mrissa: (Default)

There's no particular reason why you have to make anything out of grief that's for anyone else's consumption. A lot of people don't; but then a lot of people do, Alfred Lord Tennyson and Roland Barthes and Donald Hall and Jane Yolen and, apparently, me. The stuff that you pour out into a journal or sketchbook or freeform on your instrument can just be you and your grief, you and a bunch of tears and snot and the knots in your chest. But the minute you say, hey, I think this might actually be good, this might be worth going on with, then there's subjecting the art you made from grief to revision, and that is, frankly, very weird.





I think for me the thing that has been weirdest about this process is the bifurcated view that it requires. Because a lot of what I've been doing is looking at sentences and saying, yes, that is exactly right, that is exactly what my experience of grief and mourning was like--and, simultaneously, this sentence is not doing what it needs to do for this story as a story. And so it needs to change, it needs to communicate more with the outside world, or it needs to go away completely, having served its purpose of getting my emotions out and not having a purpose in the other thing I'm doing, which is telling this story.





Which is a story about grief. Yes. It totally is. But it's a story, I am asking an editor to publish it as a story; I had the choice of just doing a blog post that was word soup, an outpouring on the page, and instead I shaped it into something else, something indirect; I wrote about my grief by writing about the grief of someone who lost their mother, a person who lived alone, a person who had an alien visitor. None of those details are true of me. I took it into the realm of fiction because that's what I do--but then the other thing I do is actually, I revise, I consider, I add and prune and think about what's there compared to what I meant to be there.





Even when it's something incredibly personal.





Even when it's one of the worst things.





It's always okay to say no. It's always okay, when someone says, hey, can you make this clearer, can you make this longer, can you make this shorter, I don't understand what significance the bananas have here--it's always okay to say, no, you know what, I don't want to do it that way, this is how we're doing it or not at all. And I think being a short story writer gives me a very particular outlook on that, because there is always another one.





But there isn't another of this one, there isn't another that does what this one does, that says what this one says, and at the end of the day when I weigh the variables I find that I actually do care enough to make it worthwhile, to look with double vision at my own suffering and say, okay, this part is just for me, this part is to try to talk to the world about what it is like to suffer in this particular way. This, and not that.





All of the things I have to say about Dad's opinion of this are circular: Dad would want me to if I wanted to. Dad would want me to have something to say about this if I had something to say about it. Dad would think it was worth it if it was worth it to me.





Dad trusted my judgment.





Dad wanted me to trust my own judgment too.





It is a very different kind of exquisitely painful to mourn someone who wasn't good to you, and I try to be careful how I talk to people when I know their parental relationship was more complicated than this, but for me, I have this, I have this support that has lasted, that will last, because one of the things about knowing him this well and honoring who he was is that when I take a deep breath and think about whether this line stays or goes in a story, I don't have to second-guess whether he would be upset or not, because that is not how this worked, that is never how this worked with my work, he would never have second-guessed my work, not once, he would have been horrified. I can do this when I say I'm ready, and my dad was in the absolute front ranks of the people who would say that.





I was never going to be ready for the grief part. But the revision, well. Apparently that's now. Bring it on.


mrissa: (Default)

(This is the eulogy that a family friend, Barry Anderson, read on my behalf at Dad's memorial service yesterday. It is by no means my final word on my father, but rather a beginning of the writing I will do about Dad and what he's meant to me--and one for a very broad audience, since we had at his memorial various sides of the family, my friends, Mom's friends, Grandma's friends, my colleagues, his colleagues--and of course his friends from all different parts of his life. Still. This is where I started.)





I think most people go through at
least some phase in their life when their dad is not one of their favorite
people--some time, usually in their teens, when they kind of get at each other.
I never did. My dad has always been at the top of my list.





