Updating it All

Today I was able to upload the revised versions of my Blog and the main website. Everything’s pretty much done, but I will continue to tweak things over the coming weeks. So far so good…

USS Carondelet scratch-build

I’ve started my first scratch-build model project.  The subject is USS Carondelet, a City Class gunboat of the American Civil War.  You can see my progress so far HERE.

Apologies if the Blog and parts of the website appear wonky over the next few weeks.  I’m finally in the process of updating my site, and it is very much a work in progress. I REALLY need to find a new theme for this Blog, as the formatting has gone haywire and I can’t seem to fix it!

Oh well, the price of technology.

Hour of the Wolf

This coming Saturday, January 16th, Altered Fluid will participate in our semiannual visit to Hour of the Wolf radio program.  The show is broadcast live from 5-7 a.m. in New York on WBAI, 99.5 FM.  If that’s a little early for you, you can check out the broadcast recording which will be posted later in the day on the 16th.

This time up we are critiquing a story by Paul Berger.

**UPDATE 1/18: the MP3 of the show is now available HERE***

New Year’s. Again.

newyearsI was once told that everyone should make a New Year’s Resolution, as it is the one time in life that you can tell an outright lie to yourself and everyone around you and no one will think anything of it. I tend to do them every year and one of them always has to do with writing.

I didn’t need further proof that this is common – go to a New Years party with a bunch of writers and you’ll see just how common it is – so when fellow Altered Fluidian Eugene Myers sent around this “The Washington Post” article last month by Ann Patchett, and her realizations of how making yourself write every day actually resulted in writing every day and having higher output, it wasn’t a new concept for me. (I have to admit, though, that the first time I read the article, all I could think was “wow, this woman knows Edgar Meyer!)

In the article a yogi is credited with saying that if one picks a task and does it with consistency for the first 32 days of the year, then that sets the tone for the year. I agree with that, but I don’t think you have to limit it to the first 32 days of the year. Doing something every day is simple programming of the human body and mind. You can teach yourself to write every day by simply sitting down and writing every day. You can teach yourself a musical instrument by practicing every day. Professional football, basketball and other sports players practice every day. And even if you’re not that good at first, and maybe you don’t care for the task, you can still program yourself to do it. For proof of the latter, read about Andre Agassi and how his father decided Andre would be the best tennis player in the world and it became so. Also look at how many people, if they really thought about it, would admit to despising their 9-5 job, but they’ve programmed themselves to do it through repetition of the task and the telling themselves it has to be.

So, while I don’t think New Year’s Resolutions are incantations that guarantee success or failure, I’ll still make a few:

1. I will have Indian food at least twice a month. This one is easy!

2. Writing. I’ll write every day. Within reason. Some days I can’t write, due to travel, being sick, long days at work. But on the days that I can write I will. I’ve done it before, no sense not to keep it going.

3. Skydiving. Who wants to jump out of a plane with me? Kristen’s said many times that she won’t.

4. Exercise. I got into a good routine with running and Gyrotonic sessions last summer and fall, but work and the weather have dropped that to zero. No time like the present to pick it up again.

So. There. Promises I make to myself that may or may not turn out to be lies for the New Year. But, no worries. If they don’t take hold on January 1st, then I can start again on February 1st, or March 7th, or “The Ides of March”, or whenever.

Have a great Twenty-Ten!

History Beneath Us

800px-Robert_Ballard_at_TED_2008I’ve always been fascinated by shipwrecks.  Probably not the most healthy fixation for someone who lived on ships for over 4 years, but I like haunted house stories, too, and I’ve lived in those house things even longer.  My fascination with sunken ships started in elementary school when I first read about USS Yorktown and her sinking at the Battle of Midway in 1942.  Yorktown was found by Doctor Robert Ballard in 1998, sparking my interest in the man and his work.

On November 29th, 60 Minutes ran a two-part segment on the explorer Robert Ballard.  Ballard is always introduced as “the man who found Titanic“, and is so here (although I always think of him as the man who found Yorktown).  The interview shows footage of his research ship, recaps some of his other finds, and covers the in-progress search for ship wrecks in the Aegean sea.

While the ship footage in the 60 Minutes piece is fascinating, I was more drawn to something that was said and not shown.  One of the wrecks currently being excavated is in the Black Sea, has been there for over 1500 years, and due to low oxygen in the water is nearly perfectly preserved.  While the ship itself being in that condition is incredible, Ballard states that he fully expects to find human bodies amongst the wreckage, and just as well preserved.  The thought of them finding an actual, well preserved, human from 1500 years ago boggles my mind.  During my research of the American Civil War era, it’s become blatantly obvious that Americans have undergone marked physical changes in the past 100-200 years (the differences in height alone between the regions of the country were commonly remarked upon in writings), and if Ballard does indeed find his 1500 year old sailors from the other side of the world, I can’t wait to see what they look like, how different they are from us.

Give the video a look, both segments and bonus footage are online and can be viewed HERE.

Long time no type

craneAs I’ve always said, if I’m not participating in online blogs, Facebook, emails, and anything else yet invented or yet to be, it generally means I’ve been busy with other things. A summer full of travel, a novel completed (a rough first draft, that is) and a lot of consulting work have kept me away from posting here. To get the ball rolling again, a photo of the loading *cranes in Alameda at sunset, looking north west towards the hills of San Francisco.

*the rumor is that cranes such as this in Alameda and Oakland are what inspired George Lucas to create the AT-AT snow walkers in the movie “The Empire Strikes Back”.

That seems about right

notfoundA few months ago I attended a writer’s conference in Manhattan. At said conference there was a panel, and upon this panel sat an agent who spoke of how he likes to work with authors, how new authors are his particular favorites, how he likes the unique voice.   How he enjoys the personal connection with a writer.  I spoke with him briefly after the panel, he asked me to send him a query letter, I agreed.

This week I received the rejection email from the agent. It began “Dear Mr. Fitzgerald…”

I re-read my query numerous times, thinking I’d made the mistake.  But, no, my name was clearly stated in all of the materials, in the email return address, everywhere.

In addition to getting my name COMPLETELY incorrect, he also misspelled the title of my novel. I guess being an agent means you don’t have to pay attention to the details.

Next!

Fireworks!

I uploaded these photos the other day but forgot to link them here.  Old age.

We had excellent conditions for the show this year; after rain on the two previous years that was a welcome change.  Also, instead of having to strain our eyes across Manhattan, this year the fireworks barges were stationed in the Hudson, to mark the 400th anniversary of the discovery of said river.  A great show overall.

Pfalz D.IIIa Model

With the several model completions I’ve posted recently and with at least one more to come shortly, it might appear as if I’m turning these things out at an amazing pace.   In reality all I’m doing is finishing a bunch of projects I nearly completed in the past, lost interest in, and am now revisiting so I can clear the bench for a new project.

Here’s another WWI biplane.  Love those pretty colors!  More photos here.