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Printed from https://web1.writing.com/main/profile/blog/centurymeyer35/month/11-1-2025
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Rated: 13+ · Book · Personal · #2348994

If you DO want to know, welcome to my blog

For those who actually want to follow my thoughts, ideas, moans, and gripes, this is the place for you! For those of you who are returning...I questions your judgment, you poor souls. *Wink*
November 11, 2025 at 1:02pm
November 11, 2025 at 1:02pm
#1101396
         Sometimes it's the little things that get to a person. I often wonder, when I'm watching one of those true-crime documentaries where some woman went over the edge, chopped her husband up and fed him to the neighbor as a meatloaf: What really pushed that last button? Was it a bit of rust on a not-so-stainless stainless steel spoon? Was it one of those 3M Command Hooks that never damage the wall...except half the time they peel a patch of paint the size of a half dollar off? Perhaps she was simply baking a cake for which the recipe couldn't figure out whether to use English or metric measurement: use 1 cup flour and 10 milliliters of water.

         Well, I haven't quite gone 'round the back end of the rainbow, but I do feel the frustration. I reckon it's universal though. You ever put something together from Ikea? It takes 14 of those screws with the hexagon in them. But six other bolts, all the same size as the hex-head bolts, need a Phillips head screwdriver? "Place Panel A onto Panel D, then tighten screw OQ." Wait—Panel B is in the way of Panel A; and once I do move B, when I put Panels A and D together, the hole for OQ is covered! What the hell?! Forget it; I needed firewood anyway.

         It's no better if I try to escape to the garage, though. Maybe today's the day to change that headlight bulb. Well, what do you know? I have to take off the entire front bumper! Or, as an alternative, I can try to wedge my arm into a space a mouse would find claustrophobic...after taking off the wheel well covering that is held on by three 10mm bolts, three 7mm bolts, and one 1/2 inch bolt! And 2 of the aforementioned Phillips head screws. I think there's a conspiracy between Dodge and Ikea! Hell with it, I don't like driving at night anyway.

         Maybe reading will soothe me...but no, it just sends me into the bathroom looking at the razor with menacing thoughts. (Don't worry; it's just a safety razor. It may not be deadly, but I'mma shave the shit outta somebody if I snap!) When I start reading, I get tense tension. Why? Because "Julia rides her bike to Melanie's house and stood on the doorstep until Melanie answers the door." It makes my eyeball itch. Either something happened, is happening, or will happen at some point in the future. (My laundry usually falls into this latter category). I know, I know: there's still nuances and perfections and participles, and all sorts of nifty little modifiers. But it boils down to when the damn thing happened. Unless Schrödinger's cat has business with Melanie, her visitor can't interact with her in the past and the present at the same time. (Although that does offer an interesting discussion of perception of the present actually taking place one or two milliseconds in the past, making humans always perpetually reacting to the past instead of truly experiencing the present. But that's not important right now: no one ever became homicidal because of slow reflexes. Homicided, but not homicidal.)

         Aw, see?! Now I got one eye twitchin', the other itchin', and I ain't even got to plurality agreement or voice consistency! AUGH! Oh well...maybe reading's not for me, either. I think maybe I'll just go lie down. Hopefully I can figure out how to set my alarm for 13:30. PM.

         You enjoy the afternoon. For me: sweet dreams of loose screws and car boo-boos, time loops and sharp knife...and a recipe for a very special one-pound-three-milligram meatloaf for Fred next door.

November 9, 2025 at 9:02am
November 9, 2025 at 9:02am
#1101209
When I wake up on days like this, I think about going directly back to bed. Gray, sloppy, useless... Oh, and the weather sucks, too! *Wink*

November in the Midwest is about as dreary as it gets. A blanket covers everything; but it's not like the blankets of snow that will come later, bringing with them the romance of reflected moonlight, the laughter of children. These sheets of November are like wet, moldy tarpaulins thrown over the furniture of our lives. They cover, but they don't protect. They simply weight us down.

There's nothing else to do to but write and play Minecraft, it feels like. Vacuum the floors? Eh...maybe tomorrow. Dust the shelves and nicknacks? Why, no one's venturing out of their house in this cold soup to see them anyway. Cook dinner? Bologna a cheese will do just fine.

Write a flash fiction or a short story or a review? It seems easier to pull a truck with my teeth.

Gotta work tomorrow; gotta do chores today; gotta make dinner tonight. Got nothin' left in the tank after that, I don't think, except curling up on the couch to binge reruns of Downton Abbey.

