I’m sorry Stephenie

by Myg on April 13, 2010

I’m sorry, Stephenie Meyer.

I’ve trashed you here a few times for being a bad writer. I know, I’m late to a very big party.  And I also know that you have a gazillion dollars in the bank from the royalties, have probably had tea with Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart and throngs upon throngs of adoring followers who will buy and read anything you ever write. So you must not give a shit about what one sort of bitter woman in NJ would write, right?

Well, today I got to thinking about all that and how I would feel if it was me. Because, Stephenie Meyer, I am writing a fanfic for Twilight that is reaching epic proportions (okay, not saga length, but big for a fanfic) and I hope to get it out there in the world soon and am now realizing that people might actually read it, and what if somebody out there thinks I suck as a writer?

Because I’m telling you now, somebody will.

And if I read “she sucks!” even just one time, it won’t matter if thousands of people love it. I will obsess about that hate. Because that’s my nature.

Stephenie, if that’s your nature too, let me tell you how sorry I am. I really mean it.

Let me tell you something else.

I love Twilight. I read this at a point in my life when I really, desperately needed a fantasy to escape into so I could forget some very painful real life shit that was going down. I became absorbed, wholly, in your world.

Thank you for creating that world for us. I don’t care how flawed it is, honest. It brought me a lot of happiness and it inspired me to write over 100,000 words (and counting) of my own version of this tale. And my writing, I promise you, is not going to wow anyone with any kind of love of literature.

Today when Billy Burke stopped by (omfg, he didn’t, no, yes he did) Twitarded, (the most excellent Twilight related blog on the net), I realized that sometimes famous people read the shit that’s written about them in blogs. If I was famous, I know I would. And I would be bothered, too much, by the criticism.

I’m not saying it’s unfair, or somehow not right, or not useful to criticize icons of popular culture such as Twilight. I’m just saying that I don’t want to make you feel bad, Stephenie. And I know you will never in a million years read this, and even if you did, you would not likely give a shit. I would certainly hope not.

But just in case, I want you to know I’m sorry for the smack talk about your writing. And I want you to know that I thank you, a lot, for Twilight.

Love,

Myg

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Risen

by Myg on April 4, 2010

The real reason I’m posting this today is because she, my late step-sister and the “you” of “hey you” in my last blog post, would fucking hate that last post, would hate that it’s been at the top of my blog for over two weeks. She wasn’t dark and dreary like me. She was sunlight and hope and perseverance and a whole host of other sparkly and wonderful things that I miss like hell and will forever miss like hell. So I’m writing something, maybe a little less inspired since there was a painful dearth of sugar consumption today, given the day. Not nearly enough black jelly beans or peanut butter chocolate eggs.

I think the big news here is that my boys wore ties! They looked like little prep school applicants or mini bankers, but holy risen son of of a Christian God were they cute.

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They still don’t walk. They are 14 and a half months old, and I’m just beginning to think, huh, does it matter yet? When will it start to matter? It’s not like I want to rip my hair out chasing two toddling boys in different directions, but it’s got to happen at some point. And the whole not walking business does make Easter egg hunting a bit more of a chore, though they scored pretty well anyway.

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Sometimes I’m amazed at the tenacity of time. Humbled by it, even.

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Not enough, too late

by Myg on March 18, 2010

Hey you.

The last time I saw you was two days ago. March 16th. Two days after my birthday. By the way, you didn’t send me a card this year. First time in like, ever. Unlike me, who never remembers to send you or anyone a fucking birthday card. You had an excuse. I never do. In the future, I’m going to send out god damned birthday cards, anniversary cards, Easter cards, Secretary’s day cards. I am going to try to be more thoughtful, like you. But I’m telling you now, I will never come close. But I will try.

You died this morning. If I’d known you were going to slip out like that, I would have been there last night with you. I’m sorry for that. I was planning to come this morning and then Dad called. I was too late. You went so, so fast once they told you how sick you really were. You weren’t ready, I know. I am so incredibly sorry for that. I wasn’t ready either, not that that fucking matters one bit.

