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Me And My Spider

Courtesy Vertigo

As of yesterday, I finally have a complete set of Transmetropolitan. When the final volumes arrived, and I got home to pick them up, I immediately stretched out on the couch to finish reading the series. Then, last night, I started reading it again. I’m planning on reading through every trade paperback in sequence once a year going forward.

Why, you might ask?

Well, for one thing, it’s absolutely brilliant.

For those of you who don’t know, Transmetropolitan is a story set somewhere in our future. It’s an interesting future. It isn’t a good one, like Star Trek, nor is it a terribly bad one, like so many dystopias. Sure, there’s an underclass and poverty and police brutality and incredibly corrupt politicians, but we have that now. There movements for human rights and outraged citizenry and sex on street corners and incredibly inane television, but we have that now. What we don’t have is the technology to rearrange matter on an atomic level or the ability to download ourselves into nanotech cloud-bodies.

We also don’t have Spider Jerusalem.

Maybe that’s a good thing. Spider’s kind of like if Hunter S. Thompson came back from the dead and came back incredibly fucking pissed. Short, angry, blunt, manic, and unpredictable, Spider is described as an “outlaw journalist”. He barely tolerates rules regarding decorum or rights to privacy, as such things can get in the way of the pursuit of Truth. His column is absolutely scathing, completely undiluted, and takes no prisoners. His writing and his character make for an extremely compelling read.

On a deeper level, though, I have to say that I understand Spider Jerusalem pretty well.

Part of that is because Spider needs to write. It isn’t a profession or a hobby, it is a compulsion. Seriously, his necessity for expressing himself and pursuing Truth in the written word is only slightly an exaggeration of that of many writers. And he does with that need what all successful writers must do: he writes. Even when it’s hard, especially when it’s hard, he puts himself in front of his machinery and he produces words. His two-fisted editor knows how to get the work out of him, with four little magical words: “Where’s my fucking column?”

In that regard, I envy Spider, and I see a level of production I wish to attain, which is the second reason why I want to read Transmetropolitan every year. Inspiration.

Not just for writing in general. I also get inspired to keep an eye on the Truth. Spider comes across as a very angry, bitter, cynical man. He pursues religious bigots and political powerhouses alike, with boundless zeal and merciless brutality. He’d be the first to break down why the tenets upon which your entire life has been built are absolute bullshit, and why you’d do the world a favor by jumping into an industrial wood-chipper right goddamn now. But he’d only do that if you’re an asshole. Spider, under all of the bluster and bravado, is a good person. He wants what’s best. He wants what’s right. He wants the Truth. And he will do what it takes to make sure the Truth wins out, no matter what.

While I envy and admire Spider in several ways, though, I won’t be shaving my head or getting an excessive amount of tattoos any time soon.

A very dear and close friend of mine describes Parks & Recreation‘s Ron Swanson as “my favorite person I wish nobody would try and emulate.” I see Spider in a similar way. I don’t want to be Spider Jerusalem, nor would I want anybody close to me to try and be him, either. I’d be glad for his presence, sure, but I can’t see him interacting with people around me on a daily basis in a way that’s conducive for staying out of jail or keeping my genitals intact.

I’m going to read Transmetropolitan every year because it’s brilliant, it’s inspiring, and it keeps the spirit of Spider Jerusalem fresh in my head.

People talk of having angels or devils on their shoulders. I think, sometimes, Spider perches on mine. He’s definitely on my shelf. Kind of like Bob from The Dresden Files, only instead of inhabiting a skull, Spider just ambles around my bookshelf. I see him being about six inches tall (which he hates). He’s smoking up a storm (not that I can smell it, his cigarettes are tiny). He’s glaring at me. And when I write something that isn’t to the best of my ability, he starts spitting nails and curse words and implications regarding my mother’s virtue at me. Spider’s never one to mince words. And I know he’s angry because he gives a damn.

The anger isn’t the point. What you do with that anger is the point. Do you sit back and complain at the television? Or do you wing your bottle at the damned talking box, grab your bowel disruptor and filthy assistants, hit the streets and do something about it?

Spider taught me that.

And right now he’s telling me we both need some goddamn coffee.

Control+S

ON FIRE.

Folks, it is very, very important to save your work.

After a harrowing and edgy day of front-end coding work, I came home and wrote. I did some other things, first: watched the rest of a movie I’d started the other night, checked in with friends, got some food. But I finally returned to what I want to be doing, what brings me the most personal joy when I accomplish it, and what people have told me is perhaps my greatest skill: I started telling stories again. Eventually, I got tired, and decided sleep was what I needed, leaving the computer on but turning off the monitors.

