Monday, February 22, 2010
Explain Your Answer
Question for my reading faithful -- favorite memoirs? If you guys could list some of your favorites, it would be a huge help to me. And about the memoirs -- why? What element makes your choice stand out?
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Every story is really two stories." Grace Paley
Cocktail Hour
Thanks for all the Tiger feedback on the last post! Check out Jim's latest on the Motor City Burning Press website. Working on meeting stuff -- soon. Also, feel free to send submissions -- check out the website for details.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Rest in peace to my dear Angela's faithful companion, Bogey. I remember when she found Bogey as a stray ever so many years ago. He was a miracle dog, the kind that kept going and going. May he rest in Heaven with all his little friends that went before him. And welcome back home, Charles and Lana!
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Tiger In The Master's House

On Friday, Tiger Woods gave a fourteen minute apology for his sexual misconduct. Why I have no idea. Scripted public mea culpas are all the rage, but only seem to make matters worse. See Bill Clinton, Jonathan Edwards, Jimmy Swaggart. Of course he's sorry. He's sorry that his life has fallen apart, his marriage is in shambles, his children will suffer, and bye bye Nike. He says he's let me, as part of the public, down. Really? I kind of hated his public image, that I can do no wrong, perfect life, wholesome bullshit scripted ever so carefully by his agent. Why did he go this route? To please his father, to score Tag Heur? Maybe. But I think it's a little bit more depressing than that -- I think he did it to make money in the largely white, largely conservative golf world. Welcome to the Master's. Or is it, welcome to the master's house? His apology suggests, as angry as he is (and make no mistake, that was one angry ass apology), he still wants a room there.
I know that lots of people of all races do this sort of thing -- live an inauthentic life because they can't take the idea of owning up to their true natures. I myself am guilty many times over, as we Catholics say, by the things I have done and have failed to do. It has nothing to do with being an African-American man. But could he have revealed his true nature (and no, I'm not buying the sex addict bullshit -- try narcissist who thinks with enough money you can get away with anything, also see Jonathan Edwards) and still be selling Mont Blanc pens? I'm guessing no. Is being the world's greatest golfer enough? Now that Tiger is in exile from his first life and on the verge of a second, it's going to have to be a start.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"The cost of liberty is less than the price of repression. " W. E. B. Du Bois
Cocktail Hour
Working on some new spring drinks to harken the winter blues away!
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Sunday!
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Saturday's Child Is Loving And Giving
Writing a bunch of new stuff and will post a lot of it tomorrow and next week. Thanks for the feedback on the essay -- trying to work with some old material and some new to create a delightful confection. Now that Heff's Bar and Grill has been closed to me (waah!), I ask you guys the question -- What do you think of the John Mayer article this month? I read it -- TMI, TMI, TMI!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Life is too short to be living somebody else's dream." Hugh Hefner
Cocktail Hour
Drinking movie suggestion: Check out Shutter Island! Would love to hear your thoughts before posting a review.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Saturday!
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Karma

How's this for Jungian synchronicity -- I pull out my children's book on Jim Jones Monday so I can use it for the blog. I notice for the first time that Jim and Marceline Jones were the first white couple to adopt an African-American child in the state of Indiana, Jim Jones, Jr.. Two hours later, I'm at the gym and catch a commercial for Oprah. Jim Jones, Jr. is her guest for Tuesday. I seldom watch Oprah and never know who is going to be the guest. Cue Twilight Zone music. He escaped because he was playing basketball a hundred miles away from Jonestown on that fateful drink the flavor-aid night.
I found Jim Jones, Jr. to be incredibly thoughtful. Oprah asked him why he didn't change his name given all that had happened. He said that he went by James for a long time, but when he got his dream job, there were too many titles for his door to fit so they had to abbreviate his name back to Jim and he thought, that's who I am, Jim Jones, Jr. His contention was a simple yet profound one -- to disown parts of ourselves is to be forever running away from those parts, giving them even more power than they have originally. We all have a legacy and a story that we shape over and over again based on the skeleton keys we feel compelled to give each other. Like the sign over all the dead bodies in Jonestown said, Those who can't remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Everybody comes from the same source. If you hate another human being, you're hating part of yourself." Elvis Presley
Cocktail Hour
Anyone interested in Shutter Island? Looks like the kind of thing that will give me bad dreams for a few days.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Thursday!
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Own Your Own Body

Spent part of this morning writing a new part to a series of essays. I'm going to post the abridged version and will let you know when I finish. Some parts might seem a little jumpy because I'm not all that great at condensing. Thanks for reading!
For one summer, I babysat a boy named Blake every night while his mother worked the graveyard shift at the only factory in town. The trailer in which she and Blake lived belonged to O.D. Miller, a long-time friend of my parents, a guy that ran a small flight school out of the local airport. O.D. was the kind of guy who always had a get rich quick scheme going, an eternal optimist who sometimes slept on the couch in his office to hide from his abusive, jealous wife. The backs of t-shirts covered the walls of said office -- all worn by his students on the day they made their first solo flight. The dates were scrawled in permanent black marker, along with a personal message, usually something like, Thanks, O.D.!, Flying High! No lack of explanation points there. The t-shirts went on the wall as soon as the person landed, still high from the adrenalin of being alive. As my dad used to say, Anyone can fly a plane. It's the landing it that's more crucial.
My mother worked for O.D. part-time for a couple of years. On her only typed resume that now resides in my baby book, she listed her reason for leaving as not enough work. When O.D.’s beige rotary phone range, it was usually his wife who wanted to pick a fight after drinking all morning. By noon she’d already passed that window that every drinker knows, the world is glowing window, and gone into that hurt injured paranoid mode. My mother overheard her yelling at him, telling my dad, sister, and me that O.D’s wife treated him like shit. I didn’t point out that things were pretty strained around our own house since she started having a not very discrete affair with my dad’s boss. That kind of astute observation did not go well over our LaChoy dinner, a nasty concoction out of a can that claimed to be Chop Suey.
What kept O.D. in business at all was his propensity to train Iranian men to fly. Because of the recent hostage crisis, Americans weren’t all that partial to Iran, but O.D. didn’t seem to care. In addition to the ripped t-shirts, he had two small flags in his office -- an American one and a Christian one. Both rested in a tin can, as if he were a homeless veteran selling them on the street. But despite the flags and his refusal to eat “gook” food (a nod to his stint in Korea), he didn’t much care from whom his money came.
My mother supplemented her O.D. paychecks by making rattlesnakes, tarantulas, scorpions and butterflies into paperweights, suitable, as they say, for home or office use. She sold them out of his office, some of them perfect, others exploding because she’d used the wrong chemicals or too much of the right ones. She never measured or followed a set plan. She made one for O.D., a small garter snake in a paperweight shaped like the state of Texas. This gem went on the desk next to the flags and eventually became buried underneath a tsunami of paperwork. O.D. did not like to get rid of anything.
Which explains the trailer. He did not want to sell it so he loaned it out to Cynthia for a few years. A single mother with almost no possessions, she was glad to move into it with its cornucopia of cast-offs. Despite being the last year of the eighties, the furniture brought right back to my childhood -- worn avocado-colored couches, thick glass ashtrays filled with butts, a transistor radio. By this point, O.D.’s mean wife had died of cancer. My mother had cancer as well -- cervical, compliments of the affair she had so many years ago.
I had one year of college behind me. Although I didn’t know it then, this summer would be the last time I lived at home. I hated being in the house, the house where I had been raped by my high school boyfriend. I didn’t tell anyone for fear of being blamed, exposed. My family had one unwritten motto -- Whatever bad happens to you, you brought it on yourself. I believed it, at least more than I believed O.D.’s pipe dreams of wealth or Cynthia’s conviction that her syphilis (she'd confessed that she had been diagnosed with the disease, but wouldn't go back to get the prescription because she was afraid) would cure itself if she lived healthy. Her idea of health involved Hydrox-brand Oreo cookies, cigarettes, and a bottle of Beefeater’s gin for the weekends.
As a child, I had been obsessed with a book titled Own Your Own Body. My mother surrounded herself with exotic types -- foreigners, outlaw hillbillies, new agers. To her credit, she remained engaged and curious during conversations about astral projections, séances, snake-handling, and colonics. I found Own Your Own Body in the room off the garage known as the office -- it contained my dad’s Selectric typewriter, a shelf of books, and two pictures of New Zealand warriors with bones through their noses. Under their watchful gaze, I read Own Your Own Body over and over, a strange choice for a child raised on meatloaf, fried bologna, and KFC. You couldn’t eat anything cooked or canned. You were required to fast and do cleanses. After a few reads, it became clear to me that I would never own much of anything, especially my body. Given that I had enjoyed drinking the leftover sips in the various cocktails that collected in the kitchen while I was supposed to be offering snacks to the guests, I had taken, as they said back in the Seventies, a different path.
I don’t know what happened to Blake or Cynthia. Both my parents are dead, and O.D. lives in a nursing home. The trailer sits in the middle of a hill in Mineral Wells where O.D. got it stuck years ago. He couldn’t get it back down the hill, nor could he pull it to the top. And I can still see myself in it, awake long after Blake had fallen asleep, trying to find a leftover cigarette to smoke, killing time until Cynthia finished her grave and came home, the day already shaping up to be as bright as an overexposed photograph.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"I'm too old to do things by half." Lou Reed
Cocktail Hour
Drinking movie suggestion: Downloading Nancy
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Ash Wednesday!
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Fat Tuesday

