Free Books Are the Best Books

They really, really are. When you get a free book, you don't have to weigh the money spent on it against the content. You can read it free of buyer's remorse. Maybe it's a dud, but you haven't lost any cash on finding that out. Maybe it's just what you needed, and you didn't have to waste a penny in discovering it!

So, if you've been unsure about spending money on my quirky-and-queer superhero novel, Necessaries, now is the time to do it. Why? 

Because it's free to download on Amazon this week! All the way to Friday, December 23rd!  

Even if you don't think you have time right now to read it, you may as well download it this week, while it's free, so you can check it out in the future. It doesn't take up much space, and every download helps my Amazon rank!

Click here to download Necessaries from Amazon! FOR FREEEEE!

And, of course, if you like the book, I'd love to hear back from you once you've read it! Heck, if you didn't like it, I'd still love feedback! It's my first foray into novel-writing, and I want to keep improving my craft. Leaving a review on Amazon does WONDERS for my sales and downloads. I mean, have you ever bought something on Amazon without glancing at the reviews first? Even lower ratings are beneficial, because it shows folks are reading and responding to the story. If you can, please throw some stars are me and tell me what you think!

(This entry was originally meant to be published on Monday, so it's a little, ehm, belated. SquareSpace was having some trouble with links. But the deal is still on! In fact, I have some updates. I'm officially at the top of a bestseller list!!! I mean, it's a very specific subgenre, but I'll take it.)

It's the Stress-Stressiest Time of the Year

This photo of me dressed (at my insistence) as the Mouse King and wielding a rolled-up paper sword because I was forbidden from having actual toy weapons still accurately describes how stressed-out the holidays make me.

This photo of me dressed (at my insistence) as the Mouse King and wielding a rolled-up paper sword because I was forbidden from having actual toy weapons still accurately describes how stressed-out the holidays make me.

The wedding happened. It was a thing. I am a married woman. I'm a married woman who went on a honeymoon to Williamsburg, VA with her wife. Ain't that something? Maybe I'll actually write about that someday. 

#Fresh2Death on the James River

#Fresh2Death on the James River

I expected to feel different, but honestly, nothing has changed. Which is a good thing! Kelsey and I are very happy! The biggest differences have been the tripling of my health insurance premiums and the fact that I can introduce Kelsey to people as my wife now. Not that I've had much opportunity for that. And also not that I've felt socially comfortable enough to do that in every circumstance. 

Consider this situation: I met up Kelsey at Panera Bread, where she works, so we could grab a discounted bite to eat and then run some errands together. While we were sitting at a table, debating what to get, one of her coworkers approached and started chatting her up. Then the coworker noticed me.

"This your friend?" she asked.

"This is my wife, Abi," Kelsey replied.

We could see the gears clinking and grinding in her head. "You're girls. Boys marry girls and girls marry boys."

"Or whoever," Kelsey said, the edge of irritation in her voice apparently lost on the woman.

The conversation then progressed fairly normally, which is lucky. The coworker was friendly, and I think maybe a bit lower-functioning, and probably hadn't had much exposure to actual gay people. Maybe the encounter has broadened something for her. Or maybe she thinks we were joking. Whatever the case, I don't think she intended any animosity or judgment. 

But that conversation could have gone so differently. I think of the night Kelsey proposed to me, and the man who went out of his way to tell us, "THAT AIN'T RIGHT" as we enjoyed a romantic carriage ride. I think of the times when I debate on how to bring up Kelsey to strangers. Like when I had an electrician come to check out some funky wiring, and I was trying to describe something Kelsey had experienced to him. If I were a guy, it would be easy for me to just say, "My girlfriend heard a pop, and the light went out." But as a girl, talking to a stranger, am I jeopardizing my repairs by admitting I'm in a lesbian relationship? Am I jeopardizing my own safety?

Most of the time, no. Most, but not all. One poisoned piece of candy in a bowl of safe candy. 

