December 2009 - Posts

A ceremonial burning


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

15:56 GMT  Tuesday 29th December 2009.  I'm sitting at the oak refectory table.  A few occasional lamps cast a warm glow in small areas of this cavernous room.  A log fire is blazing in the corner, throwing out a blanket of heat.  Outside, the final glimmer of light is oozing through the dense grey clouds overhead.  Freezing rain is falling on the now solid remains of snow that is almost two weeks old.  I can't recall a winter like it.  The temperature hasn't risen above zero in days.  The roads and streets are treacherous, pavements are unending strips of glassy ice.  The council have gritted the main roads but nobody has bothered to clear their own streets or sidewalks: another symptom of the selfish, fuck everyone else generation.

I've barely walked anywhere for the time I've been here.  No marching around Jesmond on my 4 mile nostalgia circuit.  No hikes into town.  Too damn slippery.

This is my last full day here.  I fly back to Bristol tomorrow afternoon.  

End of an era.

I've been counting the days since I got here.  I don't feel sad, just aware of the taught emotional strings.  It'll hit me when I'm gone from here.  A lot of anger and tears no doubt.

Today I was up early as usual, two mugs of tea whilst reclining on the sofa bed in dad's old room... enjoying the darkness of the morning and watching shite TV.

Then up and out to my local cafe.  Still on chapter 18.  Now 68,000 words in.

Tonight Pete and I burn the physical reminder of what has occurred here.

Nearly two months ago now.  It was weekend I watched my mum dying.  I stepped out to help Pete build a huge bonfire in his back garden as per tradition... old doors, shelving units, tree limbs and skirting boards, scavenged from the ubiquitous skips that dot the streets around here as another wave of  new owners  move in and upgrade the interiors, gutting the previous contents.  Rich pickings for our bonfire.  

The bonfire was never lit.

My mum's condition deteriorated dramatically that day.  Pete discovered his dad was dead.

The bonfire has remained erect and intact all these weeks, clearly visible every time I walked between our two houses via the decking at the back, an effigy of that weekend and what it represents; first soaked by torrential rain and now more recently locked in ice and painted white by frost.

Tonight is my last night here before everything changes.  Tonight we plan to burn the fekking thing.

Last night was -4c.  I stood outside with a T-shirt and thin jumper, gazing at beautiful stars gleaming in a pure indigo night sky, and savouring the brightness of the moonlight casting the bare limbs and fingers of all the trees around me into inky silhouette. My ears began to burn with the cold.  Then I started to shiver uncontrollably.  I stuck it out, grinning in grim enjoyment.  Tonight will be just as cold...and getting close to a full moon, making the white frost look fabulous and eerie under those cold twinkling stars.

Tonight: a litre of good whisky and several litres of diesel fuel.  Mwahaa *mischievous smile*  If we manage to avoid drunkenly blowing ourselves into heaven I think it'll be a pretty damn good affair.  Oh, anybody involved in Health & Safety industry out there is welcome to climb on and scream like a banshee as their flesh crispens, burns, splits with melting bodily fats and ignites in its own thermal furore.

I'll raise a toast.  

To the dead and dying:

May they rest in peace and have the comfort of floating in the calm seas of eternal bliss.

To the end of an era.

And to the bright prospects that cling to the underside of every dark horizon. Jewels, that drop into the palm of your hand when you least expect and when the universe deems it right.

I bow before you now, dear reader of this blog, a close-mouthed smile curving my lips, and I tip a bottle of whisky in your direction, and raise an eyebrow before taking a long and brain numbing swig.

To the end of an era.


EDIT:
01:52 GMT, wow, what a night.  The bonfire was awesome to the extreme.  I feel like Richard Dreyfuss after being in Close Encounters of the 3rd Kind... my face is red, as is much of my body.  Can't work out if it's from the extreme cold or extreme heat or combination of both.  I stripped naked.  Yep.  Getting hot from the growing mass of the bonfire I took off my snow jacket and then my jumper. Pete grinned and said "I dare you to get naked."  Oh dear.  I'm never one to back down from a dare.  So, naked I became.  Not sure his 17 year old daughter was terribly impressed but I had a blast, standing there, feet going numb in the snow and ice, body blasted by heat waves radiating from the intense bonfire, washed in cold starlight from above.  

Spent 3 hours with the bonfire.  Mostly dressed.  Back inside Pete's house we played Fury of Dracular (Pete won!) then watched Bladerunner - Director's Cut, and drank more whisky.

It's been a great final night, a great END to the era.  Am sure I'll feel fucked up, confused and upset in a few days but right now... it's all gooooood.



The Final Christmas


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

14:06 GMT, Saturday 26th December 2009.  I say it's Saturday but it really could be any day and I wouldn't know the difference.  A combination of the natural breakdown of normal time-keeping during the Christmas period and a result of being here for nearly two months now.

I've just had my last Christmas in the house I grew up in and that has been a central touchstone in my life since the age of 9 years old.  My parents are now dead.  I'm 39 and about to enter a new year, a new phase, a new paradigm.

Although I'm wary of rawness of the emotional scars I may be carrying, I'm excited for the future; in the words of Jim Morgan; "...is a mixture of tradition and innovation - so revere the old ways and welcome the new ones."

Christmas was as wonderful as I could have hoped for, considering the circumstances.  

Jo and Kelvin were here for almost a week, plenty of time for us to retrace the contours of traditions laid down over the past 8 years: they've been coming up every year for a Norwegian Christmas since December 2001. There was the ubiquitous visit to Tynemouth, to walk the pier and munch the best fish and chips in the world from Marshalls.  For Kelvin this was a goodbye. There's no longer any reason for him to come back here.  For me, it was awareness of the end of an era.

I'll still be doing Tynemouth and the Pier when I come back to Newcastle over the next few months in the final phase of wrapping up the house to sell, or just rent (still not sure).  So my final goodbye to Newcastle is still a little way off.

There were walks in the Dene.  There was Modern Warfare II on PS3.  There was Fury of Dracula.  There was the languid quality of the passage of time whilst relaxing and savouring these moments together.

And the lovely interchange of people between the two houses, here and the family next door, with the open gap in the boundary between both back gardens, we can step outside, cross the decking and enter the other house through the back doors. This is a redolent memory of life here, since I came up in 2006, staying for 3 months... and my mother and I "found" each other again.

One night, alone, I opened a bottle of 1992 Oreghegy in an act of nostalgia.  It's been here in this house, all these years, matching the 17 years since I moved to Bristol... it was a golden colour, utterly divine on the taste buds although not as amazing as the 1979 Muskat I opened last Christmas...that was 30 years of history in a bottle.

We celebrate Christmas Eve, rather than the English Christmas Day.

Just before 4pm my sister and I went upstairs to mum's bedroom and "brought mum downstairs".  We placed her urn on her favourite armchair, wrapped in her favourite scarf and the green cardigan she wore on her final days, and placed a Santa hat on her head... the one we used to share amongst us before opening the presents one at a time.

At 4pm (one hour behind Norway) we tuned into Norwegian radio and listened to the bells ringing, something mum did every Christmas stretching back into our childhoods.  With tears streaming down our faces, we stood up, raised glasses to the mum in her chair, made a toast and drank and remembered.

My sister and her partner cooked up an absolute feast.  Truly spectacular.

6 A.M. Christmas Day Jo and Kelvin left to spend Christmas with their families, back in the South West.

That was yesterday.

So now it's Boxing Day, I'm sat at the Oak Refectory table.  Mug of strong coffee.  Pale sunlight reflecting off thick icy snow that's been lying around for over a week now.  I'm playing one of mum's CD's, by the Oslo Gospel Choir - Det skjedde i de dager.  It's become the soundtrack to this final Christmas.  It's evokes profound memories of the two years I spent Christmas in Norway (1981 and 1982) when I was 11 and 12... two of the most magical times in my life, ever, and so carries with it a deep sense of FAMILY, of what I've lost and also what I still have and belong to.

It's the kind of CD that'll rip my heart when I next play it, when I'm long gone from here.

I wonder where I'll be next Christmas. Everything will be different and new.

I've got four days left here before I return to Bristol, and my phasing back in to reality.

I'm going to watch Sherlock Holmes Hound of the Baskervilles, on TV, and Poirot of course.

I'm going to tinker with the new design of my website, and work on the new novel Dog Eat Dog.  If you've not caught a sneak preview of the first chapters of the new book, you can do so  here

Quick promo note: I've slashed the price on my last novel, Edge, as part of a promotional campaign, grab it now or before the end of January and you'll save yourself £6 GBP (compared to normal price) preview or buy here


Snow

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

08:40 GMT, Friday 18th December 2009.  I'm sitting at the oak refectory table in that beautiful blue white light that comes with heavy snow cover.  To my left, double french doors and two wide windows look out onto decking, all the hard edges wrapped in snow, beyond the garden and the dense forest...the rich contrast of deep evergreen and white dusting.

Yesterday, I spent two hours dressed in jogging bottoms and a T-shirt, soaking wet, working outside in temperatures just above zero, grimacing with the burning sensation as I had my hands in water a lot of the time. I finally fixed the fekking blocked downpipe from the guttering.  Earlier I'd been sat in the cafe, as I've been doing almost every morning now, writing... and suddenly something "rare" and amazing happened. The sun came out.  Holy sheeeeit.  Sunlight kissed my face and I realised it had finally stopped raining.  Now was my first chance in weeks to get out onto the back of the house.

However, Easy Jet charge you £9 GBP to put a bag in the hold of the plane, so I also stick my fingers up at that and travel light, with a carry-on bag.  Light, means no heavy or warm clothing, or spare clothing should the one's you have get wet... such as clearing a blocked gutter of mouldy leaves and stagnant water.  So... the only option I had was to throw on my gym kit.

Deeply satisfying though. And no sooner had I finished then the snow started; which if it had been any warmer would have bee more fekking rain.

When I realised how much snow had fallen last night, I threw on my walking boots, a thick woolen jumper and my snood and hat and headed out for a stroll through the ancient streets of Jesmond.  Tunes on my headphones.  A magical moment, coming back into our street, a blizzard of snow coming down, and Dead Can Dance - Within the Realm of a Dying Sun playing spookily... it was a real Cthulhu moment.  I stood there for five minutes, squinting against the stinging snow flakes zipping into my eyes and bouncing off the visible part of my face, grinning, hot breath from nose and mouth catching in the snood and keeping my jaw warm.

Coming back inside the house, I felt a pang of sadness that I couldn't communicate the experience to my mum. I glanced up at the open doorway to her room, which was in darkness.  But I shrugged off the negative cloak and smiled and brewed up a hot mug of tea, sat down in an armchair and spent some time reading through the proof copy of Pete's first novel.

Oj and Sharky are supposed to be driving up from the South West tomorrow, to spend the next few days here leading up to Christmas, as they have done for the past 7 years.  This is the last one we'll ever do together here, like this, in Kosekroken.  However there is a forecast for more heavy snow fall so I'm hoping they'll be able to actually make it. 

Rain, rain, rain


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

13:24 GMT, Wednesday 16th December 2009.  It doesn't seem to have stopped raining for a month now.  It's a cold, unpleasant sort of rain, not helped by the lack of heating in the house.  Can't afford to have it on much at the moment.  I've just lit the big cast iron stove and stuffed it with logs (one's I spotted on the side of road whilst out with Pete earlier this year - I recall wondering if mum would ever get a chance to burn them when I was cutting them up). Weather forecasters reckon the temp is going to drop to around zero during daylight hours from Friday... I reckon it's going to be mighty cold in this house with me and little sis living huddled next to the stove. 

I'm deep into the modified bubble world of Jesmond.  Dealing with each day as it comes.  In the mornings I go upstairs to mum's room. Light a candle.  Deal with the emotions. "Sound of silence" by Simon and Garfunkel is still in the CD machine from those last days.  I play it sometimes when I'm up there.  Talk about heart-wrenching.

Then I head out to my cafe and I write.  Dog Eat Dog is coming along at a good pace.  This morning I finished a Drobna chapter: brilliant character, such good fun to write with.

I spent the last couple of afternoon's rebuilding my website. Stripped out all of the design fluff and got it down to essential information: I'm very pleased with it.  Minimal.

Late afternoon there's usually a game of "Fury of Dracula" with Pete and the gang next door.  Certainly always one after they finish dinner around 8pm.

So in a way it's life as usual.  But of course it's not.  It's just a semblance of how it used to be... but that's what I'm here for.  To soak up these final moments of the house as it always was... before the big changes come sweeping in at some point next year.  It's all psychology but it's working.

My sister and I are closer than ever.  I'm cherishing these days alone with her.  She's good company.

As part of the website rebuild, I'm getting my mind back into promoting my work.

So, if you've not yet read EDGE, or if you're looking for a new writer to get into, now's your chance to buy this novel at a discount price.  Here's the promo blurb:

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Moving On


10th December. Bristol.  Sky Bunker.  Tomorrow will be one month since mum died.  But I'm not going to dwell on this, be maudlin or negative.  It's going to mark a point where I move on.

I tried going back to work on Monday.  Interesting experience.  A case of the arrogance of male logic being over-ridden by the deep well fount of powerful emotions.  My boss and I had a long chat.  Back to my original plan when I first left after the phone call from my sister, return to work 4th Jan.

Time is the agent of recovery.

I've had to wait a couple days for a flight back to Newcastle.  I don't mind the wait.  It's given me a chance to spend some quality nights with Jo before I vanish on her (again).  I've also been getting back into my writing.  I'm damned if I'm going to spend this time shuffling around in a numb daze.  It's time to be positive and strong, and productive.  It was a surreal case of de javu: the very same lifestyle of early 2007... after I got back from Newcastle following my dad's funeral.  As now, back then my house had been burgled around the time of the funeral, leaving me to deal with the sense of violation in the house, dealing with the death of a parent.  Back then I was spending days and weeks and months of living up here in the Sky Bunker; this time it was just a few days, but still the same routine: committing myself to 45 minute writing sessions broken by 15 minute snoozes, repeat, repeat, repeat throughout the whole day.  Listening to H.P.LOvecraft FUNGi FROM YUGGOTH audio book/poetry... the eerie yellow sunlight flooding across the city which I can see from this high vantage point.

So the past couple days have been a concentrated blur of creativity. Dog Eat Dog is now onto Chapter 17.  I'm about 58,000 words in.  

Newcastle tonight.  My sister has gone to London...her first time leaving the house in months.  So I'll be arriving at an empty place.  And she'll be dealing with the disconnect, and then the return...herself.

Floyd, my Northern Monkey, is over from New York for family reasons and it'll be good to catch up with him and share feelings.  We're planning on heading out to Tynemouth on Friday. Walk the pier. Grab legendary fish and chips from Marshalls.  

So I'm looking forward to good times.  I'm determined to enjoy these final weeks in the house, whilst the house still looks the same as it has done during my lifetime there... whilst the house still holds the essence of mum, and before we strip it down to bare walls and forever lose the ability to go back to that place we once called home.




Newcastle. Jesus Mound. 

I've been in Newcastle for a couple of days.
I'm bordering on moments of depression but I'm determined to push through it.
I'm currently sitting in my cafe on St Georges Road... working on Dog Eat Dog.
Yesterday I met up with Floyd and we rode the Metro train to the coast. Got off at Whitley Bay rather than Tynemouth, and then walked along the coast to Tynemouth.  Awesome weather. Calm but ice cold and foggy.  Walking alongside the ocean I was gripped by the idea of throwing myself into the freezing water and swimming.  I settled with taking off my boots, rolling up my jeans and wading in up to my knees. It was so cold it burned.  I couldn't feel my toes for an hour afterwards.  It was great though.





Later...
I've just been sitting in mum's room.  It's not been touched since she died.  I sat in the spare chair feeling very emotional, gazing at the bed, at the hollow indent on the pillow.  And then my gaze tracked to her chair, where her ashes are now, in a maroon coloured urn, which my sister and I wrapped in her favourite scarf and her green cardigan.  I got really fucking angry then.  I'm not even 40 and my mum has become a box of ash.   I'm never going to be able to play cards with her again, or laugh with her or squeeze her hand when we used to walk side by side.  





Later...
Somebody tried breaking into the house today.  I came back from a long walk and found the cast-iron chimneia that sits out on the decking had been dragged to the side of the house, giving somebody a step-up onto the roof of the extension... allowing them to try all the upstairs windows.  Fuckers failed.  





Later...
Sat in my cafe.  St George Road.  Dog Eat Dog in good flow.  Outside is grey and ice cold.  Pete's cooking Sunday lunch for his family today and invited me to join them.  Yesterday he popped round with Penny and a 7ft Christmas Tree; handing it over he said, "Just because she's gone doesn't mean I won't carry on tradition.  Here you go, Dave.  This is for your last Christmas here."

Beautiful gesture and action.

Heading back to the house now. Get ready for my lunch and then an afternoon introducing Pete and family to Warrior Knights.

Newcastle days, coming to the end of this period


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

I'm sitting in the cavernous space of the extended lounge at the back of the house.  Darkness pressing up against the windows and French doors.  The place looks just as it did when mum died.  My sister's not changed anything since I've been away; it's a good thing.  There's nobody here right now, and the place is cold, just the same as when I arrived here a couple nights ago... so it's strange because mum was ALWAYS here, and the heating was always set to FURNACE level, but so far hasn't been as upsetting or freaky as thought it might have been.  

I saw another double rainbow today.  Hello mum, I said, smiling as I strolled through Jesmond streets gazing up at the sky.

It's good being here.  Bruges really did something very positive for my emotional state.  I'm aware of the absence of mum but I'm not reeling at the fact of it.  Acceptance?  Perhaps.

Having Pete next door has been a massive bonus.  He and I have been swapping observations and doing that man thing of rationalising and placing emotional experiences within a logical construct.  My first night back up here I spent about 20 minutes in the empty house, alone, before deciding I needed some human company and padded round next door via the shared decking at the back of the houses.  There was Pete, Rosie and the kids, the family next door, bloody good people and the kind of friends you really want.  I got so hammered on whisky that I fell asleep sitting upright on Pete's vast sofa, and woke myself up with a back of the nose snore, jolting upright from a partial slump, aware that Pete was drifting around happy to leave me be... I lurched to my feet and shuffled back home.  Empty house.  No problem.  I can handle it.




Later...
My sister is an angel.
Coming home I'd had a sudden and sad realisation that I'd never have mum's home-cooked chicken curry again.  I said this to my sis the first day back and a big grin spread across her face, "Well, actually, mum told me how she made it before she died... along with all the Norwegian cake recipes of our childhood."

A few days later my sister made me a massive pan of mum's home made chicken curry. Perfect. Exactly right.  I'm very happy.




Later...
End of November. It's the 3rd anniversary of my dad dying. My sister and I took a taxi to the coast. Everyone said we were nuts, the rain was screaming in horizontally. Even the taxi driver questioned us when we said we wanted to be dropped off in Tynemouth. But as we arrived the rain just stopped. However the wind was at terminal velocity. The sea was churned up and jaw-dropping in its rage and beauty. I took a ton of photographs of the pier getting battered by waves that were easily 40 metres high.  Incredible.  Then we went to Marshalls and ordered plates of fish and chips; sitting down at the table we lit a small candle for dad at 3.45pm.  A really special afternoon.  Very positive. 




Later...
They've just brought mum back home. Her ashes.  Damn, she's heavy! *smiles at mum*  My sister and I lit candles, put a CD of Mozart on, and hung out the Norwegian flag.  She's currently on the coffee table, next to her armchair, with a fresh cup of coffee and a brown sugar cube resting in a teaspoon. We'll take her upstairs tonight and place her in her bedroom.




Later...
I'm back into the swing of writing.  Currently getting close to the end of chapter 15.  I reckon that's a clear sign that I'm ready to return to my reality.  Today's Thursday.  I start work next Monday and I'm actually looking forward to it.  It will signify a line being drawn under this current phase. Not an end to my grief or the sense of loss and profound change, but an end to the period of mum's death and its immediate aftermath.  I feel as though I've been on an extraordinary journey.  I really do.

I fly home tomorrow. Back to Bristol.  Can't wait to see Jo. 

Strange to think though, that this is one of the last trips I'll be doing... or so I'm guessing.  In the next few weeks / months, the house will disappear and so will much of my connection to this city.  A couple of friends left, but I can see them in Bristol or other places.  How often will I return to my past, I wonder, when all of this is finally dealt with?  I spent the first 21 years of my life in this city, but I no longer consider it to be my home.






Numb, a shadow of myself. Bruges - recovery

I've been scribbling down bits of thought in my A4 spiral bound notebook over the past days. Here's a collection of these scribbles.


November 13. My mum came to me today in a waking dream. Two days since she died.  I was on the Metro, an urban commuter train that plunges underground towards the centre of the city.  Nothing out of the ordinary.  I was in a daze. I had music on my headphones, Muse, from the Swordfish soundtrack. Uplifting sounds against the tide of bleak sorrow. The train was busy but the seat before me was empty. Abruptly I can see my dead mother sitting there... gaunt, a starved skeleton with waxy flesh.... but rapidly the flesh of her face began to fill out and gain colour as the wasted muscles returned.  Her hair became blonde again and grew long and flowed luxuriously around her shoulders. Her face became young and beautiful. She leaned forward, grabbed both my hands in hers, smiling she kissed me on the cheek and said "Thank you."  And then she was gone. I got off the train and stood in the station for 10 minutes, playing the track over again.  It was an incredibly real and vivid experience.




November 15.  Sitting in Tyneside Coffee Rooms waiting for my long time friend Richy. It's the second time I'll be meeting him here in 2 days.  He's there for me, when I need him most.  It's 20 years since the Tyneside became a regular haunt for me and Richy, both age 19.  And 20 years since Richy knocked on the front door of my parents house, for the first time since he was 11,  desperate and needing help, and changed my life forever: a good thing.

I've known Richy for 33 years. He's as solid a friend as you could ever wish for.  

Apart from a recent refurb, the Tyneside is exactly the same as it ever was; it even has many of the same staff, 20 years later; they own it, they're proud of it...and this age of corporate hegemony in every city centre, the Tyneside is a welcome bastion of independence.  Still serving mugs of coffee.  Still serving ham & cheese toasties.  Like they always did.  I take some comfort in this, and, reflect on the epic arc of my life in these last 20 years...all the things that have occurred whilst the Tyneside slid graciously along.




November 16th. The house is full of Norwegians. Mum's brother and two sisters and their husbands. My aunts and uncles. My family.  I am not alone.  I am not alone.  I am not... alone.  My beloved cousin Kenn-Ole arrives in 2 days.  It is great to have them here.  The house has been horrible since mum died.  Empty. Soulless and alien.  Now there is life.

It's weird and sad that I'm unable to step next door and seek comfort and support there. Pete lost his father at the same time as I lost my mum.  He's down on the south coast, dealing with everything there.  He's coming all the way back for mum's funeral, then back south again for his father's. Strange days.




November 19th.  The day of the funeral I woke up feeling sick with dread.  This was the moment of finality. Today they were going to burn my mum's body down to ash.  I was desperate to escape this feeling so I went for a fast and hard walk through Jesmond Dene.  Saw my old friend the tree, the one that I've gone to all these years of my life, and I stepped up close and gave him a big hug.  Then I went to a cafe on St George's Road... it began to rain, and a beautiful amber light flooded the place.  Pat, one of the family friends, she texted me to say there was a rainbow over Jesmond.  Mum.  I smiled.  

The funeral was beautiful.  Pete (next door), Uncle Erling, Alex (my chilhood friend) and I carried mum's coffin into the chapel.  The service was long with many people and with many tributes.  We played the Girl From Ipanema, and a Nordland Folk Song with classical music.

The wake was a feast of traditional Norwegian dishes and cakes cooked up by my sister, with help from our aunts.  It was a wonderful sight.  A definitive final gasp of what the house used to be like... full of people laughing and eating good food. Mum would have been very proud.  However, for me, the night was ruined by a phone call... the police in Bristol rang to inform us that our house in Bristol had been burgled.  I was gutted.  I felt like I'd been kicked in the teeth.

Mike and I drank beer and carried our glasses and spare cans down into the impenetrable darkness of the Dene, late at night.  Both of us know the place so well we don't need to see to know where we were, or where we were heading.  We walked fast and talked fast and it was a good solace to have Mike there as company. Over the past five years that I've known him he's become ever more the loyal and reliable friend.




November 20th. The day after the funeral was supposed to be a day of reflection and coming to terms with what I've just been through with mum. Instead, it was a half day in Newcastle, before having to barrel back to Bristol to deal with the burglary and secure the house.  In the morning I met up with my cousin Kenn-Ole (chap that did front cover art for Yellow Dawn) and rode the Metro to Tynemouth. The previous night I'd said, "I want to go on the train for nostalgia. I want to walk along the coast in rain and howling wind."  

I got what I asked for.  Rain and howling wind.  Pete met us there, he'd driven and was going to be our ride back.  We headed down onto the pier and walked slowly along, hands hugging luke warm take-out coffee and gritting our teeth and squinting against the icy onslaught.  It was good though.  It suited my mood perfectly.  The pier is over 1/2 a mile long, a vast stone monolith lying on its side that stretches out into the North Sea.  Halfway along I saw three slim figures heading towards us, coming back from the far end.  Getting closer, I realised one of them was Lucille, Alex's mum... she'd been at the funeral yesterday. What are the chances? I asked. We said hello but the weather was too extreme to stand around and chat.

Coming back from the pier, Kenn-Ole and Pete and I trudged up to the main drag, near my old school, and stepped into the salt & vinegar warmth of Marshalls fish and chips shop. Best fish and chips, ever, period.  The wind had died down and the rain had been replaced by weak sunlight so we grabbed take-out boxes and sat on a sandstone wall of the priory overlooking a 50 metre drop to the beach below.  It was heavenly at first, delicious tasting food and good memories... but then an incredible sadness swept over me.  I'd never be able to share this with mum again.

We drove home.  Jo and I packed and got ready to leave. I went upstairs and sat in mum's room for a long time, staring at the bed that hadn't been touched since they took her body away.  The indentation in the pillow from her head was still there.  I cried then.  A natural release of intense emotion.

And then we were on the road, driving back to Bristol, back to my home.  But it wasn't the soft landing I needed.  It was a long and gruelling drive, and there to welcome us was a messy, damaged and violated house.




Later....

Numb, is the best way to describe this period of my life.  

I'm walking around, I'm doing things that living people do... but I'm not really here or there or anywhere. I'm this compressed nugget of consciousness, squashed down and curled up, cold with nausea and nervous tension. I can't believe what is happening and yet I can also utterly accept it.  I'm just gliding, I guess.