On the eve of Lent, I ponder what to give up this year. I'm not particularly ascetic by nature and love vices of all kinds. I've gone the soda/chocolate route in years before, and broke myself of the habit of eating nothing but Triscuits all day long. Yes, you can survive this way. For a very long time. Of course, you can choose to do something active for Lent, something that will bring good into the world. I thought about writing a children's book on one of my very favorite subjects, Jim Jones, but that's already been done in the American Disasters series. I love this set of books and if you're out there listening, I'm available to write about any scary cult disasters for the third to fifth grade set.
Seriously, I'll probably try to be kinder to people. Like all simple vows, the difficulty level is pretty intense. I don't watch much of the Winter Olympics, but I did see the luge the other night after the one athlete died on the course. I don't understand the luge, what makes you good at it or not. I think of it as bend over and kiss you ass goodbye, hope for the best sport. Which is kind of like life -- only we are attuned to the subtle things that make us succeed or fail. It all looks very much the same from the outside. But one small movement this way or that can change everything.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"People wish to be poets more than they wish to write poetry, and that's a mistake. One should wish to celebrate more than one wishes to be celebrated." Lucille Clifton
Cocktail Hour
Drinking food suggestion: King Cake -- I don't know how to cook so I will not offer a recipe, but instead tell you to find someone who can bake a cake with a plastic Baby Jesus in it. Do not eat/hurt said Baby Jesus. If you get the piece with Him in it, you merely have to throw a party next year. Get everyone so drunk that they don't remember it's you that has this duty. Hide Baby Jesus in house for luck in the coming year.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Fat Tuesday! Rest in peace, Lucille Clifton, author of many wonderful poems. I remember reading "an ordinary woman" as a child and it always stayed with me.
Monday, February 15, 2010
The First Rule Of Curses
Working hard on the new novel, The First Rule of Curses. The title came from a book I read as a child and it had twelve signs so that you could know when someone had put a curse on you. The first one was simple -- you had to believe that it had been done. The others involved the death of livestock, infertility, and having to watch reality shows about people losing weight, especially the new Kirstie Alley one that looks only slightly less painful than the Carnie Wilson one titled Unstapled. Okay, maybe it didn't say that last part. But I had my dad make a copy of the curse rules so I could always have a handy index just to make sure I was okay. I also had him sign a piece of paper that said if I died, he'd stick a stake of holly through my heart before burial just to make sure I was dead. One too many Poe stories, obviously.
Will keep you posted on the novel as well as posting small sections here from time to time. My main character is named Severin which is part of a great Lou Reed song and also means severe in French. Until then, happy holiday weekend!
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Failure is the condiment that gives success its flavor." Truman Capote
Cocktail Hour
Love Potion Number 13
one part Crystal skull vodka
one part cranberry juice
one part Triple Sec
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy President's Day!
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Happy Valentine's Day!
Happy Valentine's Day! Today Baby Grouchie is displaying a beautiful painting by my dear Lana of The Dreaming Tree. Thank you, honey! Hope everyone is having a good Sunday. I have emails to answer and miles to go before I sleep so I shall sign off, also wishing you a happy Chinese new year -- The year of the Tiger.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Will You Be My Valentine?

