Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Addiction

So, apparently last week marked one year since I quit smoking. Sorry, I would've made a much, much bigger deal of this earlier, but I was a little preoccupied with getting my last two wisdom teeth pulled.

Doctor: "Do you have any questions before we start?"
Me: "Can I have my teeth when you're done?"
Doctor: "Umm, yeah, I guess."
Plus, it meant two straight days off of work, watching TV all day and tweaking on Destiny (when the servers weren't broken). Eventually I'll catch up with all the stuff on the DVR. Also, I'm still busy with plucking food out from those gaps in my gums so that takes up time.

Back on topic: Addiction. Apparently it's been a whole year since I had my last cigarette (December 5th, 2013... wait that was two weeks ago). And honestly, it still feels like a pretty stupid decision. I don't feel any healthier, though that could be because I haven't actually done anything to get myself healthier. I guess I was just hoping it would happen on its own. Actually, I feel unhealthier since I quit. I've actually gone to see the doctor. Yeah, so now I have a doctor to see when I'm sick instead of just waiting it out like I usually do. I've had some cavities recently and they even needed to put in a crown. I think that's why I started brushing my teeth twice a day (though I still haven't given in to the dentist's "suggestions" of flossing). So maybe all those toxins were actually sustaining me? or maybe I'm just getting... old.

Did you know it never goes away though? The cravings. The urge. At least they haven't so far. I'll admit they've dulled to a whisper, but it's still there. I think I've only managed because I've been trying my best to avoid cigarettes at all costs. Is avoidance really quitting? Plus I've regressed back to being a shut-in so that helps in just avoiding people in general. But the craving is still there: when I see someone else with a smoke, when I'm offered one, when I'm standing in the checkout line at Foodland. The smart phone I now own doesn't seem to help as much as I expected it to, mostly because I haven't embraced mobile games like I thought I would. I've even decided which pack I'm going to buy first, if I ever start again

Hello, old friend
Anyways, I think what I originally intended to write about was the stuff that has filled the void which quitting smoking has left in me (and no I don't mean holes in my lungs). I assume everyone has stuff they're addicted to, that they latch on to for some sort of satisfaction or something like that. Yeah, that sounds a little unbalanced but as long as it doesn't get me applying for psychological disability, I'm OK (and trust me, I read the doctor's reports, I know what psychological imbalance looks like... and sometimes smells like).

So, I've always been a reader, but honestly, this was a bit ridiculous


The craziest part, this isn't even all of the books I read this past year. Some are just too far under my bed to grab and others are still on loan to a couple of various friends. I think in total, it comes out closer to twenty-five. I think I started realizing there might be a problem when I was making monthly trips to Barnes and Nobles and when I was ordering them in bulk from Amazon. I think it was mostly to cure the boredom I used to use cigarettes for, as well as to cleanse my brain from the crap at work.

It also took me a while to realize I've been focusing a lot on K-pop. It's made its way from my writing playlists (great for background noise when you can't understand the lyrics) to my regular, daily playlists I listen to at work. Then I once typed in "Apink Mr. Chu live" into Youtube only to discover I'd actually seen ALL of the performances. Same with Girls' Generation's "Mr. Mr." and Girl's Day's "Something". I didn't think of it as a problem (just the actions of a zealous fan) until I found myself searching (and at times, even waiting) for various English-subbed videos. Finally, I realized this whole thing might be a problem when a started spending all night watching random videos... and when I bought this


Yeah, that's a book. A book about K-pop idols. I don't even follow the lives of American celebrities I've been watching all my life, why the hell am I interested in the personal lives of music idols I've only been following for about two years now? Well, I've been working on limiting the amount of videos I watch everyday so hopefully that should cut it down to a more manageable (i.e. less stalker-ish) level.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Naruto Ends! and 12 years of nostalgia

Naruto finally ended! I got through reading the last chapter earlier this week and, honestly, I'm glad Kishimoto went with an epilogue-type ending with the "what is everyone doing in the future?" scenario. It always wraps things up nicely (just ask J.K. Rowling). If you haven't read it yet, read it now! If you have no idea what I'm talking about, well, stop reading this because you've got 700 chapters to catch up with. Yeah, 700, so you better get started, though you could probably skim through the 300 or so filler chapters. And no, I'm not going to give a synopsis. Just go and read it.