Sorry if I sound like a sob story. It's not my intention. I'm not craving sympathy or woe me, but Jesus Fekking Christ, what did I do in my past life or this life even, that has warranted such a brutal kick in the face when I'm already sprawled on the ground.

I only have to survive 2 days in Bristol before we're due to leave on a trip to Bruges. Booked months ago. Now the timing is literally perfect.  I can't wait. Bruges. Escape. Release. Decompression.

But meanwhile I'm in Bristol...

I drift around the city in a daze, reminiscent of the black days of 2006 and 2007...

I go to the cathedral and light a candle for my dad, as I've done many times in the last three years.  But then I light a second candle, this one for my mum, and I place it beside dad's candle and the emotions tear me up.  I croak out, "Hey Dad, meet Mum,"

There's a brief but rewarding rendezvous with Simon and Hagen, cut short because I have to get back to the house.

The burglars ransacked the house and stole stuff.  Most of it can be replaced on insurance.  And I suppose the damage could have been a lot worse but, they damaged the window in a way that meant it can't be locked... and we're about to go away for four days.  We can't go leaving the house unsecured.  Jo and I buy various items from B&Q to try and secure it but nothing works.  We're both starting to panic.  I ring Matthias... and he comes to our rescue.  Jo and I drive to Bath, collect him and his tools, bring him back, and 8pm on a Saturday night, he cuts a sheet of heavy chipboard to the size of the window, drills massive screws into the walls and secures the board in place with thick timber batons.  There.  That'll fucking keep them out.

Smiles all round.

And thank you Matthias for giving us the peace of mind to leave the house and not worry, too much, about it getting burgled again.

We stop off at the Upton Inn for drinks.  It was a lovely moment to share.  

Tomorrow we're up early and off to Bruges.

I can't wait.




Later....

Bruges a small medieval city in the Flemish part of Belgium. Tried going there last year but for some reason it just didn't happen.  

I'm here now, sitting at a small circular table in the reception lounge of our hotel... it's a nice little spot to sit and read or write in my notebook.  

Bruges is a fantastic place.

There was a vast rainbow hanging over the city as we approached.  Hello mum, I smiled.  She knew I was coming here.



Later...
Once we checked into the hotel and got settled, Jo rang her folks.  I found myself standing there feeling strange... that she still had parents to share this trip with.  It was an odd moment. Later, I composed a text on my phone and sent it to the mobile number still stored in my phone under "mum". Strange, maybe...




Later...

Sitting at the circular glass topped table in the hotel, getting a little sozzled on the local brew.  Zot!  Feeling fluffy.  A version of one of Depeche Mode's classics is on my headphones.  The reception / lounge occupies an area between two buildings; the hotel is formed of a sprawl of interconnected structures. Above where I'm sitting the roof is of curved translucent plastic.  Heavy rain is hammering down and regular flashes of lighting are turning the pages of this notebook bluish white as  I write the words down.

It's barely stopped raining since we got here but that hasn't spoiled a thing. Surrounded by such an incredible array of medieval buildings, it helps to lend a certain atmosphere.  And I'm well wrapped up when I go out.




Later...

Yesterday I proposed to Jo with the diamond ring I bought several weeks ago.

"Be with me forever and a day," I said, placing the ring in a box in her hands.

She looked stunned, as if slapped.

Then she laughed and threw her arms around me, "Yes, yes, yes!!!!" she said.




Later...

I went to the Basillica of Holy Blood. Stepping through heavy wooden doors I entered a plain stone chapel that is almost 900 years old.  I was overwhelmed and awed by the atmosphere of sanctuary and peace.  It was beautiful.  I lit two candles for dad and my mum with tears flowing freely down my cheeks. I sat there for a long time, dealing with emotions.




Later...

Being in Bruges is helping me to heal.  I don't know how I feel when I return to the UK.  Will I step forward with renewed strength or will I fall back into despair and grief?




26th November  I'm back in Bristol. Sitting in Boston Tea Party. Outside is pissing down with freezing rain. This time yesterday I was in Bruges.  Long journey back but not unpleasant.  I thought I would feel sad today because Bruges was so amazing and little moments keep flashing up repeatedly inside my mind.  But I don't feel sad at all.  I think I'm healing.  Having this time off work has been a god send.  It's given me the freedom to do what I need to do, the space to go through my emotions without interruption, and to experience this profound moment of my life without distraction.  

Sonja texted me this morning to say there was a rainbow above the city.  I dashed upstairs to take a look and I saw it looming over the house.  "Hello mum," I called out, my hand open wide and extended from my arm toward the pane of glass. "Hello mum," I whispered.

The police man with a van came round today and fitted extra locks on our windows.  




27th November.  I'm drifting.  In a surreal point of space and time.  The normal routine of waking, going to work, evenings at home or with friends, the short weekend interval... all of this no longer applies. I'm in a detached bubble of space and time.  Tomorrow I return to Newcastle for a week. Dealing with financials and the Will, and the huge tasks that are to follow.

Strange Days - and a magazine interview



I woke up today and felt normal.

I'm going through the grieving process.

First days in the house after mum died were horrible. The house had lost its soul. It was unfamiliar, cold (literally) and unwelcoming.  

I've got a lot of memories from this period; I won't share them here.

5 days after she died a large group of the Norwegian family arrived.  My aunt's and uncles. Family in the true sense of blood, and love, and shared memories stretching back my lifetime.  It's been so good to have them here.

On the first night I took mum's two sisters and her brother upstairs, and gave each of them a chance to spend some time alone in the room where mum died.  I know I would have wanted to.  I did this with the room when my dad died three years ago...

I'm sitting in a cafe in Jesmond.  The skies are a freezing grey with patches of ice blue, ground is wet from last nights torrential rain: it's been raining for days.  The guttering at the back of house has a problem, ground level drain is blocked with leaves, I've been unable to fix it... and now I'll have to pay for somebody to come and do it.  I'll have to pay... the house is now my responsibility, and my sister's.  On one hand it is a surreal concept to get my head around; on the other hand it's simple, you own it, you look after it, you manage the estate.

My sister is going to remain living in the house for a few months, until the paperwork is sorted out.  She's been there since February, nursing mum, so this is her home as much as anywhere these days.  I feel for her, and wonder how she will cope when everyone is gone and she is there alone.

Every day I go and sit in mum's room. There is still an indent in the pillow where her head was.  The funeral director brought back mum's pink PJs, neatly folded... I placed them on the bottom of the bed. MY sister and I light a candle every day.  Sometimes I kneel beside the bed like I used to on those last days, except now there is no hand to hold onto.  I find deep comfort being in that room.

When Jo flew back to Bristol on the weekend, she whispered to my mum, "if you're there, show me a sign." Jo looked out the window of the aeroplane and saw a rainbow below her.

Rainbows now mean the realm of God and the Angels to me.

The funeral is tomorrow, so I'm aware my state of feeling "normal" is probably a finite thing.

I don't know how I'm going to feel.

I think I'll take the Metro to the coast the day after... rain or sunshine, I'll walk along wind blasted shoreline and remember my mum and my father who had their first date here in 1964... a place that's been a meca for nostalgia ever since.  A nod to Sharky, as I'll be eating Marshalls fish and chips, sadly no longer wrapped in newspaper, and I'll wander out to the end of the vast Tynemouth Pier.

Strange days.

Big Pete, my mate who lives next door to the family home, he lost his Dad the same week as my mum passed over. So he's lost his last parent and a dear friend next door (he was very close to my mum).

He's a few hundred miles away now, dealing with the estate on his own.

We ring each other and swap notes on what we're going through / experiencing.

Strange days indeed.

EDIT: just had an email from editor of SFX Magazine, they've published an interview with me regarding my writing, focussing on Edge and Yellow Dawn. You can read it here.
Interview with David J Rodger, by SFX



Goodbye Mum - Rainbows and Tears of Angels


WEDNESDAY 11th NOVEMBER 2009

Just said goodbye to mum.
Now we're waiting for the undertakers to come and take her away.
We delayed calling them, giving us a chance to spend time with her.
Calling the undertaker started the clock ticking on the finality of this experience... they'll be here within the hour, and when they arrive, they'll take my mum away from the house, and she'll be gone... truly gone and I'll never see her again, never be able to hug her again, or kiss her gently on the forehead and stroke her hair like she loved so much.
I don't want them to come but at the same time I know they have to.
My sister is with her now, upstairs... lying on the bed beside her, one arm across the duvet covering her body.  I did the same, savouring the silence and the chance to be alone and share my thoughts and tears with her.  Her eyes are closed and she looks totally peaceful, but the chill has seeped into her bones and flesh now.  She died 7 hours ago.

I'm writing these words because I have nowhere else to put them, and because I need to get them down, I need to capture this experience and then leave it.  I want to focus on memories of who my mum was for majority of her life, and not dwell on what the illness did to her.  

Time has ceased to have meaning right now.

I've not slept since...

Surreal to think it's Wednesday.

I had the phone call from my sister last Wednesday.

I came up to Newcastle last Thursday.

I had the shock and horror of seeing how much mum had deteriorated in three weeks since my last visit; and yet, despite her frailty she stayed up late so that she could see me when I arrived home after the night flight there... she was exhausted, barely able to say much, and acutely aware of the shock and sadness on my face, "See you tomorrow...if I wake up," she said and kissed me.

Since then it's been a rapid downward descent.

I’ve watched my mum starve to death and there was nothing I could do to stop it.

All I could do was give her water when she was conscious, using these foam squares on sticks that look like lollies... dip them in a glass of water hold it to mum's mouth, sometimes she was too weak to open her mouth enough, so I'd rub the sponge against her lips, or squeeze it between my fingers to get a few drops of moisture onto her tongue.

EDIT: I've just deleted a big chunk of text.

Too much detail. Too harrowing.

Moving on...

Some lovely moments.

Mum was too weak to sit up so I'd lean over the bed and scoop her up in my arms, to either prop her up against a mound of pillows, or allow her to sit on the edge of the bed, between my sister and I.  She was impossibly light, and I could feel the shape of her ribcage and hips through the soft fabric of her pink pyjamas.  

One time I did this she held onto me really tight, trembling, and sank her head into the crook of my neck and moaned with comfort.

We were able to share a few of those moments, sitting together, on the edge of her bed, gazing out of the window, overlooking the dense forest of the Dene.  Mum's ability to speak, even during lucid moments, became really tough for her... but one of these times, when we three were sat side by side, her hands in our hands, her head bobbed up and down with the effort and she said, "Thank you."

Thank you for being here with her.

Another time, I was curled up beside her on the bed, propping myself up an elbow, stroking her hair; her lips moved and a whisper sound came out, I brought my head closer and she told me, "Good boy.  Be a good boy."

Tuesday she was too weak to shuffle-walk between the bed and her chair, so my sister and I had a draining day lifting her up, sitting her up, lying her down or turning her, whenever she asked for it... sometimes this happened several times in the space of an hour...

On top of the lack of sleep, it created a manic tension to the experience. We wanted to do anything and everything she asked so she was happy.  

Mid-afternoon on Tuesday, we'd just lain her down; my sister was sat on the bed, leaning forward, I was kneeling on a pillow, in the narrow gap between the wall and the bed, leaning forward. Mum was drifting out of consciousness then abruptly opened her eyes and looked at both of us in wonder, "Are you really here?" she asked, amazed.

Yes mum, we're really here. We replied.

That blissful languid smile crept across the new proportions of her face, and she said in a clear voice, "Are you really.  That's beautiful.  My children.  Just as I wanted."

The last time I spoke to mum was sometime between 4 and 6pm.  I can't be certain. Everything is a blur.  She'd been sitting up, on the edge of the bed, between us, propped up by our arms and a great stack of pillows behind her, and she'd asked for more coffee.  I'd made her one earlier, luke warm and laced with sugar, and she'd taken several large sips of it, determined to swallow and [...removed...]

I joked, "was that good coffee?" and she actually licked her lips, narrowed her eyes like she used to with that wry sense of humour and said, "It's perfect."

After we laid her down she kept putting her hands to her eyes, as if she was trying to remove something covering them, or was uncertain of what she was seeing.

Then she raised a hand and pointed a solitary finger past our faces, and just held it there for a few moments.

"Home," she whispered, "I'm going home."

Then she changed.

Then end result was that around 6pm, she was lying there, on her back and breathing deeply and heavily. The kind of breath you might take before plunging underwater, or to hyperventilate, but mum did it over and over and over... hour after hour. Strong breathing.  Determined breathing.  A fighter.

By 2 A.M. I was getting freaked out by it.  She had not become conscious again and I sensed she never would.  

Only a small table lamp was on.

My sister had spent the entire night lying on the bed beside her, drifting in and out of sleep with exhaustion.  I sometimes lay on the floor by the base of the bed, or kneeled beside the bed and held her hands, or went downstairs and brewed a coffee...

Around 4 A.M. her breathing began to lose its strength; the fight was being lost.

Her breathing grew more quiet and gentle, but still as rapid.

It was a lulling soothing sound. We kept falling asleep and waking up every few minutes.

Mum waited until we'd all nodded off before she died.

I snapped awake, lying on a blanket on the floor, acutely aware of the silence.

It was 6.30 A.M.

In slow motion it seemed, I sat up, looked around, and saw mum lying there, utterly motionless.  My sister had stirred at the same moment.  I was on my feet.  I was beside my mum.  I dropped to my knees and just sobbed.

Everyone left the room, giving me space, time alone, I moved onto the bed and held her, kissed her warm forehead, rubbed my hands on the duvet...

I said all the things I'd been saying for days,
"I'll love you forever, for as long as the stars burn bright"
"Thank you for being an amazing mum"
"Thank you for being my best friend and coming to rescue me when I needed you most."
"You'll never be alone"
"We'll always remember you."

As I lay there, the dawn emerged beyond the window, and I said, "You just missed the sunrise."

Then I was downstairs, whilst my sister spent time alone with her.

Back upstairs and we all sat there, in silence, gazing at mum... it was like my vision had become telescopic, the rest of the world zoomed out of focus and significance and this one area zoomed into full blown view.

My mum, lying there, like something not quite real. A wax figure cast in one single pose and now lacking the variety of facial expressions and joy this woman could conjure.

She looked utterly peaceful.

She hadn't fought with fury or desperation, she did not suffer.

She fought with simple determination and dignity... the essence of her Will and Power.

She hadn’t eaten a meal in 2 months.  The doctors were stunned by her determination to live beyond their forecasts, time and again.

An amazing woman.

The sunrise turned golden, beams of divine light flooded the room, and at the same time it was raining, "The Angels are Crying," I said.

Later, after nurses had been round to verify the death, I went for a long walk through the Dene. The gaps between the trees were filled with early morning mist, burning fiery gold as the sunbeams slanted down into the ravine the Dene occupies.  It was stunning.  Sunbeams criss-crossed above the river like angled pillars of light holding up the heavens.

Then back home, upstairs, spending more time with mum.


EDIT: Later
The undertakers have just been.
They reversed the black van into the driveway and carried her downstairs on a covered stretcher. Then they got in and drove slowly away, all of us walking after it, pulling on coats, staring in disbelief and gut-wrenching realisation that this was it. She was gone.

We howled and cried and stood in the middle of the street watching that black van drive away.

Neighbours came out and comforted us.

We all went out for a long walk.  

My sister and NK went one way, Jo and I went another.  I wanted to go to Holly Avenue, I wanted to walk the street mum lived in during her first years living in England, after meeting my dad and getting married and moving here from Norway, before I was born.

As Jo and I walked, we spotted the most amazing rainbow, blasting up from the Dene and arching over the whole of Jesmond.  

It was my mum, going to heaven, I know it is true.

That rainbow hung across the sky for over half an hour; it seemed to be visible wherever we were.  

My sister rang and said there was a second rainbow, and so there was, much fainter... my dad, who died three years ago.

And then I saw something amazing.  Both rainbows were cast against grey-green cloud, dense, tall and heavy; on the far edges of this cloud bank was blue sky, sunlight and white fluffy clouds... and there, in the curving column of rainbow colour, I saw a dozen white shapes, pure white, with wings, circling around, slowly and gracefully, higher and higher. They were just birds, I know, but my God, what a sign.  It filled me with immense hope and happiness.

"GOODBYE MUM," I called out, "I LOVE YOU."

And then it rained, but it was like snow, tiny specks of moisture that barely made us wet, glistening and scintillating in the amazing amber light that was bathing Jesmond all morning and afternoon. It was the strangest and yet most beautiful rain I've ever seen.

Vigil




I'm tired.
Sitting downstairs, a few soft lamps on, most of house in darkness. Ocean like sound coming through baby monitor... and mum's snoring.
My eyes are swollen and puffy.
Nose is red and raw.
This is really hard... but then I'm not the one who's dying so we all just get on with each day as it rolls into the next.
Everything is kind of a blur and yet vivid.

Friday mum was fairly lucid, weary but able to hold small bits of conversation.
Yesterday, waking up, she had deteriorated...

Her breathing changed in the afternoon, and so a bedside vigil began.  Either one of us, or all four of us, camped out in armchairs or sitting on the floor next to the bed base.  In silence.  The room dark but for a small lamp and a candle burning. Waiting.

Waiting.

My mum is lying there.  Curled up and vulnerable.  Her arms have wasted away to the thinness of a broomstick handle. Her legs are no thicker than a hockey stick.  Facial muscles had faded away to reveal the shape of her skull; eyes are sunken, her face is distorted and barely recognisable as the woman who only three weeks ago, was pottering around the house, still able to walk up and downstairs, and who was making a good effort at eating.

Three weeks and this is what has happened to her.

My sister and I both felt she was going to pass over last night.  I went next door and asked Pete, Rosie and Rachel if they wanted to come round, one at a time and say goodbye, saying goodbye without using words.

There was a surreal moment when my sister, NK, Jo and I were all sitting there, close to the bed, holding vigil, and bloody fireworks started screaming and popping and booming, and we could hear the whoops of joy and celebration.

We're all tired. My sister managed to stay up most of the night. NK fell asleep on the floor outside the bedroom door. I passed out around 3 A.M. on an armchair downstairs, listening to the baby monitor.

Mum woke up every hour or so, confused and sleepy... but every time she opened her eyes and looked around, whoever was there would say brightly, "hello!"  And she would smile weakly and drop her tiny head back into the big soft pillows.

I can hear mum breathing right now...through the baby monitor.

The kind of shallow panting you and I might do when we're a little sick and sleeping through it.

And part of me forgets, or ignores the fact that mum's not a little sick... she won't come through this, she won't get better.  At some point, soon, she'll just be gone. And that makes me really sad to think about.  

But she's comfortable. She's warm.  She has people around her who she wanted to be with her when she died.  She's getting what she wanted.

Yesterday I was alone with her; she was sitting in her salmon-coloured armchair... slipping in and out of dozing, with small moments of being lucid.  She looked at my abruptly...alert and with an expression that said she'd made her mind up.  "I'm ready," she said.  

Yesterday one of her friends was helping her get into bed.  "Am I dying?" she asked me, gently.

I didn't know what to say.

There are moments I'll never be able to forget.  Like when my sister or I stoop in front of her, to let her put her small arms around our neck so we can help her stand up, and then help her shuffle across to or from the bed... often she just stops, and holds on tight, trembling, weak and whispers "I love you," in a really sweet voice.

Today I was sitting opposite her, where she was in her chair.  She was holding my hand really tightly... she kept nodding off, then waking up, and every time she did, she saw me and gave this slow and beautiful smile, showing how pleased she was to see me there. I started crying, again, but this time she saw me and she looked at me for a long moment, registering what she was seeing, and she whispered, "Don't be upset.  We'll see each other again."

I know she's scared but she holds herself together with such dignity. She's amazing. And I'm this blubbering wreck. Go figure.


EDIT: later
Everyone told me to get some sleep.  I went into dad's old room and crashed out.
NK came and woke me at 2 A.M... I had been dreaming just then, of being in a weird run along the edge of a harbour, big bounding strides that took me high into the air, slightly slow motion as if I was caught in some kind of reverse force trying to hold me back.  Then I was in a room with Lekne, my mum's mother who died a number of years ago... she had come to get me -
- and then NK was waking me up.


Mum spent a lot of time awake, sitting upright in bed, quite lucid at moments.
"I love you all," she said out lout in a shaky voice.
"We love you," we said together, and she smiled languidly and drifted back to sleep.


NK had made ice lollies out of fizzy grape juice and cocktail sticks.  Mum was burning up so we gave her one and both her hands came up and grabbed the thing, and kept it in her mouth, and she sucked and crooned with delight as if it was the best thing she had ever tasted.

I've not seen her eat anything solid since I arrived.

How long can a person live on like this?



EDIT: later
I managed to get some more sleep.

Went for a walk in the Dene, sunlight streaming through trees and turning morning dew into steam.

Heavy rains had turned the small river into a raging torrent of brown water.

The rocks around the waterfall by the mill were flooded.  I stood on the bridge and stared... oblivious to the occasional stranger who wandered past with a dog.

Ocean Waves Crashing on a Shore of White Noise


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

17:36 GMT, 6th November. It's a Friday but to be honest I don't know what day it is.  Now in a surreal place, but one that is immensely positive despite the raw emotional state.

Waking up this morning the sky was the colour of burnished gold, sunlight reflecting off heavy grey clouds... creating the effect of dark smoke drifting across the gold.  Beautiful.

I've just got back from running various errands.  Walking around Jesmond, the sun faded into bright grey cloud; the air is freezing and misty; the ground is covered in a carpet of dead leaves, and there are long rows of them piled up alongside the pavements and roads... throwing off swirls with every breeze, rustling sounds and fading autumn colours.  Mother Nature approaching the big sleep.  Death and the cycle of life.

Music on my headphones takes on profound meaning.  That's what always happens when you're in the grip of powerful emotions.  MUSE captures the spirit of this moment.

Now I'm sat downstairs, in big cavern like room, at oak refectory table. Sound of the ocean coming through the baby monitor my sister's rigged up: it's the sound of white noise, a steady thrumming whoosh and gentle hiss... every now and then I hear mum cough, or move about.  It is somehow deeply comforting to listen to this.  The sound fills the house.

Got here last night.
 
Not seen mum in three weeks. Can't believe the change.

Sister and I chat into the night. Then I head next door and sink half a bottle of whisky with Pete.

This morning, I can't get the image of her out of my head.  It's shocking and upsetting.

I don't know how she's still alive.

Inner strength.  Amazing will.

She's an incredible woman.

Doctors are baffled and delighted.

Sat with her in her room for much of this morning; myself, my sister, Jo and Nk.  Mum kept smiling.  Weary but strong.  She would look up from a glazed far away stare and look you right in the eyes: her gaze becoming suddenly focussed, a cheeky / knowing smile curving her thinned lips... this has stayed with me today, given me comfort, the fact she's still lucid, and that she's comfortable.

When I came up, following the call from my sister, the prognosis was that she'd been lucky to last until Wednesday. Doctor's now say she may have a bit more time.  I am blessed to be working for a company who've been amazing, and incredibly supportive, in this situation. Basically I'm now off work until 4th January. Time to live through these vital moments without any sense of pressure or being rushed.  I can just let the situation...unfold.  So deep and profound thanks to Mr Knox and Mr Foster.

So that's how it is. We're all here. Being with her. Doing what we can for her.  Savouring the smiles, but ultimately we're all just waiting.

EDIT: 21:05 GMT, the house is still and very peaceful. My sister and NK are next door. Just Jo and I on watch duty.  The baby monitor is doing it's thing...filling the downstairs with the whoooooooosh and hiss of the ocean, bizarre and beautiful... and the soft breathing of mum, deep asleep, the baby monitor at her end right next to the bed.  I sat with her for ages tonight, stroking her hair and watching her nod off where she sat in her chair.  

 

A time for Far Away Trains Passing

¦ dialling in from sky bunker ¦

04:24 GMT Thursday 5th November 2009. Sat in the soft light. Listening to Ulrich Schnauss, MP3 connected to stereo, blissful and calm sounds seeping through the big speakers mounted either corner of my desk. In particular, "Far Away Trains Passing" has a special resonance for me: memories of last Christmas with family and friends.  Although I'm up early as ususual I'm not writing today. Things on my mind.  I'm heading to Newcastle tonight.  A planned trip but I'm aware I may be going to watch my mum die.  Phone calls with my sister this week have painted a grim picture.  So if you've got any spare prayers please send them her way.  This is the nature of life.  This is the flux and flow.  

Not a lot more I can say.

Peace & Light to the World

Djr

Stormy weekend - bliss - 2,000 words.

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

22:05 GMT, Sunday 1st November 2009.  Nip and a punch for the first day of the month; white rabbit.  I was woken up at 7 o'clock this morning by the sound of a wheelie bin toppling over and the roof of the house doing a good impression of straining to leave and fly up into orbit.  Very strong winds...and rain.

Jo was absent from the bed, not due back until later on in the day, which brought on an intense feeling of anticipation and delight.

In a bit of a daze I shuffled downstairs, brewed a mug of tea and brought it back to the bedroom. Sitting up in the brass-framed four poster, with big pillows fluffed up behind me, I sank into a comfort zone.  My MP3 player was lying on the bedside table where I'd switched it off at some random moment of semi-sleep last night... I'd gone to bed playing the incredible "Fungi from Yuggoth" audio prose.  Sitting there, supping tea in the gloom of the room, heavy curtains tight across the windows, I listened to the rest of it and got the Cthulhu vibe into my blood.


I padded out of the bedroom, along the hall and went into the room with a view and saw dense grey-green swirls of cloud and rain howling across the city. Wow!   A pulse of excitement.  I got dressed and ready.  Dug out my padded grey overcoat with the diagonal-slash zip, and my blue kagool. Gore-Tex walking boots, old jeans, and a thick blue jumper with high collars.  

I drove into town along deserted roads, listening to tracks from Within the Realm of a Dying Sun  by Dead Can Dance.  A bruised sky pressing down heavily on the city, high winds lashing and whipping everything in sight, the rain painting the world in the same drab grey green colour, every surface glistening wet.  It was a memorable drive.  Once again I felt like I was in a 1920's Cthulhu story... driving my Rocket with its broad windshield, fabric fold-back roof and long bonnet filling the lower half of my field of vision, driving through horror-noir.

I parked up by the old hospital, near the harbour, got out, battered by wind and rain, and walked five miles before 9 A.M.

Part of the walk takes me past Hotwells, where I lived from end of 1991 to summer 1995, age 21 to 24.  Hotwells was where I conceived the plot for God Seed.  There's an old sandstone wall, part of an ancient 19th century industrial complex that was bombed out and left in ruins after the Second World War. The whole complex has been levelled and replaced by apartment buildings and commercial units, except the sandstone wall is still there... just as I predicted in God Seed.  I hope it remains because that sandstone wall represents a vital connection for my memories of early years, and for the God Seed novel. The murky weather was identical to my memory of it back in October 1993...

