Life

Wordless Wednesday: Annual Pilgrimage

Categories: Christianity, Family, kids, Life, Love, Travel | Tags: | 2 Comments

A World Of Darkness

There’s a BUNCH of stuff going on around here, none of which I can write about in my public journal. C’est la vie, apparently.

I hate to see this blog just sit here all neglected, though, so I’ve been thinking I might add a weekly “chapter serial” fiction story feature. I used to be quite the gaming addict back in the day, and play-by-email role-playing games were my drug of choice. My fellow gamers and I wove many a dark and colorful tapestry of mystery, intrigue and adventure, matching our resourcefulness and creative writing skills against the all diabolical challenges the GM sent our way.

Yes, I am an irredeemable geek. That’s beside the point.

I was thinking of taking some of those game stories and posting them here, a little at a time, one day a week. I would begin with “Austin After Dark,” my personal favorite, a chilling tale of vampires and werewolves and Fae and betrayal and murder. Lots and lots of murder. And goblins.

I’ve received permission from Aron Head, the evil genius who ran that game, to publish excerpts here on my blog. I’m thinking “Tuesday Tales” has a nice ring to it.

So…some background. If you’re not familiar with the concept of play-by email role-playing games, it’s fairly simple. Each player creates a character, and then that character goes forth and interacts via group emails in a story setting with the other players’ characters. The Game Master provides the setting and peripheral characters, and supplies a story plot containing challenges for the characters to try to overcome. It’s like Disneyland for creative-writing geeks like me.

“Austin After Dark” is a World Of Darkness rpg. There are stacks and stacks of WoD resource books available to the serious gamer who needs to know his way around this incredibly elaborate fictional universe.

I’ve never read any of them. I knew absolutely nothing about the setting or the rules when I first joined the game. “Tabula rasa” pretty much sums it up. I’d been playing in one of Aron’s other pbem’s at the time, a Star Trek game. Star Trek I know. Every detail of that universe is as comfortable and familiar to me as a well-worn pair of sheepskin slippers. My problem was, the Trek game had gone dormant while Aron focused on another of his pbems which was rocking along like a runaway train just then. I was suffering some serious game withdrawal.

So I figured, maybe I should join this other pbem, this “Austin After Dark” thing, just to pass the time until the Trek game got moving again. Aron and I exchanged a few emails, trying to come up with a game character for me who could fit into the ongoing story even without knowing any more than I did about the hidden underworld of Austin. We came up with Casey Gavin, a rural ranch girl who had developed telepathic and telekinetic powers and had moved to the big city to access a broader range of minds so she could develop her skills. She took a job bartending, the perfect activity for someone who wants to meet a lot of people without having to form any close personal ties.

Most of the stories I post here will be edited to keep the story moving along. Role-playing games sometimes get bogged down in conversations that lead nowhere, character (player) bickering, uninteresting tangents and other nonblogworthy narrative that I’ll be editing out of my weekly series. Also, I will be posting ONLY the events that Casey was directly involved in. If you want to read everyone else’s adventures, go here.

Okay then! Chapter One will hit the blog on Tuesday, and I hope you’ll enjoy reading these stories as much as we enjoyed writing them.

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Part 1

Categories: Austin After Dark, Fiction, Friends, Gaming, Life, Role-Playing Games, Tuesday Tales | Tags: , | 1 Comment

This Is Why Most Artists Are Starving.

When I first started using my Wacom drawing tablet, I was positively delirious with the joy and sense of unlimited creativity it inspired. I immediately embarked on an elaborate Christmas card project that was going to be the most splendid image I’d ever produced.

In retrospect, I wish I’d given myself a bit more time to learn about the software before I started a large-scale project. By the time I realized that there were some things I should have done differently, it was too late to change them without having to scrap the whole image and start over.

Also? It turns out that drawing and painting digitally rather than with actual pencils and brushes does not magically make you a better drawer and painter. Quite the opposite, actually. In other words, if you have never drawn or painted a stone bridge before, and you’ve never been much good at drawing people, you may not want to start off your digital career with a “painting” of a couple sleighing merrily over a stone bridge. Ahem.

My personal forté is drawing horses, so that was the easy part. Look at my pretty horse!

I just wish the rest of the card were coming together so effortlessly.

A few weeks ago a friend from church asked me if I’d draw a tattoo design for him: a lion laying down with two lambs, a sort of metaphor for himself and his two sons. That was a fun little break from trying to learn how to paint stone bridges, and when it was finished I asked him if I could use the basic lion-and-lamb design for my own purposes. He said I was welcome to use it for anything except another tattoo, so that became my second digital Christmas card, and the first one I’ve actually completed:

Alas, creative drive is a fickle thing. The new Star Trek movie has just come out on dvd, and I have this awesome idea for creating a music video with some clips from the film. Learning how to draw people has suddenly been unceremoniously shoved to the back burner of my creative mind, even though the Christmas card has the potential to earn money and the video is just me goofing around for free. That’s the trouble with the artistic brain — it’s so freaking undisciplined. You don’t even get to choose what it’s going to get all worked up about.

So…my goal is to have both cards finished and printed up on high-quality cardstock by Thanksgiving, to give away and to offer for sale, but this cursed video thing has taken over my head and I may or may not get the sleigh pic done in time. Which would be a shame, because it really is going to be quite lovely when it’s finished.

At times like this I really sympathize with all those great artists who died broke and alone in rat-infested garrets. I think creativity must be a form of insanity, the way it skews your priorities and hijacks your brain for its own passing whims.

But I can pretty much promise that at some point I’ll be posting a Star Trek music video to YouTube. It’s gonna be sweet.

Categories: Animals, Artwork, Christmas, Horses, Life, Winter | Tags: | 2 Comments

A Haunted Train Ride

It’s a few days late, because the gorgeous autumn weather has been luring me outside and away from my computer. Didn’t want to miss sharing this, though!

Elizabeth built a “haunted train ride” so her toys could have something fun and spooky to do for Halloween. It ended up sprawling across two bookshelves, the entire window seat and the dining-room hutch. It’s too big to show all of it — the page would take forever to load — but here are my favorite parts (click on any image for a slightly larger version):

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Categories: Artwork, Family, Humor, kids, Life | Tags: | 3 Comments

Wordless Wednesday: Harvest MAiZE

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Categories: Family, kids, Life, Wordless Wednesday | 2 Comments

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