“You are entitled to your own opinion, but you’re not entitled to your own facts.” – Michael Specter
Category Archives: Ideas (blog)
iPad mmmmm :)
Today’s comic marks the first one I fully created on my iPad. There will be more.
If anyone’s got suggestions for FTP apps for the iPhone/iPad that don’t cost a fortune and don’t suck, please let me know. With a good FTP app I won’t need to log back into the computer to post comics at all if I don’t want to.
That’s not to say that I’m giving up my WACOM tablet, just that travel just got lighter, and comicking more convenient.
Ok, THAT was terrifying.
Got a job at the Apple store. Overslept my first day, (woke up feeling awesome, then instant panic attack) so I didn’t get to work until 1pm. When I got there…
- The store was laid out like a Circuit City, with dingy grey carpet & white linoleum.
- Nobody would tell me what to do or how to greet customers.
- The registers were a combination of the VAX terminals I used in college, the computer system they ran at Waldenbooks in the late 90s, & Windows 3.1. If you didn’t know the mainframe keyboard codes, you couldn’t do anthing correctly, but you could do a LOT… all incorrectly and/or against company policy.
- The computer mice were all beige 3-button monsters circa the IBM PS2.
- I had to check people who were buying new macs against a web-based database of people who were likely to become violent if they bought one.
- One of the staff members was hosing a customer’s 6-year-old kid off (fully clothed) in a laundry sink in the back room because somehow the kid had managed to piss himself & get it in his own hair.
Woke up.
That was the most terrifying f’d up dream I’ve had in a looooooong time.
Needs, or, pruning in order to grow.
The world is trying to shake me at my roots, and I’ve been resisting.
I read an article years ago called The Sex & Cash Theory which says, in short, that if you want to be happy with your life you have to balance the things that pay the bills against the sexy, creative stuff. If you let your life swing one way or the other too far, chaos will ensue.
I’ve never had the problem of letting my life swing too far into the creative endeavors.
I get up, take care of the dogs, go to work, try to solve problems and occasionally create things that are useful. I sometimes feel like I’m genuinely making things better. Whether I succeed or not, it’s exhausting work of juggling competing priorities, competing egos, varying interpretations, and menacing deadlines.
When I’m done working, I come home, take care of the dogs if Nighthawk hasn’t beaten me to it (some days run, well, loooong….), source and prepare some sort of foodlike objects, and try to find something that will take my mind off of the work I left and the work I’m going back to the next day.
If I’m lucky, I get six hours of sleep. If I’m really lucky, it’s not filled with nightmares about work. Then it starts over.
(As an aside, have you ever tried to type around a dog? Chance says hello.)
Even as little as two years ago, I had the energy and drive to create after work. I drew a comic. I worked on the five novels I’ve got written in various pieces around my hard drive. I knit. I cooked crazy-ass things. (I’m pretty sure the peanutbutter fish story has never actually made it into this iteration of the blog. Someone remind me someday…)
But slowly those things have been sliding out of my life. The novel writing was displaced by the comic authoring (except for every other November). The comic was displaced by martial arts. That, in turn, has been forcibly displaced by injuries, health issues for Nighthawk, the holidays, more back issues, more health issues for Nighthawk, a conference, family vacation, and just when I thought I’d be going back, a strained shoulder. And a work deadline schedule that pushes and pushes and pushes. Oh, and more health issues for Nighthawk.
Slowly I’m coming to the conclusion that I’m not where I’m supposed to be, mentally, physically, or emotionally.
Nighthawk’s health has recently provided me with an extremely large burst of nervous energy. On May 12th he’s having oral surgery, but not like the nice friendly “let’s pull a tooth” surgery. More like the “let’s put the lung patient on a respirator, do all the work, take you off the respirator, and give you soft foods for at least a week while trying to keep your calorie count above 3000/day and your blood sugar normal” oral surgery. Not. My. Favorite. Kind.
What do you do with a nervous breakdown on the edge of your peripheral vision? Well, if you don’t have a creative outlet for it, you take it to work and try to get it to be useful. This is somewhat akin to putting a bellman’s uniform on the most violent rabid dog you can find, and chaining him up outside your cube, where he’s in charge of greeting everyone. Not necessarily successful, and generally requires a mop.
The universe has decided to combat this insanity by making April into “Kirabug reassesses her values” month.
The first shake-up came from the conference at the beginning of April. An Event Apart re-fired my desire to create, but not my ability to find an outlet. The inspiration-with-no-outlet problem made everything else worse.
The next shake-up came as a Studio Ghibli movie watched on my iPhone while I was feeling burnt out and sick and tired. Whisper of the Heart reminded me that creation is hard work, and you don’t get better from hiding from it.
When I started writing the thyroid cancer part of the comic, which Christ knows I’d never intended to write back in 2004 when I started the comic, it got hard. No, let me reword that. It got haaaaaaard. I lost the enjoyment of the craft because I was frustrated at my lack of skill. And I lost focus when a new sexy toy (martial arts) caught my attention.