I want you to know I’m writing this to you because part of me believes you can still see it. I am trying to nurture that part of me, but I admit it isn’t easy. The older I get, the harder it is. If you can give me any kind of sign, that’d be great. I will try to be open for it. But I’m sure if you still exist in some form where you can actually read this, you’ve got better things to do. Like not be sick for the first time in six and a half years. Like watch out for that little girl of yours here.

I know leaving her was the worst part for you. I know it was. I want to puke every time I imagine that hell for you. So badly I wanted to tell you, she’s going to be all right. She will never forget you, I promise. She is going to make it through this. Kids have a way. They are fucking magic. They can endure and they go on, even when we can’t. I will do whatever I can to ensure that she does. This I promise. But I couldn’t tell you, because we didn’t ever talk about you dying. Not even two days ago when we knew it was coming. This is probably my biggest regret right now, believe it or not, that you were dying and we didn’t talk about it. I thought it was because that’s what you wanted. I will never know.

The last time I saw you, you were propped up on pillows in bed. I told you I had a cold and I didn’t want to breathe on you. How fucking stupid that seems now. I should have bear hugged you. I didn’t know I wouldn’t get another chance. I didn’t want to make you sicker. I didn’t want to hurt you. The last thing I did for you was swab a little vaseline in your nose where that fucking oxygen tubing was irritating you. My last big sisterly act. Pretty fucking lame, if you ask me. But I’m going to hold onto that moment forever. The last thing I ever did for you, however lame it was. It wasn’t enough. I’m sorry.

I asked you, “Do you want to talk about anything?”

You looked at me with the blankest of expressions. For a minute I didn’t know if you understood the question. Then you quietly said,

“No.”

“Do you want anything?” I asked.

“No.”

“Do you want company?” Pause.

“Yes.”

“Do you want to see anyone in particular?”

Blank stare.

This was the sum total of our last conversation. Downstairs, out of your earshot, the hospice nurse told us, “She’s slipping fast. By this time next week she’ll probably be in a coma. Now’s the time for people to come say their goodbyes.”

But how could I say goodbye? I couldn’t do it. I thought I’d have another chance. I thought by next week it would be too late, not by this morning. I was fucking wrong, wasn’t I?

I remember when we used to talk about the cancer. Back when you were scared but there were still options. Things that could be done. Back when you had a fighting chance. Oh my God, did you fight. So hard you fought. With everything you had. They gave you so much chemotherapy they wiped out your kidneys for good. “Sorry, we can’t give you any more, ever again, or it will kill you.” Fucking hell. Then you got leukemia. Jesus. But you beat it! I remember how we talked then, how you fought the big, tough, scary questions. I remember holding your hand, crying with you. But then a corner was turned. The terminal corner. And you didn’t want to talk about it anymore. And I tried to respect that. I tried to understand that you just didn’t want to think about something you could do nothing about. So I didn’t say anything about it, about the inevitable, about this shit right here, ever again.

I don’t know if that was the right thing to do or not, but I want you to know, I would have cried with you, I would have been afraid but I would have stayed by your side and faced it down with you if I thought that’s what you wanted. But that’s not what happened. And I am sorry if you wanted that but couldn’t ask. I’m sorry if I should have known to just bring it up and didn’t. I will never know.

Look, I have a lot more to tell you. This isn’t even the most important thing, but it’s the thing that’s consuming me ever since this morning. This deal of not saying, not doing enough for you to help you have a better death. You had a terrible death, I know. You will not ever know how incredibly sorry I am for that. How much I wish I could have done something, anything besides slip a little petroleum jelly up your nose, to make the end of your life less agonizing than it was. I am sure now that your suffering in the end is going to haunt me much longer than your death.

Kid, someday I will tell you how much I am going to miss you, how much you mean to me, how much I appreciate all that you were, all that you’ve done to make my world a better place, but at that point I will have to be ready to say goodbye, and I’m sorry but I’m still not there. I know. I’m late, as usual.