But seriously, how has this not made front page news? 700 chapters spanning 15 years (though I've only been following it for about 12 years). But, 15 years! That's almost as old as my sister. That's just over a decade of my life to what amounts to reading a dozen or so pages a week. I can't name anything on TV I've followed as religiously as this. I can't even name a TV show I currently watch that was around 12 years ago. The only band I can think of that might still be around is Blink 182 and even they went on hiatus for a couple years. Oh, and Linkin Park but I haven't cared for any of their albums since Meteora (released back in 2003). K's Bento went up from $3.75 to around $5.00. Contrary to popular opinion, I don't think I own any article of clothing 12 years old. I think the only similarity from 12 years ago to present day is that I'm still working at the orchid farm on the weekends (though now I make $7.50 an hour instead of just $20 a day). Hell, when I started reading Naruto I probably looked more like this guy


Since then I've managed to graduate from both high school and college, traveled to two different countries, and work three different jobs. We've owned three dogs during that span. I've gone from being obsessed with baseball to a general indifference (unless it's post-season. I always pay attention during post-season). I even gained a basic understanding of other sports (who knew there were other sports). Hell, when Naruto started my sister was still waking me up in the middle of the night when she had a nightmare. Now it takes her 15 minutes just to drag herself out of bed in the morning.

Speaking of other countries, by some divine miracle I was in Japan during the 10th anniversary of Naruto where I managed to pick up this sticker






As well as this cool picture

Jon: "This background was obviously not made for people as cool or as tall as us"



You would think that after following something for over a decade, I may be walking away with some sort of lesson learned or a piece of worldly wisdom or something like that. I've got nothing - well at least nothing new that I haven't already seen in countless other manga, comics, anime, TV shows, books, movies, etc (and with less time invested in them). For the sake of being a better writer (not necessarily a better person), I have learned the importance of planning not just for continuity sake but to not waste the reader's time with 20 pages with what could be explained with just one panel. Gah, so many filler chapters! Fillers just to introduce a single concept that could've just been explained with just a couple panels. Well, here's looking forward to whatever the next manga he works on will be. At least I've still got Bleach... and all their filler chapters.

Monday, October 20, 2014

The Cure



The Cure

            Janet pulled me as quickly, but more importantly, as quietly as we could move through the trailer park (sorry, I didn’t get a chance to read the name on the sign as we were running for our lives). She stopped, suddenly, her grip tightening on my fingers as well as the cheesy “For Sale” sign she picked up. For a second I forgot about the chunk of flesh missing from my calf as her vice-grip threatened to crush every bone in my hand.
            I tapped her gently with the bowling pin in my other hand. Janet let out the slightest of “eeks” as she swung the sign, the wooden stake stopping just inches from my head. Though, to be honest, it was that bland smile of Ann Johnson, Realtor, which made me the most uneasy. Like having a third person with us, just judging with those dead eyes and brilliantly white smile.
            “Sorry, Steven. I just –” Her voice cut off. She lowered the sign before collapsing to her knees. I collapsed with her, dropping the bowling pin onto the pavement as well. She pulled in close and we huddled against the cheap paneling of one of the trailers. I let Janet’s tears soak into my shirt as we listened to the zombies around us but still out of sight. The dragging of feet, the crunching of gravel, the constant chattering of teeth.
            I decided then to tell her the worse news, but, from the look on her face, she already knew. “We were almost there,” I said, unsure if she could even hear me, “Hollows Wood was only a couple more miles away.” That was where our group was headed. I didn’t even know where anyone in the group was anymore. Rumors were that Hollows Wood was not only zombie-free, but that the research lab out there had developed a cure. So close. I looked down at my leg. Honestly, I was surprised to have survived this long, but even now I felt the change coming on like the beginnings of a tsunami, life just flowing farther and farther out of me moments before death and reanimation surged.
            There was a loud crunch of gravel and a dozen or so corpses turned the corner from the other side of the trailer. I shot up faster than my body should have been able to move at that point. A final spike of adrenaline, maybe. I lifted my wife to her feet and we ran. There wasn’t any time to care about attracting more of them. I raced between trailers, the bowling pin in one hand, the other pulling Janet along, her “For Sale” sign dragging along the ground behind us. We ran as far as my legs could take me, which, unfortunately was only to the chain-linked edge of the trailer park.
            I convulsed once, twice, falling to the ground. Terror and dread consumed Janet’s face and it took every facial muscle I had to configure my face into something more or less reassuring. I dropped the bowling pin and pointed in one direction – away. She understood and ran.
            That’s when the cold set in. Every sense connected to feeling just went cold. And numb. My eyes dimmed next, blind to anything not less than an arm’s length. Then, the hunger. I didn’t need to eat, but I wanted to. It became the only thing there was. I wondered how long I could fight it. I wondered if I would ever see my wife again. Then the wondering stopped. There was only darkness. And only one voice.
            Our voice. The growl of hunger. We hungered. We groped in our darkness. Hungry. So very hungry.