When I started studying physics, I
found out about binary star systems, where two stars form a stable orbit around
a center point instead of one consuming the other's mass. I thought, that's Mom
and Dad. Then I learned that the planets in those systems tend to have very
eccentric orbits, and I thought...well, there's me. There's always been more to
our family than that--but so much of my childhood took place in that binary
star system that as I try to write this, I'm having to translate from a private
language with only two native speakers left. Some of the small communications
among us were not even conscious. The day after Dad died, when I was missing
the way that I would go off with Dad to just be silent together for a moment,
Stella told me that we each made the mirror image of the same face at each
other when we wanted to have that silence together. I never knew that, I just
did it. It was like breathing. Right now I am trying to write this with half
the light on my planet gone. When Mother was talking about how overwhelming it
was to try to write a eulogy for Dad, I said to her, Mom, we can walk on the
surface of the Earth, we can send people to walk on the surface of the Moon,
but we can't send people to walk on the surface of the Sun. Her relationship
with Dad was two suns, and you can capture flashes of that, the lens flare of
shared jokes, the warmth it cast on everything else, but you can't portray it
directly. It was just too bright.





Tolstoy said that happy families are all alike but every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. Being raised by my parents made it clear that that Tolstoy was completely wrong. I'm willing to believe that we are not the only happy family! But I'm pretty sure the other happy families didn't spend nearly as much time talking about prehistoric giant beavers, Earl Battey, the Oglala Aquifer, the politics of mountain regions vs. prairie regions, or Haakon the Seventh as we have. I think it's hard to explain how much variety of stuff I have always talked to my dad about. It's pretty normal that I talk to Dad about how Mom is doing or how to best encourage the godkids in their dreams--although I know not everybody has a relationship with their dad where they get to do that. It's less typical that I've been excited to talk to Dad about dinosaur poetry or a new book about algae that's coming out this summer, but that's how we roll. I have no idea how I will prepare for the talk I'm giving next month about existentialism in the works of children's author Lloyd Alexander, without talking to Dad about it. For so many topics he was the only person in the world I could think of to talk to. Part of this is that Dad was always, always willing to go off on the weirdest tangents. No road was too obscure or too strange for my dad's attention. There's a story about my uncle Phil that ends in "Nah--too weird!" but one thing he got from Uncle Phil and passed on to the rest of us is that nothing was ever, ever too weird to talk to Dad about. Nothing too personal, nothing too unimportant, nothing too philosophical, nothing too off-the-wall...it could all go to Dad.





My dad approached parenting like he
approached everything else: in a spirit of joyful exploration. My mom tells me
that when she was pregnant, he would bend down and whisper to me in her belly,
"Chemistry is fun. Math is easy." The fun part there was not
optional. The message was not "put your head down and do science at all
costs, no matter how terrible it is," it was "let's poke at the
universe together and see what fun we can have." It was "don't let
them tell you this is a grind, because it's actually a great big game."
After lab in college, I would call Dad to talk about how each experiment went.
I still remember the surprise and excitement in his voice my junior year when
we got to Franck-Hertz experiment, one he had never performed, and I got to
describe the lavender mercury vapor and the peaks and valleys that showed the
quantum world in a way he'd never seen. Dad loved to bounce his new membrane
ideas around with me. We got excited about the world's beautiful new
possibilities together.





We explored maps together from the
very beginning. When I was almost six, we packed up the five of us in Grandpa's
big blue Buick and set off east. Dad handed me the maps one morning and said,
"Let's try to get Grandpa into the middle of downtown Toronto." For
the first time, I got to help navigate--and I steered Grandpa right into the
heart of Canada Day celebrations, because Dad believed I could do it. He never
believed anything was beyond me. Coming out of one of the hardest years of my
life, I wrote in his Father's Day card, "Your support has always meant the
world to me, Daddy, but in the last few months it's given me the strength to
pursue my dreams. Thank you." He kept it. Mom found it in his pajama
drawer along with the postcards I'd written him every week of that year, which
was the year I started publishing fiction. He taught me not just how to use a
map but how to go off the edges and make my own.