I hope the world doesn't expect too much out of me today, because I certainly don't.

Don't you just love November?
November 3, 2025 at 12:04pm
November 3, 2025 at 12:04pm
#1100773
I’m a selfish guy. I freely admit it; but I think many, if not most, introverts are. My hobbies are writing, drawing, creating music, and road-hiking. (And playing Minecraft. It’s my only “gaming” endeavor; I loathe most other video games, save for a quick board of Super Marion Brothers now and then.) These are all solitary ventures. The only things I do in groups are play cards or watch TV, pretty much.

I’m not a very good conversationalist, either. Usually, about 5 minutes into a conversation, I’m asking myself why the hell I started talking to a person in the first place. All I really want to do is end the conversation and go away, probably to write about how much I hate having conversations. Imagine living with a guy like me, where the only interaction is about the dogs or about how much a character on the TV irritates me, where my idea of a good time involves a quiet room, my dog, a pad of paper, a pen, and my computer (because I can’t read anything I write longhand, pretty much).

I’m “a dud.” I know this because I am reminded more frequently than seems polite. No dancing, no bar-hopping, no parties where everyone secretly has some axe to grind with everyone else but smiles like sharks at everybody instead. Yep, I’m in introvert, a dud…a writer.

I finally came to grips with it about 5 years ago. "Quiet Little HeartOpen in new Window. is written about that a-ha! moment of reconciliation. I am, at last, able to admit I am stingy with my time and my thoughts. I am more likely to reach out only if someone says they need me. I am content to give what I have mostly to the blank pages before me. I keep to myself and tend to draw in…but that doesn’t mean I don’t give back at all.

I do give back. I give my stories. I give my drawings and my music. At least, I offer these things. Whether they are accepted is no longer something with which I trouble myself. We all like a gold star now and then, but if what I offer is not desired, I’m content to keep it to myself, even to hoard up my stories and sketches and songs like some artistic Silas Marner.

So I offer this blog of random thoughts with which you may or may not identify. I offer some stories, poems—maybe even a picture or two (if I’m rich enough to afford that level of membership—I’m a miser, too; I'll save that for a different blog entry). But I made them all on my own, in my own little cave, in my own little world.

I know a little more about me now, you see, and I reckon maybe you do, too.

I’m selfish and self-contained. I’m an introvert. I’m an artist. I’m a writer.

And I wouldn’t want to be any other way.
November 1, 2025 at 8:16pm
November 1, 2025 at 8:16pm
#1100662
I have several journals and notebooks: my daily OneNote notebook at work; also my daily scratch notes in a steno pad; my writing journal, which is so disorganized at this point I'm going to need Magnum P.I. to find a story I just wrote two months ago; my drawing journal consisting mostly of abstracts; and my freewrites. Oh, and now a blog. Sometimes I think I'm a schizophrenic in training.

Of all of these, my freewrite notebook is probably the most interesting to me. The writing journal winds up with solid ideas for finished pieces. But the notebook contains wild and random thoughts. When I write in my freewrite notebook, I write whatever comes to mind without editing in the moment. It could be word by word, and it could come out completely random and nonsensical; or an entire story could pour out unexpectedly.

But one thing that I've noticed about my freewrite journal is that it always tends toward the dark. There are some rather disturbing entries. Here's some entries from around this time for the past few years:

10/25/17
12/8/19
10/6/20
11/2/21
10/10/22
11/30/23
11/21/24

So many of them are weird and dark, strange and wandering. In many of them I ask myself, in one way or another, why they are so strange. But I've come to understand them: these are the random cuts that I make with my pen to let out the bad blood, bleed by bad brains clean again.

Everybody wants to let the dog off the leash sometimes, let it run and see what kind of damage it can do. But we stifle it throughout the day—good lord, we have to, unless we want to go to prison. But we, as writers, have a way to get it out, don't we? Do you do it, too? Do you just let the pen lead you through the roses or the thorns, whichever it chooses at the moment?

If so, perhaps you'll share some of the odd windings and wanderings of your bloody-bodied thoughts, distracted dreams, and frustrated frustrations. Or perhaps not; sometimes it's better to scream in the dark where no one knows if you're in pain or if you're a banshee.

Not the usual blog entry this one, I reckon. But I have to go now.

It's time for another bleedwrite freewrite.


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Printed from https://web1.writing.com/main/profile/blog/centurymeyer35/month/11-1-2025