Wowzers. We have veered offtrack here. Do you see what the holidays do to me? In case you doubt my neuroticism, here are some sources of recent stress:

  • The aforementioned tripling of my premiums.
  • Within a week of coming home from Virginia, both puppies became sick. And while a rational person might have waited the illness out, we made the mistake of doing online research and convincing ourselves Billie and Binx were on their deathbeds. $300 and a few ground turkey and rice meals later, and they're suddenly the picture of health.
  • I have about 90 million thank you notes to write, which is a wonderful problem to have, but I'm worried that my pencil-taped-to-a-squirrel's-tail handwriting will make people doubt my sincerity. 
  • I'm starting a program to get my Certified Financial Planner designation, despite having 0 collegiate financial background and a deep fear that I'm intellectually inadequate and am wasting oodles of time and money.
  • I might be making a website for a small business owner?
  • Because my wallet is suffering a $300 vet bill deficit and I have 0 time, many Christmas gifts will be homemade, but with desperate swiftness. I'm already realizing I've bitten off more than I can chew.
  • I'm increasingly concerned about the league of cartoon supervillains that our president elect is inviting into our government, and am barely able to stop myself from brawling with every well-meaning but oblivious friend on Facebook about it.
  • Roomie Cade woke up to discover our cat, Jasper, chasing an actual, non-cartoon mouse through her room the other day. Cade threw a box at it for a while, but that approach failed for some reason. Jasper politely followed her prey around for a while, but wasn't cat enough to exterminate it. The mouse ran over Kelsey's foot, which was an exciting start to her day, and she cornered it in the linen closet. But the thing Houdinied it out of there and into another closet, where I tried to do the humane thing and trap it in a box to throw into the freezing cold so it could die slowly and alone, as nature intended. But I missed and crushed the mouse with the side of the box, traumatizing everyone in the room except for Jasper, who had completely forgotten about it and was blissfully taking a dump. Also Aphrodite/Tad Cooper the bearded dragon, because (s)he has little to no regard for the lives of others. We then chucked the corpse into the trees and sang: "We'll meet again, don't know where, don't know when..."

Whoa. What did I tell ya? Absolutely scatterbrained. 'Tis the season!

The list could go on, but I can see it spiraling out of control. The holidays are great, but I need a holiday from the holidays! It's time to find some stress-relief activities and try to enjoy the snow while it lasts. May your days be cheery, bright, and painless as we close out 2016! I'm rooting for you!

Rise Up

Today I sit at my computer, knowing I have much to say, but not knowing how to say it.

Yet.

There are big things to be said. There are things to say about America’s decision to elect a foaming-at-the-mouth racist, a misogynist, a rapist to our highest political office. There are things to say about the culture that would enable this unqualified, unpatriotic bigot to win in a race against the woman who may be the most qualified presidential candidate in the nation’s history. There are things to say about the millions of people who must now wonder whether it’s safe for them to stay in this hostile country anymore.

I sit in front of my computer, typing on a clunky external keyboard because my real keyboard stopped functioning in the middle of the election coverage, and think about how I will be married in 10 days. I am a woman marrying another woman (though there are some wiggly gender things in the mix). I can’t help but Google the ways in which my marriage can be torn apart by humans who can’t believe in the happiness, safety, or dignity of other humans.

I think about the panicking economy. I think about the montage of evil things our new president said about the people he now expects to unite beneath him. I think about my friend’s mother who said, regarding this man’s own vile admissions, “You don’t just let a man stick his hand up your skirt. You defend yourself.” She said this to her daughter, as if she’d forgotten what her own child had survived, as if her baby was the one at fault for the crime committed against her.

There is rage in my throat that will burn me hollow. There is so much to say, so much, and my heart can’t take the strain of it. My jaw aches from gritting my teeth. A new fear wraps thorny vines around my guts as I wonder if I can be brave enough to introduce my wife to people in this country as my wife, not my roommate, not my friend.

My new vice president would sooner see me electrocuted than happily married.

On my wedding day, I will think of that. I know I will.

But I will also think of how this rage can be transformed into energy. An aggressive kindness, an army of love in the face of America’s blind hatred.

Our country will not be the rabid dog that the rest of the world watches with fear, wondering when to put us down. Not with the millions of outraged voices rising up from every corner of the map. Not with the thousands of organizations dedicated to the protection of those who are threatened by the madmen we’ve let into our government.

Lend your strength to the Indiana Youth Group. To Planned Parenthood. To Dayspring Center. To every organization that values the lives that have been jeopardized today. Help the ACLU take Trump to court should he try to implement his most dangerous and unconstitutional proposed policies. Defend your Muslim neighbors. We will save America from the ground up with ferocity and passion and goodness.

May our actions preserve what I still believe is a good and beautiful nation, even as our government eats itself alive. Stand strong. We will be proven right in time, thought it will be a grueling process.

I have so much more to say. I will be among the millions who will act and love and write America back to life.

And so will you.

Sorry Not Sorry

Way back when, I went on this class trip to a spaceflight simulator. I was assigned to Mission Control and was on a team with two other kids overseeing life support. We sat at these clunky computers with an unwieldy rollerball mouse and clicked through a giant manual of everything that can go wrong regarding life support, which is apparently a lot. 

