here first because my brain is already glazing over. I’m not entirely sure that what I’ve been writing here makes a whole lot of sense, but after pounding out 2100 words already today, I’m on the verge of not caring too much and that’s not fair to you. It’s not fair to me. It’s not fair to life, the universe and everything. Plus it might make me cry if I read this in a couple hours. Normally, I take time to reread and edit my blog entries in extremely intricate detail, adjusting minor word choices and everything. Right now, I just want to avoid too many spelling errors.

So that’s the plan: write a blog entry every day for NaBloWriMo, then write my daily entry in 750words.com, the combination of which should push me past the minimum length of NaNoWriMo: 50,000 words. If I manage to accomplish all that, it’ll be awesome and I’ll totally deserve a pat on the back. Thankfully, I’ll be able to do that even if my eyes have glazed over.

750words.com: The #madwriting

Time to rumble with some #madwriting! It’s been a long time since I’ve done this and since I still haven’t done my 750words.com writing for the day, this seemed like the perfect opportunity to do it. Time to see what I can pull off…

First off, I’d like to say that I have kind of a vindictive streak, at least when it comes to people who deserve it. I’ll try and keep this as general as possible on the off chance that some of the involved parties read this and realize that I’m making fun of them. Basically, it’s an organization with a board made up of a bunch of people. What’s relevant about that is because someone is writing a newsletter for said organization and she wants a certain amount of money. They can’t afford to pay her that much and upon hearing that news, one of the board members sent out a fairly extensive e-mail about how there’s a bunch of money in some other funds, they paid her predecessor that amount, blah blah blah. There’s just one big problem:

He’s her husband.

Upon joining the board, he signed a conflict of interest form and his wife getting money is definitely a conflict of interest. I wanted to help write a simple e-mail about the situation, which really would have been one sentence: “We appreciate your concern, but we cannot accept any input from you in this matter due to your conflict of interest.”

The official e-mail that went out to the board included a lot of additional information and wasn’t nearly as direct and blunt, but it still pointed out the fact that due to said conflict, that board member should exempt himself from the vote. Every time I read that message, I start giggling and thinking about how pissed off he’s going to be when he opens that e-mail and reads it. “You’re not allowed to vote, so you might as well stop bitching now.” I know it doesn’t say that, but that’s what floats through my head, which is why I keep giggling about it. Does that make me a bad person? Eh, even if it does, I’m willing to accept the consequences. He wasn’t nice and started throwing some dirt, he got some dirt thrown back at him and it’s possible that I’m taking too much joy in the situation, but I can live with that.

But since I’m on a madwriting streak here and still have plenty of time to write, there’s something I want to touch on about a comment made on here earlier. Someone was really upset at The Onion because of an article it wrote on Patriot Day, focusing on how young people might be in the army, fighting for… well, they don’t know why. The World Trade Center went down 11 years ago, so 18-year-olds in the army would have been really, really young when it happened and probably wouldn’t appreciate the significance of the event. That struck a chord with me.

It also struck a chord with someone else, but not a good one. Why? Because her mother died in one of those towers. She lost someone very close to her and it seemed like The Onion was tormenting that loss, making fun of it and it cut deep. I don’t blame her in the least for being upset.

Before I continue, I want to emphasize that specifically: if you’ve lost anyone in a tragic accident, you have the right to be mad. Really mad. Whether it was the World Trade Center or shooting up the movie theater while The Dark Knight Rises was playing or losing a family member because someone was driving home drunk… it doesn’t matter what the circumstances are. You can attribute the blame to someone—someone could have acted differently and your loved one would still be alive. That “someone” did something really bad and you have the right to be mad. I’ll never question that.

What I don’t… well, I don’t want to say I question it, but I wonder if we should feel obligated to have the same emotional connection to such tragic events. I didn’t lose a loved one in any accidents or incidents or what have you. A close friend of mine lost her brother in Afghanistan, so the war means something very important to her. The blog commenter lost her mother to the World Trade Center disaster, so she’s got a major emotional investment in its occurrence. Me? Not so much. I felt horrible when it happened, but as time has passed, I’ve become somewhat distant in comparison.

In a way, I compare it to Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, except Kevin Bacon is Death. Kind of a twisted metaphor, but bear with me. If a loved one dies for whatever reason, it hits you hard. One degree. If a friend’s loved one dies, you feel the loss through that friend. Two degrees. You empathize with your friend, but that loved one… there’s simply not the same connection. No one should expect you to want to care as much about the dead person as you do for your friend.