            We heard the hissing, but we didn’t care. Our prey didn’t hiss, it screamed and cried. We moved, together, a herd, a wave of dead flesh and chattering teeth.
            I heard the hissing. Like propane leaking from a tank. It smelled a little like it, too. I felt my teeth chattering. I. I. I.
            We. We ignore the sound. Gravel crunched and we moved toward it. It ran, slowly. Our hands grabbed and clawed at the flesh, the warmth of it almost like fire to our frozen clutches.
            My hands grasped cloth and skin and dragged it down to the ground. My hands, my teeth. The hunger slowly subsided, but my hands are still moving, still digging and pulling and ripping. The sound of boots marched around the trailer park. Yes, I’m at the trailer park. I finally made my hands stop, warm and sticky. There’s a taste of iron in my mouth and an even stranger scent in my nostrils.
            A hand grabbed my shoulder and yanked me onto my back. A boot is placed firmly on my chest. The hot barrel of a rifle is pressed to my cheek. My vision started to come back. Three men in military fatigues gathered around me. I try to, want to tell them I’m okay, that I’m human again, but the words failed me. Instead I just nodded. At least I got my teeth to stop.
            They hoisted me to my feet though I still need to hold onto one of them to walk. Around me, I can see others stirring, as if awakening from the worst nightmare of their lives. It must be Hollows Wood. The cure. They brought it here. I was me and only me. Maybe Janet and I and the rest of the group weren’t so far away after all. I began to wipe the remains from my hands onto my clothes when I look down to see the body on the ground, reduced to an unrecognizable mess. And next to it, the bland smile of Ann Johnson, Realtor.




So, since Halloween is coming, I figured I should write a horror story. Luckily, awhile back, I needed to write a horror story for a writing contest so I already had one. I was hoping to do one story a week for all of October, but I've been playing a lot of "Destiny."

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

I Bought a Car!

Let's start this right to the point. As a couple of you know by now, I bought a car! A 2012 Mazda6 if you were really curious.



And yes, its been a while since I've smiled that wide than the night I drove it home (at least without alcohol in my system). I assume its what the birth of your child feels like. No? Are you sure? Well, I guess I could ask someone who's had a kid... like my parents.

They said I was wrong.

Like with most of my purchases (this being the biggest transaction to date that I've ever put my name on), there was some remorse. Obviously, I'm gonna have to start paying this off at the end of the month along with car insurance and gas. Especially since my eyes dragged my wallet just outside the price limit my brain had firmly set. Stupid eyes. Anyways, hopefully I'll also manage to secure a parking pass at work so I can stop hunting for parking on the street every morning. And stop parking under power lines.

Damn birds. Every morning...

And yes, as my co-worker said, black is definitely not looking to be a good color with all the dirt and bird droppings its managed to accumulate from just the roughly three weeks I've owned the car.

After driving the Aerio for almost ten years, I've now reverted back to protective mode with the Mazda6. No eating or drinking inside. Any food or drink is sealed tight. I've yet to successfully parallel park more than a couple times because I want to be sure I have as much space as possible. Remarkably, and possibly unbelievably to anyone who knows me, I've also yet to have more than one or two drinks before getting behind the wheel just because I'm not sure yet how my drunken reflexes will react with the new car. Also, because I don't want to install that breathalyzer ignition lock before I've even changed the oil.

In contrast, nowadays with the Aerio, I'll eat whatever, whenever and worry later about dusting out those chip crumbs or that stringy lettuce that falls out of the taco shell. And I'm not ashamed to admit I've tapped a couple bumpers trying to squeeze the Aerio into a space the size of, well, an Aerio. And regrettably, as some of you know (maybe even by first-hand knowledge), there have been nights/mornings, I've arrived home in the old car without really remembering how I got there... or even how I got in the car.

