Tag Archives: Ballicai

Lion Boy

brainball_close_up

Lion boy
Fine boy
Benevolent alpha cat
I see you,
with your slow-blinking Buddha smile,
stretched out on veldt grass
(the towel on the bed),
and I’m humbled that
every day,
for eight years,
you’ve shown me
that joy lives in a purr
and in the touch of soft fur,
that love dwells in peace
and trust in gentleness.
I should be blessed to have
Eight more such years,
Eighteen,
(Oh, eighty!)
Be that as it may,
your powerful purr will rumble
the tenderest recesses of my heart
even should I live
to be one-hundred.
I am
and shall ever be
all the stronger for loving you,
because Lion Boy,
fine boy,
you’re with me as long as I breathe.

=-=

That’s Brainball, otherwise known as CJ, Alpha Cat of the Ballicus Household.  Hubby and I recently celebrated his eighth Gotcha Day (we adopted him eight years ago, in August 2001).  What a joy he’s been, is now, and will always be.

And oh my goodness, am I ever enjoying the creative high of brainstorming Heart’s Chalice (my magical realism novel) as though it were a brand new story (which by now, it is).  I have another idea for a novel, too, which I had planned to shape into a rough draft during NaNoWriMo.  But in light of how sparky I am on Heart’s Chalice these days (pun definitely intended) — heck, I’m even scribbling ideas for it up on the mountain during hikes! — I don’t want to disrupt my momentum or overload myself, lest I unwittingly put the kabosh on my spark.  Gotta run with it – use it, or lose it.

So here are my revised writing plans for the next couple of months:  last of September and all of October, I’ll work on getting Patchwork Stained Glass submission-ready, and I’ll keep sparking on Heart’s Chalice.  By November 1, I hope to have a good, solid outline not only of Heart’s Chalice‘s story but also of its world-building framework, so I should be able to hit the ground running for NaNoWriMo, rough-drafting the first 50K or so words of Heart’s Chalice.

And the way the story is coming together, I have a feeling that, throughout the month of November and beyond, I’m gonna have Sizzling Fingers Syndrome.

Still love my new idea (for the fun and funky novel), but I work much better one spark at a time.  I’ve got to head in the direction my spark is illuminating.

Yearbooking

I discovered Yearbook Yourself from my friend Jannie Funster‘s blog, and I just couldn’t resist seeing how the Ballicai (otherwise known as cats) and I would look sporting new-old hairstyles.  What do you think?  Which year suits us the best?

1952 (me with Marilyn MonREOW)

1952

1958 (me with Marilyn MonREOW)1958

1964 (me with Dorydoo)

1964

1966 (me with Dorydoo)

1966

1978 (me with Brainball)

1978

1984 (me with MaoMao)

1984

1992 (me with MaoMao)

1992

2000 (me with Brainball)

2000Here’s what we look like in real life.  Heh. :)

irl_fitted

Long Time, No Post

I’ve been slacking on the blog.  Why?  In a word:  BUSY.  Here’s a rundown of what I’ve been up to:

1.  Working on Patchwork Stained Glass, my novel-in-progress.  I’m moving along at a pretty good clip, considering all the demands on my time this summer.  And Heart’s Chalice, a subsequent novel-in-progress, is still on the agenda, but before I dive back into Heart’s Chalice, I’m going to work on another project, a super-nifty idea for a novel that lit up like the proverbial light bulb over my head.  I’m going to be mysterious about that one for a while (rubbing hands together, bwahahahaha).  But I will say this:  it’ll be significantly different — both in genre and in tone — from anything I’ve written thus far.

2.  Doing what I can to promote Mirror Blue, my published novel.  Online promotion is a challenge.  There are so many things an author can do online to promote a novel, but how much of it helps to reach readers?  Many promotional activities I’ve participated in have been writers talking to writers, with only a few readers involved.  Sure, it’s fun for us writers to talk amongst ourselves, but it doesn’t do much to help bring our books to the attention of readers.  No question about it, promoting fiction is tough.

But I’m hanging in there, and I’m keeping my mind open to all kinds of new possibilities.  And I’m thinking not only about Mirror Blue but the long haul to come:  Patchwork Stained Glass, the novel which will follow PSG (title TBA), Heart’s Chalice, etc.

3.  Gardening.  Picking cabbage, peppers, zucchini and squash.  The zucchini and squash are pretty much played out, but we’re still getting cabbage, peppers, corn and plenty of tomatoes.  Here’s a picture of our recently picked tomatoes.  Gotta make more pasta sauce, and tomato casserole is on the menu this week.

additional_tomatoes

We still have multiple hills of potatoes.  Dug three hills today, and here is the result.  This week, we’ll be eating potato lasagna, mashed potatoes, and baked potatoes.

bucket_of_potatoes

Our sunflowers have gotten huge, and pretty soon, we’ll have sunflower seeds — good snacking for both birds and for humans.

garden_sunflowers

And the other day, I picked a hat full of wild blackberries for blackberry cobbler.  The cobbler turned out scrumptious!

hike13_blackberries

4.  Hiking.  Busy as I am, I can’t stay off the trail, nor would I want to.  Being in the mountains helps keep me centered, no matter what might else be going on around me or inside me.  Peace — I crave peace in my life, and spending time in the mountains brings me peace.

To my delight, I found a Mushroomopolis on the mountain — a huge colony of mushrooms in a faerie ring around a tree, and climbing up it, too!  Such ambitious mushrooms, don’t you think?  They want to see through the forest canopy to the sky.

hiking4_mushroom_metropolis

hiking5_mushroom_metropolis

hiking6_shroom_metro_tree_climbers

hiking8_mushroom_metropolis

New ghost flowers are unfurling:

hike6_ghost_flowers

No matter how much time I spend on the mountain, the forest never fails to hearten and inspire me.  On every hike, there’s something new to see:  flowers, fresh plays of light and shadow on the trail, fascinating fungi, creatures large (rarely) and small (frequently).  Here is an assortment of pictures, accompanied by quotes which speak to me:

hike1_sunny_trail

“Come forth into the light of things, let nature be your teacher.” ~William Wordsworth

hike9_forest

“Birds sing after a storm; why shouldn’t people feel as free to delight in whatever remains to them?” ~Rose Kennedy

hiking2

“Forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet and the winds long to play with your hair.”
~Kahlil Gibran

hike7_woods

“Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.” ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

5.  And just because it’s been a while, I’d like to share with you pictures of my Ballicai (otherwise known as cats):  four of the brightest lights of my life.  They make me laugh, they warm my heart, and their uncomplicated, unconditional love comforts me when I’m feeling down.

Here’s Brainball, my Lion Boy Alpha Cat:

brainball

Here’s little Dorydoo, kitty genius extraordinaire, with her aDORYble profile:

dorydoo

Here’s lovebug Marilyn MonREOW, a.k.a. my Lap Fungus (in this picture, she’s headed for my lap as I sit at my computer):

dually_lap_bound

And here’s mischievous, playful, and very handsome MaoMao (also known as Monkey Mao because he’s always getting into everything):

maomao

My sweet Ballicai remind me that joy can be found in every moment of every day, if you know where to look for it.

“This is the true joy in life, the being used for a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one; the being thoroughly worn out before you are thrown on the scrap heap; the being a force of Nature instead of a feverish selfish little clod of ailments and grievances complaining that the world will not devote itself to making you happy.” ~George Bernard Shaw