Take it a step further to three degrees: a friend of a friend of a friend dies. Do you know that friend? At all? Sure, there’s a general sense of loss, but if you’re not grieving, should you be considered a bad person for that? It seems like the natural way of things: the closer you are to something, the more it affects you. The further away you are, the less it does. Hell, if you’re grieving for everyone who’s within three degrees, you’re non-functional. Too much emotional trauma. Maybe it’s a way for your brain to cope: you can only handle so much suffering at once before you go into a state of proverbial emotional overload.

And aside from the “six degrees” I mentioned, there tends to be a level of proximity as well: the closer something occurs to you, the more significance it has. If a car crash happens near your house and some people die as a result, it doesn’t matter whether you knew them or not. It was in your backyard—it happened right there. If you’d been two blocks away from your house, you might have seen it. That’s a scary thought, seeing someone die in a fiery car crash. I’m glad I haven’t seen one.

But they happen all the time. I haven’t seen one, I haven’t had one happen anywhere near me, I don’t know anyone who’s been in a fiery car crash, so that idea doesn’t bother me very much. I don’t stay awake at night feeling traumatized about the fact that fiery car crashes happen all the time. If I did, again, emotional overload.

New Yorkers had the buildings fall down in their neighborhood—they had a reason to care. But what if a building collapsed halfway across the world? Did they have the same emotional investment when the tsunami hit Japan, powerful enough to destroy nuclear power plants? Who knows how many lives were lost? Not us. When Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, it was all over the news and people were immensely concerned about what was happening and what we were doing to fix it. The tsunami? AIDS? World hunger? How often do you hear about that on the 6:00 news versus a fiery car crash that happened in your neighborhood?

So I can’t relate with someone who lost a family member when the World Trade Center collapsed—I feel bad for the person, but I wouldn’t be so demeaning as to assume that I feel the same kind of pain. At least for me, it comes down to those six degrees: how deeply something affects me emotionally depends in large part on my own connection to it. What is my relationship to a person, how close did it occur… what kind of effect did it have on me personally? That sounds kinda shallow when I put it that way… I blame Kevin Bacon.

Still potentially awesome

I’m not sure whether signing up for the May challenge on 750words.com has backfired or not. I’m still in the running for my position on the Wall of Awesomeness, although because of the contract, I’m doing it solely for the fact that I’ll be considered awesome. Not a bad reward in itself, but I could have at least offered myself an official pat on the back or something. Then again, had I chosen a reward like that, my punishment for ending up on the Wall of Shame could have been an official noogie, so maybe it’s best that I settled for nothing.

But the problem is that I almost always look forward to write my daily entry whether it’s going to be gibberish or not. It’s usually about 15 minutes out of the day (or in my case, the wee hours of the morning) and I just cruise through, letting my fingers roam free and write “Lessee… yeah, can’t think of anything to write at the moment.” Not awe-inspiring, really, but I still look forward to it.

Unfortunately, that’s led to a lack of blog entries. I get that much writing out of my system and then feel thoroughly uninspired to write anything else. Sure, I’ve had ideas floating through my head (like “Hey, if you don’t shave soon, you’ll start to resemble Bigfoot! With stinkier breath!”), but nothing to show for it on here and that’s disappointing.

I wish I had a solution, but I don’t. I should write in here more often for everyone’s sake—yours as well as mine—but if May’s challenge to end up on the Wall of Awesomeness is going to suck all the creative energy out of my brain… maybe I’ll think about this some more when I’m writing tomorrow’s entry.

The 750 Words One Month Challenge

I’ve been making a push to use 750words.com the last few weeks to get myself in the habit of writing. Will it make me more prolific on the blog? Possibly. Am I going to start cutting and pasting from that website onto here? Hell, no!

Well, unless you want to read two or three paragraphs every day of “Lessee, what to write… I can’t think of anything at the moment, but since I have to write 750 words, I have to think of something…” Sometimes I can come up with something worthwhile, sometimes it’s a lot of rambling bullshit. Either way, I’ve been getting better about writing every day.

I’ve got a nine-day streak going at the moment—before now, I maxed out at three. Pretty impressive display of willpower back then, right? But to show my commitment this time, I’ve signed up for May’s One Month Challenge. I’ve pledged that I’ll write 750 words every day for the entire month. If I succeed, my name goes up on the Wall of Awesomeness. If I miss a day or more, it gets posted on the Wall of Shame. Which sounds better to you, awesomeness or shame? Time to summon a little extra willpower!

Incidentally, the website gives participants the option to pledge themselves some self-created rewards or consequences depending on the result of the challenge. Sure, some people will go on a shopping trip if they succeed and cry if they fail, but some are more creative. Consider:

If I succeed, I will… treat myself to double cheese burger
If I miss a day or more, I will… go into a one-month abstinence of double cheese burger

Now that is a commitment. I couldn’t think of anything to put in my personal contract, but suffice it to say that I’ll revel in my awesomeness or wallow in my shame depending on the results. Wish me luck!