There is one part of this whole new car process I haven't figured out yet, and that's the whole naming the car thing. Some say its important, some say its stupid. I really don't know, but its always best to keep all your bases covered - which is probably why I read so much mythology books, you know, in case one of their afterlifes (afterlives?) turn out to be real. I do know it's not going to be happy with Whiskey Rider II, mostly because I'm sure the Aerio wasn't even happy being the original. So, I've been just plugging in my iPod, hitting shuffle, and letting the car decide. Obviously, I'm still gonna have the final say, but so far its chosen a couple decent names:

  1. Lazaretto: "Lazaretto" by Jack White
  2. Funeral Suit: "All those friendly people" by Funeral Suits (obviously the song title was way too long but Funeral Suits matches the color)
  3. The Sweetness: "The Sweetness" by Jimmy Eat World
  4. New Fang: "New Fang" by Them Crooked Vultures
and, oddly, perfect with my indecisiveness and current addiction to K-pop:

5. Mollayo: "Mollayo" by Apink

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

"Haven't seen you for a while"... um...

By now, if you're like me, you've all run into a high school classmate or two that you haven't seen for almost ten years (maybe more if you aren't me) and you had the opportunity to play that awkward "How have you been?" conversation game. You know the one: he or she will tell you at least one interesting thing they've been up to since graduation (at least you hope its interesting), you tell him or her something you hope sounds just as interesting (though it never sounds as interesting as you hope), neither of you really care but ask at least one follow-up question to pretend you do, and then you're both on your separate ways. Not so painful when you're in a place like the supermarket or that adult video store you frequent (though honestly, who goes out to browse for porn these days, stop it!), but what if you're someplace you can't escape so quickly from? A couple weeks ago, I was on the bus and there's really no where to run to when you're on the bus unless you're willing to get off and wait for the next bus but then the next one isn't coming for another half hour, you hope since with this traffic it could be an hour and you don't want to be standing in the sun for that long and you can't sit in the shade because that's where the homeless guy stores all his stuff. Trust me, I thought it through.
     "But why would you even need to think of an escape plan?" you may naively ask. Surely, almost ten years would give the two of you plenty to talk awkwardly about for an hour? And you would be wrong. First of all, we were both pretty antisocial kids back in the day and honestly that hasn't changed much. Second, I hate talking on the bus, especially when I'm standing and trying to constantly adjust my voice to be heard over the sound of the bus but not enough to bother anyone else. Mostly, though, it's what I think is called the Conversation Paradox: The longer you haven't seen someone, the less you actually have to talk about. *I have no idea if this is actually a real thing, and, if not, you can stop reading before you get to me bullshitting something that clearly isn't real. (side note: when did "bullshitting" become a word? Spell-check doesn't seem to see anything wrong with using it as a word, i.e. no red, squiggly error line is popping up)
      To be fair, we did make it a good fifteen minutes of talking. Work ended up as the first topic as were both on the bus going home from our respective jobs. Sadly, I think the second was what we've heard was going on with some of our other classmates, which we didn't really know too much about. Then the awkward silence started to set in. And luckily by then, a couple seats opened up and I was immediately asleep. I felt kind of bad about that and probably should have made more of an attempt at keeping the conversation going but we both just got off work... and ... sleep.
     Besides, TEN YEARS! Okay, almost ten years but let's round up to make this a little easier. I can barely remember what kind of person I was ten years ago. That's a lie, but honestly, I can barely remember what kind of person my other classmates were back in the day. And that's probably why these conversations go south so quickly, because we haven't kept in touch and I don't remember too much about the past. Or it could be that I'm still trying to base these conversations in the past instead of trying to update them to the present... you know, like you're supposed to be doing in these "How have you been?" conversations you find so awkward. Ahh, okay, I'm starting to see what I've been doing wrong.
     I guess I could've brought up recent interests to fill the time, maybe even found a common one. You know, the thing that keeps you and your friends talking for hours even though you just saw each other a week or two ago. What was I interested in a couple weeks ago? I think Bleach was starting to get good again. Probably a couple TV shows. The "Mr. Chu" music video just came out, I think. But not stories. Don't go telling people that, they don't have the time. "I pet a koala" is fine, but don't go telling them about the whole trip (though that was like 8 months ago so don't go bringing that up anyway). And no achievements like the whole "quit smoking" thing; no one likes a show-off.
     Now that I've written all this out, maybe it's just me. Maybe I'm just shitty at basic conversation etiquette and sharing. Or maybe I'm just a boring person. It's probably both. Well, that was a waste of time though if I re-read this enough maybe I'll find the lesson I think I'm supposed to learn from this whole thing. Thanks for wasting time with me, though, I guess, though maybe you just had nothing better to do. (to be fair, I did give you a chance to run)

Thursday, April 17, 2014

I won the nicest rejection letter ever

Dear Alan,

Thank you for letting us read “The Tomb of Ashcroft Manor”. After careful consideration, we’ve decided we won’t be able to use it in The First Line. 
...
-------
Fun story, Alan, and the writing was tight. We just had a lot of uncovered keys in the submissions. Try us again.