After the walk I headed straight to my Sunday morning Mecca: the Boston Tea Party. A mug of strong coffee and a stool perched in a window bay overlooking Park Street.  Working on chapter 13, which I started yesterday and I'm already close to finishing. I've hammered out a respectable 2,000 Saturday and Sunday.

Back home. Strip off damp clothes and run a hot bath to take the chill off my outer flanks. I hear the front door close and Jo hollers up, giggling and excited because she's hours early. I laugh, delighted and we meet on the staircase.

I love spending time apart because it lets me get on with my shit, but it also creates these bubble-moments of bliss when you miss each other, and get to reunite.

Get ready, she told me, we're going into town.  One important item to inspect (will reveal more in a few weeks), and some bits and pieces to pick up.

We return three hours later with several items, Jo hugging a pair of knee-high black leather boots with 5-inch spike heels...bought just to please me.  Hubba-hubba!

It's been a fantastic weekend.  Very long.  Very productive.  Full of inspiration, imagination, with a tail end of romance, laughter and smiles.


Dog Eat Dog 39,000 words


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

08:27 GMT, Saturday 31st October 2009.  A bright day outside with patchy blue skies.  I'm feeling a little groggy.  Stayed late at the office last night, slotting into a deep writing groove after 5pm. Almost everyone had left so I put on my tunes a little louder than usual, pumping out Vibrasphere, Datasette and Dead Can Dance. I nailed the end of chapter 12.  The book is now on 39,000 words on counting. If my memory is working correctly, I'm taking about a week per chapter at the moment.  I scheduled 5 days per chapter when I set myself a goal, but with the burst I completed at the start of writing this, I think I'm on target.  I'm really enjoying Mikhail Drobna.

The groginess has nothing to do with the book. I drove home on a big writing high, so planned an evening of R&R. Jo's away so I've got the whole weekend to myself.  It was already after 8 by time I got home.  Hot bath, got dressed into my hobo outfit (baggy jogging bottoms, comfort jumper, big Norwegian socks, topped off by wrapping myself in Starsky).  I cooked up big pan of spagetti and smoked sausage, then sank into one of the sofas in the front room and supped red wine.  Poirot, Rude Tube top 50, then Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (broadcasting on terrestial). I crashed out and woke up to the sound of automatic gunfire on the TV.

So today is drive back to Bath, go do a big walk with Vega$, then return to Bristol, Boston Tea Party - work up notes for Ch 13, and spend the rest of the day back here in Sky Bunker writing.

COMMERCIAL NON-BLOG BIT:
Today is the final day of the Scary Price Slash on price of most of my published work.  What follows is pure commercial and promotional copy, so feel free to skip and ignore, but I'd be thrilled if you did take notice.

!!!Save £40!!!

This month represents a landmark 20 years since I started writing, age 19, sitting at an oak refectory table in Jesus Mound, in the North East of England.

To celebrate this I've slashed the prices of many of my published works.

You can save at least £5 GBP on my novels, and over £6 GBP on the Yellow Dawn Rulebook (Edition 2.1).

This is an offer that won't be repeated so grab as many of these great products now whilst you can.

Novels
--------

Dante's Fool, was £14.95, now £9.81
Preview/Buy: http://www.lulu.com/author/content_revise.php?fCID=673745


Iron Man Project, was £13.95, now £8.21
Preview/Buy: http://www.lulu.com/author/content_revise.php?fCID=673754


Edge, was £16, now £10.20
Preview/Buy: http://www.lulu.com/author/content_revise.php?fCID=4137991



RPG
-----
Yellow Dawn Primary Rulebook, was £19.95, now £13.86
Preview/Buy: http://www.lulu.com/author/content_revise.php?fCID=923035


Shadows of the Quantinex, was £17, now £11.26
Preview/Buy: http://www.lulu.com/author/content_revise.php?fCID=2216451


Red Desire ¦ Cold Murder, was £4.50, now £1.25
Preview/Buy: http://www.lulu.com/author/content_revise.php?fCID=1829589


Baruch's Burden, was £5, now £1.25
Preview/Buy: http://www.lulu.com/author/content_revise.php?fCID=7311409



Murder Mystery Game
------------------------
Murder at Sharky Point was £4.95, now £1.25
Preview/Buy: http://www.lulu.com/author/content_revise.php?fCID=1178668


These prices represent the lowest my publisher can go so grab this opportunity now. Offer ends 31st of October @ Witching Hour.

All the best for Halloween.
David

Moonlight hours for writing


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

05:20 GMT, Thursday 29th October 2009.  Back into my early rise routine; first time since the recent stress at worked passed through and out my system.  I've been up since 4 A.M.  Snapped awake in the dark and smiled, sensing my brain switching on.  Jo stirred next to me and murmured something about "come back to me at 6.30".  I rolled over, cupped her fine backside in my hand, gave one pert buttock a squeeze, then disengaged from the seductive heat that collects beneath any duvet.  The house isn't cold; we're in the grip of a freakish high-pressure system that has temperatures way above the norm for this time of year.  I pad downstairs in the dark: there's a bright alabaster moonlight flooding through windows, casting the house in a horror-film mode... which I quite enjoy.  Brew a mug of tea, pad through into front room supping the hot drink, grab a couple throws from the sofa and wrap one around my waist like a skirt to keep my bollocks warm, and a second I drape around my shoulders. Flick the TV on and squint for a few moments in the intense bright light: eyes adjust from prehistoric gloom to high tech.  I check out BBC News 24: Islamisist shot dead in Detroit; 19yr old folk singer killed in Canada by Coyote.

A few minutes of this then I climb stairs, up two levels, into the dark cavern of the Sky Bunker.  Flick switches, soft lamps come on, lava lamp glows deep red.  Laptop comes on.  MP3 player plugged into stereo.  I put on an album I bought this week as a result of a facebook message from the artist: he'd seen I like Solar Fields so sent a "cheeky" but pleasant note saying I might like his music too.  I've done the same thing with my books.  And I'm always looking for new soundscapes to write to, so I checked it out, went onto Play.Com, found an album, previewed a few tracks and thought yeah, sounds all right, why not.  "Code Eternity" by Asura.  It's pretty simple electronic ambient stuff. Strong Jean-Michelle Jarre influence, with a bit of Enigma and some 303' effects.  It's good writing music although I'm not sure I'd listen to it for any other reason.  Here's the link to it: Code Eternity by Asura


Dog Eat Dog, the new book, is coming along slowly.  It's proving to be the most difficult book I've written since Dante's Fool.  Iron Man Project and Edge were a walk in the park compared to this. Currently onto chapter 12, back with Drobna: he's making his pitch to MOCID.

The public sneak preview is still available but is now locked at chapter 10. Many thanks to those who have asked to carry on the preview/edit process through private channels.

The "scary price slash" on all my published work is still in effect for 2 more days. So if you want to  expand your collection or just dip your toe, now is the time to buy one because they'll not be this cheap again. Start with any of the novels, God Seed, Dante's Fool, Iron Man Project or Edge: they can be read in any order.  Read more details here

Or jump straight to my online store portal here: Online Bookstore for David J Rodger

Last weekend Jo and I met up with friends at out favourite new "secret place". Glencot House, a superb Jacobean Mansion set within acres of private land.  I took my Rocket; it was a superb blast through ancient rural landscape, heading towards Wells with views of Glastonbury Tor pointing up at the sky from its vast mound in the distance. Glencot House is full of mystery and the promise of a good time. It's a hotel, tucked away out of sight from everything, £600 a night if you wanted to stay there but you can drop in and munch on a white-bread sandwich for £8, or enjoy a tureen of strong filter coffee. It's worth it for the ambience, and the chance to then walk around the grounds. Here's a link to their website: Glencot House

Here's some pics I took there:






Some good news and some not so good news about my mother.  Blood test results show the cancers are currently in check.  They're not the reason she's been fading so fast; the reason she's fading is because she's not eating.  Her body has slipped into some kind of freaky starvation mode.  Doctors told her Monday, "if you don't eat, you'll die."  But the issue is complicated.  Logic has broken down.  My sister is up there, fighting to turn her state of mind around from negative to positive, to show encouragement and positive reinforcement, but it's a battle.  She's certainly gone into a very dark place.  Mum and I used to text every day if we didn't talk: I've not had a response back since I was last in Newcastle over a week ago now.  So if you've got any spare prayers left, say one for my mum.







Back in the f__king groove - loving Vibrasphere- Hot bath and Dead Can Dance


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦


20:21 GMT, Thursday 22nd October 2009.  Yay, sitting at my desk, head bopping up and down to the funky bass-line of this fantastic album.  Vibrasphere (Archipelago) has unblocked my creative dam.  That and 10 hours sleep last night.  I came home from work yesterday, feeling drained and apathetic... I had no appetite for writing.  So I cooked up another massive pan of pasta, my comfort food, and settled into the sofa with half a litre of Leffe and watched Lon Chaney,Jr as The Wolfman.

9pm I was bushed, so, padded upstairs, wacked on the space-heater in the bedroom and fell into bed. Zonk... out...

Jo crawled in at some point - she's been out partying three nights on the trot - freezing cold and snuggled deep into my heat, and we both lay there, curled up together, not moving until the alarm went off.  Still groggy, I forced myself out of bed, brewed up a mug of tea, got dressed; skipped any early morning writing ... skipped my early morning chill out... sat on the bed whilst Jo got dressed and ready for work, sharing a few moments of giggles and catch-up, then bailed into the Rocket and blasted across to the office.  Got there 8:15.  Time for 45 minutes of bashing my head against the proverbial wall of mental bricks.  Except... the frustration of the past three days melted away as I started-up the 2nd of the albums I'd bought (by Vibrasphere).

Ohhh my God. I was immediately hurled from the desk into a transport module barrelling above the remains of New Tokyo... a vast Dead Zone below.  The music was perfect.  The words began to stack together in my head.  I had pages of notes scribbled down about this chapter and now they were all forming into holding patterns around the control-tower operator of my imagination.  Utterly blissful moment.  Back into the groove.

Work was good. Projects projects projects.  

Back home in a flash.

Hot bath, lying there in water with vast clouds of steam billowing up in the chill air of the house (still not bothering with heating)... and playing Dead Can Dance (Within the Realm Of A Dying Sun) and I experienced a wonderful few moments of intense nostalgia, remembering lying in the bath at 51 Osborne Avenue, in Jesmond, back in autumn of 1990, around the same time I first ever heard of Dead Can Dance.  Can't really describe the feelings or the emotions, but they were good, fond friends in the collection of memories to meet up with again.

Then upstairs, up into the Sky Bunker. Soft lights on.  Lava Lamp on.  Starsky and thick wool Norwegian socks on.  Life Support still stashed in a cupboard.  Laptop on, MP3 player plugged in and Vibrasphere playing through big speakers mounted either corner of my desk.

I'm back in New Tokyo... picking up from my lunchtime writing session.  All good.

Other news: spoke to my mum today.  Discovered the doctors/nurses haven't fixed the excessive morphine situation... she was rambling, giggling, off her head.  I've realised that I've been focussing / dreading a date in the future when she stops breathing and her spirit passes over to another realm... but in fact, the truth is a little more grim. She's already leaving... in tiny featherlite pieces, day by day, as the morphine erases the personality and character of the woman I've come to admire and love these recent years.  Damn.

Damn!
Damn!
Damn!  

I want bang my fucking fists on this keyboard.

So the phone call ends. I ring my sister straight away, uneasy and freaked out.  "Do I need to come up sooner than planned?"

She reassures me there's no need. She'll make "the call" when she needs me to come up.

So I relax again, and just...deal with it.

Here's a link to the 2nd Vibrasphere album, the one that's unlocked my creatives juices again: Archipelago
Enjoy!


Cold House, Carcinogen Update, Novel Struggles


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

07:48 GMT, Wednesday 21st October. A cold blue grey light is seeping in through glass canopy behind me.  Red lava lamp is glowing away alongside the small table lamp that throws out a colour like old parchment.  I'm playing Deadmau5 new track, "Ghosts N' Stuff" which is fekking amazing... but is no longer my only new favourite track.  

Monday I discovered by random browsing a new group who have blown my mind. Vibrasphere.  It's electronic; very dance trance in places, and at other times it reaches out towards Enigma and other more ambient moods.  They've got about 7 albums and I had to restrain myself from buying all of them in one go. Instead I bought two: Exploring The Tributaries, and Archipelago.  The first one has become the most awesome driving album.  The second one, and any further ones I buy are designated for using with writing Dog Eat Dog.

You can sample Vibrasphere, Exploring the Tributaries here.

The book is coming along slowly.  I'm in the same situation as with the past two chapters.  Now facing chapter 11.  I sit down and find a vast, seemingly unassailable rock wall of obstacles.  My mind shrinks back and I have to grit my teeth and force myself to press on.  This is a bloody hard book to write.

I think there might be other factors involved; the recent two weeks of stress at work (major pitch) and more recently developments with mum.  I was in Newcastle this weekend just gone: the change in her appearance in three weeks was staggering... smaller, frailer, older. My god she looks so old.  Instead of striding around with that inner defiance, she shuffles around, a little wobbly, smiling meekly.  The cancer is kicking the spirit out of her.  She's barely eating again. Weight is dropping off.  Then a sharp decline the day after I left; nurses out; the auto-injector brought back into play.  A phone call with her last night; she said she'd spent the entire day out of it, non-lucid, gibbering.  Too much morphine, the doctors think... they're adjusting dosages.  Jesus Christ, this is the part I'm really dreading.  Echoes of Dad's situation.  The loss of independence.  The increasing need for care.  And my sister is up there in the thick of it; her life on hold; being the carer, seeing mum decline day by day with occasional bursts of fighting back that only leave her more exhausted.  The wish/goal of a final Christmas together is in the balance.  

The house is cold.  My breath was pluming in the kitchen last night.  I’m wearing Starsky and big Norwegian socks but I can feel a chill seeping through.  Not bothering with heating yet, and I'm playing a game of seeing how long I can go without starting to use Life Support up here.

Deadmau5, Dog Eat Dog, a week goes by


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

14:49 GMT, Saturday 17th October 2009.  I'm sitting at the oak refectory table, in the cavernous space of the extension built onto the back of the house, here in Jesmond.  Bright grey light flooding in through skylights above and the row of tall square-lattice windows to my left... lots of green outside... the dense tangle of forest leading down into the Dene.

I'm about to close down the laptop and go meet Floyd, who's over from New York, random chance allowing us to be in the same city at the same time.  Tradition demands that we rendezvous in the Dene.  3:21 at the old mill.  I'm bringing a silver hip flask filled with Jamieson whisky.

I'm listening to Deadmau5, Ghosts and Stuff...my new favourite track.
Sample Deadmau5 Ghosts & Stuff

Really uplifting stuff, and great visuals thanks to the video.

I'm also aware that it's been 20 years since I started writing.  October 1989.  Sitting at this very same oak refectory table with my Philips video writer


This thing had orange glowing ASCII text on a dark brown screen. Very basic but I loved it. Not compatible with any other kind of machine and a million miles from the idea of a PC.

I'd given up my job at the time (financial consultant) to start a book. This was the awful turd that shall not be named; well, it had a working title as bad as the book itself: Dark Coyote. Blech.

But here I am, 20 years later; I've learned my craft and I have four published novels and an RPG (Yellow Dawn) under my belt, and making enough money from it to buy the Rocket.

Time's up, got to head out.

EDIT:
It's now 14:01 GMT on the next day, Sunday, 18th October. Yesterday was a blast. I took a couple nips of whisky from the flask as I strode through a deserted Jesmond Dene towards the rendezvous point, Deadmau5 thumping away through my headphones.  Very euphoric.  Floyd arrived a few seconds after me. I was standing on the horse-shoe bridge that crosses the river and overlooks the big waterfall. We hugged, grinning; I tapped him on the chest with the silver flask and quoted lines from Highlander. Two friends who meet throughout time.

Floyd took me to a new pub; a bit of a gem on the outer edge of the Dene, a free house that sells real ales. We quaffed several pints, munched the kind of cheese toasty that you can only get in the North East, and bounced ideas around.  I talked about the new book. He talked about publicity and marketing ideas.  We discussed me coming to his country retreat in upstate New York once the coming snows melt away... next spring, where I'll be able to lock myself away for a few days and write.

I kind of stumbled home, with a sloppy smile, listening to my tunes, very happy.

So...

It's been a quick week.

Back on 9th October I had the perfect Friday night. The stress and storm of recent days at work had come to an end, so I finished the week on an exhausted high. Came home and got exactly what I wanted: bought a bottle of red wine, oven baked some fish, built up the cast iron fire in the front room with logs and smokeless fuel, turned the lights off and sank into the sofa with the growing heat washing over me and watched flames dancing and throwing shadows across the walls.  Jo and I chatted until she dozed off in the cosy comfort.  I stuck on an old DVD... Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. Wow, what a fab film.  Just brilliant to watch right now, too, as I'm in the flow writing Dog Eat Dog.

Saturday was a game day.  Yellow Dawn.  A bit stand-off for the player characters, trapped in a mountain gulley surrounded by bandits. It took a whole day to resolve; two characters died.

Sunday saw me up early and into town: Boston Tea Party and working on notes, me driving around in Rocket with the hood down, autumn sunlight kissing my smile below tinted chrome sunglasses. A text message from Oj, "I'm ready when you are..."

I got home and discovered she was ready for our little photo shoot. Mmmmm nyyyyce. A couple hours of funcity.

I went to the cathedral in Bristol on Tuesday and lit a candle for dad; I also got to think about the fact at some point in the near future, hopefully after Christmas, I'll be lighting two candles instead of one.  But the way I see it is, it'll be like mum and dad are reunited again, every time I do this, two flames burning bright side by side.

The weather's been fantastic this week; warm, cloudless blue sky and golden sunlight. But Thursday / Friday saw Autumn come crashing back in with a cold snap, icy breeze and rain. 

Driving home Thursday night I had early Jean-Michelle Jarre playing on CD: I was driving through  misty rain with eerily luminous sky above... the huge front end of the car protruding into my field of vision and I felt like I was driving through an old horror Noir film.  The Jean-Michelle Jarre brought back vivid memories of my good friend Richy, and Osbourne Avenue circa 1990.

During this week I've really struggled with the novel; chapters 9 and 10.  But I finished chapter 9 on Friday and I've just finished chapter 10 today, and I'm pleased with result.  You can grab a copy of sneak preview here:  Grab Preview PDF

*******************
20 Years Of Writing
*******************
So, to celebrate this fact, I've slashed the prices of most of my novels and RPG (Yellow Dawn) material. I'll keep the low prices in place until the end of October.  You can make a saving of around £5 on each of the novels and the Yellow Dawn rulebook; and a couple of quid on the PDFs and the murder mystery game (Murder At Sharky Point).  If you're not sure where to look, here's a list summary of all my published work. List all of David J Rodger's Published Work

Enjoy.


David



Dog Eat Dog 23,000 Words, late nights and problems with the book.

¦ dialling in from work station ¦


08:52 GMT, Friday 9th October 2009.  

Soft grey light tinged with faint autumn sunlight flooding through the tall Napoleonic window to my right.  Feeling a little groggy but pleasantly so.  Came home straight from work last night, cooked up some pasta, then settled down to work on Dog Eat Dog.  

Oj was heading straight from work to another party… she’d not been home since Wednesday morning… dirty stop out, so I had another night of the house to myself.  Yesterday I finished chapter 8, after a week long struggle with resolving complex plot threads that I hadn’t anticipated during planning.  These things are common; once you start the writing, as opposed to mapping out theoretical ideas, the characters begin to come alive and take on their own direction. I often have to tweak, adjust or sometimes change a plot thread because a character evolves a strong personality / motivation / driver, and so the proposed story arc no longer works for them.   

Onto chapter 9,  I was looking forward to jumping back into familiar ground… stuff I’d planned and mapped out.  But I felt awkward and uneasy. The scene wasn’t right.  I left the Sky Bunker and went downstairs and sat at the dinning room table with all my paper based notes. I reviewed the current chapter plan.  Something was missing from the story.  I scribbled an “issues” list, two things stuck out: I didn’t feel I’d done enough to describe both characters. They were still vague and somewhat amorphous: and yet I have a couple pages of notes for each character.  Also, this is the world of Yellow Dawn, had I done enough to paint the horror of it into the mind of the reader?  The characters to date were avoiding the Dead Zones, avoiding the Infection…

So last night saw me map out two new chapters, pushing the original chapter 9 to become chapter 11; I’m going to use both chapters to allow the characters to dwell on who they are, where they are and what they want out of life. It’s actually an ideal point in the book to do this, as they’re both about to embark on a big change.  I’ll also have an opportunity to cover off some of the more horror based aspects of the Yellow Dawn world.

Sadly, I won’t have a chance to work on these properly until next week. Today I’m tired… see below; and I need to prepare for the next game of Yellow Dawn which is happening tomorrow. Sunday I’ll be recovering from the mental intensity of running a YD session for a whole day…and spending a few hours taking photos with Oj.

By about nine pm I was all out of brain juice.  I’d been up since 5 A.M. writing and then a full-on day at work, followed by an evening of deep thought and note making for the book.  I thought about heading out but that little nagging voice in my head said, no, go to bed early, get some rest and grab the 4 A.M. wake-up ticket to crack on with the book.  I’m in bed by 9.30.  I’m drifting off to sleep.

Phone rings.

I flap awake and play hunt the phone in the dark; the phone’s lying face down in a discarded T-shirt by the bed so I can’t see the glow of the screen to zero-in.  I find it and thumb the answer button.  I hear loud music and loud voices.  Déjà vu from last night.  I flop my head back into the pillow and say hello: my voice is all strange from the fuzzy nature of sleep and semi-wakefulness. Oj’s on a buzz.  Wants to hear my voice.  Love love love love.  I like it.  I mean, she’s my lady and I adore her and we have this fantastic “thing” going on.  She’s not sure how she’s getting home and people keep buying her drinks. I grin in the darkness of the room: she’s drunk.  We end the call.  I roll over, extend my arm into open space and drop the phone back onto the T-shirt, pleased to hear a muffled thunk and not a hard thud of phone striking solid floor.

Sleep.

Lovely lovely sleep.

Phone rings.  I don’t know what time it is and for a few seconds I don’t even know where I am.  Fumble down into darkness, fingers find phone.  Click answer. Loud music and loud voices.  And Oj… her voice sounding very sing-song with bursts of giggles and laughter: man, she’s really drunk.  I check time: it’s midnight.  I’m thinking… what the hell and I doing in bed? Why aren’t I out having a good time?  Sod the book. “Hang on baby, I’m coming into town.”  I’m out of bed; dressed; and into my Rocket.  The air is freezing cold and really refreshing.  I’m a little bleary eyed but excited… late night driving in quiet streets.  I have the window down to wake me up.  Ulrich Schnauss plugged into the car’s music system via my Mp3 player.  And the anticipation of a fun night out.  I reach town; it’s a Thursday night and mayhem.  A lot of very drunk and very crazy people.  I slide into an empty parking space near the cathedral and leave Rocket to the fates, hoping some pisshead doesn’t come along and decide to take a dump on the bonnet.  I cut down the alley way between the cathedral and millennium square.  A girl with dark hair and short skirt is squatting against the wall, boobs hanging out, taking a leak.  “Hey,” she croaks, “I like you… do you like me?”  I keep on walking.   Welcome to the best of British culture.  I find the late night bar and a gang of people around Oj, some I know, some I don’t.  A drink is shoved into my hand and the good times roll.

We get back in the small hours.

Oj wakes up around 8 and the room is spinning.  I wake up and my face is grinning: only one drink for me.  I was driving.  It’s not often a bloke gets to see her lady feeling sorry for herself; usually it’s the other way round, the whole Man Flu myth.  

So, feeling a little groggy but pleasantly so.

The first 8 chapters of Dog Eat Dog are now available in a sneak preview; if you want them, go here: Click to grab PDF


Chill air, Ulrich Schnauss, early morning bliss

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦


05:13 GMT, Thursday 8th October 2009.  The house is freezing.  Not actually freezing but getting there.  The season has definitely shifted into the near gear. I'm dressed in the clothes I came home from work in, yesterday, plus Starsky, plus a snood around my neck.  I could just put the heating on, but after spending a number of years too skint to afford the heating being on, because I was pursuing my writing; or 11 years living in the Happy Flat, which had NO heating... I've reached this point in my life where feeling cold indoors is almost nostalgic.  Anyway, why put on heating when you can put on a jumper?  Remind I said that in a couple days when I'm shivering and my teeth are gritted together as my jaw rattles. *grins*

Oj's out last night and tonight, so I've got the house to myself.  Last night I came home, thought about writing, but decided to have a night off. Made a massive pan of pasta, loads of garlic.  Then I built up the cast iron stove fire in the front room, turned off the lights, opened the curtains and sprawled out on one of the sofas closest to the fire... feet nearest, lying on my back with my head propped up on the sofa's arm and a cushion, head tilted to one side so I could stare into the flicking flames that threw gold light and dancing shadows across the walls of the dark room.  I sank into a blissful snooze.  Phone rings.  I jerk away, disoriented and groggy. Pick up phone: loud music and loud voices; it's Oj, out at a party, telling me she loves me. "Lve yu to," I mumble, eyelids already heavy as the deep orange glow of the fire's embers lure my gaze.  

I shuffle upstairs and the cold nip in the air in the bedroom stings my face. I decide not to bother getting undressed and just fall into bed like a felled tree.  Pull duvet over me.  Sleep.

Phone rings. I start awake. Room filled with electronic blue light.  Side table vibrating and buzzing.  I grab phone. Loud music and voices.  It's Oj... telling me she's staying out.  Okay, cool, I reply.  Phone cuts out.  I put phone down, smiling, and start to drift back into deep sleep.  Phone rings.  I always sit bolt upright. Phone clutched in hand.  Loud music and voices.   Oj, "Did you hang up or did I?"  She's hyper and wants to chat.  I'm half comatose and I just want to sleeeeeeeeeeep.  It was a funny moment.  She's twigs the situation and signs-off with a kiss: talk to you tomorrow baby.

So now it's my time.  The quiet hours of the dead.  Leaving the bedroom I found every window in the house was like a still from a ghost film: alabaster fan-rays of moonlight flooding through the glass, stretching pale fingers across the floor, pushing back inky shadows.  I peered out through the Room with a View: cloudless sky, stars twinkling from a Prussian blue backdrop, and a very high moon looking back down at me.  I smiled.  The moon smiled back.

