My Leap Year: Small Steps 63-72

[My Leap Year is a 12-month life project (begun 11/01/07) at the end of which I intend to be writing full-time. 365 small steps = 1 giant leap.]


Kudos to Prem for calling me out on the fact I haven’t posted in close to a week.

So. Here I am! This post will be a bit of a random collection:

I’ve been having real trouble with butt in chair this past week. As I’ve mentioned before, I’m very sensitive to my environment when it comes to writing. And right now my environment is very uncertain. My wife’s job isn’t happening and its future is ambiguous due to the writers’ strike, we only know for sure what our living situation will be until the end of the month, we just moved back across country and I still don’t have a work schedule at Meltdown yet. Add to that some family drama and a memorial service for another member of the family in a week and you get…well, uncertainty. This is one of the reasons the concept of a mental writing environment is so important to me. I hate seeing my productivity tied so closely to the physical vagaries of life. But yesterday I made what I hope will be an imprtant step. I’m working on “moving” from a room office to a notebook office, which is that much closer to a full mental office. A notebook and the words in it are just a physical representation of ideas (As Madeleine L’Engle puts it: “We think because we have words, not the other way around. The more words we have, the better able we are to think conceptually.”), and ideas are all it takes for a mental office.

A quote from Rainer Maria Rilke’s Letters to a Young Poet (bold mine): “This above all – ask yourself in the stillest hour of the night: Must I write? Delve into yourself for a deep answer. And if this should be affirmative, if you may meet this earnest question with a strong and simple “I must,” then build your life according to this necessity; your life even into its most indifferent and slightest hour must be a sign of this urge and testimony to it.”

Tom Spurgeon over at The Comics Reporter did a recent interview with my co-worker and co-writer from Jim Hanley’s in New York: Vito Delsante. Check it out if you have a minute. My friend and fellow Scryptic columnist Elton Pruitt relaunched his Running Up That Hill column this week with a new article titled REBOOT!, in which he details a new focus, specifically that of helping writers brand spanking new to comics find their feet. Elton’s only been writing comics for about three years, but he’s gone about it in a very smart way and you could do a lot worse than listen to what he has to say. So go check that out, too.

I realized sometime this past week that I wrote my first comic script 8 years ago this past November. Oy. Now admittedly, there have been whole years in there where next to nothing actually got written. But still. Oy.

Kevin Kelly has this cool concept called a “Lifestream” (actually, he has lots of cool ideas, including the life countdown that influenced my own Leap Year countdown as you see it at the top of this post) where he collects on his home blog all his posts from all the various sites he blogs for. I’m not ready to take things quite that far, namely because I want the focus of this site to remain writing or something close to it, but I do want to more closely integrate my online presence. As a first step toward that I updated my Elsewhere page today. Each week I’ve been posting my comic pick of the week on both the Meltblog and the JHU Blog. This week’s pick is Scalped #13, last week’s was Umbrella Academy #4. I’m still running Caleb Music Television over at my MySpace blog. The new year so far has featured Guys and Dolls, Nickelback, Muse, Rose McGowan/Connie Francis, The Mars Volta and the first 5 episodes of a 16-part look at the music, videos and visuals inspired by Alice in Wonderland.

6 Comments

  1. A few things.
    First thing is just a spelling error, “Alive in Wonderland.”
    Then,
    Until you decide to block my IP address (and that wouldn’t do you any good because there are many many ways around that) I’m going to be thanking you a lot. I don’t know if it’s as much of a personal decision as a subconscious reality, but your posts, and the places they lead me, have done significantly more to push me along in my own aspiration than anything before.
    I’ve added Elton Pruitt’s “Running Up That Hill” to my list of daily haunts, and I’m definitely going to check out the interviews you’ve done that he actually linked. I’d love to interview other writers. In fact, the idea of creative collaboration with other creators in general has always been a big interest of mine and hopefully I can start directing that interest into fruit in the future.

    I can appreciate all the stress going on in your life, and I wish you the best over the next few months when so much uncertainty can bring a person down, or at least make things more difficult than one would want. In my own life the opportunity to go back to school and get a degree has reared it’s beautiful, but scary head, which may cause me to uproot again and head back to Florida. (I’m in California now) I do hope and will “will” that things go well for us all.

    That’s just about all I’m going to say for now.

    Again, thank you.

  2. The most important part of writing is the number of people you can connect with….you are already a successful writer, Caleb. Now you just have to make a living at it. :)

  3. Caleb,

    Thanks for the kudos, buddy!

    When things get a little more settled, I look forward to more Making Good! In fact I was thinking today what I might do for a near-future column is basically collect my favorite quotes of people you’ve interviewed, linking back to your column of course.

    Anyway… drop me a line one of these days or call me and we’ll catch up!

    Elton

  4. Prem, I’m glad the site’s been helpful to you…my hope is that it would be to someone when I started all this!

    Elton, I definitely owe you some catch-up, and will do that this week. I’m also hoping to have a new, unusual Making Good this coming wek as well, though probably later than Tuesday…

  5. [...] Comments My Leap Year: Small … on My Leap Year: Small Steps 20-2…Caleb Monroe on My Leap Year: Small Steps 63-7…My [...]

  6. [...] Comments My Leap Year: Small … on My Leap Year: Small Steps 63-7…My Leap Year: Small … on My Leap Year: Small Steps 20-2…Caleb Monroe on My Leap Year: Small [...]


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