Happy weekend from hell, everyone! Yes, it's the dreaded VD day extravaganza (VD Day -- trademarked term from Hank D. Ballenger, yes sir). Hank and I spent many a VD Day together, bemoaning the grossness of the holiday. My first Valentine from a boy (albeit a gay one who was toying with the idea of becoming a priest while listening to Berlin, oh yes, there were signs) was a balance beam. So I could practice my little tricks on a beam that was low to the ground and made of a wooden beam and duct tape. I did enjoy walking on it from time to time, but I was always too afraid to really do anything substantial. Just like in life, right?
So I send you all my best wishes for the weekend. Keep your chin up in face of all the red and pink. Be brave and eat all the chocolate you want. xox, Michelle
Michelle's Spell of the Day
Lucy van Pelt: [to Schroeder] Sometimes I don't think you realize that you could lose me. Are you sure you want to suffer the tortures of the memories of a lost love?
[pause]
Lucy van Pelt: Do you know the tortures of the memories of a lost love?
[Schroeder stops playing the piano just as Lucy goes berserk, demolishing the piano over her next line]
Lucy van Pelt: It's awful! It will haunt you night and day! You'll wake up at night screaming! You can't eat! You can't sleep! You'll want to smash things! You'll hate yourself and the world and everybody in it! Awwwwww!
[sobs, then quite normally]
Lucy van Pelt: Are you sure you want to risk losing me?
Cocktail Hour
Drinking movie suggestion: Black Dynamite
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Chinese New Year -- It's the year of the Tiger!
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Ed Nebel
Dear readers,
Many people knew our friend, Ed Nebel. He was married to our dear Stacey and died this week. Please keep her in your prayers. Ed was a fun and exciting person, always ready to talk about books and music and writing. May he join his precious little girl in Heaven and rest in peace.
Edward J. Nebel Jr.
Mr. Edward J. Nebel Jr. Port Huron Mr. Edward J. Nebel Jr., age 45, passed away unexpectedly on Tuesday in his home. He was born on October 25, 1964 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, a son of Dr. Edward J. and Evelyn (Schmelzer) Nebel. Ed graduated with a Bachelor of Arts Degree from Skidmore College in New York and a Master of Arts Degree from New York University. He was an associate professor at Macomb Community College in Warren. Ed enjoyed writing and reading literature and history. Edward is survived by his parents, Edward J. (Jacqueline) Nebel M.D. of St. Clair and Evelyn Nebel of Thornton, Colorado; three siblings, Anne (Dimitri) Prekas of Doha, Qartar, Patricia (Mark) Hill of Broomfield, Colorado and John (Kristina) Nebel of Brooklyn, New York; and wife, Stacey Simon Nebel; step-brother David Myers of Naples, Florida. Edward was predeceased by his daughter, Berghetta Justine Nebel on October 13, 2001. A funeral Mass will be held on Saturday, February 13, 2010 at 11:00 a.m. in St. Peter Catholic Church, Market Street, Mount Clemens with the Reverend Father Michael N. Cooney officiating. Burial will follow at St. Peter Catholic Cemetery in Clinton Township. Mr. Nebel will rest in the Will and Schwarzkoff Funeral Home, 233 Northbound Gratiot Avenue, Mount Clemens on Friday from 6:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m. and on Saturday from 9:15 a.m. until time of prayers at 10:15 a.m. Memorial contributions to the Michigan Heart Association .
Published in The Times Herald on February 11, 2010
Many people knew our friend, Ed Nebel. He was married to our dear Stacey and died this week. Please keep her in your prayers. Ed was a fun and exciting person, always ready to talk about books and music and writing. May he join his precious little girl in Heaven and rest in peace.
Edward J. Nebel Jr.
Mr. Edward J. Nebel Jr. Port Huron Mr. Edward J. Nebel Jr., age 45, passed away unexpectedly on Tuesday in his home. He was born on October 25, 1964 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, a son of Dr. Edward J. and Evelyn (Schmelzer) Nebel. Ed graduated with a Bachelor of Arts Degree from Skidmore College in New York and a Master of Arts Degree from New York University. He was an associate professor at Macomb Community College in Warren. Ed enjoyed writing and reading literature and history. Edward is survived by his parents, Edward J. (Jacqueline) Nebel M.D. of St. Clair and Evelyn Nebel of Thornton, Colorado; three siblings, Anne (Dimitri) Prekas of Doha, Qartar, Patricia (Mark) Hill of Broomfield, Colorado and John (Kristina) Nebel of Brooklyn, New York; and wife, Stacey Simon Nebel; step-brother David Myers of Naples, Florida. Edward was predeceased by his daughter, Berghetta Justine Nebel on October 13, 2001. A funeral Mass will be held on Saturday, February 13, 2010 at 11:00 a.m. in St. Peter Catholic Church, Market Street, Mount Clemens with the Reverend Father Michael N. Cooney officiating. Burial will follow at St. Peter Catholic Cemetery in Clinton Township. Mr. Nebel will rest in the Will and Schwarzkoff Funeral Home, 233 Northbound Gratiot Avenue, Mount Clemens on Friday from 6:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m. and on Saturday from 9:15 a.m. until time of prayers at 10:15 a.m. Memorial contributions to the Michigan Heart Association .
Published in The Times Herald on February 11, 2010
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Here Comes The Sun
Hello everyone! Been writing and working on Motor City Burning Press -- need to send out emails and will keep everyone posted. Just got a story titled "Here Comes The Sun" in Pearl, slated for the Spring/Summer 2010 issue. Pearl is the first acceptance my old buddy Hank ever got -- it only took me about ten years to catch up with him! Hope you're having a happy snow day or sunny joyful day, wherever you may be.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Rest in peace, Charlie Wilson! I always thought he was great, and I like to think of him and Molly Ivins sharing a bottle of champagne in heaven.
Tuesday, February 09, 2010
Done With Errors On The Page
I was reading the other day that Giselle (wife of Tom Brady, supermodel, ex of Leo DiCaprio) said that giving birth for her did not hurt. If she had any decency at all, she'd keep this to herself. Seriously. I've never given birth, but I think it probably hurts for most women, including those hapless innocents who appear on the scariest show on television, "I Didn't Know I Was Pregnant." But even so, Giselle doesn't bother me the way she does some people. Sarah Palin falls into this category for a lot of types -- a strong reaction. Again, she does nothing one way or the other for me in terms of a personal feeling. Yes, I have opinions about her various ways, but she doesn't get my goat. There are people I loathe, who irritate. These people are as necessary as air.
In feng shui, a person is instructed to stick a black fish in a tank with other fish to absorb negative energy. In any group, there's this person. The person who you talk about, who drives you mad. It's probably your mother at times, maybe someone at work. Someone who doesn't have any pain in giving birth. (My guess is that Giselle is driving Mrs. Big (Bridget M, Tom Brady's ex and mother of his firstborn) crazy. At least a little. What do you do? People upset us, disappoint. That's the nature of all of this mess. If that person were to magically disappear, they'd show up again in another outfit. I've had this happen, both with delightful and not so delightful people in my life. Let's face it -- we're always giving birth to a new self, one that tries to be better. And if anyone says that's not painful, I'd know she was lying.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"We think that the point is to pass the test or to overcome the problem, but the truth is that things don't really get solved. They come together and they fall apart." — Pema Chödrön
Cocktail Hour
Any good book suggestions? What are you guys reading?
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Tuesday! MCB Press members -- will email tomorrow all relevant information!
Monday, February 08, 2010
The Scar, Revised
A little section from the essay, "The Arms of God." Still working it out! Thanks for the read, as always, my dears.
The last night I spent on the trauma unit, a nurse with a thick Romanian accent changed my bandages. It was my first and last encounter with him and he was easily the best of my stay, shielding my eyes from the bright lights while changing the wound (a painful process of taking out pieces of gauze from four wet/dry sections and replacing them) and making me laugh. Everyone says that the appendix does nothing, and I had begun parroting this notion. Heavy pain medication made everything I said seem interesting to me.
"Maybe it does nothing, but it did make itself known, yes?" he said, his face lit up by the machines in the room. "You will want to have the scar revised. You do not want memory of such sadness on your body."
In a strange bit of coincidence, my ex-boyfriend had almost died during surgery to remove his lung a couple of months before my near death. He was the only person that I knew who had been in the hospital longer than I had besides my mother. I mentioned this to the nurse and he said, "It is right that he should suffer. What joy is there in life except to see those who no longer love us have more pain than we do?"
Michelle's Spell of the Day
When asked by Dinah Shore what influenced his music: "The industrialism in Detroit...what I heard walking around...boom boom bah - 10 cars...boom boom bah - 20 cars...I get a lot of my influence from the electric shaver..." Iggy Pop
Cocktail Hour
Drinking HBO television suggestion: Am really loving Big Love this season. Makes me incredibly anxious just to watch it with the various twists and turns. Anyone out there watching?
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Monday!
Sunday, February 07, 2010
When The Saints Go Marching In