I have wonderful stories of exploring the world with my family, tasting fish on the wharf in Bergen, Norway, trusting Mom's nose to pick out the best pub in London, or dodging traffic trying to get to the North Church in Boston, but truthfully some of my favorite explorations with Dad were to such exotic locales as--silence please--the grocery store--or--drum roll--Target. Every trip to the park resulted in a magic stick. Saturday morning trips to the post office were a special treat I looked forward to all week. I think one of the things that made time with my dad so wonderful is that he was such a great listener as well as a good talker. He and Mom wanted to learn things with me, not just teach things to me. Lots of people's musical taste stops in their early twenties. Dad did want to expose me to the artists he loved, so I got plenty of Simon and Garfunkel, Beach Boys, Carole King, and more--but he was thrilled to learn about 10,000 Maniacs, Barenaked Ladies, and the Indigo Girls in the Nineties, up to Josh Ritter and Meg Hutchinson in this decade. He never stopped having new music to love. Lillian was so proud to play Santana songs for him, but I know he would have loved learning whatever songs she and Rob grew to love, because he had never stopped and had to restart again.





This is not to say that there
weren't a few hilarious bumps in the road of joyfully exploring with Dad. When
I was five, Mom worked an early shift to be able to be home with me when
kindergarten got out at noon--which meant that Dad was in charge of getting me
ready for school in the morning. He was still cleaning up breakfast dishes when
I slipped in the bathroom and singed my wrist on the curling iron. Once he made
sure it was a superficial burn, Dad did all the right things, running my wrist
under cool water and bandaging it, pulling me into a hug--and then said,
excited, "Marissa! Now is a great time to learn about your body!"
What! I listened indignantly as he described the miracles of the white blood
cells mustering a defense of my skin, which did not seem like an opportunity at
that exact moment. I teased him about that one for the rest of his life,
drawling out, "Daaaaad, it's a great time to learn about your
baaaaaady."





My dad's belief in the importance of playfulness ranged through his whole life. His relationship with Grandma started with water fights when he was a teenager and she was a fun young mom throwing her home open to hordes of her daughter's friends. Up until his last days, Dad loved to play cards and games with Grandma and her friends--and how many mothers-in-law can honestly say not only that their son-in-law would drive their friends around for game night but that he clearly enjoyed doing it. He would also peer carefully at the intricate games Mark, Mike, and Kev would set up at Christmas, at all the tiny moving parts showing new kinds of game that he had never seen before, always a fascination.





But he took especially thoughtful care in teaching play to my friends when I was little. A lot of dads coach softball--so did mine. But I also have pretty special memories of how my dad taught one of my friends about teasing and joking. She was an immigrant whose journey to this country was pretty rough--and once she got here, her experience of Americans teasing was that she was the butt of the joke, and that laughter was always at her expense. My dad took the time to teach her in very gentle stages that it didn't always have to be that way. I remember him coming in and saying to her, "You will be very sad because Mrs. Lingen has made brownies and you do not like those." He waited hopefully. She paused and thought about it. "Mr. Lingen, I think you are teasing me because you know I do like brownies." He said, "Yes--and you know you can have as many brownies as you like here at our house." From that very simple point Dad stepped her up to the idea that you could tease somebody because you liked them--that her new American life could feature people who were including her in the joke instead of keeping her out. That was the kind of play he always liked best, and he wanted to make sure other people had the chance to enjoy it too.





With all the time they spent together from basically the minute their ages hit the double digits, you'd think my parents would know everything about each other. And yet I remember within the last year each of them marveling to each other, "I'd never heard that story," or, "I didn't know that!" about new discoveries they could make together, new stories to tell each other, new dreams of ways the world can get better. Some of this is that they remained always open to listening and thinking about each other's perspective. Some of it is that they have both always listened respectfully to others, so that when they came home to each other they would have fresh perspectives to present from their conversations, new thoughts sparked by other people they value--people from all walks of life.