Like I said, definitely the nicest rejection letter I ever expected to get and it's probably for that reason that it took me so long to post the story (since they ask everyone to wait until the magazine is printed before using your submitted stories). If you're curious about the winners or even feel like entering yourself, check out The First Line. But, as promised, here is my rejected work and hopefully I'll get started on something else, eventually.




The Tomb of Ashcroft Manor

Carlos discovered a key under a pile of shoes in the back of his grandmother’s closet. It didn’t look impressive or special but Carlos knew it was. After all, in certain magic clans keys were just as significant as wands or pointy hats. And, he thought, if this was The Key, it may be the second most valuable item in all of Ashcroft Manor.
“Did you find anything else?” Behind him, Sarah meticulously ransacked their late grandmother’s belongings with all the grace and tact of a rampaging bull, tossing shelves and overturning dressers with simple flicks of her wand. Their grandmother managed to amass quite a collection in the nearly two centuries before she passed.
Quickly, Carlos pocketed the key. “Just another spell-cutter,” he said as he instead flashed his own enchanted knife, hoping she wouldn’t recognize it. Grandmother, or Lady Ashcroft as she was formally known to the rest of the families under the House of Ash name, was known to always carry a spell-cutter similar to the one he held. He hoped it would pass as just another trinket.
Without warning, Sarah swung her wand like a fisherman casting a line as the air between the siblings heated up. A green ball of light appeared and raced across the room toward Carlos. Reacting, he forced some of his own magic into the spell-cutter and swept it through the air. The blade collided with the green orb and, with a flash, it vanished and returned the room to its original, crisp wintery climate.
Sarah already turned her back to Carlos by the time he cut through her spell. “Add it to the collection,” she said, motioning to the bed where they put the rest of their mutually acquired magic tools, “but remember we’re here for the Grimrose.”
Instead, Carlos tucked the knife back into his belt and headed toward the rear of the closet. Ever since they were small, Sarah liked to be the one in charge even if he was the older one. He figured it was because grandmother gave her a wand and laughed at the idea of giving one to him, someone who shared their name but not their blood. She liked to say he was only an Ashcroft in name and would never be a true Ashcroft. This was probably the reason he didn’t have a problem raiding her things before the family even put her body in the ground. After all, Lady Ashcroft’s will, in just two words, specified exactly how she wanted all her magic tools divided – Finder’s Keepers.
The closet, like the house itself, was much bigger than it seemed from the outside. A simple spell made the closet the size of a small room much as it turned grandmother’s ranch-style home into a three-story mansion. Ducking behind several old dressers in the back of the dusty closet, Carlos pulled the key from his pocket. Holding it carefully in his palm, he began to channel magic into the key.
Everyone knew that Lady Ashcroft never locked her doors, claiming that anyone who broke into her house did so of their own free will and she would punish that poor soul accordingly. However, only a handful knew the truth – that she never locked her doors because she lost the key within a week of moving into Ashcroft Manor.
Carlos unleashed the energy he poured into the key, hoping it would guide him to the lock it opened. Instead, the magic rebounded from every direction and tossed him into the wall. He smiled. It rebounded from everywhere. The key literally told him that it went with every lock in the house. Carlos practically skipped out of the closet as an elated voice called to him. “You’re a true Ashcroft now. You’re just like us,” it said, the voice old and familiar. But it didn’t matter to him. He now controlled Ashcroft Manor!
Sarah gave Carlos just enough time to close the closet door before she slammed him into it. With ropes of pure magic, she lifted him to his feet. Extending a hand, she said just four words. “Give me the key.”
Before he could even sneer in Sarah’s direction, the ropes shoved him into the door again. And again. And again. Magic filled the air. It was literally crackling with it as Carlos’ hair rose and tugged at their roots. It buzzed and hummed at such deafening decibels that he could barely form a thought. It burned his lungs just to breathe. It was more energy than Sarah ever released before. In his confusion, Carlos caught a glimpse of Sarah’s wand … still tucked in the belt around her waist. In her hand she held another wand. The Grimrose wand.
Eleven and seven-sixteenths inches from end to pointed tip with an ever-so-slight bend where the leather-wrapped grip finished. Thirteen thorns scattered themselves along the Grimrose, each barely visible to the naked eye yet sharp enough to poke out said eye if it ever got too close. Lady Ashcroft forced a prophet to carve the final fourteen days of humanity into the shaft with only the finest of diamond-tipped needles before allowing him to fall into the madness from what he saw. He couldn’t mistake it for anything other than The Grimrose wand. In his dreams, he’d hold it, make it his own. But Sarah found it first.
“One more time.” Sarah’s voice jolted him back to reality. “Give me the key, Carlos.” The energy in the room crackled as she pronounced each syllable. The ropes tightened just enough to let him know that at anytime they could sever a limb or three.
