Thirty days hath September, April, June, and November
All the rest have thirty-one
Excepting February alone
And that has twenty-eight days clear
And twenty-nine in each leap year
I can never remember any line but the first one of that little poem that was meant to teach the number of days in each calendar month. I’d rather cut out a day of August and give it to September, especially this year, but nobody asked me. So I’ll celebrate the thirty days of September in my own way.
I have four newly revised, full novels in the saga and 140ish pages of the next one. I’m thinking of slashing a bunch from those 140 pages and revising/rewriting. With that in mind, I decided to take a brief writing break, because August writing was intense and challenging.
I’ve made some daily goals to give me structure until I write again:
- Do at least one housekeeping task per day.
- Listen to music, not as background, but for the music alone.
- Do one of the things that allows my brain the freedom to think about my fiction writing (coloring, sewing, petting a dog or four, creating art, contemplating, or writing poetry/lyrics).
Today, I cleaned my bathroom. That’s some exciting material right there, I know. Thank your lucky stars I’m not giving you details about last night’s palmetto bug adventure.
I’m still listening to the Feel Flows CD box set. I did that while coloring today, and I was moved to tears by 4:47 minutes of an alternate version of a song I already love. I guess I must be a multitasker, because music + coloring = a breakthrough idea on that fifth book. SCORE!
Sometimes when I post about the Beach Boys, whether it’s their music, their history, or their drummer, I feel like I need to issue a disclaimer. I’ll put one at the bottom of this post to amuse myself.
Someone I know only via a social media site who’s a big Eddie Van Halen fan is doing a “30 Days Idol Challenge” in EVH’s honor. I don’t know if I can find a photo for all of these categories for my muse Dennis Wilson, but I can enjoy the heck out of trying. If I know the photographer, I’ll give credit. If you are the photographer, please tell me so I can credit you!
September 1 — In sunglasses cropped photo ©Ed Roach, 1980
Disclaimer: Unless you are a member of the Beach Boys, or have traveled or recorded with the band, or personally know members of the band, or are related to a member of the band, or you are married to me, or you are my lifelong friend since the age of twelve, or you are a sibling or cousin who handed over your Beach Boys records to my care, carefully consider what you might say to me. Do not tell me “facts” about the band. I’m likely aware of them, true and false. Do not talk about the bad things connected to the band, e.g., mental illness, addiction, untimely death, a fraudulent therapist, or a certain psychopathic cult leader. I’m fully educated about how these impacted the lives of band members, and they aren’t fun for me to talk about though you’re certainly entitled to find them tantalizing on your own time. Do not tell me what years of their music are superior to other years unless you are a music critic with a by-line in a reputable publication or you did several years of research to write an authorized book about one of the band members. Do not perpetuate the contrived myth that the Beach Boys and the Beatles resented or competed with each other. That applies to some of their fans, not their musicians (a single Beach Boys member’s rambling speech at a recognition ceremony notwithstanding). There are two current versions of the Beach Boys: the band that tours under the name, and the band that Brian Wilson and Al Jardine, among others, work and perform with. If you don’t know which of these two bands has my loyalty and owns my heart, do you even know me?
your disclaimer cracked me up, mainly because I watched a new documentary on ………
…….
…….Ann Boleyn …. who loved the Beach Boys
Of course she did. When time-travelin’ Anne came to the 20th century, her first wish was to hear those boys from Hawthorne, CA, and WHO COULD FAULT HER? She deserved her fun in the sun.
What makes Dennis Wilson your muse?
I don’t know. I guess that’s the magic of it. There was a moment I saw him and it was as if something clicked into place inside me, and from then on, he inspired me. Stories came to me from… where? He’s one reason past lives began to intrigue me. I’ve had people assist me with past life regressions.
But really, I think there are no answers. There is a kind of acceptance, and it comes with both immense joy and pain.
Something of him is in everything I create.
I’ve just met someone who is a past life healing practitioner. I’m intrigued to learn more.
Once a friend sat with me with a colleague of hers who guided past life regressions. I didn’t do a regression, but my friend asked her several questions about a significant person in my life. After closing her eyes and reflecting for a while, the guide said that I had a past life with him and described our relationship, past and present (because of promises made, things we were working out), and I kept thinking it didn’t seem familiar/connected in any way. A couple of years later, I met another person, and THAT person’s traits and our connection seemed to perfectly reflect the life she’d told me about. It’s all so fascinating to me to think about.
If you do learn more, I’d love to hear about it.