Happy Superbowl day to all of you who are loving it, hating it, or forced to endure it. I'm always a fan of the commercials and did see the Tim Tebow ad that has everyone talking along with the banned Mancrunch ad. Neither one has my proverbial panties in a bunch. Those of you who read the blog know that despite being Catholic, I'm pro-choice (I got stopped by a pro-life group the other night and pretended to be deaf which worked fine -- I got a Bless you, my child and moved along my merry way). But alas, I don't think the Tim Tebow ad is that big of a whoop -- simplistic, yes, but mercifully brief. It's not, in my opinion, going to change hearts and minds. Those who agree will love it and those who don't will put it in the same category of the whole, "You just aborted Beethoven" story.
Mancrunch made me laugh. I loved that ad. What is more homoerotic than sports? Not even circuit parties have so much man on man action. To their credit, Mancrunch now has tons of publicity which I think is fantastic. Peta (a group I can't abide for lots of reasons, but admire for their media savy) does the same type of thing frequently. So my dears, enjoy the day, if you're cold, snowed in, happy and you know it, choosing life or choosing just plain old sex. Enjoy the commericials -- just keep in mind, you're always being sold something.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Confidence is a very fragile thing." Joe Montana
Cocktail Hour
Favorite superbowl snack? Mine was the free shots at Jacoby's a couple of years ago. And they didn't even put the volume on the game -- Heaven!
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Sunday!
Friday, February 05, 2010
Friday I'm In Heart-Shaped Glasses
Hey everyone -- thanks for the support! You guys will be hearing from me soon. And I'll be posting the completed essay this weekend.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
“What's nice about acting is that you're not just left with yourself all the time but you get to see the world through so many different people's eyes.” Evan Rachel Wood
Cocktail Hour
Drinking movie suggestion: Humpday
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Friday!
Thursday, February 04, 2010
Briar Rose
Hey everyone -- been working on the start of a new essay, incorporating the fun little sepsis debacle last year. More soon!
I used to lifeguard at a pool located on a decommissioned army base. The guards referred to the pool as Ft. Wolters and once a day, the kids from Edgemeade would run down the street for their hour of swimming. Edgemeade, a residential facility for teenagers who were “touched” (criminal, mentally-challenged, abandoned), no longer exists, nor does the pool except as an empty shell, like those commercials where an unwitting victim of drugs dives headfirst in the cement. On the edges of the fence, bramble and brush go unchecked, giving my past the appearance of a Grimm’s fairy tale, my very own Briar Rose. It was here on slow days I read Fear of Flying, Portnoy’s Complaint, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. And it is here in this broken and desolate place, I ask myself if can I sing the songs of Zion in a foreign land.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"The important thing is this: To be able at any moment to sacrifice what we are for what we could become." Charles DuBois
Cocktail Hour
Motor City Burning is getting ready to start up this month -- Hi Mark and Jim (meeting will be announced right quick)-- I'll see you soon! And to those interested in submitting or editing, please let me know.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Thursday!
Tuesday, February 02, 2010
I Used To Be Somebody

