Hope Darby Writings

Making words work.

Archive for the ‘Daily Life’ Category

I decided to complete my Hooked-on-Facebook transformation by adding a “Like” button to posts. I’ve tried it out, it seems to work. So if you see that I have “Liked” one of my own posts, rest assured that it isn’t rampaging narcissism, it was just me checking out the new button!

 

Also, there is a new “Share/Save” menu bar at the bottom of each post. It has huge selection of programs (Twitter, MySpace, GMail, Reddit, Digg, etc), but if you use one that isn’t listed, let me know and I’ll get it on there, as well. If I can, that is.

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A.Hope on May - 14 - 2010
categories: Daily Life

So, I have been ridiculously absent for an obscene amount of time. I could blame it on a hectic life, outside interests, computer problems, health issues, or any number of things, but the sad truth is that I have been completely dominated by Facebook.

You see, I’ve tried to keep my more, shall we say, inflammatory writings and opinions off of this blog. I’ve been told so many times that to fly too many controversial flags is to give a bad impression to potential employers/editors/readers, and to risk alienating an audience. Facebook, however, doesn’t seem to inspire that kind of tact. I talk politics, religion, and idiocy with passion and regularity. I don’t mind angering people. I have no problem inciting a riot beneath my status updates.

And that freedom quickly becomes addictive.

The problem is, while I may not be alienating readers with my opinions here, I’m also not encouraging a following by being an absentee landlord. So which is worse? Not writing at all, or writing things that could really tick someone off? I’d have to go with the former. At least if I’m making someone mad, they’re reading what I’ve written, yes?

So my socks are pulled up, my boots laced tightly, and my gumption restored. Let’s see where we can go now.

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A.Hope on May - 12 - 2010
categories: Daily Life

Happy Ides of March, everyone!

Since we’ve last talked, a very dreadful thing has happened: my age-odometer flipped to a new zero. That’s right, I am now 30. Which means I’m close to 40. Which means that 50 is right around the corner. After 50, I’m fine, because you basically get to start over and be just as fabulous as you were at 25. It’s the decades in between that comprise the “getting old” years. I realize that most people treat the “0″ birthdays as momentous occasions, perfect for taking stock of their lives and plotting ahead for the future, but that’s just not my style. Honestly, any plans I make on traditional plan-making days are doomed from their inception. New Year’s resolutions, birthday wishes, and post-Halloween candy regrets never lead to anything productive. If anything, the promises I make to myself on these days are almost guaranteed to be broken. Maybe I just can’t stand the conformity. Perhaps I dislike feeling as though I “must” make resolutions, wishes, and declarations. Or, more likely, I’m lazy and stubborn and need more motivation than a simple calendar number to make me do something.

Sounds about right.

Now that I think about it, Caesar and I may have been kindred spirits. After all, he didn’t much cotton to being told to be superduper extra careful on the 15th of March, and look where it got him. Perhaps if he’d been told, “Trust everyone and be joyous this Ides of March,” he would have been defiantly wary, and Brutus wouldn’t have stood a chance.

That being the case, let me make a few belated, mandatory birthday wishes: I hope to gain ten pounds, NOT write a best-seller, and never taste chocolate again.

Hmmm…I feel the need to rebel already…

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A.Hope on March - 15 - 2010
categories: Daily Life

I have been spending these past several weeks covered in yarn. Literally. I have been learning to knit for an article an a very prominent knitter’s magazine. I was beginning to feel in over my head, but about midway through, a friend of mine posted on my Facebook, “I was thumbing through a backwater newsagent’s and saw an article written by you! Made my day!”  Since that “backwater newsagent” was in Australia and I live in Alabama, it very well made my year, and gave me the boot to the tuchus to get back to my project at hand, as well :)

The article is now completed, and I have, oddly enough, developed a real affinity for knitting. I’m not very good at it yet, but I’m really, really liking it. I’ve also learned a very important lesson. When given the option of several different choices, don’t pick the coolest looking one every time. Pick the simplest one and move your way up. ;)   Every time. Because next, I’m tackling something simple and planning on feeling much, MUCH better about the outcome!

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A.Hope on February - 8 - 2010
categories: Daily Life

I’m still stuck on what to call this upcoming decade. The trend seems to be toward referring to the past 10 years as “The Noughties” (or “Naughties,” depending on what spell-check you’re using), what with the awkwardness of the double-zeros. This leaves the next 10 years as the “2ks” for obviously double-grand reasons. Feels a little “Y2K” trendy for me, but whatever works.