But creating stories is what I was born to do. I create stories in the shower, on the way to work, in the comic. Some of my best web design was expressed in a comic strip, not a wireframe. New ideas are literally scrawled in every file and on every note of every piece of paper I get my hands on. I haven’t stopped creating stories, just because I lost time and motivation. I just started drowning them out in news feeds and bad TV and RSS feeds and comic strips and timewasters.
(By the way, Whisper of the Heart is my new favorite movie. It requires two things: one, that you remember how it felt to be sixteen. Two, that you forget how it feels to be your current age. If you get those two reversed you’ll think it’s horribly corny.)
So I threw out a bunch of distractions. I cut from 78 webcomics to comics folder to 36 core stories I’ve been following for years and still love. I threw out all but 15 RSS feeds (down from 50-ish.) Repeat ad nauseum through Twitter and Fark and Facebook ad nauseum.
Progress. Still, I felt lost, like I’m not sure what I’m creating for.
But tonight Nighthawk and I watched Train (or How I Dumped Electricity and Learned to Love Design. Now, Nighthawk turned me on to Brenda’s twitter feed months ago. He happens to know that I’ve wanted to write RPG video games ever since I discovered Final Fantasy in high school. And game design is a bit of a passion for him as well.
Brenda reminded me tonight that I create to grow. Not everything I create is going to be pretty. Not everything I create is going to be valued. Certainly not everything I create is going to be useful. But everything I create helps me step forward.
I have neglected the pruning. The grass has overrun the garden, and the important branches have been left to wither.
I need to walk away from martial arts. It’s a great experience I will return to, but I can’t fit martial arts, work, and my home life all in the same jar. I certainly can’t do all those things and add any other form of creativity into the jar.
I need to leave work at work.
I need to do hard things again, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.
I need to reconnect with my characters and find out what they have to say, before I forget how to speak their language.
I need to give this nervous energy someone to chase that doesn’t wear a tie. Figments of my imagination are suitable candidates.
I need to listen to the earth, stop resisting who I am and what I do. At least for a little while.
One more, this time on the volcano
Via Fark (again), here’s how to pronounce the volcano:
I am so smrt. S-M-R-T smrt. And smug.
MUHAHAHAHA! 10 years of geekdom pays off again!
A few days ago I updated my iMac to 10.6. Everything went smoothly except for two things: One, my printer broke up with my iMac and said they weren’t speaking anymore. Some nice drivers and a glass of wine fixed that.
Two, Adobe Acrobat whined that it wanted an upgrade. Every time I ran the upgrade, a dialog appeared behind the main upgrade window telling me that it needed to repair the print to PDF components. The upgrade wouldn’t run until the box was clicked….. but it was impossible to activate the window the box was in to click the buttons.
I knew I was in trouble when I force-quit all running applications (including the Finder) and the box was still there. I had to reboot to get rid of it. I knew it wasn’t a fluke when it happened twice.
After the 2nd reboot, I started wracking my geek brain for answers. I’ve seen a repair dialog like this one before, when I was providing tech support for Adobe Reader in my day-job. It popped up if you were using or installing Reader and the plugins for Safari weren’t in place. It could also be launched from a Reader menu inside the application.
This wasn’t the exact same dialog as the one I’d seen at work, and the work dialog box was never totally inactive in its own bubble world, but hey, Adobe = Adobe. Instead of trying to restart the upgrade, I launched Acrobat. Lo and behold, the same dialog came up, and I was able to actually process it this time. Right after that, I got the upgrade prompt, which ran just fine.
I’m gloating not because I defeated Adobe’s dumbass upgrade installers, but because I wouldn’t have known what to do if I hadn’t spent 7 1/2 years supporting Reader.
Some days, I miss that job. I get to solve all kinds of cool problems in my new job, but they’re almost all design-related. I rarely get to “get my geek on” anymore. In fact, I’m frequently discouraged from thinking about the geek challenges of creating my designs, because one of my roles as an architect is to challenge the status quo by pushing the developers to find new solutions to existing problems.
Today I proved geek-girl isn’t dead, and remembers her geek-tools. When I get to exercise geek-girl, I’m a happy geek girl.
I think I’ll go recode the whole blog as a reward.
I love living in the future.
Consider the following quote, from The Design of Everyday Things
by Don Norman (copyright 1988):
Would you like a pocket-size device that reminded you of each appointment and daily event? I would. I am waiting for the day when portable computers become small enough that I can keep one with me at all times. I will definitely put all my reminding burdens upon it. It has to be small. It has to be convenient to use. And it has to be relatively powerful, at least by today’s standards. It has to have a full, standard typewriter keyboard and a reasonably large display. It needs good graphics, because that makes a tremendous difference in usability, and a lot of memory – a huge amount, actually. And it should be easy to hook up to the telephone; I need to connect it to my home and laboratory computers.
I bought the book and found this passage while reading the book on my couch… on the Kindle app on my iPhone.
I love living in the future.