I'm back into Ulrich Schnauss again: damn, that man is a mood magician. Absolutely dreamy music. Not writing music but a great soundtrack for all those segments of my life that fit in between writing. Check him out here: Ulrich Schauss

I can't believe it's Thursday already, this week has shot by.  Monday morning was the only time in years that I've woken up, dreading work and preferring the idea of not going in. Simple reason: fear.  However, a meeting on Monday quickly established that the big storm of the past two weeks is becoming weaker and much more manageable.  

Right, time to brew my 2nd mug of tea and crack on with chapter 8. Then a hot bath and some clean clothes.

Djr

Caution, Exploding Breakfast.


¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

12:47 GMT, Tuesday 6th October 2009.

Yesterday saw the first noticeably cold weather.  A silvery blue grey quality to the air.  Very atmospheric.  It reminded me how much I enjoy these autumn months; the early morning ground mist; the chill damp on your face and in your lungs.  The world of nature winding down into decay and the big sleep, with a promise of new things for spring.

The mornings are remaining dark later and later, too. Here’s a pic of the Sky Bunker about 5 A.M.  Again, I love the extended reach of the darkness.  I adore coming up here in the wee hours to write.


I’m taking a break from my lunchtime writing stint: I’m on chapter 8 and struggling.  I’ve reached a critical point in the story and it’s vital I get the facts correct – as this sets the character onto a specific course of action… so all the reasons and the subsequent results have to fit.  I’m going to resort to sitting in a café tonight (Boston Tea Party in Bath) with a mug of coffee and my paper notebook. Try and mind map the concepts I’m working with.

My early morning stints have been on hold the past few days whilst Sharky has been visiting from Spain; too many late nights and late night drinks have pushed my balanced routine off kilter.  I’m not complaining; it’s been great to have a house guest for a week.

Last night we watched the 2nd half of the Two Towers… we started watching the whole Lord of the Rings set on the weekend.  I built the fire in the front room, turned the lights low, sat on the floor beneath Oj where she was curled up on one of the sofas; Sharky sat against the other sofa. Whisky & Coke and a roaring fire. Delish.  Maybe a bit too delish.  The film finished; Kelvin headed upstairs to one of the guest rooms; Oj stroked my head and said “are you coming to bed?”, I nodded, prodding the fire with stick and lost in a bit of a dreamy gaze. She left me there. I woke up a few hours later on the sofa, blissfully warm and sleepy.

My breakfast exploded this morning.
Porridge oats with a lot of water; no milk; nothing else. I normally microwave it for 30 seconds or so but this morning I must have turned the timer dial further than normal, then got on with brewing a mug of tea.  I heard this muffled pop.  Thankfully I’d used a plastic dinner lid over the bowl, the explosion had splashed back down over the sides of the porridge dish.  Half my porridge was gone!  And it stuck like a bizarre blend of concrete and slimy napalm… to everything.  When I tried to take the bowl out of the microwave it nearly stuck to my fingers; burning.  Then trying to clear the gunk off the sides, the paper towels just stuck and ripped.  Ripped!!!!  The stuff stuck to my fingers like kaka.  Everything I touched became glooped up with pale oaty kaka.  The paper towel drum. The sink taps.  The kitchen bench.  The edge of my T-shirt.  Bloody stuff was a nightmare.  So, lesson learned.

Strange echoes


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

10:02 GMT, Saturday 3rd October 2009.  The room is awash with rainy grey light; I've got all my little lamps on, creating a cosy atmosphere, the perfect rainy day mood.  I love weather like this.  I'll be heading out a little later, driving down to town and park outside Dom's old place, walk around the harbour, get a little damp, then find a seat in a cafe and work on paper and pen notes, nursing a strong cup of coffee.  

I had a lie in this morning.  Didn't need it, just chose to ignore my 4 a.m. snap-awake in the dark, and spend several hours dozing, dreaming, and basking in the sultry heat radiating off Oj's body.  That cyclical routine of spooning; rolling onto my back, Oj turning round to drape herself across my chest; then me rolling on my side and her snuggling into my back.  Do that and repeat.  Bliss.

Was up around 8.  Brewed a mug of tea and carried it straight up here to start on Dog Eat Dog. I'm back in the groove after a couple days hiatus whilst going through Hell at work.

When I say hell at work, I mean that in the worst sense possible.  I've had the most terrible week in my working life, since those dark and monstrous days in October 2004.  Hence the title for this post: Strange Echoes.

Kelvin arrived here from Spain on Thursday night; he's going through his own period of torment, so here's here for some sanctuary and tlc.  Kelvin's visits are always lovely and he's a very easy guest.  He arrived with a bottle of red wine from Spain.  It was a reserve, from 2004.  I drank, thinking about everything I went through back then.  And this week has had echoes of those days.  A terrible event at work; me waking up at 2 in the morning, sweating and tormented by the night demons...

However, I think the situation is resolving itself. Yesterday was a good day at work. And I'm not longer feeling so strung out and scared by "what might happen if things go wrong".

Off-setting the dark clouds are phone calls with mum, up in Newcastle. She's doing great!  What an amazing fight back. Even the nurses have commented on her internal reserves of strength.  Christmas here we come!  *prays and hopes*

I'm currently writing chapter 7.  I'm in Marseilles and loving it.  These characters, Carlos and Drobna are fantastic.  If you want to read a preview of the work-in-progress then
Click to grab PDF

Just taken a break, went downstairs, brewed more tea, made bacon sandwiches for Oj, Kelvin and myself.  

Oj stood by the large window in the lounge, rainy light flooding through and revealing her trim figure silhouetted and visible through the gauzian fabric of her PJs: I clambered down onto the floor behind her, got on my hands and knees and did a worshipful bow.  Kelvin nearly choked on his bacon sandwich.  Oj laughed and rolled her eyes.

I'm going to work on some photos. Break. Back to Chapter 7, then head into town for that walk in the rain and get a coffee before the sun pokes its face through the clouds.


Dog Eat Dog 16,000 words and Licking a Portuguese tart in Boston


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

05:05 GMT, Monday 28th September 2009.

Dark outside; a murky blackness mixed with early morning mist and the dirty orange of sodium street lighting.  

It's approaching 5 years since a big negative occasion took place (day NAVC was disbanded), and life has a curious way of dropping you into a repetitive cycle.  Here I am again, looking at a tenebrous storm cloud forming over my work.  I've had an angry weekend.  When I've not been focussing my thoughts on the new novel, my mind has been picking through events from Friday.  I don't think about work when I'm away from work.  In the past 23 months I've only done so once.  Grrr.

I've chosen to listen to the gloomy sounds of El Greco, by Vangelis. Powerful emotions compressed and confined.

Despite the edgy vibe, or perhaps as a result of it, I've had an excellent weekend of writing. Saturday and Sunday saw me achieve something of a lie-in, waking up around 8 A.M. in the blissful radiator heat of OJ wrapped around me, or curled up back to back, big duvet creating a cocoon.  Fooling around time.  Then up, out, enjoying the roads free of the city traffic that will come when the sheep arise for their pens and migrate into the concrete, steel and glass grazing zones hoping to fulfil the empty promises of advertising and aspirational television.

Boston Tea Party had no croissants.  I'm staring at a mound of things that look like small brambly apple pies gone wrong.  "What are those?"

"Portuguese tarts."

"I'll try one."

Oh my God.  Sitting at the high stool and bench arrangement in the downstairs window bay, overlooking Park Street, I experienced licking my first Portuguese tart.  Baking pastry cup filled with some kind of fluffy creamy custard, a lightly glazed top tasting of caramelised sugar.  Utterly delicious and perfect with a mug of strong coffee.

I repeated the experience Sunday morning it was so good.

Met up with Doc Toc for a very enjoyable coffee and chat.

I went to the Cathedral and lit a candle to remember my dad.

Several conversations and texts with mum over past few days has brought a ray of hope.  The pain-control is working wonders.  And she's eating again, putting precious weight back on. She sounded fantastic and very upbeat.  She told me she's determined to be here for Christmas.

Right, time to upload the latest sample preview of Dog Eat Dog then head downstairs and brew another mug of tea. Time to work on some photos before I jump back into bed with Oj for the 6 to 7 A.M. snuggle and fool around fix.  

Then up again and get ready for work. Driving the Rocket through rural hills and valley between Bristol and Bath.

Dog Eat Dog: I'm going to be making the first few chapters available as I finish them; grab the latest sneak preview here:  Click to grab PDF

Dog Eat Dog, 9000 words


¦ dialling in from the Sky Bunker ¦

21:14 GMT, Wednesday 23rd September 2009.  Sitting in the glow of my red lava lamp and several table lamps.  I'm supping Leffe from a brandy glass.  Vangelis Mythodea playing again. I could play something else but this album seems to be re-embedding itself in my brain for the new book.  It's either that or "Swan Song" album by Hollywood Undead at the moment; or "Jagged" and "Hybrid" albums by Gary NUman.

Funny how behaviour patterns shift and form new routines.  Most of the summer I barely came up into this room; I barely touched my laptop.  I saw my friends, hung out in cafes.

Now the new book is underway, I'm back to waking up at silly o'clock in the morning, and coming up here straight after work.  Loving being back in the writing saddle. 

Didn't do any writing this morning though; so bloody tired yesterday, after a 5A.M. start to fly back to Bristol, then coach to train station, then taxi to house, then Rocket to Bath Park & Ride, then bus to Bath centre and walk to work.  Not helped by the fact I didn't get to bed until 1 A.M. after yet another hellish whisky session with Pete next door.

So this morning I woke up early, just snapped awake, but I said, "fek off" and rolled over back into a big hot body hug with Oj.

I sorted out my compassionate leave at work today.  I thought it best to get a plan in place so that when the phone call comes through from Newcastle, I can just go and be there for as long as it takes.

Tonight I've finished chapter 3. Preview available here:

Sneak Preview Chapter's 1 to 3 from Dog Eat Dog

I spent the past couple of days snared in a fight scene. This pushed the chapter length up so I had to break my original plan; I'll be adding the rest of the original chapter concept into a new chapter. But because I'm alternating each chapter from two main character POVs, it means I'll have to extend the next planned chapter and break it into two chunks.  Make sense? Nah, thought not.  Anyhow, it means I'll need to dream up some new stuff to avoid cheating and padding it with fluff.

I've also, finally, got back into working on the backlog of photos and updating the "window". Slowly but getting there.  I'm up to June at the moment. I've ditched Photoshop for the open source GIMP: bloody loving it so far.



Dog Eat Dog - 6,000 words


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

18:15 GMT, Sunday 20th September 2009.  Sitting at the oak refectory table. It's been blue sky and bright golden autumn sunlight all day, now fading to a pale baby blue, the sun dropping behind the dense tangle of the ancient forest surrounding the back of the house.  

It's been a good day: thankfully with only a minor hangover following the 4A.M. finish to Pete's 50th birthday party next door.

I've just finished chapter 2 and dropped in the first of the blog-entries that will appear throughout the book.

I'm going to be making the first few chapters available as I finish them; grab the latest sneak preview here:

Sneak Preview Chapter's 1 and 2 from Dog Eat Dog

It's been a strange day, emotions all over the place.  I've been feeling uneasy.  A slight case of unneccessary paranoia perhaps?  I posted a comment on somebody's profile a couple days ago and discovered it had been deleted: so now I'm wondering if my sense-of-humour has caused offence or been miscontrued. Certainly a worry I can do without right now.

At the party last night, one of mum's friends, a woman who's known her since being a teenager, collapsed on me and began sobbing, overwhelmed by the whole situation.  It seems everyone's who met my mum has been touched in some way.  A random stranger at the party told me he'd met my mum and would never forget her.  She is an amazing woman, that's for certain.

I've not actually seen her today.  My sister's been up into her room, helping out with the nurses who came this morning; but I figure I'll see her a little later, if she's strong enough to come downstairs.

Right, I'm going to post this, pull on my battered hiking boots and black waxed jacket and go walk 4 miles with Hollywood Undead on my headphons.

Djr



Dead before Christmas


¦ dialling in from Kitsch'n Cafe ¦

12:46 GMT, Friday 18th September. Grey light flooding the cafe through large plate glass windows.  An appropriate hue for the mood.  Although I'm not feeling in such a state of deep shock as I was last night, after I arrived home in Newcastle.

The flight was uneventful.  Oj dropped me off in town after work and I caught the coach to the airport. Breezed through security. 90 minutes sat in a bar with my paper notebook and pen, bullet pointing the next scenes of chapter one.  Shuffle onto the plane; some bright eye contact from a striking dark-haired woman who I thought I knew... then realised I didn't but had already done the big smile thing.  I spent the 45 minute flight with my cap pulled down low, eyes closed, headphones on.  Easy landing and a long taxi back across the apron to the terminal building... the usual thoughts for me, remembering being here when I was 16 on a week long "work experience" session... in the traffic control tower.  Through the airport, my long-legged fast stride bringing me into a game of dangerous-walking, side-stepping, braking, accelerating in spurts to get past everyone else who just walks so damn slow. Through the arrivals gate.  A steep ramp down to the Metro station.  25 minute train ride to West Jesmond.  Then a walk through memory-ville.  Too many to mention.  I dropped into a late night TESCO store and picked up a bottle of Leffe. Then home.

It's not even been three weeks since I was last here but what a dramatic change.

I opened the front door and did my usual whistle. For more years than I can remember I've always had a whistle from my mum come right back at me; followed by the sound of her moving towards the door; then we do the usual sizing each other up... or rather, she grins at the fact I'm towering over her and I stoop down to envelop her in a big hug.

This time there was just silence.

Utter silence, and I was struck by the realisation that "this is what it'll be like when she's gone."

A few moments later I heard my sister move from our old bedroom and she came down.

"Is mum asleep?" I asked.

My sister nodded; we hugged briefly then settled down in the lounge to talk.

Last time I was here my sister was away; she'd been away for a month, in Marseilles, taking a much needed break from being a full-time carer... confident she could because of the marvellous bounce back to vitality and health my mum experienced this summer.  Last time I was here, I hardly saw mum... she was ill. A flu, she called it.  And I didn't worry too much.

It wasn't flu.

It was the cancer making a renewed assault on her body.

My sister spelled out details that have surfaced over the past two weeks of doctors and nurses and Macmillan people visiting the house.  The house remains silent.  There's a distinct absence of mum's presence lingering in anything.  The big armchair she used to occupy for so many years now seats my sister.  I sit and listen, guzzling Leffe and aware that I've got tears flowing freely down my cheeks.

No more treatments.

We're now into pain-control.  She has an auto-injector strapped to her that gives her a cocktail of pharmaceuticals and pain-killers over a 24 period.  The specialists are monitoring doses and combinations to ensure they remove pain but not at the expense of her consciousness: she doesn't want to be a zombie. I don't want her to be a zombie... that was my childhood... the middle-class thing with a rich dad who was never there and a mum hooked on Valium, Lithium and Diazepam.  It's not just the under-privileged who get fucked up by their Nurture. But hey, that's the distant past and 35 years of anger and mistrust came to an end in 2006 when mum and I finally "found" each other again. The relative recentness of this fact only adds to my anger about this current situation.

Going up and down the stairs can leave her exhausted for the rest of the day. She's out of breath and finding it hard to breath.  The cancer is now in her blood. Either the cancer spreads to her other organs and they eventually fail, or she grows ever weaker from not being able to eat (she's not had a solid meal in 7 days) and that's the route she exits.

"How long has she got?" I ask.

"I know you really want to have another Christmas with her, Dave, but I think we all need to be realistic and prepare for the worst case."

"Dead before Christmas? Jesus."

It's late.

My sister and I hug again and she heads upstairs to bed.

It feels weird to know mum's upstairs and I've not seen her.

I give the cats a head rub then step out the double-French doors at the back, onto the decking and pad round next door to see if Pete's up.  He's there, sat at his kitchen table with his laptop on; he's been waiting for me.  The evening switches in a less serious note and I'm grateful.  I knock back whisky and Leffe to numb the shock and settle into a comfortable groove of talking about Pete's first novel: which is very good, by the way.

It's nearly 3 A.M. when Pete finally kicks me out.

I stay up late, a couple more drinks, sitting on the sofa bed watching shit on the TV.  Eventually exhaustion and alcohol have the desired effect and I fall back like I've been struck by a poleaxe, my thumb hitting the standby button on the remote before I sink into a restless sleep.  I wake up at dawn, still dressed and sweating; the heating is on Global Thermonuclear War setting; I'm dehydrated and melting.  Memories of last night's conversation kick in and my mood plummets.

My sister brings me a cup of tea around 9.30.

I get up, clean up, step into the main body of the house: still no sign of mum. I go upstairs. Knock on her door.

Mum says, "don't come in."

I hear her shuffling around messing with stuff, then she steps out.  I do my best not to show my shock.  It's like part of her is missing; like's she's collapsing in on her self.  She's so unbelievably thin, grey and unwell.  I envelop her in a hug and I feel her skeletal arms shaking as she holds onto me.  Her skin looks so thin it could tear like paper; it's taught against the sinewy limbs, no muscle or fat to speak of.  There's deep blue and purple bruises where various docs have been punching holes in her to take blood samples.  The change from just over two weeks ago is unbelievable.  

However...

She joins me downstairs.

She woke up today for the first time in weeks without pain in her chest; the medication is working.

"I had to lie there and think, is this real, it was such a joy to wake without pain. I slept so well, David," she tells me.

I sat on the floor at the base of the big armchair, my legs tucked beneath me, my head resting on her knee.  She's stroking my hair, hands trembling, but there's a defiance in her voice, and when I look up and into her face, there's a sparkle in her eyes. She's not beaten yet.

"It'll be okay," she says.

I cry a bit then.  Can't really help it. Emotion just wells up out of nowhere and I let out this big unmanly sob.  Sons and mothers, eh, that can be powerful stuff.

Half an hour later and the room is full of people; strangers, doctors, nurses, specialists... all doing their thing.  I leave them to it.  My sister is in the fold, managing the situation.  Thank God I've got her.

I pull on my jacket and my mum smiles at me across the room with her eyes, not saying a word. She knows I need to get some distance and do my thing: find a cafe; write.

I'm now deep into chapter one: going really well.

Djr

Dog Eat Dog, early days, 2000 words and counting


¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

13:04 GMT, Thursday 17th September.  Sitting in my office swivel chair with a high back, lumbar support, gel pad resting under my wrists, the toes of my battered hiking boots hooked around the lower legs of the chair.  sunlight flooding through tall Napoleonic windows to my right... although the sky is fading from blue through to hazy white, heading towards grey. Storms tonight? Hope not, I'm catching a aeroplane to Newcastle tonight.  Got new tunes blasting through headphones: "Swan Songs" the album by Hollywood Undead.  Good "fuck-the-world" energy, perfect for writing the new book.

Check them out:
Swan Songs, Hollywood Undead

I'm up to 2,200 words.  A LONG way yet to go but I'm absolutely loving the experience of slotting back into the writing groove... open up a Word document and find a whole WORLD rezzing up in your imagination where you left off. This is why I do it, eh? *smiles*

A few days in Newcastle is going to give me a chance to get deep into the groove, rather than bouncing in and out for a couple hours in the morning, lunchbreak and back in the Sky Bunker after work.

Work is still uber busy but has become manageable again. All the stress and anxious sweat of the last few weeks has cooled off.  The work is scheduled, the conflicts resolved, it's just about managing the people doing the work through all the milestones.   Plan, manage, respond, react, adjust...and repeat.

Interesting how the department has changed over the past 18 months. Gone from 1 PM and 1 Dev just dealing with S&M on small sites, through to 2 PMs and 3 Devs (plus freelance overspill) with chunky site builds, challenging commerical briefs and some interesting concept brain-mash ups.  I'm loving it.

So, Newcastle tonight.  See mum, see how's she dealing with the deteriorating health situation.  See how I deal with seeing that.

Djr



Dog Eat Dog, begins

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

08:13 GMT, Tuesday 15th September 2009. High winds blowing around outside but the most beautiful amber coloured sunlight.  Autumn is sweeping in.  I was able to drive in with the hood down.  Currently listening to the soundtrack for “Vexille” by choice, throbbing away through speakers either side of PC, the bass unit sat at the back of my desk.

I started writing the new novel yesterday, and went straight into a freak out: feeling like I’d forgotten how to write, desperate to crawl back into the “easy” planning and note making stage.  I fought through it and have the first chapter taking shape.  I placed social fun in front of writing last night, as per this year’s personal objective, and spent the evening out with Oj.  She’s awesome.

I woke up this morning with a dream of my mum dying, echoing through fading memory… it was grim feeling, the most notable experience in the dream being the realisation that when I wanted to ring her up, I couldn’t.  The finality of somebody being absent from your life.  

I’m no longer so certain she’ll be still around for Christmas.  I lulled myself into a false state of optimism following her remarkable bounce-back and positive state of mind this summer.

I shrugged off the dream during this morning’s drive.

Into the office mega early and cracking on with the novel before starting work; another surge of feeling daunted by the task ahead, but I gritted my proverbial teeth and forced myself to open up the document and pick up where I left off yesterday.  Chapter One, page 3.  

I’ve mapped out 44 chapters, so I’m looking to finish around the end of April 2010.

September sunlight


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

17:58 GMT, Sunday 13th September 2009.  

Ahhhhhhhhhhh *happy sigh*

The room is bathed in a soft amber light flooding in through glass canopy behind me.  I'm sitting at my desk, wrapped in Starsky, skin glowing and smooth from that just-got-out-of-a-hot-bath feeling.  I'm playing Mythodea by Vangelis, again.  Kind of through choice, more through the fact that since my laptop got chip-fucked and won't play MP3s, I'm finding the reversion back to CDs quite tedious... I mean, I have to go downstairs, where they're all kept, and physically sift through my collection reading album titles, and find one I want to listen to, then bring it back upstairs and mess with the machine. Ugh. So 20th Century.

It's been a really nice weekend.

I spent most of yesterday driving the Rocket or sitting in cafes working on paper-based notes for the new novel. Finished the blog-entries that I'll be slotting into certain sections of the book between chapters.  

Today I was up early and in town by 9 A.M. My favourite time for driving; Sunday morning before nine. The sheep are all still asleep or day dreaming of the daylight hours they'll spend wandering around shopping malls; the roads are empty.  Bliss.  

I took a detour once I reached down; shot down the A4 into Hotwells where I used to live for 4 years when I first moved to Bristol back in late 1991.  I pulled up outside the house and sat there for a few moments, reflecting on who I used to be back then, on what I wanted out of life and on how many of those dreams I've managed to achieve... although nothing's ever what you expect when you get it. *wry smile*

A good moment though.

By 9.20 I was settled into a stool within a window bay at Boston Tea Party, on Park Street (not the one in Bath), munching a pain-au-chocolat and supping a very large Americano. Stacks of paper notes came out and I'm now stitching together the ideas I first jotted down in the South of France back in summer of 2006 and summer of 2007; where I first came up with the characters and primary plot for Dog Eat Dog.

Part of me feels like I'm stalling; delaying the moment where I have to commit and begin actually writing narrative. You can get lost within the planning process. But at some point you HAVE to start writing. But I know I'm just being thorough.  I'm pretty sure there's some holes in the plot that need extra thought, so I'm going through notes for each chapter and seeing how it unfolds in note form, looking for things that could trip me up once I'm deep into the writing phase.

Doc Toc came and met me mid-morning; sharing stories of new things in his world (paradigm shift after severe dips and darkness). It was appropriate that the sun was shining and the air was cool and fresh.  He did Forbidden Planet; I did more notes; we rendezvoused again and went for a long spin in the Rocket, winding back at Cosy Castle for oven-cooked strips of bacon and warm croissants, washed down with strong coffee. Delish. I then did something I've not done in AGES. I just relaxed.  Enjoyed the company of a good friend; sat around in the back garden, chatting with Oj and her twin sister, Sarah, and knocking back mugs of tea.

Then Doc Toc and I blasted across to Bath to drop off the fully-enclosed Darth Vader helmet I borrowed off Vega$ about 2 years earlier (finally); followed by some more high-speed cruising with tunes playing and the hood down.  Big grins and the wind ruffling our hair: well, my hair, and skimming the smooth dome of Doc Toc's Kurgen-esque skull.  A pint at The Upton, and stories of serendipity and of when "the Universe clicks into place".

The sun has been glorious every day for almost a week now.  A final and much welcome treat after the months of rain and heavy cloud-cover.

So Sunday is almost gone.

I'm thinking Chinese Takeaway, followed by some of that delicious whisky Nice Guy Tony gave me for my birthday; then a chill-out of sofas with the TV.

Rodger’s Rocket Reaps Righteous Reward, District 9, Carcinogen.


¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

08:32 GMT, Thursday 10th September 2009.  Another morning of glorious sunshine.  Beautiful.  Cold mind you, especially when blasting along winding country roads that hug the upper ridge of the hills between Bristol and Bath with the hood down.  I got my car back last night.  I rang Terry, my mechanic, yesterday afternoon to get the bad news on what had gone so wrong to cause such awful noises.  I was holding my breath during the call, especially when he said “it was your catalytic converter, totally blown, the inside looked like a hammer had been at it; I had to replace the whole front end of your exhaust system”.  A month ago, the same week I bought the car, I’d already heard somebody mention that a new exhaust system for a BMW cost them £1,600.  So Terry said, “It was expensive, Dave, I’m sorry.  It cost £180 to buy the parts. How about we go fifty – fifty?”

“Why would you want to go fifty-fifty?” I asked.

“Well I feel bad, Dave, you’ve not had the car long.”

This was true. So I went round, gave him £120 anyway, and drove off with a big grin stretching my face.

Which didn’t last so long.

Had a phone call from my sister last night. Mum’s had the results back from latest blood test.  I guess I’d managed a mental sleight of hand over previous few weeks, after seeing my mum so ill on my last time to Newcastle…. I’d put it down to flu; I’d fooled myself that the cancer had sunk down into a pit for a while. After Cornwall, in July, mum bounced back with radiant health and vitality and smiles and laughter.  It was incredible.  My sister says mum’s now very ill.  Both cancers are spreading.  Mum’s now moving into an escalating phase of pain-control.  I don’t feel upset.  I’m just kind of numb to it now… from this distance, but I know next time I go up there (next week), and see her, see the suffering, that’s going to be tough.

Changing subject.

I saw District 9 last night.

Utterly fantastic film. The acting, the special FX, the script, the story… even the massive gaps in the story, the sort of broad sweeps of a pen that leaves you wanting to know more.  Brilliant, simply brilliant.  

UK National Lottery magic.