My poorly-received art project about the collapse of childhood dreams.

My poorly-received art project about the collapse of childhood dreams.

The way the simulation worked was that a random series of errors would occur, and those of us in "Houston" would have to find a solution in our manuals and notify the astronauts. At some point, the astronauts said they were experiencing static electricity, and it was our time to shine. My little crew and I dug through this giant manual, looking for anything related to static electricity. This was a minor inconvenience, right? There had to be an easy fix.

But we weren't having much luck. Every comparable situation in the manual didn't quite line up in one way or another, and our time was ticking down.

"We need an answer, Life Support," said the director.

We gaped at each other. There wasn't a solution. We had to pick the closest match, something to mitigate the situation while a better answer could be found. My teammates were afraid to pick. 

So I was the one who sent the communication to the astronauts to diffuse the electricity into special bars in the cabin of the spacecraft that had been placed there for that purpose.

I picked wrong. The astronauts did as they'd been told, but the problem persisted, and the director stopped the simulation.

"What happened, Life Support?"

Again, my teammates didn't want to come under fire. We were pretty sure we were being graded on this, and we were the only unit to screw up so badly that the mission had to be effectively aborted. 

I knew I had to be the one to do it. My reasoning was selfish. I thought I could demonstrate that I was calmly and confidently taking responsibility for a mistake, and that I would get good marks for being so noble and honest and for taking the hit while my friends cowered.

I stood, and all of Mission Control stared at me. I explained that there was no perfect match for the situation, so we'd chosen the next best thing. I apologized for the error and asked what we should have done instead.

The director was not impressed. Though he didn't tell me what the right answer was, he made it clear that we'd chosen incorrectly. "Don't say you're sorry. Had this been a real mission, you would have killed them."

I had been so ready for a pat on the back for owning up to a mistake in front of so many people. And I was so sure we had done the right thing. We'd problem-solved and come up with something to treat the symptoms of an issue while we searched for a solution. 

I'd been wrong. I'd ruined the mission. I'd hypothetically killed a group of people because I couldn't read a manual properly. My "humility" hadn't mattered. Everyone on the trip saw me as the one who murdered the mission, even my Life Support teammates, who got to sit safely on the sidelines. 

And I wasn't supposed to say "sorry"? That seemed like the perfect time to apologize! 

Then again, I've always had a problem with apologies. 

Has this ever happened to you? You casually apologize for something minor, and the next thing you know, everyone's up in arms and acting like you just kicked a puppy? And then, obviously, you have to apologize again, and they get even more frustrated with you, and you seriously contemplate jumping out the window to avoid all this new and unexpected shame?

That's where I live. I'm constantly at that auto-defenestration shame threshold. 

I, like many women, am a chronic apologizer. It's a sucky-but-true fact that women learn at an early age that they must apologize for everything. For their bodies, for their needs, for taking up space, for speaking, for not being good at things, for being too good at things, etc. Pair that with persistent self-hatred, a desperate need to be considered "good enough," and the baseline anxiety level of a chihuahua stuck in an electric fence, and you get me.

I apologize for a number of reasons. Here are some common ones:

  • I'm sorry I screwed up such-and-such-work-related-task, especially since that particular task could have been handled by a 1998 original-release Furby.
  • I'm sorry I pooped in the bathroom before you were going to take a shower.
  • I'm sorry such-and-such-bad-thing happened to you (in addition to the pooping before you showered thing).
  • I'm sorry for staring blankly at you while you explained something simple that I subsequently failed to comprehend because I was A) inexplicably tired, B) thinking about a stupid story, or C) just straight-up wasn't paying attention for no freaking reason.
  • I'm sorry that I can't remember if I've met such-and-such-person that you're asking me about, especially since when I see them I won't be able to recognize them anyway because I'm just face-blind enough to be a social nuisance, and they're going to think I'm rude if we have met because they'll think I'm a forgetful and rude person, which is not true, because I'm actually forgetful, rude, and have a slightly dysfunctional fusiform gyrus.

These are all situations in which I have inconvenienced another human being, which is my very-special talent in life. And yet, I hate inconveniencing people. I don't even like it when someone at a store offers to help. I don't care if I will die in the next 5 minutes if I don't find the stationary aisle at Staples, I will not ask an employee for help. My last words will be a breathy apology to whoever finds my prone body by the clearance printers. Yes, I recognize dealing with a corpse is more inconvenient than having to show someone where to find note cards, but at least I won't be alive to be ashamed of myself.