I forgot to hit Control+S on Notepad++ to save my work.

Windows, in its infinite wisdom, decided to automatically restart itself to install yet another critical update. I’ve been doing that manually every day for weeks, now. I guess that’s part and parcel of running Windows 7 on Balthazar. Anyway, I woke up to find the damned thing prompting me for my login information, and my heart sank into my stomach.

Now, all told, it wasn’t a lot of information. 100 words, tops. But it was the principle, the idea. I haven’t done a Flash Fiction challenge in weeks. It’s been a struggle to have the energy and focus upon returning home to sit down and really make words happen. Rising to the challenges presented by the dayjob is taking a great deal out of me, and it is not in my nature to hold a great deal back for myself. Not when expectations are so high.

I’ll see if I can manage it again tonight. And hopefully, this time, I’ll either write the whole thing out, or remember to save my damn work.

Energy Ebb

Change, even when it is welcomed, can be difficult. I’m not just talking about daylight savings time, and losing an hour of potential sleep to an antiquated means of preserving candle wax or lamp oil. I’m referring to the fact that on top of the new dayjob, and all of its responsibilities and pressures, I have other aspects of my life that demand my attention and engagement.

Once I get myself home and I have the time to catch my breath, I find myself with very little energy to take time for myself, be it in writing or gaming or anything of that nature. Lately, I have simply felt too drained to invest much time or attention in anything solely for my benefit or advancement. Even writing out this particular blog post feels like a luxury; I should already be making the coffee I’ll need to fuel my coding endeavors for the day downtown.

Hopefully this is a temporary state of affairs and I’ll strike a more palatable work/responsibility/life balance soon. Until then, I’ll do what I have to do. Expectations are damned high, but I’ve been enough of a disappointment already in my life, and I’m doing my utmost to not be one anymore.

500 Words on CSS

Courtesy Keytechinc

Cascading Style Sheets are not exactly in my wheelhouse.

They’re kind of in the supply shed next to my wheelhouse. They’re right next to what I work with and I am familiar with them, but they aren’t what I work with all the time, and the nature of working with them slows me down quite a bit. I can do it, sure, and I can even produce results that are aesthetically pleasing. But it’s meticulous, exacting work, and continuously having to run between my wheelhouse and the shed take a lot out of me.

Don’t get me wrong. I vastly prefer using CSS to laying things out in Photoshop or even Flash. One of the advantages of the dayjob work I currently do is that 95% of it is happening on the code end of things. All I need is Notepad++, FileZilla, and a few browsers for testing. This method allows me to assault my problems from an angle that makes sense to me.

In terms of programming, I’m a little bit on the ancient side. I never got into some of the more hardcore languages like C, Python, or Perl, but back in the day, I hammered out some programs in BASIC, and my first few forays into web design were pure HTML constructs, before the advent of CSS or JavaScript. I think that’s where a lot of my approach comes from.

I use automobile analogies a lot when I describe online programmatic approaches and challenges. For example: if I were working with cars instead of computers, I would be more concerned about the inner workings of the engine, transmission, and even the sound system, rather than the paint job, flares, or rims. I can do it – I know my way around an airbrush rig and the sockets for the rims – but I much prefer being elbow-deep in engine grease and pistons.

I’ve worked for a great firm called Twelve23 for two weeks, now, and the experience has been a good one. I don’t drive to work – it’s walking and the light rail, for me. I have access to Belltown, a nice little portion of downtown Seattle. When things feel intense or problematic, I can duck out and walk up the hill, and catch sight of the Space Needle. It’s relaxing and a comfort, in all honesty. I have to remind myself that out here, things are different.

I’m used to the pace of the east coast. Everything is more immediate out there, at least in my experience. Workplaces are more intense. Stakes are high and the edges are sharp and jagged. It seems smoother, here. It could just be me, but the environment here is much more amenable to my pace of work and my outlook on priorities. I’m no slacker, and I’ll do what must be done, but I need to remind myself that taking care of myself is important, too.

And now I’ve gone 487 words without mentioning how I’m not at PAX East this weekend and that SUCKS.

Whups, Missed A Day

Courtesy Matt Groening

Okay. I said last week that this week the normal blogging schedule would resume. But for various reason that do not bear divulging on this particular outlet (which is why I maintain others), things have gotten in my way. I’ve been struggling to find more time and energy for more writing, and the emphasis here is on ‘struggle’. The rhythm of the dayjob and the internal ebb and flow are making things difficult.

Anyway, I’m not giving up, and I still have my focus on making the words happen.

It’ll just be happening after these messages.

And a few more lines of code.

And this beer.

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