I’m not referring to Derren Brown’s stunt last night to predict all six numbers of the National Lottery.  But I did mention this to my compadre, GonzoBen yesterday, and he jokingly quoted a string of six numbers, followed by changing his mind on two of the numbers.  I had a vibe and wrote them down.  

I played the numbers he gave me, but I also remember the variations he gave, i.e. when he changed his mind. So I played all three.  

Checked the results this morning.
 
1st line, I scored 4 numbers out of 6
2nd line, I scored 3 numbers out of 6
3rd line, I scored 4 numbers out of 6.

Holy shit!!!! How cool is that.

Rodger’s Rocket Runs Risky Recovery


¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

13:15 GMT, Wednesday 9th day of 9th month of 2009.  Sat at my desk, blinds down on the tall Napoleonic window, a shame as the sun is glorious at the moment… but it’s either that or not be able to see my screen for glare.  I’ve got Dead Can Dance, “Within the Realm of a Dying Sun” playing by choice.  Comfort music, I suppose.  It’s been a tough morning, although I feel like possibly the stress and tension (at work) of past few weeks is easing.  Could be famous last words.

Normally this album is “bad shit’s going to happen” music during Yellow Dawn sessions, and previously GAME.  It’s certainly one of my favourites and has been a regular feature in my creative life since 1990.  Check it out here: Preview Dead Can Dance

I did Yen Sushi today.  Need the protein fix for my brain.  I’m pretty sure the reason I did such an excellent job writing Edge was because I was eating sushi 2 or 3 times a week.  Yen Sushi didn’t disappoint; still the best sushi house in the world. *smiles*

If you’re anywhere near the South West of England and can pop into the ancient Roman city of Bath, then check them out: Yen Suhsi, Bath

I had to get the bus in today.  The crappy 332 which generally arrives 15 minutes late, but you have to arrive 10 minutes early, resulting in a 25 minute waste of your life… because if you decide to arrive at the time the bus is due to turn up, or even assume it’ll be late and turn up later, you’ll discover this was the one day the bus flies past earlier than expected.  Reason for the bus journey is my car, the Rocket, has developed technical problems. How bad I’m yet to discover – I dropped it off with Terry, my mechanic, last night. Essentially what started a couple weeks ago as something that sounded like a flaky exhaust evolved into something that sounded like a bag of spanners in a washing machine; then past 2 days it got worse and sounded like a bucket full of nuts and bolts being poured down a metal escalator… even when the engine was just ticking over. I’m dreading it to be something like the clutch.  Probably going to be expensive, whatever the reason.

:o(

Progress with the new novel, Dog Eat Dog continues.

I’m still reading the proof copy of Pete Will’s first novel, Absolution. For a 1st attempt it’s bloody good. Lots of silly mistakes, sure; mainly typos, but it reads like proper novel and I’ve found myself thinking about the story when I’m not reading it.  I’m certainly enjoying it.

Had an email from my publicist in New York today. Made me smile. Not sure if it’s being exposed to my writing or simply the pace of his life that’s doing it to him:

From: floyd____@xxxxx.com
To: clovenfeet@hotmail.com
Subject: dreams
Date: Tue, 8 Sep 2009 15:23:58 +0000

Hey man,

Had a dream I was reading one of your new books.

Boring bit on a plane - people sat around tables.  I knew horror had to be involved somewhere.  Cool part was when I thought, "Maybe I'm the horror!"

Cut to a nasty hotel.  Junk and clutter everywhere, creepy lighting. In bed with a friend (non sexual). We're eating a MASSIVE curry.  It's not good, feel too full, ill.

Went to go to the bathroom, into the hallway, go to turn on light and notice at the end of the corridor, my own shadow in the opposite doorway. Then I realize, with some horror, that the shadow is moving a split second too late.  It wasn't human.  It was being sneaky.  What did it want?

Woke in a very cold sweat, breathing hard.

Ha.



Last Sunday found me sitting in front of the TV taking a break. The interval guy announced that “Around the World in 80 Days” was about to start. I grimaced, then I checked the blurb and saw it starred David Niven.  I thought, hmm, I’ll give it a go.  Anyhow, it starts and within the first few minutes I find myself watching this amazing looking man, with South American features and a very Charlie Chaplin vibe, riding a Penny Farthing down a late 19th century London street.  I was immediately entranced.  The man / actor, was incredible. And throughout the film he was the absolute star of the show.  The actor’s name is Mario Moreno Reyes, also known as “Cantinflas”, and is one of those rare diamond’s of a human being who is both brilliant and self-effacing, powerful and philanthropic. I would have loved to have met him.  Wiki link for Mario Moreno Reyes

Getting your oats every morning sure keeps you thin


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

18:52 GMT, Friday 4th September 2009.  Sat at my large desk, in its new position facing the walls rather than placed beneath the glass canopy.  The room is flooded in a beautiful aquatic Autumn light, yellow sunlight with the most subtle tinge of green (probably a reflection of the encroaching countryside).  I'm playing the dramatic tracks from "Mythodea" an album by Vangelis. Love his work.  

Click to preview Mythodea album

I had such a fantastic drive home tonight; roof down, empty roads, high speeds and sweeping corners angled along the steep ridges of the hills between Bristol and Bath... I wanted to keep driving. But I live on the edge of the city and to have kept going would have meant getting snarled up in evening traffic... and I'm keen to avoid previous Friday evening experiences.

I'm also feeling the ever increasing mental tug from my writing. Go out and drive? Ney, ney, ney, laddie... you've got to stay in and write.  So here I am.  Mug of tea on the desk, files ported across from my toughdrive.  

I had an interview-by-email with David Bradley, the editor of SFX Magazine yesterday.  SFX Magazine is a big name in Euro sci-fi so this is a fantastic opportunity for me.  Watch this space and I'll link when my slot comes up. 

So I'm back on the oats.  After another indulgent weekend in Newcastle my weight shot up by 3KG (6lbs), but just five mornings of eating oats mixed with water for breakfast, no milk, no sugar, just oats and water, I've dropped back to 12 Stone (144 lbs).  I never used to pay much attention to my weight but Jesus, hit your late 30s and suddenly every little nibble seems to make a difference.

Okay, enough chit-chat, time to crack on with the book; although I've just realised I've got a session of Yellow Dawn tomorrow. First game in about 2 months. Damn, I need to prep.  Looking forward to it though. I think prep can wait until tomorrow morning; find a cafe, dose up on caffeine and map out the next scenario.

Oooo, I just stood up and caught a view out of the glass canopy behind me. Man, that is a beautiful colour light.  The sunlight is now a profoundly soft and rich Yellow, not gold like honey, more like weak and diluted orange juice... more... hmm, more like the jacket cover of Yellow Dawn rulebook.  Eeek! Anyhow, I'm faced by the spines of several long hills, marching away from me; the nearest is clearly defined, the potent green of foliage and tree tops, and the red tiles of roofs glowing against the yellow light; the next hill top is less visible, just smudged outlines of manmade structures, and each receeding hill top seems to merge further and further into a yellow-brown haze of the far horizon.  The far horizon is a continuous undulating line of a blue-grey mass posed against the luminescent glow of the yellow sky beyond. And yet, directly above, in contrast to the yellow the sky is blue! Blue with vast cumulous nimbus clouds drifting sluggishly in the air streams. I think I'll stand there for a while, supping my mug of tea and enjoy.

Last lingering smell of '83, back in the groove, ego back in a box


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

07:53 GMT, Wednesday 2nd September 2009. Came home last night and had the urge. Oh yessireee.  I'm back in the groove. For the first time in months I had the desire to head up to the Sky Bunker after coming home from work and get into my writing. Currently creating more of the blog-entries that will drop between certain chapters; then it'll be final prep-notes and one day soon, chapter 1, line 1.  Great feeling.  This morning too, brewed a mug of tea then headed up and up; here I am. I'll get 30 minutes done before leaving for work.  Don't get me wrong; not-writing for the past few months was a conscious decision.  I needed the break. I needed to see my friends again, and enjoy the brief appearances of the sun... and my new wheels *smiles*.

Can you believe the Mood is still with me?  Not as prevalent as when it first started but I'm still catching whiffs of it.  Very much a flavour of 1983.  Very much James Herbert's book, "The Fog". Bizarre.

Talking of the new wheels: I'm finally starting to feel normal whilst driving it.  For the past four weeks, just thinking about driving it started my stomach floating within the cavity of my abdomen and had adrenaline squeezing through every ventricle in my system.  And I was out driving a lot.  Showing off?  I wonder. Probably.  The ego in control for a while.  At the end of the day though, it's just a car.  Ego, back in the box.  Thank you.

The pressure cooker environment at work is not easing off.  I'm aware of people changing.  Personalities hardening, flexibility diminishing, characters starting to fray.  Less smiles.  There are jaw-fights over who gets the resource that is available, and there are senior types trying to crash their projects into existing schedules.  Tensions are high.  Ironically, this probably makes the company extra-ordinarily lean and efficient?  But what's the cost if you put your foot to the pedal and the pedal to the floor for too long?


Fury of Dracula, Crematorium, and wet in my underpants


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

20:59 GMT, 31st August, 2009.  Sitting at the oak refectory table in near darkness. Only a couple of occasional lamps blazing away.  No music playing, not that I'd be able to hear it anyway: the rain is coming down hard and heavy, drumming on the sloping roof and skylights above my head.  Brilliant sound, love it; heavy rain with that background of running water down roof tiles and gurgling drains.

It's been a great few days up here.  I've managed to find a groove with the new novel, Dog Eat Dog, and maintain a sense of perspective and not get so carried away that I write at the expense of all other aspects of my life.  I've been playing a lot of the board game, Fury of Dracula, with Pete, the bloke who lives next door with Rosie and three kids (plus dog and cat).  This is the game I adored back in 1990 (memories of Richy and Osborne Ave), then 16 years of just recalling it with fond nostalgia before I acquired a copy for myself in 2006 (up here in Newcastle), introduced Pete & Rosie to it and bang, they too were hooked.  This is the 1980's version, not the crass attempt to revamp it brought out a couple years ago.  Each time you play this game, it's different: I'd go so far as to say it's the absolute Perfect game (certainly when you add the home-grown rules I've written for it, ahem!)

I went to the crematorium today. I've not been there since dad was scattered there back in December 2006.  He was decidedly absent, in spirit.  Whereas when I go to Bristol Cathedral - I'm not religious but I cherish the atmosphere of churches - I do sense his presence.  Be it a trick of the mind or otherwise, it's a comforting feeling.  The crematorium was okay, but the only vibe I got was memories of going there every year as a child with Dad, to remember his dad - a man who died before I was born.

Driving back to the family home, it struck me how detached I am from Newcastle; how unfamiliar the roads and the people are to me.  I tried to direct Jo who was driving and found that vast chunks of the city "map" that used to exist inside my head are now gone. Erased. Forgotten. We got lost. Literally. I no longer know this city and doubt I'll make many trips here once mum has gone.  It's a curious sensation, to have that revelation... the place where you were born and raised, where you spend the first 21 years of life, no longer has meaning or relevance in your "adult" life.

Mum's been very ill the past few days; not sure how much is to do with the cancer or whether she's just suffering from flu as she says.  I've barely seen her as she's spent most time tucked away in her room.  We ate together tonight and enjoyed some time together chatting... but I'm acutely aware that these "moments" are possibly final moments.  What I mean is... I'm looking at the cats, curled up and cosy, and I'm thinking, at some point, soon, or maybe later, but definitely coming, these cats are going to not be able to curl up and be all cosy here.  That things are going to change.  That I can no longer take for granted the journey up here and the fact I can go to my room, spend time in this house that I've known and loved since 1980.  Change is coming.   

Mum is sitting in her big armchair; she’s got that thoughtful repose I know so well…she's talking; Jo's chuckling at whatever is being said. We're cosy. We're happy. We have food in our belly.  Drinks in hand.  Thank God for just that, eh?   

My birthday was fab.  Went to Cragside house, up near Morpeth, where Lord Armstrong shaped the landscape with his iron mind and iron-making machines and introduced great inventions of the late 19th century.  A brilliant day out.

Earlier today, as the rains grew heavier, I discovered an overspill of rainwater running over from the guttering and down the kitchen window and outer walls. Something was blocked. I was about to head outside to unblock it when I realised the only trousers I have with me are the ones I was wearing... and I'm catching a plane early tomorrow morning. Dang.  So, I pulled on mum's bright red kagool, stripped off my trousers, pulled on my big walking boots and headed out there in my bare legs and underpants. Quite a ridiculous sight but one worthy of the moment.  I got soaked but I can fly home tomorrow with dry trousers.

14,234 days and Inglorious Basterds


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

11:16GMT, Saturday 29th August, 2009.  I'm back in Newcastle. Currently sitting at the oak refectory table, bright sunlight flooding in through skylights above me and the long wall of square-latticed windows to my left.  I've only just settled here though: it's been a blissfully lazy morning and I've spent a couple of hours in dad's old room, where I've been sleeping; sitting up on the big sofa bed with a mug of coffee, legs extended, a familiar view beyond the tips of my feet, through ceiling to floor net curtains hanging in front of the large double French doors...one of which I've wedged open with a heavy ceramic thing to enjoy the cool breeze and the hissing rustling of the wind in the trees.  There are thousands of trees here, densely packed together.  Behind the house, at the bottom of the garden is a steep drop and a large forested area.

I've got no music playing because my laptop is still fekked, good enough for writing but that's about it.  

Been here since Thursday night.  A long drive with Oj straight from work in her car.

Friday morning I slept through until nearly 11.30 A.M.  I never do that, so it shows something of the stress and pressure I, and all of us at work, have been enduring the past few weeks.  It's been utterly insane.  I've got projects stacked up end to end and no spare resource until mid-October now: which is an impossible situation because commercial jobs are going to continue coming in thick and fast with two day or three day delivery deadlines... we've already got one freelancer in and he's maxed out for the next 6 weeks. Recession, what recession?

Everyone has been ending the day in a battered daze.  We're working beyond a 100% and any manager knows you can't sustain that for a significant period of time before something Big goes wrong.

So Friday, I crawled out of the sofa bed in dad's old room and smiled, grateful for the chance to catch up on much needed rest.

I let the day drift by. I'm currently reading a proof copy of the first novel by my friend, Pete Wills.  He's got an excellent writing style.  Mistakes, sure, loads of them, but this is his work in a raw state.  End of the day, I'm enjoying the story and want to continue, rather than feeling it's a chore.

I've told Sharky he needs to get his skates on and get some proof copies sent out to trusted parties who can perform the same service.

Dog Eat Dog is now deliciously embedded in the forefront of my mind.  I'm constantly thinking about it, working on it.  Not long now before I end this final phase of notes and preparation and start the beauty.

Iron Man Project has yielded yet more positive feedback. Bizarre. This is something I finished back in 2005 and was a book that never really took off like the others; but now it seems to be finding a voice. Certainly sales are spiking at the moment.  Very nice, thank you!  You should preview / buy Iron Man Project here. 

Inglorious Basterds.  I nearly avoided this film.  I mean, Tarantino has been producing some utter crap the past few years - you have to respect him for working the industry and achieving the production of a film, however much they don't appeal to me, but my entrenched view point was, I'll not waste my money on him.

Then The Guardian website film critic gave it only 1 star out of 5. And I thought: hmmmm, that Guardian film critic is a lazy asshole who always has the wrong view on anything.  So I went to see it. Thank God.

Inglorious Basterds is an amazing film.  I hadn't followed any of the hype so I didn't know what to expect. I suppose I expected some kind of bloated comical romp along the lines of Mel Brooks.  I was not prepared for the sheer unbearable (positive) tension of the opening scene and several scenes later in the film.  I wasn't prepared for the fantastic cinematography, which in many places harked back to some of the true classics of mid-20th Century film making.  And I wasn't prepared for the spellbinding performances.  Of note is Christan Waltz who for me, made the film what it is.  So, Guardian film-critic, ya got it wrong, "Again".  Inglorious Basterds is 5 out of 5 for me.

Finally, tomorrow I shall be 14,235 days old.  So wish me a happy birthday if you’re so inclined.

Good words about Iron Man Project, and I saw the Milky Way


¦ dialling in from work station ¦

13:53 GMT, Tuesday 25th August 2009.  Listening to the incredible sounds of Devin Townsend, the album called Ki.

Click to hear samples of Devin Townsend Ki

I've been working on the blog inserts for Dog Eat Dog: I'm back into a regular routine of writing during my lunchhour.

I'm knackered though. Went to a wedding with Jo last night: yeah, I know, I DON'T DO WEDDINGS, right, I've managed to only do 5 in my life and this was another rare exception. The venue was incredible however, a vast 18th century mansion, set within a huge private estate. Towers, minarets, several wings, servants and well-behaved guests.  It was a 40 minute drive through narrow country lanes into the heart of Sommerset to get there.  Being so far from anything there was no light pollution.  I stepped outside at one point for some fresh air; well, no, let's be honest, I stepped outside and walked to my car to sit there for an hour and avoid all the speeches. Yawn city. Like I said, I hate weddings.  But outside, my God...I looked up at the night sky and saw the stars.  Incredible.  I could see the Milky Way. Overlapping layer upon layer upon layer of white speckles merging into a misty haze... a haze of stars.  It was a better view that in the South of France.  Better even than the time I was in the Sahara at 2 A.M.  

So, being the driver, I wasn't drinking anything but coffee. Rather a lot of coffee as it happened. Got back home around 1 A.M., crawled into bed and lay there, eyes wide open... buzzing.

Got up again and padded around the house like a twitchy crack-head until 3 A.M.

A crazy morning of work has not helped.

I had a lovely email from this dutch fella, who's just finished reading Iron Man Project. Good words:


From: panzercreuzer@XXXXXXX.com
To: clovenfeet@XXXXXX.com
Subject: RE: IMP
Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2009 18:54:49 +0200

Hey David

I want to congratulate you with The Iron Man project which I just read. It’s been a while since I bought it, but it had ended up in Italy and I stumbled across it now that we are spending a few weeks here recovering from our Africa trip. Anyway, I think it’s a bombshell, extremely captivating. The plot is so rich you could have made a trilogy out of it, easily. Mildly futuristic but without the cyborg-stuff, so I actually enjoyed it very much, more than Godseed I must admit. I especially liked the picture you paint of the future world, different from the usual science-fiction scenarios where super-technology is over-organising every aspect of the daily life, which I believe is not what is going to happen. As far as I see it, the progress in technology is increasingly geared towards private, individual interests, so yes, we’ll have fancy PA’s doing whatever you can imagine, but also power cuts and water shortage because no-one cares about investing in the public good. The rich will be living in star-trek surroundings but there will still be poor living in slums. If you worked out these concepts further in detail, focussing on the political-societal aspects instead of the plot, you could write another trilogy based on the same contents but for a different audience. Perhaps you could even become one of television’s futurism experts.

[...]

I've omitted the rest of the email simply because it's about stuff personal to him and not about the book.

You should take peek at Iron Man Project here.

Enjoy.

David




Drive to sunset nostalgia

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

23:31 GMT, Friday 21st August 2009.  Room is in darkness apart from the deep red of my lava lamp, and several coloured glass tea-light burners... the three I bought in Cornwall with mum, Jo and little sis.  I'm playing Symphony No.3 by Gorecki.  Suitably sombre sounds for a time close to midnight.  The Mood is pungent, intense... all pervading.  Jo's been away in Cornwall since Wednesday, not back until Sunday.  I met a friend after work tonight, Mr GG, arranged a meet at my new favourite eating place, The Olive Shed.  I've known GG since the Agency days.  He's moved on and up: now responsible for more overseas interests.  Great to catch-up as usual.  He was genuinely pleased for me... reflecting on where I'd come from to get to this point in my life.  It was a short meet; long enough for some croquettes and grilled sardines washed down with Euro-beer.  The sun was still blazing into the evening.  I drove back home with the hood down.  Stopped at a junction on a busy main road, where both opposing lanes of traffic have the option to turn right.  Never had a problem there before.  But tonight, some dude in a muscle-car swings wide and stops short of T-boning me; he sits there, now blocking all the traffic behind him, and he starts eyeballing me...

Oh-for-fek's-sake! What is it with Fridays and black dudes in cars?

I can't move forward because the guy in front is trying to pull right, crossing a stream of oncoming traffic... that's now not streaming because of the arsehole who's ready to T-bone me.  Suddenly he revs his engine and I get a mouthful of patios: apparently I should get my head examined.  For waiting to turn right.

Right.

He seems oblivious to the situation he's caused, himself.

I looked at him and pulled my biggest shit eating grin.  Some kind of stiffled rage begins bubbling up through the features of his face.  I laugh. I mean, this is now tedious and hilarious.  Somehow the guy in front is able to squeeze through a gap, and I follow.  I laugh again, loud, and freely.  But a bitter edge creeps in.  So much attitude and ego from so many people.  This world is fekked.  I floor-it and drive like an idiot for half-a-mile, nearly clipping an oncoming bus.

Home.

Chill. Cup of tea.

I've considered spending the night writing but... just not in the mood.

I jump back in the car and just... drive.

I get onto my route to Bath.  No vehicles, just like this morning.  The sky is a deep emerald blue-green, glowing with some far off luminosity.  It's beautiful and I can see it filling my vision above me, because the roof is down.  I put my foot down and let the power grab me; the noise of the engine fills my ears; the wind roars over my head, whipping my hair into a frenzy... it's chilly cold but I don't care.  I turn off at Kelston Park and pull up at the top of the driveway to an isolated manor house: I'm sat in my Rocket on the crest of a high hill overlooking the ancient Roman city of Bath, and the vast open space of the countryside between that city and Bristol.  Tall stacks of clouds are drifting like bloated sails, catching mother-of-pearl colours.  I can hear evening bird-song, and there's a hush and a stillness descending over the rural landscape around me.  No windows or roof seperating me from this raw experience.  It's just... divine.  I've got some mellow music playing: massive attack, I think, and I'm remembering sitting here in Swampy, in this very spot, back in 2006.  How different things are now.   

I'm happy.

Never under estimate the state of everything being normal.

I sit there for an age.

The sky darkens.  I've still got the hood down.  

I start the engine and grin at the throaty rumble; pull away, headlight on, and drift back home.

Smells like 1983

¦ dialling in from work station ¦


13:05 GMT, Friday 21st Aug 2009.  Beautiful sunshine pouring like amber liquid through tall Napoleonic windows to my right; "Beautiful Burnout" by Underworld thumping out from speakers mounted either side of my PC. Nice moment.  The Mood is back, this one very stong, pungent, almost unpleasant: I've had it a few times before... my first memory of it back in 1983, when I was 12, reading "THe Fog" by James Herbert.  Back then I thought it was my over-active imagination creating the smell of the noxious gas that was the fog in the book... but ever since I've had it come back again and again, throughout different parts of my life, with different flavours and vibes.  It's a smell, it's a taste and it's an emotion... it pervades every aspect of my sensorium.  Bizarre, eh?

I had a fantastic drive into work today.  The air was fresh with recent rain but the morning was warm and sunny.  Once I got beyond the boundary of the city, the road was empty of traffic, utterly empty. I put my foot down and felt the acceleration push me back into the leather bucket seat: long sweeping bends, sun beams flashing between trees. At one point I did that whole talking aloud thing and pronounced with a broad grin: "You fekking beauty!"

I'm still not into a writing groove. No issue. I'm enjoying a different style of life. In fact, I went up into the Sky Bunker last night to get something from my desk and had this surreal feeling of being a stranger in this room, it's been so long since I'd spent any proper time in there. Up until June, I used to spend a 1/3rd of my life up there.  Having said that, I'm making progress with the blog inserts for Dog Eat Dog: slowly slowly, but I'm enjoying the pace.


David

Four Home Boy Wankers in a Rental Car

¦ dialling in from a bench table outside Arnolfini Cafe ¦

 

10:11 GMT, Saturday 15th August 2009.  It's sunny but almost gale force winds are battering the ancient stone and modern steel and glass structures of the harbour.  It's pleasant, although I'm having to keep a very tight grip on my paper notes... and the half-empty coffee cup (waxed and recycled cardboard) that keeps threatening to topple over with each power gust.  I'm feeling hot under the collar and finding it difficult to concentrate; an episode last night keeps running through my head and making my blood boil.

 

Stand out from the crowd, you should expect to attract attention, not all of it positive.  It's been an interesting experience, the past three weeks, owning and driving a material object that has this extraordinary power to shape people's opinions of you.

 

Last night I drove into town to go meet James Catholic Funboy.  I got caught in a big snarl of stationary traffic, one lane of traffic that eventually split into two as you got close to the traffic lights.  Behind me was a car that had been driving aggressively for the last half mile or so. A silver thing with four home boys inside, black skinned, head-scarves wrapped around foreheads, eyes narrowed and in some kind of bad mood. I guess they didn't like being forced to sit in traffic. The driver honks his horn.  Nobody moves.  Nobody can move.  It's a jam.  The driver revs his engine.  Nobody moves. Then the driver decides to force his way alongside my car, squeezing into a space between my passenger side and a rusty metal railing beyond which was a slow moving brown river.  My passenger window is down and through it comes a fountain of verbal diarrhoea in a street-speak dialect, liberally dosed with the word fuck.  Apparently I'm a wanker for not conjuring some more space between me and the cars in front to let him through.  Of course, he didn't say it quite like that.  His statement of glory though was, "You've got a nice car mate, but I'm in a hire car and I don't give a fuck, so move it!" At which point he revved his engine, slammed the wheel round towards me and jumped his car forward a few centimetres. I watched my wing mirror snap back in a tussle with his wing mirror, but remain intact.  It was clear he had every intention of continuing if I didn't move, easily stoving in the front end of my car.  I looked at the road ahead of me.  There was nowhere for me to go, except into the lane of oncoming traffic.  He starts ranting at me again.  More street speak with sort of high-pitch intonations, accompanied by sneering titters and giggles from his adoring audience, the three others in the car with him.  I’m speechless, not through fear; I was very calm; but more through an awareness of how I was in a totally non-winnable position.  I couldn’t be violent: there were four of them.  I couldn’t drive away.  I couldn’t ram his car, because any damage to mine would be extortionate and stressful.  I experience a moment of seeing myself as Clive Owen in a scene from a film.  At this point however, the traffic ahead of me crawled forward... and twat face was able to rev up and screech through the gap, forcing his way in front of me, then back into the now available 2nd lane and then out through the changing lights.

 

The experience left me in an angry mood; not helped by the fact that James Catholic Funboy was a no-show.  So the trip and associated unpleasant experience had been for nothing.

 

In the absence of James, I called on Chris Master of Tic Toc and spent the night cruising around Bristol with the roof down, stopping off at bars and having some damn fine conversations.  Chris recently finished reading God Seed, and I'm deeply flattered by the praise he summoned for the book.