Hitting bottom is a common concept in AA -- the idea that we go for as long as we can until the humiliation of living a certain way becomes too much. Jeff Bridges as Bad Blake in Crazy Heart has spent his entire life in the familiar rise and fall story of an alcoholic country western singer who has seen better days. Beyond the trappings, this brilliant film gets to what everyone feels at one time or another, embodied by the lyrics that Bad Blake sings: "I used to be somebody, now I am somebody else." This somebody else still has his fans, but he's broke and playing bowling alleys and hole in the wall bars. The singer he mentored, Tommy Sweet (played by a terrific Colin Ferrell) has become wildly successful, his agent can't get him gigs that don't require driving all over hell's half acre, and he isn't able to drink without vomiting. None of this bodes well for his brief love affair with a reporter played by Maggie Gyllanhall.
Jeff Bridges makes you believe Bad Blake, makes you feel his pain. The movie is a redemption story, but at its core, Crazy Heart isn't a movie about a magical transformation -- it's about becoming more yourself. There aren't any easy answers offered here, nor is there the ability to forgive and forget the past. The past is always with us. Jeff Bridges deserves the Oscar for this one; I've loved him since he played Duane in Last Picture Show. He's good at those lonely places we all end up from time to time, the sadness of their collective song.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"I'm very manipulative towards directors. My theory is that everyone on the set is directing the film, we're all receiving art messages from the universe on how we should do the film." Jeff Bridges
Cocktail Hour
Drinking biography suggestion: Raymond Carver Carol Sklenicka
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Tuesday!
Groundhog Day
Okay, good news -- six more weeks of winter! This pleases me as spring is my least favorite season. I don't much care for summer either, but at least it has something in that David Lynch-creepy kind of way to recommend it. I'll be back this afternoon with my review of Crazy Heart. I really loved it -- let's face it, I'm a sucker for that sort of movie.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Rita, I've come to the end of myself." Bill Murray, Groundhog Day
Cocktail Hour
One more day on the Carver biography.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Tuesday!
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Loving The Now
I love people who claim to know the future -- one of my favorite times at the Mind, Body, Spirit Festival was when I picked out a white dude in a Native American tribal outfit. The clincher -- he called himself One Feather. Indeed, he had one feather in his hand by which he claimed he could divine my next year. After asking my first and middle name, he said, "Michelle Marie, will you marry me?" I knew I had picked the head crackpot and was pleased with myself. I can, if nothing else, spot a good time.
One Feather told me that my mother was a literal snake charmer (spooky given her propensity for the evil creatures), and I was a metaphorical one. This gave me the confidence I needed to continue with my day. I can't remember what else he said. Unlike my friend Sharon, I always forget to brings tapes to record the prophecies and see if they are accurate. I guess I really don't go for that reason. The future will be whatever it will be, que sera sera. It's more for shoring up about the present, which, of course, is the hardest place to be. (Hence the need for a million different books on being present, staying present, loving the now, etc.) After our prophecies from One Feather, my buddy and I took off for a dinner at the Macaroni Grill where we examined all the options, so much of it bad for us, hard on the heart.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"I do not know many survivors." James Baldwin
Cocktail Hour
Okay -- I LOVED Shannon Day's weekly astrology on Tarot.com. I was so unhappy to see her Skyvibe gone, replaced with someone else who is not near as fun. Please come back, Shannon! I need my weekend fun!
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Sunday!
Friday, January 29, 2010
Six Thousand Egg Rolls
Just saw the movie Big Fan the other night. Loved it. It's a dark comedy that skirts tragedy, a film about Paul from Staten Island, a parking attendant who lives with his mother and defines himself by his love for the New York Giants. This fantasy world gets challenged when he meets the quarterback for the Giants at a strip club. I won't give the plot away, but in all honesty, it wasn't the plot that had me most compelled. It was the details of Paul's life, my favorite being when we see him and his only buddy going to the Giants game and realize they don't have tickets. They sit out in the parking lot with their television hooked up to a car battery and watch just to be closer to the team they love. "They can't lose if we're out in the parking lot," Paul claims.
I'm guessing we all feel this way from time to time, that close is as good as we're going to get. Paul and his mother have a bit of the Grey Gardens' type relationship going (my shorthand way of describing an enmeshed symbiotic situation), and my favorite scene is with the two of them is where Paul's mother is sorting soy sauce, duck sauce, and hot mustard into Ziploc baggies. Paul eats his take-out and watches her, musing that she doesn't even like Chinese food and that what she really needs are "six thousand egg rolls." I don't know a better way to describe this movie. It's for all of us with bags of useless shit that we don't want to waste, but will never use, for those who try and go along and do what we can, who want to feel like part of something bigger, something magical.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"It doesn't matter who my father was; it matters who I remember he was." Anne Sexton
Cocktail Hour
Tonight is the first full moon of the year, the wolf moon -- take a look if you dare brave the cold!
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Friday!
Thursday, January 28, 2010
It's A Wise Child
Like so many people, I've always loved J.D. Salinger. Not the obsessive crazy "I'm part of the Glass family" love (although is there any of us who didn't at one time feel that way?), but with the reverence of someone who changes the way you think about writing. I didn't read Catcher In The Rye in high school -- I got to it way too late to really love it. Instead, I gravitated to his novellas and short stories, particularly Franny and Zooey. He wrote of topics that other people didn't, or at least not in the same way, a desire for God, for understanding. His words had a way of lingering. You might not get it all, but he wrote about the ineffable, the things for which there are no words.
And uncommon for this publicity-whoring age (I'm no exception, obviously), he didn't seek the spotlight. Of course, this brought it in that Jungian, What you resist, persists kind of way. Most of what we know about him comes from other people's memoirs and it's not particularly flattering. He stopped publishing altogether. He resisted the movies. He gave up the things for which most of us would give our very souls. Who knows how it was for him in his years in seclusion? The young will always love his work, the way he could see longing and desire and the hopelessness of it all, the beauty.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Jesus knew — knew — that we're carrying the Kingdom of Heaven around with us, inside, where we're all too goddamn stupid and sentimental and unimaginative to look? You have to be a son of God to know that kind of stuff." J.D. Salinger
Cocktail Hour
Loved Big Fan! Will have complete review soon.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Thursday!
The Catcher In The Rye
Breaking news -- J.D. Salinger just died. Whoa. I'll be doing a longer post later, but for now, Rest in peace!
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
A Night With An Exorcist
Here's a very small portion of the new (as yet untitled) novel. Thanks for reading!
After a nap, Severin went to inspect the message. She wanted to get rid of it, to pretend like whatever was happening wasn't. Could it be the Ouija board with which Luci had tried to conjure spirits? She wondered if she should mention it to Deacon John. In a month, a visiting priest was scheduled to come to St. Patrick's downtown and deliver a lecture titled "A Night With An Exorcist." Severin didn't think she would go because of the high ticket price, thirty dollars per person. But now thirty dollars seemed like a pittance in order to get answers.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
“Perhaps they are not stars, but rather openings in heaven where the love of our lost ones pours through and shines down upon us to let us know they are happy.” Eskimo Proverb
Cocktail Hour
Drinking movie suggestion: Tonight I'm watching Big Fan. Will let you guys know how it is.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Wednesday!
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Pure Michigan
Happy 173rd birthday to my dear state of Michigan! I hope you guys are having a great week. I've decided that my horror novel is going to be psychological rather than demonic even though I really enjoyed "Evening With An Exorcist" night at St. Patrick's not so long ago. I'm going to start posting little bits this week.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"I remind young people everywhere I go, one of the worst things the older generation did was to tell them for twenty-five years "Be successful, be successful, be successful" as opposed to "Be great, be great, be great". There's a qualititative difference." Cornel West
Cocktail Hour
Drinking vodka suggestion: Dripping Springs -- it's a vodka from Texas and the name makes it sound like a particularly nasty STD, but it's the smoothest vodka I have tasted in a long time.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Tuesday!
Monday, January 25, 2010
Secret Windows
In the wake at trying my hand at horror fiction, I've been reading Stephen King's Secret Windows which is a collection of essays from various points in his career. My favorite story so far is the one where he talks about the first time he saw someone reading a copy of one of his books. He determines he will sign if for her. He was drunk and on a plane so he goes up to the woman reading Carrie and asks if she likes it. She says no, that the writing is pretty shitty. My favorite part of this anecdote is Stephen King's reply, Oh, I guess I won't get that one.
Self-deprecation is a quality that has gone out of favor for some reason. I think it's all the new age bullshit that has us believe that if we're not one hundred percent confident all the time and presenting our "best" selves (ie, nightmare horror version of this -- Heidi Montag's ten plastic surgery procedures done at one time), we will fail. I don't know about you, but sometimes it's a relief to be a mess and let the guard down. Right now, I'm worried, my face is broken out, and my hair is in a transitional 'do that is downright scary. But that's okay. I'm in search of my opening sentence, something that will make it all good. Right now, I'm toying with the image of a bullet-riddled wall that surrounded the hacienda where my dear Angela had her wedding. Those bullets had been lodged for a long time. Someone needs to notice them.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"The difference between daytime and prime-time drama is the suffering of consequences. There is no time at night to experience the result of foolish actions; during the day, that is all there is to do." Agnes Nixon, creator of All My Children
Cocktail Hour
Drinking movie suggestion: What Happened Was
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Monday! My apologies on Cleaving, Dave! Hey, if I controlled who got the book deals, I'm telling you it would be a different world. But I still think it's interesting in a train wreck sort of way. I don't think too many people want to admit a pretty common situation -- wanting the comforts of a predictable, relatively happy, relatively safe marriage versus the crazy passion she describes with Damien. I take the view that all affairs given enough time become as tedious as any marriage. And Keith your comment about the evil little blonde white children in Village of the Damned cracked me up! And finally, rest in peace, James Mitchell, ie Palmer Courtland. A fan of All My Children since birth, I can guarantee you will be missed.
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Rosemary's Baby
Working on a new project and have a question for the day to pose to you guys -- What are your favorite horror novels and why? I used to read them all the time when I was younger and remember really loving Ira Levin, particularly Rosemary's Baby. What, if anything, really scares you?
I'm also reading the new Carver biography and will have a review soon. So far, very compelling!
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Speed, strength, and the inability to register pain immediately." Reggie Williams, when asked his greatest strengths as a football player
Cocktail Hour
Drinking suggestion: I have a new drink with dry ice coming up -- it's really cool-looking and a little scary to drink, perfect for the mid-winter days.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Sunday!
Friday, January 22, 2010
The Story Of My Life
Well, we come to the end of yet another week in the sorrow that is January and find out that (gasp!) Jonathan Edwards has indeed fathered a love child. This does not surprise me. He is a rich man who was having an affair with a woman who stands a lot to gain from such a situation. (For further reference, Jay McInerney wrote a story about her titled "The Story Of My Life.") Also, the baby looks just like him. What surprises me is the outrage of the pundits on his lying, many going so far as to call him a pathological liar. Really? The man did not act well. He lied about it. For about two years. With a terminally ill wife to boot. But what do we know of his life? While huffing and puffing away on the elliptical, I heard a woman on television say that he did irreparable harm to his daughter by denying paternity and that she would never get over it. I grew up in a place where a young boy suffocated to death in an abandoned refrigerator because of lack of parental supervision, where kids got routinely beaten and starved and bullied because their parents didn't have money, chances, or the sense God gave a goat. Perspective, please.
I've made many mistakes, large and small. I've done stupid shit, lied about it, ruined relationships, broke my own heart, covered up mistakes. Sound familiar? It should. Everyone has regrets, even the ones who say they don't. We've all been the dude in the Bible who buries the talent and has to pay the piper when the time is up. No doubt that Edwards acted the fool. Let's just say he's not the only one trying out for that part.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"A mistake in judgment isn't fatal, but too much anxiety about judgment is." Pauline Kael
Cocktail Hour
All right, I'm really wanting to see Crazy Heart. I'm a total sucker for that type of movie. Has anyone seen it yet?
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Friday! In answer to the Macomb question, yes, guilty as charged!
Thursday, January 21, 2010
When You Are The Camera