 

Resolutions for this year are still pending. There are the standards, of course, such as losing weight, improving my physical strength and flexibility, and learning to browse Amazon.com or a bookstore without spending my nonexistent inheritance, but the ones that are actually important – professional, personal, and the like – are still muddling in my mind. A new query system, new online (and hopefully brick-and-mortar) classes, and better journaling habits are a must, as are rededications to things like housework, dog bathing, and not vacuuming during televised sporting events are right in there with everything else.

 

So, hopefully, my next post will contain some sort of system, some organization, something. Then again, it may be another “Geeze, I’ve really gotta get on that,” rambling. Guess we’ll find out!

 

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A.Hope on January - 6 - 2010
categories: Daily Life

This season has been a little insane, and this post may very well reflect just that. I have been working on several projects which have been keeping my scribbling fingers extra busy. One project, as a matter of fact, is forcing those scribbling fingers to become…knitting fingers? It’s a blast to learn new things, and since I have no problem making a complete and utter fool of myself, writing about my foray into a new “talent” is proving to be fun.

 

My wonderful husband gifted me with a lovely new desk for Christmas this year. I have been without a real workspace for several months, since my old computer died and be bought me a Dell all-in-one. Absolutely fabulous computer, but wicked heavy. Far too heavy to place on the wickety-wonkety forty-bucker from WalMart I’d been using up ’til then. So I’ve been set up on the dining room table, with papers strewn everywhere, no organization, no structure; I don’t know about you, but I need my supplies to be organized so my brain can remain creatively chaotic. If even my resources and materials are scattered to the four corners, how am I supposed to be anchored at all? Surely someone out there can understand that.

 

For now, I believe I shall snuggle down into my warm PJs, check on the sickly husband in my bed (poor fellow has a dreadful sore throat and aches…sads!) and cuddle down with a furbaby or three for a little movie viewing. Hope your holiday was spectacular, and I hope your tomorrow is restorative.

 

 

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A.Hope on December - 25 - 2009
categories: Daily Life

I’m a fan of quotations. I enjoy the feeling of stumbling across a sentence, a phrase, a disjointed thought that resonates with me and makes me want to jot it down before I forget all about it. There have been many times when I’ve seen a quotable, not stopped right then and there to put it to paper, and find myself later remembering the general gist of the words but not the complete thought.

Today, I was indulging in one of my guilty (extremely guilty) pleasures: Dancing with the Stars. I know, I know. Reality TV at its most combustible: putting mostly uncoordinated celebrities in silly costumes and ask them to appear halfway graceful while dancing with a partner so impressive, the celebrity has only a microscopic chance of appearing less than gawky and foolish. It’s trainwreck television, and rubberneckers like myself eat it up like popcorn.

Anyway, one of my favorite pros on the show is Maksim Chmerkovskiy. Attractive guy, killer accent, and very little filter between his brain and his mouth–what’s not to like? I rarely watch the show when it comes on live. I’m more of a DVR girl; I can skip commercials and the ever-awkward moments of the show and watch only the bits that strike my fancy. Well, I forgot to set the DVR yesterday, so I took to the internet to see what I missed. Lo and behold, I discover a blog written by the bluntly-observant Chmerkovskiy. And this is where I discovered a “quotable” that was wholly unexpected and absolutely perfect:

“I refuse to be a gray mass. I refuse to be part of the majority. Let me be disliked or misunderstood, but different. I just want to see how I high I can go.”

Well said, Maks. Well said.

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A.Hope on November - 16 - 2009
categories: Daily Life

Yes yes yes it’s that time of year again.

The time of year when the weird kids get their mojo uniforms out of the closet, brush off their coffee pots, invest in large quantities of espresso, chocolate, and severely high-octane Mountain Dew (well, if you’re in the South, that is), and start trying to accomplish a nearly impossible feat: writing a 50,000 word novel in one month. Even worse, a 50,000 word novel that makes sense.

 

That’s right. It’s NaNoWriMo time.

 

Last year, disaster struck me down when my ever-faithful USB drive completely tanked and wiped out a major portion of my writing. Severely ticked off and highly jaded, I hate to admit that I put the story on the back burner and haven’t so much as looked at it since. Now that November has rolled around again, it looks like I’m going to have to give it another go. It’s a great story, and I think it would do really well in the publishing world, but I swear I’m spending more time fixating on how to prevent it from being lost than actually writing.