Because it all comes down to shame. I'm ashamed of almost everything about myself. I'm deeply aware of my many, many shortcomings, which is a problem because I very badly want to be the best at everything ever. So I sometimes apologize for not understanding something quickly enough, or for asking questions, or for not knowing an important name, or forgetting to do something, no matter how minor. 

After all, I killed a bunch of imaginary astronauts over something I thought was minor at the time.

Apologizing is how I convey to people my self-awareness and my conscientiousness. Like, "Hello, I'm aware that I've failed to measure up in some way, and I feel bad that my failure has inconvenienced you, and I'm going to do better." 

I've been told not to apologize so frequently, else people think I'm insecure or incompetent. Which I'm not. Or, not entirely. But I'm often in situations in which I don't have the right answer, or I'm stepping on someone's toes, or I'm otherwise blundering around, and I feel like I must express an apology, or come off as rude and unaware of my mistakes.

Here's the thing. I don't understand why apologizing gets equated with a lack of confidence. Can't confident people make mistakes? And shouldn't they say "sorry" when they do? Because that's what nice human beings do when they mess up? That's what you do when you're a smart person who happened to do something wrong? Like misunderstanding a fake Life Support manual?

It's true that I sometimes apologize when I shouldn't. Or worse, I apologize when I don't really mean it. However, I'm sticking to my Life Support guns. I think there are times when an apology is important, and it shouldn't convey self-doubt. It communicates that you're human and capable of error and that you're aware of it. You have to be aware of your shortcomings in order to make progress.

But you shouldn't expect accolades, either.

Anyway, this entire entry has been an experiment in bitterness after being called out for apologizing too much. I'm not sorry for my sorries. Not all of them. I think they're important. If people think they betray a lack of confidence, then I'll have to demonstrate confidence in other ways. 

Though perhaps I will think harder about what I mean when I say, "I'm sorry."

Essay: The Wind Telephone

I heard this story on the radio. In Japan, on a hill by the sea, the old, white bones of a phone booth stand. People go there to whisper messages to the dead for the wind to carry away. Little updates, gentle greetings, tears. They call it the Wind Telephone.

So this is my Wind Telephone call.

You aren't dead, but you are a ghost. I can talk and talk and talk to you, but you can't hear me, you're in your own world, your own afterlife. I tell you that I know what it's like, because we've both fallen into Hell, but landed in different circles. I don't know your circle. I just know mine, and every time I think I've trudged out of the tar of it, I find myself still trapped in the mire. So what can I say to you to give hope when I'm still sinking in the muck?

I know what it is to be your own hostage, rattling against your skin-cage, screaming soundlessly like in a nightmare, but you're wide awake. We have different ways of fighting our captors. I'm loud and impulsive and weapon-wielding and chattering. I throw lines into the dark and hope they find purchase. I spill myself in ugly, tumbling words. When I Jekyll-Hyde, everyone knows it. I'm a performer. I'm scared of falling into the black. I'm bright bile green: toxic, searing, but full of energy and expression.

But you don't throw lines. Like they told you to in the movies, you stand still as the quicksand eats you. Your words are weapons that are sharp on both ends. Whether you hold them or share them, they cut. You're the falling House of Usher, a slow crumble inward, a final devastating split on the horizon. You're a purple, appealing poison. You're the color of art in a quiet, shadowed gallery. 

And I don't know what to do, because your monster raises the hackles of my monster, and I'm afraid of letting them get too close. But that's what keeps happening. When I stare the ghost of you in the face, when you're that spectral self, I feel my monster shift and growl under my skin. Because I'm terrified that there's nothing I can do, and fear is my monster's favorite meat. It doesn't matter what chains I've looped around its neck. When it smells my helplessness, when it hears my closest loved ones mention its name and the things it's done, it will claw its way out. Not as powerful as before, but still with those hungry, seeking teeth.

There was another story I read this week. This woman wrote her friend's text messages into an AI, she computed him back to life. A linguistic echo. I can't help but think of your words. They're scattered here and there, extensions of yourself, red and pulsing and alive. No one writes like you. Surprising sets of sounds, details that become the DNA of a character. You write with such visceral physicality. Faced with your ghost, I can find your body in your poetry.

Which is how I wound up here, wind-telephoning. Because I don't know what else to do. Because holding it together isn't always an option. Because I'm afraid of ghosts.

Maybe you won't see this. Maybe you will, and you'll be angry with me. Good. Be angry. Be real. Hear me, talk to me. Let me help. 

Please, return my call. I'm waiting by the phone and listening to the wind.