My dad centered values in his life, not policy--the question was always how to get clean water, clean air, how to feed hungry children, how to nurture hungry minds. When he was a young man he was interested in hearing my grandfather's viewpoint, which was a lot more traditionally conservative than Dad's was then. These days I'm pretty far on the progressive side, and Dad listened to that with just as much respect as he gave Grandpa. But the point for Dad was never what team you had signed up to play for it, was how the ideas worked and whether you were treating all humans with respect and decency--and whether you were always willing to take in new information on how each idea was working in the world to help real humans. My dad would be the first to tell you that if you spoke all the tongues of men and angels but had not love--real love, love that is enacted on the earth--you were a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. (Probably less than that, because he would want our percussionist Lillian to have all the clanging cymbals she wants. Sorry, Stella.) 





My dad taught me that a perfect day was a day that we all spent together as a family. The details didn't matter--it was the time we spent that made it perfect. So if I tried a new recipe and the sauce came out soupy--perfect day. If the beautiful castle and garden in Uppsala were at the top of a very VERY steep hill--perfect day. (As God is my witness, Grandma, it looked flat as a pancake on the map.) He appreciated the ways that Mom and I spent time lining up details to make a GOOD day, whether it was reading newspapers over brunch, climbing down a thousand-year-old copper mine, learning a Japanese style of weaving, or spending all day making the year's supply of lefse and Christmas cookies. But ANY of the details were the RIGHT details as long as we were together, and Dad knew that was what mattered. He would hug me at the end of the day and whisper, "It was a perfect day."





We had so many perfect days.


My father

Jun. 2nd, 2019 06:57 am
mrissa: (Default)

This blog has evolved with time, as you would expect something to do in 18 years. I used to post daily, little rambly posts, few of them particularly themed. Now it's almost all book reviews and publication news, with the occasional theorizing about craft. But this personal thing is too monumental to leave out.





Two weeks ago yesterday my beloved father had a massive brain bleed from a med he was on. Before the bleed profused we had time to talk and laugh and say "I love you" so many times. At that time there was still a lot of hope that he might recover. There was then a second, ischemic stroke in the opposite side of his brain. The two weeks since have been a haze of brilliant care and uncomfortable facilities, of waiting and hoping and gradual realizations that the Dad I have adored was never coming back to us. He died gently yesterday morning before dawn. My mother was with him. I had been able to spend all day, every day at the hospital--always the three of us, as it's always been, but other family and dear friends supporting us as well.





I will have so much more to say about Dad--for years, for the rest of my life. I am heartbroken, shattered, agonized. I don't know how I'm going to do this. One step at a time, one day at a time, everyone keeps telling me. Yes. I don't think there's another choice. Those of you who have known me for years know that the phrases I keep handing people like "Dad and I were close" do not even begin to cover it. I never had a phase, not a year of my life, not a moment, when my dad was not one of my favorite people. He always called me Sunshine but we were each other's sunshine. I don't even know how to say all of what's gone. I will have to keep trying.





But a thing I am capable of fully articulating now is this: the ICU nurses at Fairview Southdale did such an astonishing, such a phenomenal job that I never had a moment of doubt that they and we were a team together, that he was getting the very best of care. And when the hospital transferred Dad up to the palliative care floor on the last day, I kept having the mad urge to run back to the ICU floor where I felt safe. Think on that: it was the place where I found out my dad was going to die. I had so many tears in that place, so many bodily indignities for the father I love. But their care for my dad and for our family still let it feel like a safe place to me. That standard of care is an amazing achievement. I have said over and over, "This is the worst week of my life," and it is. It is. But it could have been so much worse without the ICU nurses we had.





