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24Sep/10Off

Dreamscapes of my Mind

They say to write what you know. That's a hard thing for me to accept sometimes. There's always this balance between two extremes for me. I've always wanted to write science fiction, and to a certain extent, that's the only thing I've ever been really interested in. Of course I tend to lump this all into fantasy vs. science fiction, which is really a different post all together, but this is the crux of the matter in my mind. You see, I figured out recently that what I know is science fiction.

I used to think that writing what you know meant that I was supposed to write about things that I actually knew about, school, going to work, office politics, what it's like to be a father, the trials and tribulations of everyday life. The kind of thing that when incorporated into a screenplay, you could shoot it without a single special effect. All that's nice, but I don't think they make a compelling story all by themselves. I just love space too much. Space and pirates. Har!

So recently I sat down and listed out all the fantastic science fiction that I've ever loved, from the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and the Illustrated Man to Star Wars and Harry Potter. What I know is all science fiction and fantasy. So, I may as well write that. I kept the list, and maybe I'll talk about them all, everything from the first time I deconstructed a story into it's component parts to learning to write notes in the dark for Film School (I can still do it pretty well) but again, those are all another post.

Take the movie Dreamscape for instance, a fairly low budget thriller about psychics that train to enter people's dreams in a big secret government project, when it turns out that they are being trained to become killers, keying in on the idea that if you die in your dream, you die in life. I know this not to be true from personal experience, having died many times in my dreams, but that's not the point, it's still an interesting story that keeps coming back over and over again for me. Sometimes I think I'm the only one I know who cares for the film, but that didn't stop me from using it as inspiration for a screenplay I wrote during College for a screenwriting course.

Dream delving. It's a powerful concept isn't it? The idea of entering someone else's dream, or even just taking control of your own. I've done that sometimes, when I woke up just enough to realize it's a dream, and you have a moment there of lucidity, and you're suddenly in control. Who wouldn't want to do that on a massive scale? I mean what if the dream world is the real world and this one is just an illusion we use to keep us from flipping out at just how wild, crazy and creative the world around us really is?

Drop a dream in your story and see what happens.

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17Sep/10Off

That mustache feeling

I have to admit, that many years ago, when the mustache crawled across the Tick's face and started typing a note to him in Spanish, that I've been thinking about growing my own. It took many years, (I wonder why sometimes) but I've finally done it, beard and all. Though I think about shaving it off every single day, I can't help but be thankful that I did it. I had always wondered, and this may sound odd, what God intended my face to look like. So, while on vacation to Disney World what seems like a lifetime ago now, I decided to toss the razors and see how long I could take it.

I'm happy to say that I kind of like the look. It hides a lot of my neck, and it's not nearly as uncomfortable as I thought it might be in the Georgia heat.I think everyone should try one eventually. The truth is I don't think I thought would actually like it. I figured in three months or six months that I would shave it off and be done with it, but the truth is that nearly two years later I still have it. prior to this I had fooled around with growing a beard, but every time the at the week's end I couldn't stand it and I would shave it off. There was one time when I was working at a local seminary where I let it go for a week and gave it a good look in the mirror and really thought about keeping it because I liked the way it looked. In the end it took a Disney trip and seriously working through an itchy stage before I got it finished. Interestingly there's a patch on the left side of my face about the size of a thumb print that doesn't really grow at all. That should keep me debating cutting the sides off and going for more of a goatee instead of the full beard for a while.

It's of course there's a lot of writers out there who are famous for their beards, Stephen King being one of them who have always admired I consider George Lucas a great storyteller, also with a good beard and who could forget the practically iconic Alan Moore, responsible for some of the best Swamp Thing has to offer as well as Watchmen and the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, please the comic book and not the movie. I don't know whether I am modeling myself after these people, justifying a beard based on some of my personal heroes or just considering it an amusing story. Either way it seems the beard is here to stay, at least for a while.

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10Sep/10Off

I’m not all there myself

When I think about all the stories that have influenced me in the past, I tend to keep coming back to Alice in Wonderland. It's not really something that I plan to do, it's not really something that I actively do, it's just something that happens. Mostly it has to do with Disney's version of Alice in Wonderland, cartoon, but I do have a great love for the book, and it seems like whenever something comes up about Alice in Wonderland, people tend to ask me like I'm supposed to know something about it. So I may as well list it among the things that are bouncing around in my head that inspire me all the time.