I’m sorry.

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by Myg on March 17, 2010

Know what I want to do? I want to run up there, into the nursery where they are sleeping so soundly, so quietly, and I want to take them someplace that isn’t real. Somewhere where nothing bad can ever happen. Where we have some control over the outcome. Someplace deep in the heart of my imagination where we all live forever and we never get sick and we never die. I want to inhale my children like air, over and over and over and exhale them out over the world where they can be everywhere, anywhere all at once. I want to be with them forever. I want to sustain some sort of belief that that can happen. I want to knock this terror right on its ass, stare it down and tell it to fuck off. It can’t have me. It can’t have them. It can’t have you. None of us are leaving. Ever.

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Eclecticism, revisited

by Myg on March 11, 2010

Just wanted to remind you all that I am still a mother. Those two heart breakers above would be the proof, along with the growing crop of grays at my temples and the bags beneath my eyes. They are 13, approaching 14 months, and yeah. Big. Beautiful. New and wondrous every day. Magic in their own right.

What the hell do kids this age eat? Anyone? I mean besides Cheerios. My kids eat anything and everything, it’s not that, it’s just that I’m in a rut, and I don’t know how small I have to cut their food up anymore. I read other parents do crazy things like give their toddlers a whole strawberry. Madness. Mine get strawberries cut into Cheerio sized pieces. It’s time consuming as hell, and plus I just don’t want to be one of those parents cutting their son’s chicken fingers up for them when they’re in high school, you know? I’m kidding. My kids don’t eat chicken fingers. Unless they’re pureed.

We do give them whatever we eat ourselves, aside from things with nuts or sesame seeds because I don’t know, everybody says if you feed a child a peanut before they’re 23 years old they’ll turn to stone. Or something incredibly scary like that. Yes, allergies. My understanding is that all the research on allergies now says that waiting to introduce foods doesn’t do shit. I find more and more I don’t trust a damned thing doctors tell us to do, but I’m not paranoid. Much.

On the fanfic all I can tell you is I didn’t finish it on 2/26, like I promised. I did hit the 50,000 word mark by then, but it wasn’t done. I finished it, or so I thought, last week at around 80,000 words, but then the ending wasn’t quite right, so I had to go add another chapter. Now I’m doing a once-through read, and then I think it may find a home somewhere in Twilblog world. I am not going to post the damned thing to fanfic.net because for some reason they just don’t like pr0n there anymore, and my fanfic has some parts to it that are for 18+ eyes and sensibilities. Really, it’s written for that intensely interesting class of Twilight fans who are women over 30, of which I am a member.

Did I tell you that I am a Twilight fan? It’s their fault.  I don’t know how this could be, because the writing is fucking horrible, I’m sorry. The stories are fairly lame as well. And you know what? The characters can suck it, as well, with the exception of Edward Cullen, who is largely written like a tool, but who has so much potential you could write about him forever and ever and ever. Poor Robert Pattinson. He’ll never be rid of the Edward Cullen aura. Cedric who?

On the new Eclipse trailer, I don’t want to be a wench, but I am really sort of dreading the movie. That’s because a) the book was fucking horrible and b) the trailer points to the fact that 1. the book is lame as shit and 2. there is far, far too much murmuring by the characters. Watch that trailer and all you can think is, what the hell is wrong with Edward and Jacob? These guys fucking murmur every line in the damned movie trailer, and I sure as shit hope they don’t murmur their asses all the way through Eclipse.

Damn you straight to hell, Stephenie Meyer.

We played another show at Maxwell’s in Hoboken (Jersey for those of you who aren’t from around here) and it kicked ass. I’m not saying we kicked ass, but I am saying it kicked ass. It was really great to be on the Maxwell’s stage again. First time in 8 years ftw. I don’t know what any of it means in terms of some kind of musical future, only that the future looms large and we’re stepping forward into it.

Other things in life are really ass kicking these days. I’ll talk more about that later. Trust me, you can wait.