The key in his pocket took on a subconscious weight, a pressure to remind Carlos that he just needed to give it to Sarah to make it all stop. Still, he tried to struggle free, his body straining against the ropes, his spirit against her newfound magic. He just got the key. Just got power and he wasn’t ready to give it up yet. Their eyes met and Carlos hoped the anger on his face gave Sarah her answer. And, just to make it clear, he launched a spit wad at her face, only to watch his saliva salvo splat harmlessly on Sarah’s magical barrier, six inches from its target.
She didn’t say anything. She didn’t recoil from his tiny act of rebellion. She didn’t even make one of her famous mocking retorts. Any of these would’ve given Carlos the split second he needed to brace himself. Instead, she responded only with a flick of the wand. Simultaneously, the ropes lifted Carlos high into the vaulted ceiling. Then slammed him hard to the stone floor. Then back to the ceiling. Then the floor. Ceiling. Floor. Ceiling. Floor. Something broke, Carlos knew. Probably a rib. He would’ve heard it snap had it not been for the buzzing noise still emitting from all the magic Sarah was releasing.
The ropes disappeared and Carlos felt the pressure in the air build as Sarah stooped over him, picking the key from his pocket. “I am the new head of the House of Ash,” she said, taking a seat on the bed as Carlos struggled to his knees. She held both the wand and the key in her hands like trophies, admiring them as she spoke. “You know, they never saw me as a threat for the throne. Always just as the youngest of the grandchildren.” She went on about her newly acquired power and respect but Carlos wasn’t listening.
She’d taken from him. He could stand; he just needed the right moment. Physically, he was still stronger. Plus, he still possessed a lot of his own magic. Sarah, however, had been expelling hers like a leaky faucet, magical energy dripping from her even while she sat idle. He could take it all back, and more.
Sarah stood and moved to the door. “Now to give the family a glimpse of their new leader.”
Carlos lunged forward. Sarah froze, startled. Carlos surprised even himself at how quickly he moved. He pushed Sarah onto the bed and pulled the spell-cutter from his belt. Sarah raised Grimrose. This was his only chance. The air between them sizzled as Sarah started to summon a barrier between them. Carlos fueled the spell-cutter with as much magic as he could quickly find and forced the blade through the barrier and into Sarah’s chest, burying it to the hilt.
Leaving the knife, he gathered his original prize – the key to Ashcroft Manor. Just by touching it he saw and felt every square inch of the house: the location of every magic tool, the breeze as it circulated from room to room, which floorboards creaked. He was everywhere. Most important, he could hear doors open and close as his relatives poured into the house, searching for the power that was already his. Power they’d never take.
A whisper caught his ear and as he focused, it grew louder. Like a warm embrace, it welcomed him into the house, into the family. Repeating, over and over, “You’re a true Ashcroft now. You’re just like us.” Carlos smiled. “You’re a true Ashcroft now.” The head of the House of Ash, he thought, correcting the voice. “You’re just like us,” it whispered back.
That’s when he remembered the wand. It lay right where he left it, in Sarah’s now cold, stiff hand. He knew her body lay still yet he couldn’t help but imagine a stirring on the bed. Moving closer, he saw he was wrong – the body was moving. Half the knife blade now stood visible as if Sarah’s body collapsed in on itself. Even the blood flowed in unnatural streams along the bed, making its way toward the wand.
The wand! Grimrose fed to grow stronger and it would take all it wanted from Sarah until only a husk remained. Carlos looked at Sarah’s sunken face and her expression was clear – she wanted power, but she’d never murder her own brother for it. “You’re a true Ashcroft now,” the voice repeated, stronger than before. It was whimsical, laughing, familiar. It was Grandmother Ashcroft’s voice.
And now he saw what his grandmother had seen in him. Saw what he would do for power. He was just like them.
Before the blood touched the wand, Carlos picked it out of Sarah’s withered grip. The thorns dug into his skin with just the slightest touch. He felt a coldness from the wand as he raised it into the air, hatred as if the wand knew exactly what he was about to do. A roar filled the room as Carlos pushed his physically-exerted muscles to their limits to snap the piece of wood in half.
He heard his grandmother’s voice one last time as he tossed the two pieces to opposite ends of the room. Faintly, it whispered, “You’re just like us.” Us. The word echoed through Carlos’ mind. Us. He’d forgotten about his relatives, now swarming Ashcroft Manor like ants, all looking to claim power in any way and form they could find it.
“Perhaps this is the true Ashcroft legacy,” Carlos said to himself as he channeled all his remaining magical energies into the key. As it glowed brighter than anything he’d ever laid eyes on before, Carlos turned the key. Grandmother Ashcroft’s bedroom door slammed shut, as did the other fifty-two doors in Ashcroft Manor, with deadbolts and magical wards locking them tight. Then he took a seat on the bed next to Sarah. He was a true Ashcroft now, trapped in this living tomb like the rest of them.