The Cheshire cat for instance, always one of my favorite parts of either the book or the movie, the Cheshire cat sets the tone of surrealism that I've rarely seen achieved elsewhere and it's something that I would love to aspire to. I think about the Cheshire cat and I think here's a character totally designed to make you crazy, something that is in there just to test Alice's nerve. He can say one thing, and then say something totally different, and I believe he actually believes what he says each time. To him the two different realities that he describes are both absolutely valid to him in the moment he says them. In his mind the Cheshire cat can see all possible future and relate them to variant of pasts and it all makes sense to him, unless he's just stirring the pot again, trying to see how far he can push you.

Whenever the Cheshire cat shows up, Alice has to be on her guard even more than normal for such a mad world because when the Cheshire cats around he knows how to push all the buttons of all of the characters who surround him and he can do it all at the same time. We have to watch out for character like that into the protagonists because they can ruin your life very very fast, or they are too else in Wonderland can save the day at the last minute you just never know with them. It's an interesting thought when you start to consider supporting characters, because the best supporting characters seem to me to be a little bit antagonist and a little bit protagonists all of the same time a good supporting character should steal all the scenes there in and make you root for them when you know they're wrong.

When you're building a next story, heck maybe when I'm building my next story, make sure to think about the motivations of your supporting characters. If you  backstab your main character; see how far you can twist the knife. And if they're there for support what they die for the hero? Somebody's got to win the best supporting actor Oscar, may as well be a character you came up with right?

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3Sep/10Off

Picking the right instrument

There are things in my life that have great meaning, and the idea of playing music is one of those things. It's also the thing that has made me think a lot about what I'm doing and what I want out of life, and it's also been one of the hardest things I've ever taken on, but occasionally over the years I've had this bug to learn to play music.

I decided a few months ago to start to learn to play an instrument. I have never played one before save for about a three week stint in my teens when I decided that the guitar wasn't for me, and after nearly twenty years later I still had the bug. I can paint, I can write, and I can sing, and though the site of me dancing is an experience all of its own, I still want to learn to play an instrument.

So, I laid them all out. What should I learn to play? Should I learn to play the piano? I don't really want to learn anything that big, and I don't count electric keyboards in the mix. Aside from the fun to be had by Ferris Bueler, I've really never seen the attraction, so without the room for a baby grand or an upright, I really didn't want something that I couldn't carry around. So, with that thought, out go the xylophones and drums as well.

I thought about brass instruments, and woodwinds. Would they be a possibility? Every time I ask someone what kind of instrument I should learn, I hear "Learn the saxophone." and I have to admit that I considered it. I considered it for so long that nearly ten years went by, and I still wasn't learning how to play an instrument! The problem with woodwinds and brass is, that you have to use your mouth, and I like to talk. I like to talk and tell stories, and use any instrument like I'm some kind of bard or wandering minstrel. I like to think of myself sometimes as one of those long lost fire side story tellers, complete with a goat skull cap, with the wild beard and the magician's staff, the keeper of a vast tradition of oral teachings or entertainments. So they were out. If you can't talk while you play then I'm just not interested in it.

That left me with strings. I wasn't really interested in getting on the wagon again with the guitar. Holding the neck was painful, and awkward for me, so I had to find something else. I still saw myself as one of these wandering storytellers though, so I wanted to make sure that It would fit that for me. Something that I could take with me when telling a story. Veering away from the guitars, I was led more to bluegrass instruments. While not generally my thing, they have potential, and I like the way they sound.

When I really got serious, and started getting into it, I landed on the Mandolin. Or maybe it landed on me, I'm not sure. I'm still no good with it, and maybe I never will be, but I expect that if I stick with it long enough, I'll get good enough to satisfy myself. I bought it before I lost my nerve, after much debate and gnashing of teeth. It wasn't so much the cost of the Mandolin. I had decided to get a student quality one, but the lessons, and that's not even about the money, but the time involved. They say it takes about two years to get good at an instrument. I'm two months down now, and I still haven't propperly introduced my left hand to my right yet. Ah well. I'll get there.

I'm looking forward to it though, wherever it leads me. One thing is for sure. I like being someone who has bought an instrument and is struggling with it, a lot better than being someone who hasn't taken the leap yet.

An important note: The video clip on this entry is not me. I only aspire to this. One day I'll get there. Right now, it makes my hand cramp just to watch this.

Have you taken your leap yet? No? Get on with it!

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