Thanks so much to Laura at her Wardrobe by Sam blog for inspiriting this post!
I liken pictures to an autobiography of sorts, this is me, this is who I was, this is where I have been. Was in a discussion the other night about whether knowing something is autobiographical automatically takes away from the artistry. I think not, though others disagree. I think it's a question of taste (for instance, I usually prefer photography to painting and that in some ways mirrors my taste in literature) because all writing comes from somewhere and it ain't thin air. You're pulling out the deepest parts of yourself, trying to understand or at least tell a decent story. And as Joan Didion pointed out not so very long ago, We tell stories in order to live. I can survive without a lot of things, but a story isn't one of them. Even if it's a story about not having a story -- my brief flirtation with meta, I suppose.
For me, writing is where artifice meets honesty, paradoxical bedfellows. Sometimes we are most ourselves when we are posing as someone else. When I was a little girl, I used to imagine myself as someone else, usually one of the popular, effortless girls, tried to see what it would be like. I'd choose a new girl every week, imagining her reality to be far superior to my own. But I never quite made myself believe it. I remember a lot about that time, but not everything. My favorite picture of myself from these years is one of me lying on my stomach, reading the Bible, dressed in a nightgown and pom-pom socks, looking as serious as can be. As if I could midrash those stories, find out what I needed to know in order to be whole in the world. I don't know if I ever made it, but I have the proof that, at least for a moment, I was seeking it.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"And as I've gotten older, I've had more of a tendency to look for people who live by kindness, tolerance, compassion, a gentler way of looking at things." Martin Scorsese
Cocktail Hour
Drinking movie suggestion: The Woodsmen
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Thursday! And thanks so much for the reminder about Robert B. Parker -- rest in peace, writer extraordinaire!
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Adventures In Babysitting

My favorite babysitting gig was for a child named Sunny Gayle. Her parents, Sonny and Gail, were heavy drinkers who always paid well and never insisted on driving me home. I liked that their house always had a lot of food, and I spent most of my time cooking Rice-A-Roni, the San Francisco treat, and watching cable, which in those days meant that you subscribed to HBO. Whenever I requested similar Rice-A-Roni privileges at home, Mother would tell me to wait for my next good babysitting gig since the boxes were pretty expensive and it was good to have a job with perks.
Certainly it beat babysitting Brad and Blake, the two little boys that lived behind us. Brad at seven wanted to be a Marine and spent most of his time trying to get me to play China Beach, a game where he'd ask me to dance on the table for money while he drank wine. I never danced on any tables, but I did put his Welch's grape juice in a wineglass and let him hold some Monopoly money in case any would-be strippers sauntered by. His brother, Blake, named after the poet, decided by his tender age of five that life was too hard and that he wanted to kill himself. I didn't know much about William Blake at the time except that fucking "Tiger, Tiger" poem Mother liked so well. The road to excess and all that, the way a friend had written in a journal about a visit with him, Still dirty, still poor. Brad would goad Blake and tell him he wasn't man enough to take his own life. I told him if he kept up that kind of talk, there'd be no wineglass for him and he could forget staying up late and watching "The Twilight Zone" with me. After all, why put it on television when you're living it?
Michelle's Spell of the Day
“True love comes quietly, without banners or flashing lights. If you hear bells, get your ears checked.” Erich Segal
Cocktail Hour
Drinking blog post selection -- my beautiful Jodi's post on the good and bad points of Facebook communication is a must read!
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Wednesday! Rest in peace, Erich Segal! And special birthday wishes to my dear lovely Jill and sweet adorable Marci! Hope you both have a wonderful day.
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Monday, January 18, 2010
MLK Day

In lieu of a post, I offer this picture I took in Detroit a couple of years ago. See you tomorrow, my lovlies!
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Everything that we see is a shadow cast by that which we do not see." Martin Luther King, Jr.
Cocktail Hour
Best Golden Globe look for my money -- Christina Hendricks from Mad Men. Love her, the dress!
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy MLK Day!
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Take My Hand
My idea of the perfect Sunday or funeral song. Of course, my favorite version -- Hank Williams! Happy Sunday to all!
Friday, January 15, 2010
No Good Deed
Lots of good things to think about with the comments this week! I think Lana's comment about expectation is right on so I'm going to go with that issue on this blog post. Thank you, my dear!
I remember the first time I heard the old expression -- What does assume do? It makes an ass out of u and me. This gem came out of the mouth of a fellow lifeguard I didn't like at all. Darren (his real name, not the real spelling) had the uncanny knack of finding someone's soft spot and picking at it, like a dog nipping at your heels and finally biting hard enough to draw blood. Darren was the first male bulimic I ever knew; he'd gorge on bags of fast food and vomit in the men's room at the pool. If you are desperate enough to force yourself to vomit Taco Bell, Chicken Express, and McDonald's in such a nasty place, you have some sympathy from me. But then he'd do something to fuck it up like call the morbidly obese woman who had ventured out to the pool Shamu and make me hate him all over again. I avoided him for the most part and aligned myself with the older lifeguards who wanted to keep the radio tuned to Hendrix and the Eagles and Skynyrd, not the new rap music that the younger guards favored. Which is now called old school rap. How evil and quick the passage of time!
I grew up in a house with a bunch of rattlesnakes so I didn't assume much about anyone, only that I was sure there were places that were calmer. On this fact, I was right, although not by much. Expectation was a different matter, though. When you act well or do a good deed, you most of the time expect that you will be treated accordingly. Wrong bat breath, my dad would have said to such an assumption. No good deed goes unpunished, my mother would have replied in a sage voice that my sister deemed her Oh Wise One posture. But both were right, of course, because sometimes those we give our love, time, and support don't give a shit or can't reciprocate in kind. So we end up feeling like we're constantly giving to the shiftless friend who never has any money except when he or she wants to jet off to Paris for the weekend. This said, I think that giving is best when freed from the constraints of a fair return. Once a boyfriend said that he thought relationships were investments and that you put in your time and energy and when that person became successful, your investment would pay off. Sorry, buddy, I am not Bank of America! Your best bet is to enjoy the giving and the receiving of any particular moment, taking as many self-protective measures as you need. (Lana's suggestion on remaining anonymous works wonders here --if there's no way you can be rewarded except karmically, you don't worry about it. Another way is to avoid being put in uncomfortable situations -- give as much as you can without feeling used. It takes some practice to know the limits, but I assure you that you'll know the line once you cross it.) Once I had a rosary where Jesus popped off the cross. I guess he was tired of his perpetual crucifixion. I put Him in a drawer where He could rest, take a break from forgiving my sins for a spell.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"We create monsters and then we can't control them." Joel Coen
Cocktail Hour
Drinking movie suggestion: A Serious Man (finally got to see this one and LOVED it!)
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Saturday!
Thursday, January 14, 2010
The Dead Girl

