12/11/07: Coffee time
Dec. 11th, 2007 10:09 pm
A productive evening's writing at the coffee shop. It was only me
and jaylake tonight, and Jay left a while ago, but I
kept slowly plugging away. The plot is being fractious and not
helping me to guide it to the right place, but I think some kind
of confrontation is brewing even if it wasn't the one I had in mind.
Also, Jay gave me some great writing-business tips. In exchange,
I gave him my opinion (for whatever that's worth) on a novella of
his which I think could be great if he just let it go in the direction
it wants to go instead of the direction he wants it to go. But
it's his novella and I wish him all the best with it.
kateyule and I have been enjoying the latest season of
Amazing Race and we keep thinking about what it would be
like to compete for real (as opposed to the pretend version we had
in Thailand). I think we could be good at it -- it is what we do
for fun, after all -- except for the physical demands of some of
the Detours and Roadblocks, and the whole going-without-food-and-sleep
thing. I know that there are a couple of tour packages offering a
semi-equivalent experience for money (a trip around the world with
some competitive and adventure aspects, though without either the
million-dollar prize or the possibility of elimination). I've also
considered asking our friends to put together an itinerary for us
(places to go and certain things to do or see) which we would then
unseal bit by bit as we traveled. Could be kind of expensive,
though, since we'd have to buy all the tickets on a last-minute
basis. Kate's also considered adding an element of unpredictability
to our travels by going to the first postcard rack we see in a new
location, giving it a spin, and traveling to whatever is shown on
a randomly-selected postcard.
I'm just putting together a calendar of all the SF and square-dancing events we want to attend next year. There's two or three events every month -- we're plainly not going to be able to do all of them, and if we add any non-convention-related international travel (we're thinking Venice/Vienna, and/or maybe Kate's delayed trip to Guadalajara) or just-visiting-friends domestic travel (Bay Area, New York, and Vancouver are among the candidates) we're going to have to forego even more. The paradox of choice is that too much choice makes one unhappy. But it's still good to have the options.