 

EDIT: 12:58 GMT, Sunday 16th. Now sitting in Sky Bunker. Working on Dog Eat Dog blog entries. Feeling a creative groove forming.  Hopefully I can build on this but avoid getting sucked into some monster vortex of self-determination, the usual thing that happens when I write... I'm enjoying the social thread I've woven back into my life: I'd like to manage a balance between the desire to finish the book and the desire to see my friends.

 

I burned off yesterday's bad mood by driving down to Wells with Jo.  A thunderous roar of noise and speed; fantastic road.  I've had a lot of strangers smile at me or pass comments of admiration about the car.  I guess it counter-balances the three years I spent driving my 18-year old Nissan Micra rusty biscuit tin... I used to get a lot of looks with that too, usually comical.

 

Right time for a coffee from the Octagonal Steel coffee God then a power snooze, Da Vinci style, then back to Dog Eat Dog.

Devin Townsend - soundtrack to Dog Eat Dog

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

13:13 GMT, Thursday 13th August 2009.  Currently listening to a phat-bass remix of "Beautiful Burnout" by Underworld. It's become a bit of a soundtrack to the last few days, as has Devin Townsend's album "ki"... which is simply incredible music. It ranges through mellow harmonic guitars and vocals to plunge into jagged stretches of manic growling and emotive yelling of words...emotions and energy surges, like peaks of anger. So I'm gradually peicing together a "brief" for myself before I start writing a ton of blog entries to go in between the chapters of Dog Eat Dog: and this album is the perfect soundtrack to the mood and thoughts behind it.

Ironically, the music also suits my recent work mood. Yesterday was a combative day: I had two verbal scraps in the morning; a shame, because they're with people I enjoy working with; probably a combination of factors making the perfect storm... both them and I in pugnacious mood, spoiling for a fight? I don't know. Anyhow, one guy rang this morning to build bridges. What this shows is the consequences of the pressure-cooker environment we're all dealing with at the moment.  Despite this, I'm enjoying it in that sick sort of way you can enjoy tabbing across a Scottish mountain with 60KG in your backpack in the pissing rain and cold wind.  Once you finish you look back in satisfaction.

Yesterday culminated with me managing to catch my tea-mug with the flex of my phone, resulting in said tea-mug (full of tea) sliding across polished desk surface and out into open air.... gravity takes rapid hold and the tea mug drops cleanly into my open bag that is resting below my desk... digital camera, portable toughdrive, and reams of paper notes for Dog Eat Dog.  I was on the phone at the time, and the way I screamed FFFFF_UUUUUUUCCK!!!! was enough to prompt the person on the other end to simply say, "I'll call you back," and she hung up.  Nothing ruined, but interesting blobs on my camera lens... and digging out my Dog Eat Dog notes today I discovered a large damp corner on every page.

Ho-hum.

A very smart gentleman came round our house last night to close the deal on some life insurance tied to our mortgage. Turns out he's a fan of my writing.  A pleasing moment of reality.

Djr

Departure Lounge

¦ dialling in from Newcastle airport ¦

06:15 GMT, Monday 10th August 2009.  Sitting at a square of dark wood, a Cafe Nero outlet here in the departure lounge. Heavy grey skies seeping misty white light, a vast wall of inward sloping windows and a view of tarmac... planes lined up... white painted service vehicles. I smile with nostalgia as I recall 1987... me being 16 years old and doing 1 week of "Work Experience" here.  My college placed me in the control tower for a week. It was great. Talking to pilots. Riding along the length of the runway in an open jeep with some guy who had a shotgun, blasting away flocks of birds who'd settled too close for comfort.

I've changed.  The paradigm has shifted.  Along with several other key areas of my life, my feelings towards Newcastle have adjusted.  I no longer feel torn between two places, as I have done for the past 18 years.  Bristol, the South West, it's in my blood now.  I belong there much more than up here in the North East.

I'm feeling quite perky despite the early rise: I managed to be sensible and go to bed before 3 A.M. this time.

I'm looking forward to getting into work; there's a ton of stuff to manage and some new projects emerging which are pretty exciting.  Long may it continue.  I'm also looking forward to getting back to Bristol and into my car. It's just a car, I keep telling myself, but goddamn... I can't keep it out of my mind.


EDIT: 12:33 GMT, I'm back in the saddle, strapped to my desk and workstation. Madness. Utter madness, and I'm loving it. There's several deadlines to hit today, a hundred emails to respond to; I'm in the flow, prioritising, directing the traffic.

The flight was swift as ever. One moment I'm in Newcastle; less than an hour later I'm way down here.  Grabbed a taxi back to the house and had the pleasure of pouring myself into Rocket.  Black leather bucket seats. Fat steering wheel. Massive front end extending deep into my horizon and POV of the road.  Turn the ignition, throaty rumble... a perpetual sound in the background like a jet flame roaring inside a metal drum. Ahhhh.... ease foot onto accelerator and pull away.  Couple of residential streets, slow slow slow, then merge with main flow of traffic. Five minutes later I'm popping out the East edge of the city... country roads... foot to floor, engine roar, acceleration grabs me physically, a bear hug, I'm grinning... loving it. Whooooo-hooooo tight bends, narrow corners, trees rushing past, climbing higher... emerging onto a thin ribbon of asphalt running along the crest of a hill, views of open countryside flashing past below.

It's only a short drive. I'm almost tempted to turn around and do it again.

I'm sure the thrill will fade over time, so right now I'm simply revelling in it.

Djr

Writing and trying to get back into the groove


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

09:45 GMT, Saturday 8th August 2009. Listening to "$50 Pistol" by Hybrid on my MP3 player.  Sitting at the oak refectory table, the cavernous room glowing with pale yellow sunlight streaming in through the skylights.  Yesterday was a strange day.  I started to think about all the people I "should" get in touch with whilst being up here and then got caught in a mental tussle with my desire to get back to writing.  The result was me falling out with myself.  I wasted the morning sitting around doing nothing... feeling grumpy.  Eventually I headed out for a walk but then the lingering trace of man-flu had me breaking out into a cold sweat and feeling odd, and a little voice in my head harping on suggesting I'd be better served going back home and... writing.  I wandered around, not particularly happy, for a while then found a cafe, touched down with a strong Americano and began pulling together notes for Dog Eat Dog.  Another annoyance, the novel is ready to write but I've got and thought-up this need for a series of blog entries, inserted between chapters, telling a seperate story within the story.  It's a challenge and a pain, but I feel I should give it a go.  

I got home and somehow the afternoon didn't yeild any creativity.  I went for a 4 mile walk.  I came home again and ended-up drinking half a bottle of wine and watching shite TV until after midnight. Great use of your time, Dave, well done mate.

So I've just set my alarm to go off in 45.  Then I'll take  15 minute snooze and get back to it.  DaVinci method, can you blow a gentle breath onto the embers of my creativity and bring back the blaze I once enjoyed?

Back in Newcastle

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

10:43 GMT, Friday 7th August 2009.  Listening to Linkin Park on my MP3 player; unable to play music through my battered laptop.  Sitting at the oak refectory table in a flood of sunlight filtered through heavy cloud... a misty white effect.  The house is utterly silent.  Mum's upstairs: enjoying a coffee and "her time".  My sister's spending a month in the South of France... taking a break from being a carer.  The fact she can is a testatment to how positive our mum's health is right now.  

I'm feeling a little disorientated. A combination of things.  I've been coming up to Newcastle so often this year, that I can't quite recall when I was actually last here... my memories of each visit are just a seamless blurr; I kow it's been longer than usual.  Being here so abruptly, thanks to the fact I'm flying, after the manic rush of the past few weeks... the current ongoing intensity of work, especially the past 8 days since I've been acting head of department; and entertaining so many people during the gathering of the Fellowship.  I'm also disorientated because I'm out of my writing groove. At last.  But sitting here, in the still silence of the house, that Pavlovian auto-suggestion is tugging at my neurons: you should be writing, you should be writing.

Maybe I'l get back into it. Or maybe I'll just go for an 8 mile walk.  *smiles*

I'm currently reading "I Am Legend" by Richard Matheson; I'm really enjoying it, and pretty impressed by the fact it was penned way back in the early 1950's.

Oooo, the sun has burned through the clouds.  No blue sky yet but the light is rich and golden... pouring through the skylights and reflecting off floors of polished pacific oak.

I woke up this morning thinking about my car.  Is that sad?  I don't know.  I've never experienced anything like this before, dwelling on material objects.  Everytime I left work this week and made my way to the car park, my guts have tightened up with excitement.

Right, time to grab a shower, freshen up, knock back another black coffee, then get out and about.

The Lovers, Ace of Cups, The Magician

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

 

13:01 GMT, Tuesday 4th August 2009.  Listening to tracks by my new favourite band, Marsheaux: I discovered them by random on Play.com, heard one track and went and bought every album I could find. Interestingly, some of the guys/gals here at work, within earshot of the beefy speakers either side of my PC, reacted as soon as they heard it… everyone went, “Wow, I don’t know what this is but I like it.”

 

So, check em out.

 

Marsheaux

 

It’s been a good day.

 

Woke up just after 4 A.M., just pinged awake.  I’m still fighting my creative spark / burnout so closed down all idea of going upstairs to the Sky Bunker to write. Instead I left Jo asleep, pulled on Starsky and my thick Norwegian socks, padded downstairs, brewed a mug of tea and watched TV for an hour. Back to bed and a delicious snooze snuggle with m’lady.

 

She was up and out by 6.30 to catch a train North.

 

I got up again, brewed another mug of tea and ran a bath for a hot soak.

 

I ended up slipping, like some old fool, and nearly brained myself on tiles and cast iron.  Amazing how fast it happened, and how unexpected.  Luckily I fell back into the water.  A huge Archimedes-style cry and crash of water sloshing out over the sides.  Then me lying there, stunned, and wondering if I was going to pass out and drown.

 

Did a three-card spread up in the Sky Bunker.  What a wonderful set of cards to appear. Very appropriate to my current state of mind. 

 

I was out the house before 7.30.

 

Flew to Bath in the Rocket.

 

I’m enjoying that euphoric trippy vibe that comes with recovery from flu. 

 

I sense a creative surge is approaching.  So, I intend to enjoy these “days off” for as long as possible. Sunday I started to watch Twin Peaks, right from the very start. Wow… I’d forgotten how bloody fantastic they are.  It’s aged really well; freaky to think I first started watching this back when I was living in Osborne Avenue, in Newcastle (1990).  Of course, the primary memory association with Twin Peaks are the first months living in the Happy Flat, with Vega$ living downstairs. Lazy summer mornings, me playing “The Girl From Ipanema” out of my tiny kitchen window… prompting Vega$ to have the coffee ready by time I made my way downstairs.  Vega$ and I started to watch an episode or two a night, usually ending with him making Horlicks and me zonking out like some old fart on his sofa.  *smiles* Good memories.

 

Djr

Man flu - Day 5 - and the Fellowship winds down

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

09:24 GMT, Sunday 2nd August 2009.  Listening to "My brain is like a sieve" by Thomas Dolby.  Not far from the truth right now.  My head's full of mucus.  I feel like I've bruised my lungs with all the coughing.  My nostrils are raw from blowing my nose and there's a permanent crust of semi-dry snot on the inside ridges.  Attractive, not.

I've been suffering from this thing since Wednesday.  Not entering that slightly pleasant trippy stage. 

Oj and her sister left with Us Dave a couple hours ago, taking him to the airport for his return to New York. His departure draws a line under 10 days of the Fellowship gathering here in Bristol. It's been fantastic.

We took Us Dave to our "local" pub, an isolated country pile of stones with diamond-leaded windows, about 4 miles away.  I took the Rocket and had a chance to properly floor-it for the first time since getting it on Monday night.  Wow.  The acceleration just kept climbing.  My balls shrank inside their warm inner region and adrenaline flooded my system.  By time I parked up at the pub I had a grin that went round my face a couple times. So, thanks to everybody who has ever purchased one of my books or bought into Yellow Dawn.  You've helped me pluck one of my daydreams from fantasy to reality.  Here it is, my Rocket, or Pug as some people now call it:



Now that July has been and gone, I've been able to select a winner for my "July Give Away".  The winner was a chap from the US called Chris, one of the fans from my facebook page has won himself a novel of choice, or a Yellow Dawn rulebook.

Right... it's glorious sunshine outside; the first time in over a week.  I suppose I should crawl back into bed and try to sleep this thing off,  but I'm going to head over to Coffee #1 on Gloucester Road instead.

Laters

Djr



Silver Rocket, Mental Reflections

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦ 17:51 GMT, Thursday 30th July 2009. Just woken up (again), this time by the lances of bright sunbeams stabbing through a gap in the heavy curtains. Earlier I was woken by a clamorous rumbling crash of thunder. The weather is fekked.

I've got man-flu. Took today off work. No energy and a collection of razors slicing away the soft flesh inside my throat. So I've been drifting between deep sleep, partial wakefulness kind of tossing and turning and moments of feeling really alert and awake... I get up, make a cup of tea and then the energy drains away again. And so back to bed. Right now I'm in a wakeful state; wrapped in Starsky, T-shirt, unshaved and hair sticking up in random tufts. I smell of sweat but fek it, I'm ill.

I'm listening to a track from the album "Micro-Phonies" by Cabert Voltaire; I'm actually playing the viny record because my badly resurrected laptop can no longer play music. Ramona left the UK this morning, heading back to New York. Kelvin left at lunchtime, seeing his parents before returning to Madrid in Spain. I'd wanted to go with Jo to see them off but was in no condition. Zed is bouncing off to various parts of Europe for the next few weeks, with several trips back to Bristol before returning home to Sydney, Australia. US Dave has been in Edinburgh since yesterday, I drove him to Bristol airport at 5AM, in the Rocket; he's due to return tomorrow night, continuing his stay with us until Sunday...when he flies back to New York. And then it's all over. For a while at least.

It's been a manic few weeks. Cornwall with my mum, OJ and my sister. Then the stress of my laptop going into meltdown and my car, Swampy, suffering a fatal dose of Old Age. And then a week of The Fellowship all getting together; big nights in the house, or car loads of people heading in convoy to enjoy a gathering somewhere... staying up until 3 A.M. and feeling my body getting a battering. It's nice to be sitting up here in the Sky Bunker with a bit of solo time. Sunlight flooding through the glass canopy behind me, gleaming off the blue-painted walls and the long expanse of low sloping ceiling. It's been great having so many people staying in the house for all these days, and I reckon it'll be a bit weird when US Dave's gone and suddenly the house is empty. Just Oj and I and lots of vacant rooms.

So I got a new car to replace Swampy. BMW Z3. Mint condition. I'm still feeling rather overwhelmed and blown away. I've wanted one of these for more than a decade, and suddenly, in a swirl of serendipity, I'm able to get one. I went to pick the car up Monday night. I'd not actually seen it yet... part of the way Terry operates... I just trusted his opinion/judgement and let him spend the money. Pulling up outside Terry's house I saw Swampy... and then I looked left, to the bottom of Terry's steep driveway and saw this silver gleaming thing. Oh My God, a voice in my brain uttered. Terry drove it out onto the street and then left me to it. I can only describe it as an out of body experience. Okay... true, it's ONLY a car. But... it's also the achievement of a dream. And a major upgrade from my 19 year old Nissan Micra. I'm now sitting in a convertible, two-seater sports car, with the roof down, a huge front end stretching away before me, and a throaty rumble when I put the pedal down. Holy shit. It's like it isn't me driving this thing. I feel like I'm observing somebody else at the wheel. I had a surreal moment of "Being John Malkovitch". I glance at the unfamiliar dashboard - big dial displays; my hands on the fat steering wheel; at the black leather seats; at the new stereo with the MP3 connector; at my massive grin reflected back at me from the rear-view mirror. All these experiences are flooding into my brain through sight, sound and touch... even the smell, a mixture of engine oil, leather and the contents of the breeze flowing over the windshield and through my hair.

The moment brought me to reflect on where I was 2 years ago. August 2007. I'd reached the end of a massive phase of my life, a phase that started in 2005 when I left the Agency. Two years ago I'd achieved a dream... my novels published, but, I was without a job and my savings were gone. I can recall dropping Kelvin off at Bristol airport, it was the end of another gathering of the Fellowship, and we spent some time supping coffee at the little cafe there. I had no money and was starting to pay my mortgage on a credit card. Things were a little tense and the future uncertain. I prayed that something good would happen. Kelvin departed back to Madrid and I entered a grey period of several weeks. Then in a dream-like moment (which Nice Guy Tony got to witness, up here in the Sky Bunker) I got a phone call from a recruitment agency to say I'd got the job: a job that had found me, in a company I'd actually wanted to work for. That was October 2007 and suddenly my life was back on track, a new paradigm established, a positive course...

I'm grateful for these good moments.

Other recent memories: watching LET THE RIGHT ONE IN, with English subtitles, in the front room of Cosy Castle, a bottle of red wine and glasses of cognac... and a roaring fire to ward off the chill of the rain outside. An evening convoy drive to Wells, to the luxury of Glencott House, a Jacobean mansion on the edge of the river Axe where it emerges from the mystical caverns of Wookey Hole. Passing between the stone gateposts we trundled down a narrow sweeping drive, through ancient trees... there's a grand piano in the forest; there's chandeliers hanging from branches and bizarre, eerie and grotesque statues placed where they sneak up on you and surprise you. A fabulous evening of excellent company and food. I'm also enjoying stepping away from the writing. I've been on a manic creative drive for several years straight. I'm still working on some ideas and projects, but, a slower pace for now, eh? Two more days and then I'll be randomly selecting a winner for the July Giveaway: somebody gets a novel or yellow dawn rulebook for recommending friends to become fans of my Facebook page.

Right, time to crawl back into bed.

9 Swords, Knight of Cups, The Magician.

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

03:37 GMT, Thursday 23rd July 2009.  I'm back, sort of.  I managed to resurrect the laptop back to a semblance of life but it's like some feeble suffering victim of a necromancer.  I'm going to have to buy a new one.  I dropped my car off with my mechanic bloke Tuesday night... had a funny feeling I wouldn't be seeing the old girl again.  Bloke rang me Wednesday morning and said he'd given it a buzz around the block, intending to get a feel for what might be wrong with it before heading over to the MOT station.  He didn't bother with the MOT station and told me it was the most dangerous car he'd ever driven. So, I'm got to buy a new car too.

I was in a bit of a dark mood last night.  But in the scheme of things, its a big "SO WHAT?" and things could have been much worse.  I could have lost all my data on the laptop. The car could have killed me.

So I'm going through the 9 Swords, and I'm certainly embodying the traits of the Knight of Cups... but the Knight also provides a clue for how to pull myself out of this slump; advice and direction for achieving the Magician.

It was nice to wake up at 3 A.M. again, like old times... but the spark just wasn't there.  I didn't head upstairs into the Sky Bunker with a grin of delight to work away on my writing in the best hours of the day.  I'm the living dead.  Drained.  

So I'm going to shut down for a while.  Take a few weeks off. Buy a PS3, play games, meet up with friends... try and take it easy.  Time to take control of my life instead of running on an automatic routine that was configured for maximum creative output.  

Some good things to look forward to: Ramona & US Dave are over from New York tomorrow morning; Kelvin is over from Madrid tomorrow night; Zed is already over from Sydney, but my broken car precluded a rendezvous, so we'll all be hooking up at various points over the next few days.

Right, time to finish this mug of tea then catch some zzzzz's before work.

Djr


The Stress of these broken machines


¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

17:35 GMT, Monday 20th July 2009.  My laptop is still broken. My car is not safe to drive.  I’ve got handwritten notes stacking up on sheets of paper, ideas backlogging and squashing together. Not being able to write and work on my stuff is driving me crazy.  A dysfunctional computer for me is like walking around with my front teeth missing; my tongue probing the gaps where they ought to be… depression, stress and anxiety jabs my nervous system. I’m not a happy camper.  Car was supposed to be going into the garage tonight but it’s been pushed back a day… which means yet another day riding the bus between Bristol and Bath, suffering snotty school kids jabbering, posing and bullying each other at high volume, high pitch. Grrrr.

All my creative projects are slipping now.  I am really fekked off, tired from stressing and can only look forward to a point where everything works again.

One good thing happened this weekend. Woke up late Sunday morning and discovered it hammering done with rain.  I grabbed my jacket, tied up my heavy duty walking boots, packed a wind/rain proof kagool and took the bus into town.  Bounced between a couple cafes, writing notes and avoiding the rain… then decided to do the harbourside walk. 3 miles.  One mile in, I’m heading towards Hotwells and I’m looking down the barrel of the Avon Gorge… the hills of Ashton Court are only vaguely visible, rapidly vanishing within a moving grey squall… a solid wall of greyness that was rapidly heading in my direction. Shit!  I dropped my bag onto a bench, dragged out my snood, started to unpack the kagool when the first drops of rain started to hit me. Two seconds later I’ve got one arm into the kagool, slipping it on over my waxed black jacket and it was as though somebody had thrown a bucket of water over me.  The downpour was incredible.  I span round to keep my back to the rain as I struggled to get my other arm into the kagool.  The intensity of the rain was incredible. I zipped up, pulled the hood up over my cap and tied the cords around my chin. Turned round and gasped at the increasing density of rain and speed of the wind.  I staggered forward, grinning like a fool in the onslaught.  After a few strides I had a waterfall pouring off the stiff peak of my cap and my jeans where glistening, shiny and wet.  I kept walking.  My waterproof walking boots began seeping water with every stride.  My waterproof kagool began to leak.  My waxed jacket failed to protect me.  

Then it was gone.  The sky turned blue. Hot sun shone down. I began to melt.

30 minutes later I was back at my starting point, the Arnolfini café, and the sky had turned grey again as another block of rain hurled itself down the barrel of Avon Gorge and ripped through the harbour area.  I stepped into the café, asked for a pint of that dark Czech beer “for outside”.  The barman glanced at the heavy rain beyond the windows and then looked at me like I was mad.  I smiled, “I’m already soaked. If I sit in here I’ll just steam up.”

So I got my beer in a plastic pint glass, and a sandwich and stood outside in the pouring rain, enjoying the experience.

Then Jo arrived on cue to pick me up. Back home, strip off wet clothes, into hot bath with a mug of fresh coffee… then out and slipping into warm dry clothes. Fab.

Finally bit of joy, my good friend and soul-brother Mr Vega$, aka Hiab_x has pointed me to this video of a couple of musical icons.
Gary Numan and NIN; two figures who’ve had megalithic influence over my writing and imagination past three decades.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FncsSgbH2U4&NR=1

Beautiful. Just beautiful.

David

 

Bad karma chews my ass. Yellow Dawn - next steps.

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

12:16 GMT, Friday 17th July 2009.  A fast week.  A bit stressy. Driving out of Bath from work on Wednesday night I could hear a strange sound from the car, a very bad strange sound.  I pulled over by Kelston Park and found a chunk of metal dragging underneath.  It’s already booked into a garage on Monday for an MOT so hopefully nothing more will fall off before then.  I could be looking at having to buy a new car.  Ouch.   Then later the same night, something or somebody decided to vaporise my laptop; virus or hack I don’t know but the thing is fekked.  Luckily I’ve got recent back-ups, but I’m going to have to fork out to get it fixed or replaced.  So my penny jar is getting hammered this month.  Am I paying for some bad karma somewhere?

Slow progress with “Age of Hastur” supplement since getting back from Cornwall, mainly down to lot of social engagements or going out walking after work… Harbour route, 6 miles at a time.  Oh yeah, and now having no laptop to work on.  Grrrrr.

I met up with Nice Guy Tony and Simon P last night.  A couple of beers sitting up in the newly “expanded”  Sky Bunker. Vurrrry nyce.  Tony and I discussed the Age of Hastur concept.  I’m not going to replace the existing Dead City / Dead Zone construct within the primary rulebook; that was never my intention.  This ties into the reason I didn’t provide a detailed in depth definition of “what is the Age of Hastur” within the rulebook in the first place; I wanted to leave things fluid, open to interpretation and most important, create enough narrative space to explore the ideas outside of the main rules.

Dead Cities / Dead Zones already have one optional expansion, called Bile Weed; the Age of Hastur will be something in this vein, flexible enough to be used by GM’s occasionally or as a global phenomenon sweeping the ruined Earth in a new wave of terror and peril.

Discussions with Tony about Yellow Dawn also explored the idea of me releasing a free-to-download version of the game, containing a “lite” version of the rules.  I’m also considering breaking the rulebook up into smaller books, focussing on the major sell-points of Yellow Dawn:
  • The World of Yellow Dawn ¦ background, organisations, politics
  • Dead City runs ¦ easy to spawn adventures, much like “dungeon crawls” in D&D
  • First Contact System ¦ a lot of fast and effective social interaction rules, allowing characters to excel through interpersonal skills
  • Building Settlements & Making Things ¦ applying your tech skills on resources you’ve bought or scavenged
  • Occult & Mythos ¦ the Quantisphere and how the “Cthulhu Mythos” is separate from Angels/Demons & human sorcerers practising the occult.

These are just discussions at the moment and any decision to move ahead with this stuff will be based around the next novel, Dog Eat Dog. Do I push it back, yet again, for some Yellow Dawn stuff or do I crack on and write it once I’ve finished the Age of Hastur supplement?  I think the latter is best.

The big revision of Iron Man Project is about 2/3rds done.  I’ve finished going through the book, I just need to transcribe my notes to the manuscript.  But of course, I need a laptop to do that.  

All the walking has delivered the desired result. Remember back in May I mentioned my weight hit 13 Stone and thought, damn, I’m getting chubby, so started looking into this whole calorie thing.  I’m 6ft 1” with a normal weight of 12 Stone.  I set myself a goal of dropping a stone in 3 months by reducing calorie intake by 3,500 a week.  I could either skip 2 days of food every week, or walk 35 miles every week; neither struck me as pleasant so a natural compromise was found. Anyway, the weight dropped off so fast I've started munching Indian curry or Fish & Chips some lunchtimes just to stop myself turning into a stick.

Cornwall

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

08:18 GMT, Monday 13th July 2009.  Back in reality since departing Tuesday night last week.  Sat at my desk, playing the album by La Roux which has become a soundtrack for this period.  My mum and sister flew down from Newcastle last Tuesday.  A fun evening indoors then croissants and coffee for breakfast.  A slow, lazy start. Then pile everything into car and head further South and further West. Through Devon and into Cornwall. Roads shrink to tracks barely wide-enough to squeeze a car through with tall hedgerows either side and dense overhanging tree limbs increasing the sense of being caught in some tunnel.  Huh, I’ve just realised I could write a wee novel on every moment percolating through my memory right now… so here’s some highlights.