We're trying to put one foot in front of the other, we're trying to figure out how this goes. We're leaning into the care of our friends and family. But I feel like I fell into a parallel universe, and not one of the delightful ones. With the timing of the weather in our Minnesota spring, I feel like I was beaten and mugged and shoved out the door of the hospital into a world that was suddenly bafflingly warm and fully green and filled with heart-deep bruises, and I only wish that what had been taken from me was my wallet.





Oh, Dad.


mrissa: (hats off)
This morning I am leaving for World Fantasy Con. The hotel doesn't have free wireless in the rooms. I packed a cable, but I'm not likely to be online very much in public space if there isn't free wired internet in the rooms, and I'm not likely to pay for wireless in the rooms. So by all means still e-mail me or whatever, but don't expect me to be getting stuff regularly, and especially not on social media rather than my very own e-mail box.

Before I leave, [livejournal.com profile] timprov and I are celebrating Teddy Roosevelt's birthday by going to Wirth Park and charging up the sledding hill or the tubing hill, whichever is not golf course at this time. We're also getting pancakes at Maria's.

The idea of celebrating TR's birthday came from a friend of my parents. His youngest needed picking up from grade school, but when he went to fetch her, she and her next-older sister were both there, even though the next-older girl was supposed to stay after for special reading help. "J---, what happened?" he asked her. "Oh, I told the teacher I had to go home because my family was celebrating Teddy Roosevelt's birthday," said J--- airily. It was, in fact, Teddy Roosevelt's birthday, but my parents' friends had no plan to celebrate it, so he sent her back in to her reading help.

"This is the difference between you guys," I said to my dad. "If I'd gotten myself out of something with the deftly applied knowledge of TR's birthday, you would totally have said to me, 'Okay, what are we going to do to celebrate'?" And he laughed and agreed, but then [livejournal.com profile] timprov and I looked at each other and said, "All right, what are we going to do to celebrate?"

Also I have silly new icons. FYI.

Okay, onwards. Don't leave the internet in a mess for when I get back.

Analogy

Nov. 12th, 2008 09:32 pm
mrissa: (dad)
"I was drafted in the eighth round of the junior draft by the Hamilton Red Wings. I showed up to camp to find seventy-five other players on the ice. I phoned my dad crying my eyes out, but he said, 'Son, just do one more day.' The next day I called and said, 'Dad, there are forty-five guys better than me!' He told me the same thing, 'One more day, son.' The fourth day I called him back and said, 'You know what, Dad? There's nobody here who can do what I can do.'" -- Pat Hickey, quoted in Dave Bidini's The Best Game You Can Name

You think his dad was surprised?

I don't. Because mine wasn't.

In case you missed it: the fourth day did not make him say, "I'm better than everybody! Nobody else is any good!" And that's important, too.
mrissa: (dad)
For my dad's birthday, we met a friend of his he hadn't seen in 37 years, ate green beans and chocolate cake (consecutively, not concurrently), and watched Smothers Brothers clips on YouTube. I know he's had more exciting birthdays, because I've been there for some of them, but this one certainly had its strong points.

Internet interactions will continue to be sparse through tomorrow, since my grands and Aunt Dor and Uncle Rudy will still be in town, so we'll get to do Father's Day stuff with Dad and Grandpa. Which may mean nothing more exciting than steaks on the grill, baseball on the TV, and trying to get a hot game of Blokus going amidst the domino-playing of the older generation, but sometimes it's the company that makes the difference.
mrissa: (thinking)
So, Valentine's Day, huh? All right: I'll tell you a story about love.

Once upon a time there was little girl who had a bully. He was not unwilling to beat people up if they were boys, although he knew that the teachers who looked the other way when he was a racist little beast (among other fine traits) would step in and put a stop to it if he hit girls. But what he really loved was to say horrible, nasty things to people. Starting in kindergarten, he thought it was great fun if he could make people cry. By the time third grade rolled around, he hadn't made this little girl cry, but he made her furious and miserable quite a lot.

Furious and miserable was not good enough.

