One of my babies really loves the color orange.
I dyed some merino wool roving, to spin into yarn, to knit into a winter hat for her.
An author's collection of thoughts and stories
I’ve decided that I need to stop keeping an eye on trends, considering the increasing number of things that are physically painful to know about. Honestly, the sort of terminology that is popular on the internet makes me want to say, “Uh huh. And did you come up with that before or after you ate Tide pods?”
No one with any intelligence or dignity would apply those sorts of words to themselves as a label. Ever.
Then again, I think that quite frequently when I go to the grocery store and see what people are wearing these days. A main characteristic of modern life is how far are you willing to degrade yourself to fit in. I’ve come to the conclusion that the majority of people don’t have any limits.
And I don’t want to know about it.
I’ve also decided that there are some IRL people that I need to cut out of my life entirely. The situation is getting too fucked up and exploitative, so it needs to end. Not to mention, after a year and a half of no contact, I found myself simultaneously thinking, “Were they always this bad?” and, “I did not miss this!” So I have to work my way through the guilt of being a cold-hearted bitch, simply because I don’t want to be treated unfairly anymore.
In other recent events, there’s nothing quite like watching a building burn down to remember how meaningless and insubstantial materialism is. Everything can be lost in under an hour. Everything. So instead of wasting my time on empty pursuits, I’ve been playing Jingle Bells on the piano while the children dance and sing.
Memories last longer.

Is there anything more exciting than a story passage presented completely out of context?
Hee hee, enjoy.
Carol began to gasp and moan in her sleep, whimpering the words, โDonโt โฆ take me โฆโ before Lambert managed to shake her awake. She was thoroughly drenched in a cold sweat, and still confused as she frantically asked, โWhereโs Henry? I canโt find him!โ
โHeโs there, right next to you in his crib,โ Lambert answered soothingly, and waited for her to pick up their four-month-old son before pulling her into an embrace. โEverythingโs fine. You had another nightmare.โ
She was quiet, and he suspected that she had dozed off again. He kept her pressed against his chest, however, feeling her clammy skin underneath his hands as his mouth formed a straight line. He had hoped that with time and emotional support, Carolโs struggle with postpartum anxiety would resolve on its own, but instead it was growing worse.
The baby woke and began to root, so Carol shifted to breastfeed. โSorry about this,โ she murmured, completely awake. โCould you get out another pajama shirt for me?โ
He nodded, but remained still. โCarol โฆโ he began, and she stiffened from his tone. โIt might be time for you to go see a professional.โ
โI donโt want to,โ she answered slowly.
โYouโve been having nightmares every night for awhile now. It might be best to get you on medication to help you through this.โ
โI have you.โ
Lambert felt Carol move to curl up around their baby, and for a moment he debated whether or not he should drop the subject all together. He got up to rummage through the dresser in the darkness, found one of the over-sized shirts that she liked to sleep in, and handed it to her.
โCognitive therapy isnโt making any difference,โ he said quietly. She remained silent, so, he pressed on, โYouโre a good mother, and itโs natural to have some feelings of anxiety with a new baby โฆโ he began, and the therapistโs intonation that he had slipped into grated against his own ears.
โWould you mind holding Henry while I change?โ Carol interrupted, her voice slightly higher pitched than usual. She had recently discovered that he couldnโt argue with her when she spoke that way, and utilized it whenever she wanted him to back down. It was enough to make him cave and give up on his line of reasoning.
Lambert didnโt know what to do. For the most part, Carol was still Carol. They went fishing together on the weekends, and he came home every evening to dinner and a clean house. As long as she had their baby pressed against her in the carrier or in her arms, it was as if nothing had changed. The car trips were almost endearing, with the way she frequently checked the mirrors to ensure that Henry was still breathing, and needed the occasional reassurance that he wasnโt going to be stung by a bee or bitten by a spider while he was in his car seat.
But the nights were different.
Lambert had purchased a special crib with one side that clamped onto their mattress to help her feel closer to Henry, but it couldnโt overcome the mental separation of sleep. There were times when she had startled awake with the baby in her arms, crying about how she couldnโt find him. Recently, she had begun to fight against the fear of being taken away herself, but once awake she always claimed that she could not remember what she had been dreaming.
They had talked. And talked. And talked. Lambert had accepted the military relegating him into a paper-pusher role after the war had ended, because it enabled him to be home every night, and he didnโt dare leave Carol to sleep alone. He had even quit drinking for the most part, so he could maintain his vigilance and be there for her the moment the nightmares began.
After four months, he had reached the end of what he could handle on his own. Carol needed something more than talk to help her, and as a defunct psychiatrist, he was no longer qualified to provide it.
My husband recommended The Kingdom of Loathing for me to play.
It’s pretty epic.
And yes, I named my character Carol Lambert. ๐

When I first learned what a recluse was during my childhood, I thought that it sounded like a great idea. Heck, I even made it my life goal.
Shortly after reaching adulthood, I discovered that I don’t actually enjoy living completely alone. I forget to eat if I don’t have someone else around to keep me grounded in reality.
So, now I have a family of my own, and it works really well for me… As long as I get the kids in bed early so I have time to myself, lol.
But lately, I’ve been feeling overexposed to people.
It’s the combination of a number of things that I don’t want to get into (don’t worry, it’s not you), but I’m worn down. I don’t want to interact with the outside world, so much as I want to retreat within myself and paint the stairs. I’ve absorbed too much energy from too many sources, and I need a mental cleanse.
I’m being literal, btw. I bought supplies to paint our wooden staircase yellow and green, and have been doing the prep work. The previous owners painted it taupe, so I’m not ruining anything. Albeit, I *am* making it weirder.
Reclusive. Retiring. Cloistered.
That’s me.
And you can’t bully or cajole me out of it.

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Because after September, this story will be dead to me.
At least until it’s time to write the sequel. I’m one of those sorts.