Around 4pm we arrived at the hotel.  It was just beyond a small village ominously enough called Helland, right on the edge of the Moors. Before we got there I was thinking, Oh God, please don’t be like the Leviathan hotel in New Zealand… a real horror show, but, no, my slight fears were totally unfounded.  As soon as we finished the 20% incline, twisting round and round the tight curves of a hill, we pulled off the narrow road through twin stone gateposts onto a vast gravel drive and caught sight of the wonderful stone structure sitting astride a level area with lawn and forested grounds sloping away.  I thought of Corso, in the 9th Gate, arriving at the Chateau St. Martin.  We parked up and wandered across to the front door.  No sight of any reception.  It didn’t seem like a hotel at all. Did we have the right place?  The door was locked.  A sign said, “Between Noon and 4pm please ring bell”.  So we did.  Then a very attractive Italian woman comes down, greets us, welcomes us, and guides us upstairs… through amazing high-ceilinged rooms, up a gargantuan oak staircase, around a passageway and up smaller stairs into the roof area.   There were only two rooms up here, both massive, with en-suite shower/bathroom, and a comfortable lounge attached to each.  The windows overlooked the grounds, the forest descending the hill and climbing up the other side of the close valley… hills.. forest.. sky… clouds. Beautiful. Perfect. We were here for the next four nights.  

The hotel is called  Tredethy Country House, postcode, PL30 4QS

Google it and you’ll get images and a map view of the surrounding terrain.

It’s owned and run by Marco and his wife.

It’s not a glossy corporate brochure.  It’s a well-appointed house with crumpled edges: and it’s these things that give it so much character.

Marco isn’t a servile English gent.  He’s a proud man who works his arse off to run the place very well with a small crew.  He can come across as blunt but he's just being direct and very much left-field.  He’s a character that slots into the vibe of the place.  I spent a lot of time downstairs in one of the lounges chatting with him, often late into the night and I was genuinely sad to say goodbye at the end of the trip.    

When I wasn’t chatting with Marco, or out bouncing around Cornwall with Jo, Mum and Sis, I spent every morning and every evening camped in a big armchair by a tall narrow window overlooking the grounds, with a supply of coffee and my paper notepad and print outs in my lap.  I’ve been working on the next phase for Yellow Dawn, which is the idea of the Age of Hastur actually beginning: the past 10 years, since Yellow Dawn actually happened, was a lull before the storm.  A lot of good ideas but it means pushing back starting Dog Eat Dog (again!) until I can get all the concepts down in black and white.  Not a bad thing though, as it means I’ll be able to weave these fleshed out ideas into the book.

So a lot of good memories:

Walking down to Helland along the narrow, sharply winding, 20% descent, road, where the overarching tree canopy became so dense at times, it was like walking into night-like gloom… occasionally pierced by  beams of golden sunlight. A bit hairy when a car came whizzing along.


Taking mum to Padstow and seeing the delight glowing within her eyes, beaming from the smile curving her lips.  All her life she’s wanted to see Cornwall, and now she’s here.  Mum flung her arms wide and walked along with a joyous swagger in her hips.  It was a brilliant moment.  I even took a photo. :o)


1st night in hotel, getting a double-whisky from the small, very cosy bar (a serving hatch in a wall), settling down in an armchair with the alcohol hitting my system. Bliss.

Going to Tintadgel Castle.  Clambering around the ruins perched on the edges of some fabulous cliffs. Descending steps that dropped almost vertically for a 100 metres or so.

2nd afternoon at the hotel.  Glorious sunshine.  My sister and I playing with a Frisbee on the manicured lawns in front of the country house.  Then Marco’s family dog appeared on the scene… a small speed demon with a great human intelligence and a hunger for playing games.  The dog had me running ragged to the point where I thought my heart and lungs were going to explode.  I looked up at one point and saw lots of faces in different windows, all watching us, all smiling.  Later in the afternoon I lay back in the grass and watched big fluffy clouds skimming the forested horizon, listening to La Roux and loving the whole 80s vibe.

Driving to Mevigissy in the rain. Impossibly narrow roads, cars and vans trying to squeeze between ancient stone buildings, BOTH WAYS?!!?, and climbing an impossibly steep cliff with houses either side… just an insane drive.  Parking up and wandering through the old fishing village; pungent smell of seaweed by the harbour.  Mum, Sis and Jo finding a café whilst I clipped in my headphones and went striding.  I found myself at the end of a stone pier, standing in the rain, with nothing but the Atlantic Ocean around me. Fantastic. Thoughtful.

Stopping off at Reformel Castle on the way back from Mevigissy, simply because I'd seen it in a brochure in a cafe there and thought, cool, I'd like to see that. And was able to plot a route back that took us by it.

Going to a port further West from Newquay, on the north coast of Cornwall.  More rain which didn’t even dent our high spirits.  Mum bought a bright red plastic mac. She called it a Kagoogull, rather than a kagool.  Laughter all around and the name stuck.  All of us found a place with a ton of delicious looking pasties piled up in the window.  We took our hot wares back out into the rain and huddled in a doorway, munching with smiles on our rain-soaked faces. I’d grabbed a sausage roll.   It was the best sausage roll…ever.  The gang split up. I clipped in headphones and went striding across vast beach. Surfers everywhere.  Rain came down harder.  I waded through a stream of water, shin deep but not caring.  Jagged cliffs, gaping holes carved by the sea. Click click click goes my camera.

Back to Padstow one afternoon. More rain. Buying fish and chips from Rick Stein’s.  I was cynical but they turned out to be the best fish and chips I’d ever had.  We sat in the car, facing the sea, windows steaming up, smell of vinegar… we were all grinning.

A couple of months ago my mum was starving to death, literally, because her cancer was closing off her gullet.  A blast of radiotherapy and a dose of steroids and she’s making a remarkable and fantastic improvement.  She ate and ate and ate.  Hopefully she’ll get back up to a normal weight soon.

That’s it for now. Those who know where to look will find photos appearing over the next couple of weeks.

Djr

Belly of an Architect and deep recollections

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

00:11 GMT, wednesday 8th July 2009.  No sky above my head.  I've moved everything around.  The big glass canopy is now some distance behind me.  I've tucked my desk into a corner, between a main wall and the sharp downward slope of the roof. Tres cosy.  My mum and my sister arrived in Bristol tonight.  In the 18 years I've been living in Bristol, it's only my mum's 2nd visit; last time was 3 years ago; it goes to show the transformation in our troubled relationship over recent years. It's been a bloody good night.  Tomorrow we're all driving down to Cornwall for a few days.  Mum's always wanted to see Cornwall before she dies.  Time caught up with her I guess.  She said to me tonight, with a cheeky and delighted smile, that she never thought this day would actually come.

Everyone's in bed now.  I'm up here in my "den".  With the big re-arrange of furniture and stuff I'm now able to play my bulky collection of old vinyl records.  I flipped through several stacks and one record jumped out at me; I put it on, grabbed a seat in the big armchair with the bottle green velvet upholstery that followed me from the Happy Flat... it's the soundtrack to a film that blew me away back in the late 1980's, called "The Belly of an Architect".  The music is by Wim Mertens and just incredible. Anyhows, I put it on and was immediately transported back in time to the last day I spent in Newcastle, before relocating here to Bristol...it was October 1991.  A lot of emotions just flooded through me.  It wasn't like I was feeling sad, or happy... just, reflective and appreciating the depth of the recollections and all the emotions that come with them.  Does that make sense?

No work for me until Monday, so I'm staying up late, enjoying the wee hours and getting things done.

No web access from tomorrow though. Cornwall and zero technology. Catch y'all beyond the Dark Side of the Moon.

Djr

Close to burnout

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦ 12:39 GMT, Monday 6th July 2009.  Sat at my desk, headphones on, listening to "Anywhere Out of the World" by Dead Can Dance, trying to maintain a chilled state of mind.  But there's so much going on.  Work is mental... on top of all the little day to day jobs, my big project is now gathering increasing momentum, passing through the initiation phase into Information Architecture and Design...about to launch off requests for Editorial Strategies from 18 different editorial teams.  A lot of compiling and analysis ahead.

So I'm grabbing some time to retreat into my lunch-hour-shell and crack on with my stuff.

The past few days have seen me divert my creative energies from writing new material, to promoting the existing material.  I'm running a prize draw where at the end of July I'll give away one of my novels, or the Yellow Dawn rulebook.  Check out this link for more info:  http://www.davidjrodger.com/win1.htm

Saturday was a scheduled Yellow Dawn session. An all-dayer. I was up at 5 A.M. made a mug of tea, went up into the Sky Bunker, started getting on with stuff and then Zonk... I was poleaxed by an overwhelming tiredness.  I felt nauseas with exhaustion.  I needed to sleep. I shuffled back down to the main bedroom and sparked out.  Woke up at 10 A.M. and thought, "God, there's no way I can do today."

I pulled myself out of bed, threw on some clothes and drove in a dangerous mental fog to Gloucester Road. Found a cafe and settled down with a mug of strong coffee. Got my thoughts together.  Eased away from the panic that I was going to have a bunch of players turn up and not have a scenario ready.  Ideas sparkled and my pen started flowing across notepaper.

The game session was great fun.  Intense and gripping as the characters tried to deal with a potential serial killer and instead found themselves besieged by some sort of monstrous winged entity.  

Afterwards three of us headed to a local bar / lounge and spent three hours drinking and shooting the breeze, ending the night with some huge steaks.  Bloody lovely.

There was a lot of discussion about Yellow Dawn.  A raft of positive words bordering on praise that gave me a delightful feeling of being pleased.  We also discussed the criticisms that have cropped up recently, from players and from places like the King In Yellow Wiki page.  I need to stress here that these criticisms are welcome, if not enjoyed for the fact I appreciate anybody taking the time to explain how things can be improved.  The main consequence of all this talking was my resolve to bring in more of Hastur, into the Age of Hastur.

It's something I'd planned to do in the future once the game had grown but I've realised it would be best do some of this now, before I start writing the first Yellow Dawn novel, Dog Eat Dog, as I'd like to bring in these ideas into the book too.    

Sunday woke up early feeling refreshed but in no mood for spending a day on my laptop.  The list of stuff that I needed to do could wait, I decided.  The morning was spent ripping out weeds from the garden. Something you put off again and again but once you start you actually enjoy getting into the swing of things.  Mugs of tea, wearing old clothes and a couple of hours squatting in the garden moving in crab-like motions whilst stuffing a bizarre range of ugly spiky and wispy fronds and tendrils into black bin liners.

Jo headed out with her twin sister for the afternoon.  I decided to clean the Sky Bunker. This turned into a 5 hour marathon furniture moving, sorting, dusting, vacuuming, and re-arranging session.  By time Sunday evening came round I had dragged the coffee table out of the downstairs lounge, up two flights of stairs, into my room... and somehow still managed to double the floor-space available.  It's great.  And good timing too as this month sees a gathering of the Old Gang.  People from Sydney, New York and Madrid are converging on Bristol for a week.  The house is going to be busy.

Djr



The heat continues, plus a little PR pitstop


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

20:30 GMT, Thursday 2nd July.  Blue sky crammed with dense white cloud visible in glass canopy above my head.  Pleasant summer evening light.  Not so pleaseant ultra humidity.  I've got the canopy cranked wide open.  A feeble cool breeze but it's better than nothing.  Jesus what a day.  I've been gradually evaporating.  Jo pulled up outside the house tonight, rang me and said, throw something on your feet and meet me outside... we're hitting the town.  Just got back from a couple cold beers at the Boca Bar: very very nice.

I've started a mini advertising campaign on Facebook today.  Hoping to attract some like minded souls to my Facebook page and generate enough critical mass to have a place where ideas can combust and evolve.  Not cheap but... it's time I spent some time / money on PR rather than just writing writing writing writing...

David J Rodger Facebook Page

I need support.

I need people to spread the word... if they believe in me.

Spoke with one of the Director's at the media company I work at; he's something of an online guru, big respect for his ideas: I asked for advice about Yellow Dawn and making it more accessible. A plan is shaping up.

I've just written up the bug fixes for Killer Kloo Doo after getting murdered by Hagen during playtesting last night.  A lot of people are downloading it so here's the fixed version (V3.0)

Grab Version 3.0>

Djr

Heat Wave, Killer Kloo Doo, Twitter


¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

23:28 GMT, Wednesday 1st July 2009.  Absolutely melting here.  Sitting beneath black sky visible through glass canopy above my head; portal kept shut despite desire for coolish breeze from outside due to likely invasion by moths and other bugs attracted by lights here.  Deep red lava lamp and several small 40w lamps casting mellow pools of tarnished glow. I'm playing Afterhours by "Outcast", probably not the Outcast you're thinking of... this group has haunting female vocals, comes from album OUT OF TUNE, released some time around 1996 or 1997: memories of Michelle Gordon and the months following the end of writing God Seed.

I've just got back from Hagen's pad.  A 30 minute drive away, heading from the outer East edge of the city, weaving in and out to near the outer North edge... not a pleasant drive in this heat but there was an ice cold can of beer waiting for me, and Hagen's set up some garden furniture on the cracked and scaberous concrete patch outside the door of his place... tucked away from the main street within a curious little yard.  We play-tested Killer Kloo Doo and the Advanced Rules for Cluedo: simple enough concept. Take your existing Cluedo board game, add in a pack of ordinary playing card, and use all the existing peice but with new rules, hey presto, you've got a brand new game.

The play test went very well.  The new rules give it some nail-biting tension in places. Very pleased, despite being murdered by Hagen.  He laughed and said, "Well you can't complain, you wrote the rules that let me do that to you."

Pah.

Anyhow, I've discovered a couple points that need to be refined so hopefully get Version 3.0 up on the site by Friday.

I'm back into using Twitter. Love hash-tags and finding lots of interesting people to follow.
http://twitter.com/davidjrodger


I'm having thoughts about a possible next step for Yellow Dawn.  I don't feel I have enough people playing it to create any sort of solid fan base; there's no critical mass.  I'm thinking about releasing the rulebook as a PDF download, no charge, possibly scaled down, Yellow Dawn Lite sort of thing.  Not sure.  I put so much bloody effort into creating Yellow Dawn part of me feels giving it away is the wrong move: but, if it results in more people playing it... getting into the world?  I'm talking with the play-test group and my publicist in the States... bouncing a few ideas around.  Watch this space.

Djr








Starsky in the washing machine - bruised dumpling weekend

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦


11:26 GMT, Saturday 27th June 2009.  "Song of Life" by Leftfield is playing on laptop via random.  Sunlight is glowing off the walls for some moments, alternating with moments when big fluffy white clouds drift across...visible through the glass canopy above my head... changing the quality of the light.  There's a cool breeze pushing away the recent humidity; pressure's dropping.  A promise of rain.  It's a good weekend to spend indoors... something Jo and I have planned to do.  It's what we call a "bruised dumpling" weekend.  We no longer recall why we call it that but it comes to mean quality time together, an island of "us" time in the general flow of busy weekends, holidays and regular time apart doing our own thing.

Despite the cooling temperatures outsides, the house is still warm enough for me to dispense with Starsky, the faithful big-collar cardigan of the past 15 years... so he's now in the washing machine.  A big moment for something potentially delicate.

Of course, a bruised dumpling weekend doesn't mean I won't be spending hours up here locked away in the Sky Bunker.  Too much to get on with to ignore it.

I got to speak with an old-time friend, Andy C, this week.  I met Andy back in the Agency days, around 1999.  Great to catch-up again and definately plans for a rendezvous in London some time sooner than later, but I was reminded about how long it's really been since we last hung out when he asked me how my dad was.  Christ.  My Dad died back in 2006.  Another symptom of how much I've been ignoring my social network by focussing on my bloody writing.

Yesterday lunchtime I did some googlebating, specifically on Yellow Dawn.  I found a wikia page had been created about it. It’s always slightly surreal reading what other people think of your work.
 

http://kinginyellow.wikia.com/wiki/Yellow_Dawn_RPG


There’s some very valid criticism about the lack of content for the “Carcosa Mythos”, particularly when you consider the full title of the game is Yellow Dawn – The Age of Hastur.  It’s ironic because it was only last weekend, whilst doing one of my 7 mile hikes around Jesus Mound, that I was thinking up a new Dead City bolt-on for the game, specifically something involving the Carcosa Mythos, creating “overlaps” between our world and the realm of the King in Yellow. It will have to wait though: I’m currently blazing through the revised version of Iron Man Project and gearing up to start work on Dog Eat Dog.  

Hopefully, I’m not viewed as guilty of mis-selling something.  Still, it’s rewarding to see positive words and comments from other people about something I’ve sweated over.

Djr

R.I.P. Mr Jackson

A strange moment.

A point to reflect on your own mortality.

For me, I remember 1982.

Peace

Djr

Monday Morning in Bubble World


¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

09:50 GMT, Monday 22nd June 2009.  Sitting up on the sofa bed in "dads" room.  Laptop on a big Readers Digest world atlas that's resting on my thighs, legs outstretched, one foot crossed over the other, I can just see my big toe poking out above the screen of the laptop.  Beyond that, some open space and then the muslin drapes covering the square-latticed French doors that lead out onto the vast decking.  The partition with the neighbours has a break in it, creating a continuous boardwalk effect, into their garden behind their house.  I'll be walking along there in about 8 minutes, for a game of "Fury Of Dracula" with Pete, after I've thrown on some big Norwegian slippers... currently wearing a white T-Shirt come pyjama top, and a thick white towel wrapped around my waist to conceal those nether bits.

*pauses to sip dregs of cooling mug of tea*

It's been a great weekend and I'm glad I took an extra day off work to stay for today.

I flew up on Thursday night, straight after work, and got here only five minutes after Jo, who drove up.  She'd tried to glimpse my plane coming in as she barrelled up the M1 Motorway but never saw me.

Friday was mum's birthday.  Quite probably her last but I didn't dwell on that.  A big gathering of old friends and a sumptuous feast of food created by my sister for the event: she never fails to blow everyone away with her preparation and presentation.  It was like old times.  The drinks flowed.  The conversations punctuated by laughter.  Just a lovely lovely time.

EDIT (12:02 GMT), I'm back from next door.  I kicked Pete's ass.  His Dracula was trapped in Athens with storms raging the oceans around his position, and my hunters flooding South from Sofia and Bucharest.  He was staked through the heart.

Saturday evening was a meal with my sister, her partner, Jo, myself and mum.  A swanky restaurant in Jesmond.  Very nice.

Sunday morning Jo left early so she could partake in father's day things with her vast family in the South West. Sunday afternoon saw my sister, her partner, myself and mum walk along Jesmond Dene road to the amazing Jesmond House Hotel for a spot of Champagne afternoon tea, at £25 a head... pricey but delightful and indulgent.  So much bloody cake and coffee I started getting palpitations from the sugar rush; then walked 7 miles just to try and burn off some of the massive calorie intake.

In between these social moments, I spent all of my time here in the house, writing up Baruch's Burden, or out walking, zigzagging the ancient streets of Jesus Mound, building up a sweat, burning off cals and zoning out into a state where I'm walking whilst lost in thought.  Some great ideas percolating around inside this skull of mine.  I should finish Baruch's Burden today.  I've decided not to make it a freebie, so will make it available through LULU.

Generally mum has maintained the great gusto she got from her radiotherapy and steroids... she's been on a non-stop rollercoaster of entertaining guests and family who are all flocking to see her and spend time with her, now that time may be short.  She's got another guest arriving today, for a week, and then in two weeks she and my sister are coming down to Bristol for a week in Cornwall with Jo and I... mum said she's always wanted to see Cornwall.  

Little Peaks of Happiness

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

23:20 GMT, Tuesday 16th June, 2009.  Just got back from another solo trip to Boca Bar.  I've had a really good day. I got a load of writing done at lunchtime, and again tonight getting back from work, despite my head being left spinning by the current workload; rather than head out to the cinema as planned, I decided to stay in the Sky Bunker and crack on with this scenario I'm writing for Yellow Dawn: Baruch's Burden.

Little peaks of happiness:

  • Rediscovering Ulrich Schnauss in my Mp3 collection. Wow, what atmospheric and uplifting brilliance.
  • Some positive words about Yellow Dawn on another forum
  • Stumbling into the online chat room on Yog-Sothoth.com and finding myself greeted by two very friendly peeps. Lovely, actually.
  • Phone call from Jo who's seeing Take That in concert.
  • Bailing out of the Sky Bunker, jumping into Swampy and following the river road in the final blue-haze after sunset... eerie and delightful.  Pulling up at Boca Bar and enjoying the vibe there.
  • Grabbing a rare Mac-D's on the way home (must be a year since I last had one), utterly yummmm.

Djr

 

Bristol brilliance and end of the Trigan Empire.

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

08:50 GMT, Monday 15th June 2009.  After a long Friday night, Saturday and Sunday morning locked away in the Sky Bunker I was saved from my internal worlds by the return of Jo from Vallencia.  I drove into town and met her as she got off the ride from the airport...she was tanned, grinning and brimming with stories.  The day was glorious sunshine and a cool breeze. This is where Bristol really comes into it's own.  We dumped the car by Dom's old place and walked into the harbourside area... just so many cafes and eating places... so much choice and variety... Bristol has such a tight hub for pleasure and relaxation.  We spent an afternoon sitting outside a place called Jack's, enjoying the sun and a couple of beers, whilst Jo filled me in on the details... arch-rivallry between the "Chief Bridesmaid" and the rest of the girls.  God, humans are designed for divisiveness.  Anyway, the group dynamic didn't spoil Jo's trip and she was certainly with the camp who were out to have fun.  It was then a quick stroll to the Spyglass for some cheap but tasty BBQ food.  So despite a sense that I hadn't really had a weekend up to that point, Bristol's brilliance made up for it in the final half.

I realise I never concluded my mention of the Trigan Empire.  A commic book (vast) that I rediscovered amongst some of my old possessions at the family home up in Newcastle.  I read the whole thing in that one weekend.  It was brilliant and I can see areas where it has had a massive influence on my imagination these 30 years later. 

Here's some pics:

Map Map, Map A Map

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

10:04 GMT, SUnday 14th June.  Surreal weekend.  I've ended up spending 95% of my time in here, in the Sky BUnker.  Jo's away in Valencia.  I had a brief foray into town very early Saturday morning; went to Bristol Cathedral and lit a candle for my dad.  Then hiked up to Boston Tea Party on Park Street and spent some quality time supping delish coffee and working-up notes for Dog Eat Dog.  Then back home to Cosy Castle with a vague plan that I'd head back out again later... but I just got sucked into my world.  I spent all day rolling up maps for Yellow Dawn.  Go figure, I'm in love with my own systems.  Each map generated its own little tales of survival and continued struggle.  It got to 9pm and I thought... go out?  Nah.  I built a fire with some logs and dropped into one of the sofas with a bottle of Leffe... and decided to just relax.  I channel surfed between various stand-up comics; found Maddona's Confessions tour (amazing) and then found Top Gun.  What is it with anything 80's that gives me such a delicous sense of... *shakes head with a smirk*?  I don't know.  There's just a pleasure in watching it... the 80's rock riffs and passion ballards... the 80's world-view... recalling who I was back then and seeing such young-young-young faces.  I had a midnight call from Jo who told me she was eating dinner on a giant bed, with various motown singers performing in front of her and the girls she's there with.  Sounds amazing...I see myself on a trip to Valencia in the near future.

It's my mum's birthday next week.  I'm heading up to Newcastle for a long weekend.  What do I get her though?  This is quite likely to be the last birthday she has.  Any suggestions welcome.

Stocking up on new tunes - T4 Salvation

¦ Dialling in from workstation ¦

08:45 GMT, Wednesday 10th June 2009.  I saw T4 – Salvation last night.  After all the negative rants by high-brow critics I very nearly didn’t go.  But circumstances last night left me footloose and fancy free so I caught a last minute showing.  It’s a really good romp, especially when you view it in the context of the other T-films.  The big machines are terrifying and the sound effects really work to create a Wellsian "War of the Worlds" vibe.  I loved the way they introduce the secondary hero character.  A simple linear story.  A feeble attempt at a twist near the end, but only in the sense it was utterly predictable… but then, I guess the characters / even the AI are being true to their form. I’d give it 8/10.

I’ve been working on Balruch’s Burden, a scenario for Yellow Dawn, and having fun with dice… using the “Map of the Land” rules and rolling up some new maps to add to the Yellow Dawn community. Nothing finished yet but I'll post on the YD forum when they're done.

I’m getting close to wrapping up the big revision of Iron Man Project. Depending on social calendar this weekend, I may knuckle down and nail what’s left to do in one big chunk. We’ll see. In preparation for starting Dog Eat Dog I started browsing online MP3 stores for tunes… to build up some music I can use as soundscapes for the writing process. I went a little bit overboard. Not listened to any of these yet, just bought them and filed away for later listening pleasure….

 Amor for Sleep - Smile for them
 Devin Townsend - Ki
 Hollywood Undead - Swan Songs
 Idiot Pilot - Wolves
 Marsheaux -  Breakthrough
 Marsheaux - Ghost EP
 Marsheaux - Peek a boo
 Marsheaux - The E-Bay Queen
 MOS Clubbers Guide Summer 2009
 Nerve - Prohibited Beats
 Rabia Sorda - Radio Paranoia
 Secret Society - EP
 The Blackout - The Best in Town
 Theory of a Dead Man - Scars and Souveniers
 Underworld - Oblivion with bells

  

Headless Magpie on a stick

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

23:33 GMT, Friday 5th June 2009.  I was supposed to be going out to a gallery open-evening tonight, catching up with some friends, and friends of friends, and generally unwinding; but it's been a nuts week at work and I've got to keep my brain intact for a whole day of Yellow Dawn tomorrow, so decided to come home, buy in an Indian, guzzle a litre of Leffe and just relax.  Jo's away for the weekend so I'm slobbing it.

This time last week I was up North, in Newcastle, getting lost in my rediscovery of the Trigan Empire (note to Floyd, thanks for the E-mai fella, great to discover you and I shared a similar buzz during our childhood years - beams a smile at ya). 

I forgot to mention the headless fekking Magpie I found in the garden, skewered on a length of bamboo growing along the boundary with Les the neighbour. Freakiest fekking thing I've seen for a long time. I mean... how did it lose its head?  And what are the chances of it falling out of the sky and landing on the bamboo?  Maybe it lost its head after it got skewered. But what came along and chewed it off?  I don't know.  Odd, is all I say. 

Apart from that Newcastle was bloody lovely, as usual. Mum is in fantastic spirits: she's managing to eat properly again and is putting lost weight back on.  Fingers crossed she'll fight this thing and carry on.