So he brought out the big guns, the worst thing he could think of. Surely that would finally make her cry. This little girl was an only child. And her bully informed her that that meant that her parents didn't want kids at all, that they didn't like her and certainly didn't love her. And then he folded his arms to watch her fall apart.

And she laughed.

Of all the things the little girl knew in her clever, bookish little life, the one that was bedrock certain, all the way down, was that her Mom and Daddy loved her and wanted her. And so the bully's spell was broken. After that, he could upset her by hurting her best friends, but she always knew that he was full of it, making things up to be hurtful, and his power over her was gone.

Not everyone is given that kind of bedrock-certainty love as a kid. But everyone should be. Those of us who have that kind of upbringing have the world's most important kind of noblesse oblige. We are obligated to pass that along -- to our own children if we have any, but also to partners and friends, to whatever others we come upon in our lives who have a piece of our hearts, mentors or protégés, cousins, in-laws, godchildren, whoever. We owe it to the rest of the world to find people to whom we can pass on that certainty of love. We need to let the people we love know it so thoroughly that when the world's nasty voices hiss, "She doesn't really love you," they can laugh and say, "Of course she does. What a stupid thing to say," and mean it down into their bones.
mrissa: (winter)
Christmas Eve is my holiday. Other holidays are very fine, and I'm fond of celebrating, but I have a certain relaxed attitude towards them, an air of "it doesn't matter which day exactly" and "we don't have to follow these traditions; we can do what we like to celebrate." But Christmas Eve is what I like. It goes like this:

--There is breakfast, and there is lunch, and they are both as relaxed as possible.

--My dad and I go shopping. No, we are not lunatics. My dad has an immensely good in with the parking fairies, and so we tend to waltz into the mall from a space no more than three from the door. We have already done any shopping that is truly necessary, so this is along the lines of, "Look! Good socks! We know and love people who have feet!" or, "Hey, don't you think Mom could use those earrings? I think she could!" And, "Hahaha, look at how ugly this thing is! It's ugly and useless! Ha! We will leave it to be ugly and useless here in the store." And also, "Look at those poor stressed-out saps. Smile, stressed-out saps! It's Christmas!" There is also some solving of the world's problems along the way. Also technical discussions of the world of speculative fiction and the world of water chemistry in the last year.

--My dad and I have frozen yogurt with fruit on the top. Failing that, smoothies. But the right thing is frozen yogurt with fruit on the top. Vanilla frozen yogurt. If possible some of the fruit should be chopped kiwi. If they don't have kiwi, we will make the same skeptical face at each other about this newfangled kind of frozen yogurt place that lacks kiwi.

--My dad and I come back and wrap whatever socks/earrings/fruit bats/orangutans/breakfast cereals we have managed to find along the way. We use my dad's secret to wrapping presents: use lots of tape. (Dad's secret to building houses: use lots of nails. Dad's secret to sewing buttons: use lots of thread. Dad's secret to writing novels: use lots of words.)

--There is smorgasbord. Clam chowder and pickled herring and meats and cheeses and usually shrimps (which I do not eat) and veggies and lo these many other fine things. Many of which are Ethnic. In the background of this, there are very cheesy Christmas carols on the hifi, which has been replaced by my mom's sleek under-cabinet kitchen CD player, but still, the theory is the same. These carols are too cheesy to have been played a million times over in stores for the month of December, so no one is sick of them. Two words: Eddie Arnold.

--There are presents opened. The presents are passed out by the two youngest parties present who are old enough to read gift labels. The presents are opened one at a time, going around a circle with the youngest opening one, and then the next-youngest, and so on up to the oldest, then starting again with the youngest.

--There are cookies, and there is raspberry sherbet. These days the sherbet is sorbet, because I buy the sherbet. But the theory of it is sherbet.

--There is the trying on of various gift clothing items, and occasionally the modeling for family members.

