2. Max and Zoe. On their bikes. Max is going to try to pedal his Spiderman bike since he call balance on his pushbike all the way from our house to Grandma's. Zoe is riding my bike. Does this mean a new bike is in my forecast. My future holds bike riding and that is the best kind of future one could wish for.
3. The lesson for the summer is: Writing is fun. Revising is not. Yesterday, I realized why revising takes me so long. I'm reading along, things are going well and I hit upon a sentence that reads something like, "And then her her ate the position." I have no idea what I was trying to say. If I delete it, will I lose some important that comes up later? Is this a key to the character's identity? Is this a leitmotif? So, stressed, I look to Facebook or recipe suggestions for dinner for help. This is a slow defensive mechanism. I should try to stick to the uncomfortable. It's a good lesson for life and for summer's ending.
Two writing manifestos to go push ahead:
From Richard Powers' Orfeo, page 322.
Let no one persuade you of a single thing. Study your hunger
and how to feed it. Trust in whatever sounds twist your viscera. Write in the
cadences of first love, of second chances, of air raids, of outrage, of the
hideous and the hilarious, of headlong acceptance or curt refusal. Make the
bitter music of bumdom, the sad shanties
of landlessness, cool at the equator and fluid at the pole. Set the sounds that
angels make after an all-night orgy. Whatever lengthens the day, whatever gets
you through the night. Make the music that you need, for need will be over,
soon enough. Let your progressions predict time’s end and recollect the dead as
if they’re all still her. Because they are.
And from Dinty Moore's Facebook:
"I write because I’m suffering, and the world is suffering, too, and I believe a great story, well written, can help as much as anything." ~ Alan Heathcock