Last night, I watched a dvd called The Dead Girl. I knew nothing about it, just thought it looked interesting. Well, it was. Great movie, but on a creepy note, the late Brittany Murphy played the title character, said dead girl. Just a couple of years before she died, she was on her way to death in film. And for me this type of coincidence always begs the question -- do we have prescience over that which is about to happen if we are alert? Do we tune into reality or create it as every self-help guru would have us believe? If we create it, I'm writing a story titled "The Rich Beautiful Girl With No Worries Who Will Live Forever."
But I don't write those stories. Hell, I can't even bring myself to read one of the Chicken Soup for the Soul books. (This is no judgement -- the guy who wrote them was persistent in his desire to get published and I have no doubt they help lots of people.) Even so, I do believe in what people sometimes refer to as the power of the word. They have powers, words. Powers to heal and to wound. Some of the dumbest shit I have done has been in response to a nasty comment someone made. And guess what -- all the bad stuff was self-inflicted. Always looking out for number one, I suppose.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Follow your inner moonlight; don't hide the madness."
Allen Ginsberg
Cocktail Hour
Okay -- let's all try to not worry or get inordinately pissed off about Pat Robertson's remarks about Haiti's deal with the devil (the gong show should have pulled him off a LONG time ago) and do what we can to help.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Thursday!
Black Hawk Down
Hey guys, hope your week is going well! I'm working on a project and tying up several others and am starting to feel like the scene in Black Hawk Down where the guys think they're rescued and then they realize they still have to run through the bullets to get to safety. Alas, the writing life! I'll be back soon with some recent writing -- until then, Celebrity Rehab is on tonight!
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
What's So Funny About Peace, Love, And Understanding

I pray. A lot. I'm like the character in Steel Magnolia's who "prays because the elastic in her panties is shot." I pray about big things, little things, begging prayers, thankful prayers, forgive me prayers, forgive them prayers, help me forgive them and not want to shoot them prayers, the works. But the hardest prayer in some ways is the one I see engraved on plaques, stitched on samplers, a prayer that seems to be pretty simple, but isn't. The St. Francis prayer. You know the one, the one about seeking to console instead of being consoled, about doing for others those things you want for yourself. When I'm being honest with myself (once a month, every third Wednesday), I know that this is more than a nicety that you can give out on a bookmark. I know this is the most important thing we can do, no matter what, if any, religion we follow.
I, like everyone else, get into the occasional fight or tiff with people I love. No surprise there. I used to think this was the end of the world, as phobic about confrontation as if someone had stuck a rattlesnake around my neck. But it isn't. Even so, very few of us like to fight with those we love. It's so hard, though, because we become so very entrenched in our positions that we lose any hope of bridging the gap of understanding. Usually when someone is upset, the default reaction is to become defensive or attempt to minimize the problem. This makes the upset person become more strident in an attempt to convey the seriousness of the problem which makes the listener become more defensive. And so on. If both people can come together a bit, a lot of the cycle would be broken. I don't really know why I wrote this today; my guess is that someone out in the world needs to hear it. Or like Anne Lammott wrote in an essay once, that she writes things she would like to hear. So I think about the St. Francis prayer, that sweet saint of animals. It's simple, but not easy. To do for others what we so desperately desire for ourselves is perhaps the ultimate prayer.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"I'll put you through hell, but at the end of it all we'll be champions." Bear Bryant
Cocktail Hour
Has anyone seen Synecdoche, New York? My friend Priscilla says that there will be a giant sucking sound that is your life going bye-bye for those long two hours of the movie. But I've also heard some good things about it so I ask you, dear readers, to give a recommendation if you've seen it.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Tuesday!
Monday, January 11, 2010
Celebrity Rehab

Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew has a special place in my heart. When my appendix ruptured, I was in the middle of season two and in ICU, the channel was one of the few things I could remember. Clearly not ready for the pearly gates yet. Hi Jesus, I had a good life, but I did miss the last three episodes of Celebrity Rehab. Is there Comcast On Demand here? Just the kind of thing that cements your standing as a Deeply Spiritual Person. Now that we're in the third season (with, for my money, the best cast so far -- Heidi Fleiss is television gold! Dennis Rodman is also pretty cool and let me point out that he wasn't near as crazy as he is now when he was a Detroit Piston. Forget Dr. Drew; let's just reincarnate Chuck Daley to straighten his ass out), I find myself asking why I like the show.
Well, I delve into this mystery because I'm not touching Sarah Palin being hired by Fox News even though I got an email asking me what I thought about it. No comment on much of the political scene which has raised some ire in the past. One old boyfriend used to say, You're a nihilist, Boo Boo. How anyone nicknamed Boo Boo by her then-beloved could be called a nihilist, who knows? But back to the point. Why do I like the show? Not because I particularly like Dr. Drew -- I find him a bit condescending. Not because the patients are such beds of roses -- just like in life, you find some you adore, some you think are true assclowns. It's more the sense of urgency that everyday actions carry. I know this is in large part because of careful editing. Reality shows have more in common with soap operas than reality. But what makes either form compelling? It's because words and actions matter in a way they don't in real life. I once read that women watch soap operas because it's one of the few forms where women are listened to by men, where their actions matter deeply to the plot. This makes sense to me. Who doesn't want to matter in some fundamental way? And our interest in celebrities gone wrong also stems from the whole love to build them up to tear them down mentality. Everyone always complains about the cars slowing down to see a car wreck. I've never heard anyone say, I'm the dufus who slows down to look. But someone sure the hell must be.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Isak Dinesen said that she wrote a little every day, without hope and without despair. I like that.” Raymond Carver
Cocktail Hour
About to read the new Raymond Carver biography. Will give a full report when I'm finished.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Monday!
Saturday, January 09, 2010
A Black Cat Crossed My Path