 

But hey, it’s only the 2nd. Well, technically the 3rd. The swing of things will swoop my way soon. Right?

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A.Hope on November - 3 - 2009
categories: Daily Life, Writings

The past few days have been intensely chaotic. My uncle unexpectedly passed away on Wednesday night, sending a shock wave through the family. My little brother called at 10pm to tell me about it, and I could hear my mother in the background, crying while she dressed to go to the ER to be with her sister (wife of the uncle who passed.) I left a note for my husband, who, having to wake up for work at 3:30am, was already in bed asleep, and I drove out to the hospital. A large gathering of my extended family was already there, in varying stages of tears, silence, and pallor. I knew my mother would be broken down, as she struggles to cope with any sort of trauma, especially death.

Entering the room where my uncle was lying, surrounded by his wife, children, and other relatives, I immediately walked to my cousin, my favorite female cousin on my mom’s side of the family, and she fell against my chest, clutching me in a hug so fierce I could feel her heart beating against my own. After a while, she stepped back into her husband’s arms, I hugged and murmured condolences to my aunt and other cousins, and I left them to their private grief, wishing I could have properly extended my heart towards my favorite male maternal cousin, but not knowing the appropriate finger art.

When back in the common area, again surrounded by relatives and acquaintances, I was struck by the diversity in reaction. Some, like my mother, seemed almost incapable of containing their grief. Tears, crumpled faces, trembling hands…their entire bodies seemed to sob. Others were stoic and stone-faced, almost as if they had shut down completely in the effort to not let their emotions show. Others were talking softly, expressing the same stunned disbelief that everyone felt at such an untimely passing. Family arguments were suddenly forgotten. Relatives who had been at war with one another were hugging, desperately whispering apologies and swearing love and regret. The tragedy has shined a light on the insignificance of petty squabbles, and slapped everyone with a hard dose of reality. And I had to wonder, why does it take death to remind us of life?

Why must we hold onto our ignorance, our selfishness, our ego and pride, when we have daily opportunities to make amends, to solve problems, to grow and learn and be the people we are capable of being? Why do we sit and wait, stew and steam over wrongs, both perceived and actual, when all parties are still walking the ground and fully able to respond and reciprocate? Why do we not realize the implications of our actions and inactions until a tragedy forces us to look beyond our self-enclosure?

Simply reiterated, why does it take death to remind us of life?

A question I’ll likely never have the answer to, but one that I fully intend to prove wrong.

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A.Hope on October - 18 - 2009
categories: Daily Life

Rather against my will — and definitely against my better judgment — I recently began “Twittering.” I know, how late to the game am I? Actually, I joined Twitter way back in the spring, but as of today I have only made 8 or 9 “tweets.” There is something a bit liberating in attempting to express a complete thought in 140 characters or less, but I have to wonder how history would have looked had society been Twitterfied long ago.

Like any overly curious, too-nosy-for-my-own-good writer, I decided to go on a hunt to find out just how widespread Twitter has become; is it just for celebrities who jones for thousands or millions of fans to “follow” them online, or is it just as well-loved by us regular Joes and Josephinas who get a kick out of the short-short-short story thought factory?

In my Google spree, I stumbled across a blog that pointed me in the direction of The Guardian, which printed an April Fool’s article claiming that all news stories must be limited to 140 characters, and elaborated on how Twitter would have affected major historical news points. Here are the highlights:

A mammoth project is also under way to rewrite the whole of the newspaper’s archive, stretching back to 1821, in the form of tweets. Major stories already completed include:

“1832 Reform Act gives voting rights to one in five adult males yay!!!”;

“OMG Hitler invades Poland, allies declare war see tinyurl.com/b5x6e for more”;

and  “JFK assassin8d @ Dallas, def. heard second gunshot from grassy knoll WTF?”


From the archive

Highlights from the Guardian’s Twitterised news archive

1927
OMG first successful transatlantic air flight wow, pretty cool! Boring day
otherwise *sigh*

1940
W Churchill giving speech NOW – “we shall fight on the beaches … we shall never surrender” check YouTube later for the rest

1961
Listening 2 new band “The Beatles”

1989
Berlin Wall falls! Majority view of Twitterers = it’s a historic moment! What do you think??? Have your say

1997
RT@mohammedalfayed: FYI NeilHamilton, Harrods boss offering £££ 4 questions in House of Commons! Check it out

Now we’re going to have to come up with new ones…add yours in the comments section! Oh, and see the full Guardian article here: Guardian Gets Twitterized

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