Archive for June, 2010

Status Report

I have now packed everything that I can possibly pack and still live in our house for the next week and a half.

I still don’t know when we’ll be moving, for absolutely sure.

Drew’s painting is coming along.  Five more weeks of madness, and then it all has to be done, one way or another.

My rewrite.  Oy.  Don’t ask about my rewrite.

I still don’t know if I’m going to Gencon.  This largely depends on the costs involved in the move.

I got fed up with my insanely scheduled calendar yesterday, mostly because half the things on it are contingent on other things, so I don’t know what day they go on.  So I wrote myself a triggered to do list.  When A happens, do B, C, and D.  When E happens, do F, G, and H.  This makes me feel less like I’m going to forget something, and more like I can handle it.

I wish A would just freaking happen already.  I am tired of making contingency plans.

On Responsibility

I generally consider myself a responsible person.  I pay my taxes.  I keep track of my finances.  I stick to a budget.  I generally fulfill my commitments.  I examine the consequences of my attitudes and actions.  When I say I’m going to do something, I am reasonably confident that I am responsible enough to actually follow through.

But sometimes the IDEA of all that responsibility circles around and scares me to death.

Just a few years ago my only responsibility was to financially support myself.  There were also responsibilities of religious significance, including serving in volunteer positions at church, and in a less formal way, being a decent human being and take care of other people (which is a privilege, really, but also a responsibility). 

Sometimes it feels like progressing in life always means taking on new responsibility.

Now I am responsible to my husband, to fulfill the promises I made to him when I married him.
I’m responsible for making sure our bills are paid on time and in full and with money we currently have in the bank.  (And there are more of them.  Like health insurance.)
Owning a business means I am responsible to practice accurate financial reporting and fulfill our financial obligations to the government.  (That one is especially important to me, as I have many friends who have at one time or another needed government assistance–hell, I went to school on a federal loan–so I feel it an acute responsibility, even a privilege, to make sure I’m paying my contribution to make those things possible.)
Owning the painting studio also means we have responsibility to make sure our customers’ orders are filled accurately and on time and in a way that makes them happy to be doing business with us.
I have some limited contractual responsibility with other people’s intellectual properties.

I handle all those things just fine, miraculously.  I am flakier than I’d like to be in my personal life (because of my desire to see everybody, I sometimes overbook on fun things and attendance becomes sporadic) but generally I think it works out okay.  

So I have no reason to believe that I won’t be able to handle writing under contract, or making house payments.  These responsibilities are really just variations of things I’m already doing.  Logically, I know it’ll be fine.

But there’s this tiny part of me saying: more responsibility?  Really?  Do I have to?

Yes, fearful part of Janci, you have to.  In no small part because the rest of you actually wants to.

Welcome to your life.  It’s a good one.  I promise.

Questions that have no answers

People ask me:

When is your book coming out?
When are you signing your contract?
When are you moving? 
When are you closing on your house?

Here’s the only answer I have:
When other people tell me it’s time.

There, now you know everything I know.   Isn’t it fun to be in the dark?   :)

 

Over and Over

So this week I finally got my rewrite past chapter two and the first half of chapter three.  It took me forever to get those chapters written.  I had to scrap and rewrite large parts of them several times over the last month or so.

Then yesterday I realized that the scenes at the end of chapter two and beginning of chapter three would be much better if I scrapped them both (again) and combined them.

So I rewrote them again, half as long.  

This isn’t a rewrite.  It’s a write-over-and-over-and-over.

*sigh*

I think that second chapter can now be stamped *revisable* and left in the dust.  Now to write a new beginning to chapter three…

Exhaustion

I’ve made myself a promise.

After Gen Con, there will be no more Big Commitments, Big Goals, or Big Changes in our lives for a good while.

We haven’t had six months without a Big Event (or four) since we started dating. 

And I am so totally exhausted.

Everything we have accomplished has been important and good, but if I keep running hot like this I’m going to burn out.

So starting in the fall, we’re staying home.  I’m going to write books.  (And hopefully, you know, sell them.)  Drew is going to paint things he gets paid to paint and whatever else he feels like painting.  (And no more 70 hour work weeks, thank you very much.)

Between now and then we have to finish off all the things we’ve already committed to, like a rewrite, Schlock minis, competition minis, a major shipping event, a convention, and a move. 

After that: six months.  Please, let me be able to pull off six months without a big event.

Because all this amazing stuff that’s happening doesn’t mean a thing if I can’t take a breath and enjoy it.

Welcome to the website of Janci Patterson. Janci's first novel, CHASING THE SKIP, will be published in October, 2012 by Henry Holt.

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