Friday, March 14, 2014

100 Days Later

It's been 100 days since my last cigarette and I gotta say, it's the worst decision I've ever made. But its been 100 days and since I don't have a lot (or any) real accomplishments to brag about, I'm gonna take this opportunity to do so. But first, I should probably say this - I didn't quit for your typical health or financial reasons. Mostly, it was on a stupid challenge to myself that just got way out of hand. It originally started off as just one of my annual, I'm-gonna-quit-this-time-but-not-really campaigns. Typically I'll make it a few days or even a week before I just say "fuck it" and start smoking again like I knew I was going to all along. This time though, I got to the 3 week mark (the longest I've ever quit) and then it turned into New Years so I decided why the hell not just keep it up. And that's how I've gotten to this point now.

My first pack




Maybe it's because I was never a big smoker that it was actually possible to quit cold turkey. I never made it to a pack a day (even when they were 300 yen a pack in Japan). Maybe half a pack at the most. Usually, just to get through school, work, and boredom. I think it dropped to 3 or 4 cigarettes a day before I quit. Actually, I think the greatest temptation so far isn't stress or peer pressure like the commercials say it is. So far, the greatest temptation is boredom. Just plain, old boredom. Waiting at the bus stop, waiting in line, waiting for anything. I think I just need to upgrade to a smartphone and the cravings will probably disappear altogether.


Even though I didn't smoke a lot, there were definitely withdrawal symptoms. It sucked not getting my fixes throughout the work day, especially on the shitty days. Luckily, I managed to bury myself in all that shitty work so that helped distract me during the day. I somehow managed to not gain weight like everyone says happens when you quit. Probably because I dropped $20 in the company's weight-loss challenge around that time as well as that queasy feeling I was getting during the day from withholding said nicotine. Oh, it sucks but I assume I'm healthier now (at least that's what all the anti-tobacco propaganda wants me to believe). I guess I would know for sure if I actually got back into physical activity rather than just watching TV after sitting behind a desk for eight hours. Seriously, though, I'm sure the main reason I haven't just gone out and bought another pack is that I'm certain I'm gonna puke after my first drag. Not looking forward to that shining moment.

Even after all this time, though, I do miss some of smoking's more useful aspects:
  1. covering up unwanted smells like not showering the night before or the fact that I've been wearing the same pair of pants all week
  2. socializing with other smokers (trust me, there's no greater bond than ten of you trying to huddle under the same narrow ledge in the rain)
  3. getting out of awkward conversations/situations
  4. relieving boredom
  5. littering. because I'm helping the birds. and fuck mother nature
  6. flicking at your enemies. I've never actually done this as I don't have enemies and everyone likes me (though I probably just made quite a few with that statement)
I think I'll end this here. My fiction writing professor once commented on my story that as much as he liked smoking, "there's too much smoking in this story" and I think this is heading in the same direction. Don't worry, you've never read that story. It wasn't anywhere close to being my best work though one chapter of it did inspire the "Mr. Thompson" story. So that's 100 days. Maybe I'll make it to 200.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