My birthday is Sunday. If anyone would like to send me large sums of cash, now is as good a time as any.

And on that note.

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Well, this is embarrassing.

by Myg on February 11, 2010

So, I would have a lot to tell you about what’s been going on since the boys turned 1, but that would require that I actually be somewhat coherent and observant and present in my own life, and that’s just not been the case.

Since January 26, four days after their birthday, I’ve been obsessively writing something that was starting out as a silly story about a certain teen saga, and it has sort of turned into a novel in progress. And now I am really mad at myself that I didn’t just write an all original novel with all original characters that I can sell and instead had to borrow some heavily used and abused characters from someone who, let’s face it, can’t even fucking write. Lesson learned.

This thing has a drop dead date. I’m going to have a first draft done by 2/26 and I’m not going to dedicate the time to do a rewrite. I can’t allow it. Instead I’m allowing myself to make the story go from one end to the other just to prove to myself I can actually write a novel.

I have always, forever and ever, wanted to write a novel. I knew that I could write. Not just blog posts, song lyrics, progress notes or training curriculum, either. I can actually write fiction. I am no literary marvel (that would be Mr. Myg/Wisermom/aka Alex).  But I can put words together in a way that might interest you and motivate you to keep reading. I just haven’t done it in a very long time.

Writing this thing (oh Jesus, let’s just call it what it is already, a fucking fan fic) is embarrassing in its all encompassing hold on my attention. My poor children. I am near them when I am with them, but all the while my mind is working on this scene or that plot detail or this exchange. If I was writing something not a fucking fan fic, this might seem not so bad, like, I was really absorbed in the creation of something worthwhile. As it is, it feels a lot like sneaking twinkies into your lunch bag, eating them at your desk with the door closed, hoping nobody comes in to chat.

It would make no difference if I wasn’t busy, you see. But I. Am. So. Fucking. Busy. I have two babies. I have a job with work that has to get done. I am training to become faculty at University of Phoenix. I have a show to play on March 5th. And yet, my mind is always, always working on this fucking thing.

Such it is when you’re damned with obsessive/compulsive traits. So pass the crack pipe. It’s no sleep until 2/26.

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Perfect hard boiled eggs

by Myg on January 25, 2010

No, that is not a euphemism for anything scandalous, get your mind out of the sewer.

On the occasion of my breakfast and my need to add protein to my diet, I offer the following recipe for perfect hard boiled eggs, not over cooked and no icky green/grey tint around the yolk.

  • Put your eggs in a saucepan and cover with 2 inches of cold water.
  • Bring them to a boil over medium heat.
  • When the water begins to boil, remove from heat, cover and let stand 20 minutes.
  • Rinse under cold water until cool, then peel.

For tips on peeling, I refer you to Tim Ferriss. The only superhero that I currently know of.

I’d like to tell you that Tim Ferriss and I go way back, but we don’t. In fact, we don’t know each other at all. But he did go to Princeton, and I live near Princeton, and I was the first person I know who bought and read the Four Hour Work Week, and even though I haven’t put any of it into practice I believe it’s brilliant and do-able if you’re, say, not me (read: not befuddled and disorganized and, um, lazy).

And the guy has interesting ideas about egg blowing, don’t you think? Get your mind out of the sewer.

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One.

by Myg on January 22, 2010

Doot and Bing, my darlings,

Today you’ve officially ended your first turn around the sun. Good for you! That wasn’t so hard, was it?

Every time I think of you two being “one” and your time on this rock measured in the length of years, I just choke up.  I know deep down that the next twelve years will sneak by me as fast as the last twelve months did and all I’ll be able to say is, well, heck. That was fast, wasn’t it?