--There is church. I am mildly flexible on the subject of the timing of Christmas Eve church. It can be any time after sundown, as long as there are candles and carols. Last year I settled for morning church, since Christmas Eve was a Sunday and my parents' church was not having an evening service. It was a very nice morning service, but it was not the thing. This year: midnight, darkness, candles, carols. Difficulty staying awake is the order of the day here.

--There is the stocking-stuffing, which is topped off with cocoa with Bailey's in. It is quiet and sleepy. The cocoa with Bailey's is one of our best adult innovations to Christmas Eve. Innovations to Christmas Eve are few and far between because it is Christmas Eve -- it's already so hard to improve. Better cheese on the smorgasbord one year than another is about the extent of improvement here.

Clearly this is about me and what I want; I wouldn't dream of telling you what you ought to do for Christmas Eve, or that you ought to do anything at all, and anyway my dad's busy that day and can't go shopping with you. Also, things can be added more easily than subtracted. For example, this year my household will open the presents that don't fit in with other Christmas celebrations together in the morning. In some years past it's been the right time to have coffee or brunch with a friend who's in town for limited time. That sort of thing. But by mid-afternoon, Dad and I will be buying random chocolates and laughing at our own incomprehensible jokes, and that is the way of the world. Not everybody's world. Just my world.

It's a good world, on Christmas Eve. And then Christmas morning there are cinnamon rolls and stockings, and by 10 a.m. on Christmas morning, I am back to my amiable, cheerful, whatever-you-like, we-can-be-flexible attitude about holidays.

Is there a holiday about which you have Firm Opinions? What are your Firm Opinions?
mrissa: (dad)
My dad wanted to get on the phone last night after Mom and I had talked, because I made him some mix CDs for his commute, and he wanted to tell me he was greatly amused by mishearing Dar Williams singing, "our parents do more drugs than we do," as, "Paris has more trucks than we do." Which was a perspective he had not expected.

Just now I misheard Liz Phair as singing, "one-eyed ingenue," when in fact she was singing, "wide-eyed ingenue." Oops.

I keep telling people that my main talent is getting the wrong end of the stick in an interesting way. Some of them even listen. Others probably think I said it was an interstellar way. Anybody who wants to write me and my dad a story about an interstellar one-eyed ingenue in Paris should feel perfectly welcome.

Have you had entertaining mistakes lately?
mrissa: (dad)
1. Happy Father's Day to those who celebrate it today. My dad rocks, in case you didn't know. So does my grandpa. I even have a good memory of my great-grandpa, who died when I was three. (He had this wonderful laugh, and he was always so glad to see me -- me, not just some random small person.) I also have good uncles, godfathers, cousins, and other paternal and avuncular figures of various sorts. I'm very lucky, and I know it.

[livejournal.com profile] markgritter and I are having dinner with my folks tonight for Dad's birthday and Father's Day. There will be cake. Nachos have been predicted, with a chance of enchiladas later in the evening.

2. I am trying to catch up on e-mail and lj comments, but I'm still limited in upright time, still dizzy. If I don't get back to you right away, it's not you, it's me.

3. I thought people knew this, but then I found out otherwise, to my dismay: if you agree to critique a piece of fiction for me, please try to critique the book, not the person. That goes for personal stuff that's intended to be nice, too -- I would far rather hear, "This book sucks," than, "This book sucks, but I'm sure your hair smells nice." Or, "This book sucks, but it shows that you're a very moral person." Or, "This book sucks, but I know you've been sick." I think this is a good general ground-rule for critiquing unless you've heard otherwise from the person, but it's certainly what I prefer for critiques of my stuff. Not everybody works well together in any field; certainly not everybody critiques well together. And that's okay -- doesn't mean you can't be friends with someone if you have different work preferences. Just means you should steer clear of those situations. So I'm trying to steer, and the direction I'm steering is away from critiques that go personal.

4. It's a good thing we have a nice couch, because I just can't imagine how sick of this couch I would be if I didn't like it to begin with.

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