The Valentine's Day Post

One of the few good comic strips in the school paper back at UH
     Well, it's February, which means you can't actually go the month without talking about Valentine's Day. And since that's what it seems like I'm gonna use for this month's theme (because it's easy), there are really only three things that I could write about: Love, Roses, and Chocolates. As you hopefully figured out from that comic strip I clipped out from years back, obviously I'm still single and, with my recent divorce from nicotine, lonelier than ever. I'm still working at the orchid farm on the weekends so there's no way I'm spending even more time talking about flowers. So, that makes the choice of theme pretty simple: Candy


Don't be fooled by that depressed look. She makes that face whenever she's tied up (unless food is involved... or a belly scratch). Though, recently, she has been sadder looking more often, probably because of the scratches on her face. I keep telling her that the cuts on her cheek just make her look more badass but she still frowns a lot. She found a cat in the yard a couple weeks ago and, like she does with all smaller, living things, she decided it existed solely for her to chase and possibly put in her mouth (which is also why I try to keep her away from other people walking their dogs... and those chickens tied up in the yard up the street).

From the first day we got her, Candy has been much smarter than we thought she would be. Turns out she tricked my sister into adopting her from the Humane Society by pretending to be a lazy and quiet puppy (thus easy to care for) while her cellmate chewed on concrete. However, that night, in a new house, in the dark, she managed to climb her way out of a make-shift pen, cross the patio, climb the steps and sleep by the door instead. She also knew instinctively to do her business on the newspaper without any training so that was pretty cool. She managed to get off her chain several times without explanation. Not a link broken or a clip bent. More times than I'd like to admit, I've chased the dog up the street when she's gotten loose... or just slipped my grasp. Honestly, it's just weird that she doesn't lick. And that she's started burying her pee, making me look like the asshole who isn't picking up after his dog.

As you may have been wondering, I consider Candy only partially my dog (mostly to avoid full responsibility for her well-being). She's actually my sister's dog (hence the name Candy), but since she started getting involved in after-school stuff I'm the one who usually takes care of her. Luckily, Candy doesn't ask for much: water, food, treats, clean-up her shit, and letting her off the chain for a bit.

But, its important to take her for a lap or two. Somehow it calms what may be a natural predator instinct she displays in our yard. Or at the least, the walking/jogging tires her out enough that she can't catch the random stray cat hiding in the bushes or the stupid birds stuck in the batting cage. Don't laugh, I've seen her hunting skills first hand. Once, there was a whole flock of birds in our batting cage. And, honestly, it used to be fun to watch Candy chase the birds back and forth, as long as they never landed. This time, a couple of them did land
I tried to draw it to scale but I it was hard enough to just draw
So, which bird does she choose to go after? Does she pounce quickly on the closer, yet larger bird? Nope. Instead, I watched her size up the two targets. Then she sprints clear across the batting cage to the farther, yet smaller bird and scoops it right into her mouth. The whole, fucking bird! Just right into her mouth. And now I'm freaking out because the only part of the bird I can see is its head sticking out, but slowly it is also sinking into Candy's mouth as if trapped in quicksand, you know, except with more crunching sounds.

Recent evidence
Unfortunately, walking Candy comes with one big consequence: my neighbors now think I am more sociable. I'll give you a moment to stop laughing because I'm not joking. Apparently, since I have a dog, it is now okay to start chatting me up in the middle of the street. To be fair, I didn't really play outside a lot as a kid so they might think that I just moved in. And I mean it's everyone: other people walking their dogs, kids wanting to pet her (I promise, I'm not a pedophile), and the one lady who only speaks Japanese. It's gotten so out of hand that I've actually come up with nicknames for some of them (I was gonna draw a map, but it was really hard):
1. Beagle Lady
2. Old lady with tiny dog
3. Smoking lady
4. 2 dogs man
5. Ghost dog (I swear I can hear barking at that house, but I've never seen a dog)

With all the time it looks like I'm going to be spending with her, I'll eventually answer all the questions I have about her (like "what breed of dog is she?" and "why she gets bored with her toys after just one day?" and "why does she only stare at other dogs when peeing outside their fence?"). Besides, she doesn't care as long as I keep mixing treats into her dinner (she almost refuses to eat it without treats mixed in).

enlarged to show texture

Well, that's it. Happy Valentine's Day. And if you've been wondering, yes, I have been writing. I'm working on a new serial plot and, if that story I submitted gets rejected, I'll post it here.