I wonder sometimes how it all looks from your perspective, this being born thing, this growing up business. For months you were tucked safely away inside me, then one day, BLAM! You were thrust into the blaring light of day amidst screaming and crying and adoration and elation. And then swept up in this constant rhythm of doing, first breathing, eating, pooing, sleeping, crying then cooing, smiling, laughing, rolling over, holding your bottle, sitting up, and then babbling, crawling, eating finger foods, standing, using a cup, climbing, talking. It’s all happened so fast, it seems to me. But probably not to you. Nor will the next 12 years. They’ll feel like a lifetime to you and you will do so much in those years. And it will be a breath, a blink, to me.

Guys, I really don’t even know what I’m trying to say here. All I know is that last night, nearly all day yesterday, I cried at the thought of this day. I know, I know, you’re probably wondering what’s wrong with your mother, and I don’t have a simple answer for that. Everyone tells me it’s normal for mothers to cry when their babies have a birthday. I guess it’s just part of being a mom.

I want you to know that the tears don’t mean anything bad, though. Nothing is wrong. Everything, in fact, is just as it ought to be. You’re here. We all survived the first year of your twindom, and I’m sorry but there were days during those first months of your life when I just didn’t know how we were going to make it. But we did, and here you are – growing, doing,  becoming the people you were born to be, right in front of my very eyes. At least, when I can get the tears out of them I can see that. And that is as it should be. I wouldn’t, couldn’t ask for anything else.

Except maybe this.

As you continue to grow and explore this crazy rock on which we dwell, never forget that no matter what you do or who you become, I love you. You won’t always be my babies. In fact, you’re almost not that now. But you will always be the center of my everything, my hope for humanity projected forward into time.

So go on then, grow up.

One. from Myg on Vimeo.

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Well, this is it.

by Myg on January 21, 2010

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This is likely my last pregnancy entry, as I’m going to be induced in a couple of hours.

I am feeling quite an eclectic mix of things right now. Scared, yeah. Excited too. Like I’m about to walk off a cliff, too.

I’m not focused on the pain as much as the unknowns. I know it will hurt. I have no idea how much or how I’ll tolerate it. Hopefully I’ll tolerate it just fine with a few pharmaceuticals.

My biggest fear is how the boys are doing and how’ they’ll do during the process. I pray that they tolerate it well and that their bodies are developed enough to have a good start to life.

I am very excited hold them in my arms.

I am a little sad that this very, very sacred time of carrying life inside me is coming to a close now.

But I also know this. It’s time.

Last entry in my pregnancy diary, 1/21/09

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On love, obsession, stories.

by Myg on January 10, 2010

I’m having one of those, Wait a minute, what the fuck? Kind of evenings. Because I’ve gotten myself totally obsessed over a story. Just a story. A teen love story, no less. Maybe you’ve heard of it? It involves the Pacific northwest, vampires, high schoolers and a pack of indigenous wolves. You know the one, right?

I went with my friends from over at Twitarded to see New Moon today. LOVED. IT. More than I dared to hope I would, after reading it. And yeah, sheesh, there are some moments in that movie where an extremely well built underaged male is running around shirtless and I had to shake off the awkward, all the while, JJ (aka @JennyJerkface) is sitting to my right half muttering, half chanting “He’s not 18, he’s not 18, he’s not 18!” We snickered, and I remembered neither am I, not by a long shot.

I don’t care, really, about all the feminist controversy surrounding Twilight™ etc. Maybe I should, I haven’t really gotten that deep into my analysis of my reaction to it yet. All I can tell you is I love it, despite the fact that, (and I’m sorry, but, really) Stephanie Meyer is a mediocre writer at best (and I’m being generous here, silencing my inner literary critic altogether). But Meyer really does get something about girls and about the kind of love girls crave.

That would be the all consuming kind.

And you know what? Maybe the yearning for an all consuming passionate love does fade when girls grow into strong, independent women and hit marriage and motherhood and middle age.

Or maybe it doesn’t.

Maybe instead of fade, it just gets buried under all that stuff, like your keys in the growing pile of undone laundry, and then maybe a story like Twilight comes along and just sort of blows the pile away, uncovering what was always there.

All kinds of awesome. All kinds of thinking going on.

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