Today as I wrote, a black cat stared at me from beyond the glass door. I felt its wicked eyes on me and flipped out a little when I saw it, much like Paulie in The Sopranos when a cat becomes fixated with the dead Christopher's picture in the Bada Bing. Of course, being a modern girl with a dash of my late great grandmother, I stared back at it until it left. And then going with the modern part of that sentence, I googled black cats and what the hell does it mean when they stare at you with yellow eyes? Of course, most Americans think black cats are unlucky, but in Scotland, if a black cat comes to your door, it means that you are coming into prosperity which is the meaning I'm going to take as it will help fund Motor City Burning Press and all that jazz. Old joke -- How do you make a small fortune from a small press? Start with a large fortune.
I'm a bit on the superstitious side in life, picking up pennies (a habit from my younger days -- a hundred pennies meant going to the local movie, a story I could bore my grandchildren with if I intended to have any), avoiding walking under ladders, that sort of thing. Nothing too dramatic, just cautious. Birds scare me, although given that my friends love owls, I'm warming up to them as a symbol of wisdom. What about you, my dear readers? Any superstitions you fear or welcome as signs of luck?
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"You can play a shoestring if you're sincere." John Coltrane
Cocktail Hour
Check out beautiful Jodi at the J Spot with the drink I made especially for her sweet self!
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Saturday!
Thursday, January 07, 2010
Birthday Wishes
Hey guys, Here I am with one of my favorite little girls in the world, Angela, on her birthday! I thought this was a fitting photo since its my dad's birthday today. I've been working on a much longer project, a horror novel of sorts, that I'll start posting bits and pieces of next week. But for now, I'll leave you with an old poem of mine. Happy Thursday!
Last Big Show
On his last morning, my father drives
himself to work, tired from a two-week
air-plane sales show. Even so, he listens
to Fleetwood Mac on the cd player, turned
up loud. Before he leaves, he writes on the dry-
erase board -- Good to be home! Last big
show. Days later, picking through the debris
for what was his, almost nothing remains
except the battered rims of his sunglasses,
a pocket knife. My sister identifies the face
of the watch his friend, the pilot, wore,
still working. It’s like an advertisement,
we think, this three thousand dollar
extravagance that lasted through a final
confrontation with a power line and all
that charred earth. The evidence bag of dirt
and litter yields nothing more, just this -- small
unconvincing proof that time has not stopped.
Wednesday, January 06, 2010
Tale Telling
Still working out my thoughts about memoirs. I have to agree with my dear friend Priscilla on the question of TMI -- it's not so much what it told, but who is telling it and how it is told. I guess that's true in life as well. I think it's one of the pitfalls of the technological age. Whereas if you're on the phone or having a conversation with someone in real time, you have to at least take nominal notice of social cues and audience whereas with e-mail and texting, it's much easier to do the old, apropos of nothing routine, the kind of revealing tale telling that used to be reserved for drunk dialing. We're also used to knowing a lot more about people which can be a good or a bad thing. Like I said, I'm still relatively half-baked on all this material. More thoughts soon!
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"Solitude is not something you must hope for in the future. Rather, it is a deepening of the present, and unless you look for it in the present you will never find it." Thomas Merton
Cocktail Hour
Check out Mark's post on Motor City Press -- we're going to get things going this year. Like all presses, the start-up is slow, but Detroit needs a literary venue and this is going to be one!
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Wednesday! Still calling for JR's return -- Car 54, where are you?
Tuesday, January 05, 2010
Cleaving

Thanks so much for the thoughtful comments on relationships, image, and persona. I've been thinking a lot about all of that upon reading Cleaving. Interestingly, Cleaving is also the title of another memoir about marriage that I love. It's written by Dennis and Vicki Covington (two writers married to each other) and the utter honesty in that work gives one considerable pause as well. What makes it significantly different is that both sides have a say. I'm working on a longer post for tomorrow, but please keep the comments coming and what I can weave from the various strands of thoughts.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"What a lovely surprise to finally discover how unlonely being alone can be." Ellen Burstyn
Cocktail Hour
Anyone watching Hoarders this season? I do, if only to clean more furiously.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Tuesday! Thanks so much to Whitenoise for the kind comment and I second your Where's JR? JR's Thumbprints come back to us!
Monday, January 04, 2010
The Art Of French Cooking

Just finished reading Cleaving, a memoir by Julie Powell, the same writer who wrote Julie and Julia. Let's be clear: Julie Powell is no Amy Adams a la the movie. I saw the Julie/Julia movie, surprising myself by enjoying Meryl Streep as Julia Childs, but not caring as much for the cutesy heroine who cooks her way through a year of The Art of French Cooking. No worries there -- that cutesy narrator is nowhere to be found in Cleaving. The book, from what I hear, has not done well. Those readers charmed by the plucky happily married blogger/cook in the first book won't like the narrator in her new offering. But does this make the book a bad one, much like many of the reviews on Amazon suggest? In Cleaving, Julie Powell cheats on her husband (in a slightly s/m-ish affair where, after being dumped, turns into a full-blown loop de loo, cyber-stalking her ex-lover and sending him countless texts about her how miserable she is), learns how to butcher meat (arguably some of the best parts of the book), drinks a lot, and travels with her husband who knows all about her extracurricular activities.
To be honest, I don't know what I think of the book. I found it compelling, staying up late to read it in that train wreck kind of way. Never having watched Buffy the Vampire Slayer, I missed a lot of the references to it and the way it serves as a touchstone in her marriage. I don't dislike or feel betrayed Julie Powell as much of her former fan base seems to feel; I don't think it's a writer's job to be likable. But this begs the question -- how much information is too much in a memoir? Do you have to like or identify with the teller of the tale? And what if, like in all relationships, the writer eventually lets you down? We all start every relationship with an idealized view of someone. Then we have a fight or the person disappoints us in some fundamental way. The walls come down, the masks are tossed to the side. We no longer sit in the glow of perfection, but the good news is this -- we are now free to have a real relationship, the kind that will last, free of the bullshit and soul-killing expectations of perfection. Someone told me that the publisher didn't want Julie Powell to release this latest memoir before the movie. And the movie does charm. But like the meat she learns to butcher, Powell exposes herself in a way that Julie and Julia doesn't begin to touch. The recipe, like liver or chicken hearts, isn't for all tastes, but it does get pretty close to the bone marrow.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"An idea, like a ghost, must be spoken to a little before it will explain itself." Charles Dickens
Cocktail Hour
Good news, my friends. Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew returns this Thursday!
Benedictions and Maledictions
Yes, Jason, I did copy your Crystal Vodka skull! Let's face it, it's too cool. Vodka and a skull? Not since Tequila in a gun have I been so pleased. Happy Monday!
Sunday, January 03, 2010
Sunday's Child
Saturday, January 02, 2010
Bodies In Motion

Here's some random thoughts about writing and mildly interesting (or maybe not even mildly) discoveries of the last year. Hope everyone is well and recovered from holiday madness. Today the tree goes down. I had one of those mothers who took the Christmas tree down on Christmas afternoon while Beth and I crawled around picking up pine needles from the carpet. She wasn't one to linger in the holiday glow. And truth be told, I'm not either, but I gave it an extra week this year just because.
1 -- I work better with a word/page count than a set amount of time to write. Having done it both ways, I notice a huge increase in productivity when I have a goal to reach. I also get a lot less bogged down in my own worries and have an easier time with plot. Go figure.
2 -- Take a day off. I take Sundays off now and since I've started, more writing gets done. I think if you're "always writing," you're "never writing." Work hard and take a deserved rest. It's counter intuitive, but you'll get a lot more done.
3 -- Enjoy yourself. This one seems self explanatory, but I never gave it much thought before this year. I thought of writing as passion, pain, and most of the time, about as much fun as a colonoscopy. But I've been having a lot more fun, making myself laugh (fortunately I'm easily entertained), taking more risks. Not everything need be so very serious.
I'm sure there's more, but those are the essential truths that come to mind. Also, remember the whole body in motion stays in motion. I don't know about this when it comes to exercise, but I do know that this is true of any long writing project. Even a little each day is better than nothing to keep the flow.
Michelle's Spell of the Day
"I'm here today because I hated everything else." Wanda Sykes
Cocktail Hour
Nominations for favorite drink of the year? I'll be posting some new recipes very soon.
Benedictions and Maledictions
Happy Saturday!
Friday, January 01, 2010
Happy New Year!
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