Getting back to Bristol and to work on Monday, I found myself struggling to keep a hand on the helm of my projects because of all the work I acting head of department in Stu's absence. Then Wednesday afternoon the Director says can I have a report (Project Echo) for the Board tomorrow morning. Shit! So a late night and a very early morning (woke up in the dark with project componets whirling through my brain and slotting into how I was going to construct the Board report).  Was kind of fun though, I mean, *wrinkles nose above a thin smile* it's not like that all the time, and I did enjoy the buzz of pulling everything together under pressure.

I've also been out every night this week... no time in Sky Bunker... only minimal writing time during lunchbreak and just after work.

I was approached by the developer of a new website called resurrect.me.uk, a place for alternative artists and people to collaborate and Virt.  I've signed-up because I admire anybody who manages to get this far, driving an ideal along with passion and determination.  It doesn't officially launch until 4th July, but I'd recommend you take a peek and join-up.

I'm still working on the revision of Iron Man Project - very much a back burner task, so I'm happy for it to drag on this long.  Despite picking up the file of notes for Dog Eat Dog several times now, I'm resisting starting until I've finished Iron Man Project properly.  However, I have started writing up a new scenario for Yellow Dawn, called "Baruch's Burden".  I was hoping to keep it simple and make it a freebie download for the Yellow Dawn community, but as usual my imagination starts to fire on multiple cylinder... so if it takes more than a couple weeks to write I'll probably put it up via LULU and charge for it.

I was wanting to go and see Salvation this weekend but I'm hearing a lot of reports saying it's "Beyond Salvation".  No! Have the fekked it up?

I got to spend some quality time with my soul brother Vega$ this week. We've not seen in each other in MONTHS.  The man's been doing a lot of hard manual labour and I swear his arms are getting massive.  He's even getting a little pot belly... we had a chuckle about that. Matthias, fat?  It'll never happen.

"First Cut", by Eurythmics just came on. Ahhh blisto, memories of being 14 and getting into Call of Cthulhu back in 1985. 

The Trigan Empire

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

09:48 GMT, Saturday 30th May 2009.  I'm back in Newcastle.  The sun is blazing, the heat is way up; it feels like summer.  I love being here.  It's the place I most enjoy being.  It was great to meet Jo here Thursday night; she's settled in like part of the family.  Mum is amazing.  Glowing with energy, radiating a sense of confidence regarding her health, and she's eating like a horse; hopefully the scary weight loss will stop now... she's down to 5 Stone, 30 KG, 60 Lbs.

Waking up here, in dad's last room, on the ground floor extended back of the house... early morning sunbeams split up by the dense branches of the encroaching forest, lighting up the muslin drapes hanging over the wall of windows.  Wooden floors reflecting.  Light so much light.   Rolling over in the bed, propping myself up, sitting there on the edge for a few moments, getting my bearings, my brain saying "I'm here now," with a delicious sense of contentment. Rubbing my hands through the bed-head exlosion of hair; finger to eye, poking out chunks of crusty sleep.  I smile at my good fortune and offer an immediate reflex prayer to hope this lasts... deeply aware of how everything went so fucking wrong in 2004-2005-2006. Looking behind me at the sleeping form of Jo wearing something nice from the night before, my closed smile broadens, stretching my lips: she was there for me through all of that. 

A thousand memories crash through my brain.  This house the touch point for so many phases and episodes of this fleshy machine and collection of chemical memory markers called "Me".

I push myself up from the edge of the bed, stooping again to pick up my undercrackers from the volcano shaped pile of jeans and socks left there the night before.  Barefoot, I pad across warm wooden flooring and enter the vast cavern space of the kitchen/breakfast/lounge area. Sunlight streaming in from windows and skylights.  Half of Norway here in wall hangings and little nic-nacs my mum brought over with her.

A mug of tea sitting in tree-dappled sunlight on the decking outside.

Picking up an old book from my childhood, a "graphic novel" called THE TRIGAN EMPIRE.  Inside cover is an inscription from my older cousin, "July 1980, To David with love from Trudi."  It's been nearly 30 years since I read it.  I can remember that summer of 1980... and I can remember loving the story that's now back in my hands. I flick past the cover and start to read, eyes soaking up the lovely artwork, and I'm hooked.  A strange blend of high-tech and low tech civillisations, I'm suddenly struck by how much this book must have inspired deepset ideals in my imagination.  I reckon I'll spend much of this weekend sitting out in the garden going through it again. 

I head up to Acorn Road and grab a coffee in Starfucks.  Looking at my notebook I realise I've nailed most of the little jobs I've been writing up the last few months. My thoughts turn to Dog Eat Dog.  I don't have any of the Dog Eat Dog material with me, I mapped it all out back in the South of France in 2007, but I get a wonderful sense of the whole novel's story-line, beginning middle an end in my mind.  I can visualise the main structure and key plot points.  I start jotting down tweaks and refinements of the "hidden story" within the story.  Might actually start writing it sooner than later.

 

In love with a town called Toledo

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

 

08:50 GMT, Thursday 28th May 2009.  Living in a bit of a whirlwind at the moment.  Time passing fast.  Lots getting done.  All good.  Went to Madrid and Toledo last weekend.  Great to spend time with my old friend Sharky, and Ramona’s brother, US Dave.  Also great to munch away on delicious tapas… a few favourites building up for me so I’m looking forward to going back for the food.  The highlight of the weekend was catching a high-speed train out of Madrid and going to the medieval town of Toledo.  OMG!!!! What an incredible place.  You cross a moat-like ravine via a narrow stone bridge, stepping onto an “island” of rock, surrounded by a river on three sides.  Passing through the first curtain wall you’re forced to zig zag between defended positions and ascend steeply, before reaching another curtain wall through into the town proper.  Impossibly narrow lanes winding and backtracking and confusing in a delicious demonstration of medieval cunning to fool invaders (and tourists).  It was a simply perfect day… despite the heavy rain during the morning… very friendly, not expensive.  Many photographs but I’m still working through a set of images I took back in March and April, so it’ll be a while before I have time to go through these ones.


I’ve finally started concluding some of the numerous Yellow Dawn supplements and bolt-on rules I’ve been fiddling about with for the past few months.  Just launched a collection of occult and mythos artefacts, and a separate system that allows characters to “analyse” them and attempt to disable the malevolent links that some artefacts create.


Whilst in Toledo, sitting in a café with a notebook and pen, I had an idea for creating a quick system to enhance the COOL and Anxiety system.  I’d been reading an article about how the brain chemistry of individual soldiers can influence what roles they are best suited do, and affect how they react to battlefield conditions and stresses.  I’ve come up with something called MADS: Morality, Anxiety, Depression and Stress.  It allows GMs to determine a unique profile for each character, potentially without their knowledge, so they won’t know how they react to these factors until they happen.  I should have it up on the site to download by end of the weekend.


I’m flying to Newcastle tonight.  A long weekend up there.  Jo flew up there Tuesday, almost directly after returning from Spain; she’s keeping my mum company and making sure she’s eating, following the end of her radiotherapy sessions.  Jo says she’s in very high spirits, which is great news.


Djr

Mum gets three tattoos and gets hyperactive

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

13:05 GMT, Wednesday 21st May 2009. Sitting at my desk with new tunes playing through headphones.  "Life of a Ghost" an album by Blue Foundation, a band I discovered via the Miami Vice soundtrack.  Pretty atmospheric and uplifting. I'm reclined in my chair, fingers flitting across the keyboard, and I'm smiling.

I rang mum last night for an update and have never heard her so radiantly happy.  A few days earlier she was joking with me about having more tattoos that me. I've only got one so not hard to beat, then she explained it was the preparations for her radiotherapy.  Cross-hairs tattooed to her body for the machine to target the tumours. Tuesday she had a brain scan to see if the headaches were a result of the cancer spreading.  Yesterday was her first radiotherapy session.  Speaking to her last night she sounded like a 13 year old girl who'd just been given a horse for Christmas.  She sounded full of hope and confidence that she might be able to  beat this thing - or at least live longer than originally predicted. I mean, the doctors said she would be dead by August.  I can't see how that's possible right now.

So I just had a text from mum with the results of the brain scan. They found something.  A brain. In mum's words, "amazing". No tumours.

So it's a positive upswing for now.

Meanwhile I finished a Yellow Dawn supplement last night, allow characters to unpick magickal constructs and disable malevolent bonds... hopefully have time to publish it tonight.  I'm off to Madrid tomorrow, and then a trip to Toledo (really looking forward to that).  Plus a chance to share some quality time with Sharky and Big Dave who's joining us from New York.

I've bought some other albums:

The Cure- Seventeen Seconds 
Vexille - Soundtrack 
The Crystal Method - Divided by Night 

Purposefully not listening to them until I start the trip to Spain... they'll embed themselves in my brain as the soundtrack to the upcoming memories.

Djr

A Monday in May

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

 

08:43 GMT, Monday 18th May 2009.  Humid sunlight seeping in through tall Napoleonic windows to my right.  A bunch of bananas on my desk: standard breakfast rations for the next few mornings.  A copy of M.R.James Collected Ghost Stories, and a copy of Iron Man Project that I’ve been used to complete a revised version due for release late this year.  I’m playing Southland Tales through the speakers mounted either side of my work PC... low volume, unobtrusive to the people around me.  It was a good weekend.  Long.  Productive.  Saturday was eaten up by a session of Yellow Dawn.  The group were still wrapping up lose ends with Shadows of the Quantinex, but a detour via their settlement, a place they’ve spent a couple years building from a derelict Business Park a few miles West of Boston, allowed me to spring a ploy by Nyarlathotep.  So that group of characters is now on ice.  We spent the rest of the session rolling up new characters.  I’ve been wanting to go “back to basics” with the Yellow Dawn sessions.  The recent group of characters only tasted  the real wilderness before quickly acquiring equipment, technology and significant money… which was more about me being able to rapidly test the full range of systems in the Yellow Dawn rulebook. That’s all done now so I’m looking forward to running a refreshed set of sessions with low tech survival out in the wilderness.

 

Yesterday was me and my laptop, up in the Sky Bunker, working on a Yellow Dawn system to allow characters to unpick Occult and Mythos constructs to disable malevolent bonds and soak up released POW.  It’s proven to be a real brain drain… but I’m finally on a roll with it so hopefully will have it finished before I head off to Spain at the end of this week.  I did a trip into town. Sat in the Arnolfini with strong black coffee writing notes with pen and paper. Then did the big walk around the harbourside.

 

Djr

Queen of Pentacles, Justice, 9 of Pentacles

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

20:06 GMT, Friday 15th May 2009.  Soft grey light is filtering in through the part of the glass canopy not covered by thick cardboard.  I'm sitting at my desk, wrapped in Starsky, refreshed and damp from a recent hot bath, hair much in need of a cut sticking out in random tufts, stained dark by its wetness, nearly 2 weeks beard growth covering my face... I look like a cave man. 

Just finished a tarot reading, using the deck I've had since 1986.  It's been a few months since I last did one, but it's good to pick up the cards now and then and delve back into a world I used to be so deeply involved in.  So many people have handled these cards, so many questions asked, so many moments of revelation and confronting the truth.  For me, a quick three-card spread. Good energy and very representative of the mood I've been in for a few days now.

The smell of 1989 has transformed into something much deeper, a new Mood, one I recognise from my childhood... elements of 1977?  1978?  Bizarre. I can recall the massive house I first lived in; several ghostly encounters and a freaky start for a young mind; formative Gary Numan tracks; a Silver Jubilee with street celebrations... and somehow this "smell" or Mood as I call it, also reminds me of 1996... starting the novel God Seed and the golden years of the Happy Flat.  I've never experienced so many of these Mood / Smell / Taste / Emotions with such variety and frequency as I have these past months.

Soundtrack to this era is Southland Tales, mixed with some Euphoric Dance Breakdown 2009.

I was knackered after work today. I've phased out of the recent big project I was helping with, and now picked up a brand spanking new one. Project Echo. Lots to do and I'm loving it. But I was up at 4 A.M. again today, writing, so it's been a long day. However, refreshed by the bath, a little meditation, tarot cards, I'm looking forward to knocking back some Leffe and cracking on with the writing. Currently working on Yellow Dawn relics / artefacts, and some house rules for how characters can examine and unravel complex Occult / Mythos energies associated with such items, or with more obscure things such as "magickal constructs".  It's requiring some real deep thought but should result in an interesting and useful supplement for the Yellow Dawn system.

Jo's away for the weekend, and I have a big session of Yellow Dawn with the group tomorrow: I'm looking forward to it. They're actually still wrapping up Shadows of the Quantinex, which is a pleasing testament to the strength of the story that they actually want to mop up parts that no longer affect them (directly).

 

 

Djr

Sunshine on a sunny day

  

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

 

08:54 GMT, Tuesday 12th May 2009.  What a beautiful day.  I woke up with my limbs wrapped around Jo, sunk deep in the warmth and ultra soft splendour of the mattress and duvet.  Early morning sun filtering through gold silk curtains bathing the room in a regal light. 

When I left work last night I was exhausted, dazed, numb and a little misty eyed thinking about having left mum up North. Jo and I hooked up after work and headed down to the centre of Bristol, parked up and did our 3 mile harbour-side walk, weaving between modern riverside developments and crumbling shipping yards, and museum-like moorings for the SS Great Britain and the wooden hulled Matthew, everything illuminated by the blaze of a slow setting sun. 

Completing the walk I dragged Jo across Queens Square to a place I’ve been meaning to go to for yonks.  A boat with a BBQ, essentially the top area is covered in a giant marquee, strung with lights and equipped with bar and food prep area.  Spy Glass Bristol  I guzzled a pint of Birra and devoured a plate of honey coated ribs. Utterly delish.  Leaving I had phone call from mum, saying she’d seen a specialist who confirmed she should go for the radiotherapy… and who said they might be able to slow down the progress of the other cancer.  The joy in her voice was euphoric and contagious.

 

Soundtrack to these moments: Southland Tales.

 

So, a good start to the day.

 

Laters

 

Djr

A smell like 1989

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦


16:36 GMT, Sunday 10th May 2009.  Sitting at the oak refectory table savouring the final hours for this particular trip. It's been good.  Despite everything.

I'm playing the soundtrack to "Southland Tales" and I feel okay.

I went out for a walk at 2A.M. this morning. The bubble-world of Jesus Mound allows you to do that.  You step beyond the front door and you're immediately somewhere interesting. A place you can just walk around and lose yourself. I got back and stayed up til silly-o'clock watching shite TV.  Up at 9.  Went for a 7 mile walk, and another smaller one this afternoon.

I had a whiff of 1989 for a while, a vivid sense of who I was 20 years ago, living here and walking around these very streets: my life, my social world centered here.  One of those moments of pleasant nostalgia.

Despite mum's weight loss she's been in good spirits, until today.  Today's been difficult.  She's in pain, she's frustrated at her weakness and the slow loss of dependancy as doing simple things begin to require help from other people.  I've spent a lot of time sitting in her room with her, talking and joking quite a bit. It's good to have this chance to grab these moments, to know they're special.  At one point I was kneeling on the floor beside her chair, with my head resting on the arm of the chair; she put her hand on my head and suddenly I was a small boy again... soaking up the love and attention. 

I saw my sister briefly on Thursday night, when I got here, and she looked exhausted.  Hopefully her escape to London will help recharge her batteries. 

I'm planning to dip into the stack of unopened E-mails and FB messages that's been building up over the past 3 months.

I'm still working on small bits and pieces for Yellow Dawn. Nothing major.  Just fun to do.

Got a 7A.M. flight tomorrow morning and then straight into work.

The vanishing MP3 player

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

 

04:31 GMT, Thursday 7th May 2009.  Another early start, working on a “more info” sheet about Yellow Dawn for the website.  Why is it always so difficult to describe and explain your own work?   Anyhow, I’m rather pleased. Yesterday morning I threw on my jacket to head to work, reached into my upper pocket for my MP3 player and it wasn’t there. WTF?  I knew I’d had it with me as I pulled up outside the house the previous evening.  I checked every room in the house.  Twice.  I went outside and checked my car.  I checked underneath my car.  I pulled everything out my bag.  Nothing.  Perplexed, I gave up looking, climbed back into my car and set off for work.  Every time I stopped at lights I checked my bag again.  Where the hell could it go?   Last night I parked up outside my house and studied the driveway and the street area outside the front of the house.  And there it was.  Caught in the ivy hedge.  Nobody had taken it and the rain hadn’t trashed it. Whoop-whoop. Very pleased although still a little perplexed as to how it got there. 

 

I’m heading up to Newcastle tonight.  See how mum’s getting on.  News is the radiotherapy can’t start as soon as hoped so the plan for Jo to spend two weeks there has been pushed back. 

 

Djr

 

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

 

05:07 GMT, Tuesday 5th May 2009.  Looks like I’m heading back into old habits. So much for being exhausted yesterday morning, today I snapped awake at 3.45 A.M.  I grabbed a drink, tried going back to sleep but then thought “fek it” and climbed up here and got on with my stuff. Some news: I passed that professional qualification I took last month. 75%  Not bad.  More phone calls with home last night.  It looks like my sister is having a tougher time looking after mum that I thought.  The thing in her gullet is getting so big mum can’t eat and she’s losing a scary amount of weight.  Doctors want to rush her in pronto for radiotherapy: plan is to zap the thing and give her ability to eat and gain strength to continue fighting.  Jo’s heading up there for 2 weeks to give my sister some support whilst mum goes through this.  Jo can work from home.  I’m kind of stuck down here, saving the bulk of my annual leave for later…when I guess things are going to get more difficult for everyone.

 

Djr

Bank Holiday Weekend

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

09:22GMT, Monday (Bank Holiday) 4th May 2009.  Pleasant grey light pressing through the visible portion of the glass canopy above my head. One half is still covered up in thick card.  I'm exhausted.  I was craving this bank holiday weekend by time it arrived, feeling slightly burnt out and spent.  Friday night saw Jo and I doing the post-apocalyptic walk, 5 miles of it, in the setting rays of the sun.  About a mile from the car the weather changed, became grey, overcast and then a light rain began.  Quite beautiful actually.  Clambering into the car, tired and a little damp, I had a moment of blissful self-awareness. Jo was driving; we had a rendezvous at our "local" a few miles away with a friend... so sitting there in the car I was able to look forward to arriving at a remote rural location, with an ancient pub on a hill surrounded by forest, stone mullioned windows with panes of diamond leading; a roaring fire, the buzz of conversations, comfortable seating and a pint, an ice cold pint of beer.  My visioning did not disappoint.  I had all of that, and a slice of home-baked steak & ale pie.  Bloody lovely.

Jo's away this weekend. I spent Saturday drifting between cafes in Bristol working on notes with pen and paper.  Or camped up here in the Sky Bunker, using my DaVinci method.

So now I'm exhausted.  I feel as if I was to close my eyes right now I'd just drop asleep on the spot.  I've tweaked my website design and did a major overhaul of the Yellow Dawn section, which involved a bit of teach-yourself-CSS at 1 o'clock in the morning.  A few more bits to do but I'm not going to spend the whole weekend doing that.  Also working on several bolt-ons and supplements for Yellow Dawn.  I'm not ready to start the new novel just yet.

Events are unfolding in Newcastle regarding mum's health.  My sister is up there, living there now, nursing mum through it all.  I am so deeply grateful for that.  My sister is an amazing human being.  I've been given snippets of what's occuring over the phone but I think they're waiting for me to get up there. I'm flying up this Thursday for a long weekend.

Right, time to throw on some boots and a jacket and head out into town before the "sheep" start drifting in and cluttering up the place.  I'm thinking Boston Tea Party: strong black coffee and poached eggs on toast. Some note making and then a big walk around the harbourside.

Laters.

Djr

Upswing

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker¦

13:56 GMT, Saturday 25th April 2009.  A good week despite the lousy start.  I've walked 29 miles since Sunday, straight after coming home from work.  So I'm burning through calories and getting my mind back into focus.  Work's taken a positive twist.  Events have led me to being drafted in to help out with a big project; it means the enterprise level video solution I've been working on has gone to another PM.  Thank God, really, because it was going nowhere fast due to events (people) beyond my control.  It's also allowed me to get stuck back into the bread and butter work of my primary role... fast churn, high adrenaline.  The week has blurred by.  A lot of progress with taking "Shadows of the Quantinex" out of beta, writing it up and polishing it to launch as 1st Edition. Still on target for the end of April.  Have had lots of positive support by phone and email from a number of people regarding the situation with my mum; I guess in response to previous blog post. So, thanks for all that.  Plans for the weekend are much the same: walking and writing. Got a date with friends for cocktails tonight.  Should be a good chance to blow off steam.

Djr

 

 

Low point

¦ dialling in from the Arnolfini Cafe ¦

15:39 GMT, Sunday 19th April 2009.  I'm back in Bristol, flew down from Newcastle on Friday night.  Now I'm sitting in the cafe by the harbour, flooded in liquid gold sunlight, supping a black coffee and soda+lime.  I've walked 11 miles today, burned 1,100 calories.  Oh the joy of spending so much time writing and ignoring your body one day you wake up with a rubber ring hanging off your hips.  I'm blaming the past 6 weeks of good eating, since I got back into making interesting meals from new recipies.

I'm in a strange state of mind, fighting off a horribly familiar sense of despair and depression that hawks back to 2006 and the prolonged decline and death of my father.  Now I'm going through it again with my mum.  Coming back from Newcastle I can't stop thinking about how frail she looked... I can see how much she is suffering already.  Jesus, cancer is such a horrific disease.

So, I'm walking.  Mile after mile. Trying to burn off calories and push through the mental fog that's got my spirits so dank and down.

The revision of "Shadows of the Quantinex" is going well.  I'm hating it.  It's not easy work.  But it's progressing and the anticipated 1st Edition is shaping up nicely.  

Back to my job tomorrow. I'm looking forward to the manic intensity to sweep my thoughts away into distraction.

 

Sore Arse

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

 

16:46 GMT, Thursday 16th April 2009. Sitting on a big soft cushion, at the oak refectory table. Grey light outside.  It's been cold today.  This morning I agreed to join Pete, bloke next door, on a cycle ride out into the country.  I've not ridden a push bike in about 22 years.  It was an 18 mile round trip, not a great distance, certainly a good ride but fek me... who designed those saddles?  By the end of it I was cycling with my bum off the seat just to avoid the pain.  I've been walking around all day like I've been shagged by an elephant. 

 

Tonight is my final night in Jesus Mound.  It's been a good trip despite... the circumstances.  Mum's spent most of the time upstairs in her little sanctuary.  It's scary how much weight she's lost in such a short period of time.

 

I'm deep into "Shadows..."   I'm writing the GM introduction from scratch, tightening up the information, dropping in diagrams. 

 

Soundtrack to this period is:

() Babylon A.D. soundtrack

() Hybrid Soundsystem 01

() Miami Vice soundtrack

Medieval Delight

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

  

08:16 GMT, Tuesday 14th April 2009.  After the blazing sunshine of the past couple days - the Easter weekend - today has a delightful coolness, a murkiness with an eerie green tinge, promising rain... a quality of light I associate with Jesus Mound and my years growing up here.  I'll probably do a walk down the Dene later.

 

My legs are aching from the exertions of yesterday.  Took an 8-in-the-morning train from Newcastle to Edinburgh.  Beautiful train journey hugging the rugged North East coast of this island.  I've not been to Edinburgh since I was 11 and have no real memory of it.  What an amazing place.  A shell of Medieval architecture with a beating heart of a modern city inside of it.  Jo and I did the walk out of town, past Salisbury crags and up, up, up to the lofty perch of Arthur's Seat.  Had a great meal back in town before jumping on an early evening train back to Newcastle. We were home by 10pm.

 

Came back to a sombre atmosphere.  Mum's been really suffering past two days.  A nurse is coming out tomorrow to assess her situation.  I was really counting on getting at least one more Christmas with her, but there is talk she won't live past the Summer.

Ghost of dead father and the knocking on the door

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

 

 

08:13 GMT Sunday 12th April 2009.  Sitting at the oak refectory table. I'm just out of bed, supping the first mug of tea of the day, sitting here peering somewhat bleary eyed through the broad range of square-lattice windows. A beautiful sunrise is in full effect, throwing down golden beams of euphoric light through the dense canopy of the forest surrounding the back of the house.  An early start in the wake of a late lie-in and deep sleep every night since arriving here on Wednesday.  A strange night of sleep last night... hours spent lying cheerfully awake, ideas and daydreams streaming through my head... thinking it must be only minutes before dawn when the truth is more like 1 A.M. So a long time thinking and looking forward to starting the day: today I finally start putting together the 1st Edition of "Shadows of the Quantinex". Taking the thing out of Beta.  I've spent the past couple weeks designing plot maps and GM guides to various aspects of the story. Now comes the task of inserting those into the campaign book, and editing it down into a more tight and cohesive product.

 

Yesterday afternoon saw me sitting with mum in her little sanctuary upstairs - where she camps out on days when her health is not so good.  The amount of painkillers she's taking is often leaving her spaced out and tired.  She was telling me about a strange experience a couple weeks ago when she was going through a particularly bad spell: twice she woke up in the middle of the night hearing the wrought-iron knocker on the front door being struck against the aged wood.  Climbing out of bed she woke to find herself standing on the upstairs hallway... listening, and discovering no sound and looking down out of the window seeing nobody at the door. Mum says she can feel dad waiting for her, and the door knocking is his way of showing his impatience. Since she's had the recent upswing in health the door knocking has stopped: she's not ready to leave just yet.

Saved by a Gregg’s pasty

 

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

 

15:34 GMT, Thursday 9th April 2009.  Sitting at the oak refectory table. The bright sunlight has been swallowed up by dark clouds - threatening rain.  I arrived here late last night, around midnight, after a long drive from work with Oj.  I was asleep before my head hit the pillow on the big sofa bed in what was dad's room.  Jo left early this morning to drive to Darlington for a meeting.  I had a lie in - savouring the fact I don't have to work for the next few days.  Of course, it doesn't mean I can rest my brain: I've been compiling all the feedback/reviews from play-testers of "Shadows of the Quantinex" now that they've finished. I'm aiming to complete the final overhaul of the Beta version during next week with a view to launching a polished 1st Edition end of April. Lots to do.  Today I've been making pen/paper notes about the computer networks within the story that characters may want to tackle; and also noting down ways to make improvements to issues highlighted in the feedback.

 

I had a moment of grumpiness this morning when I learned a couple of people are "in a mood" with me because I haven't responded to email or facebook messages.  I was really fekked-off because I have a stack of messages I've chosen not to look at for weeks now; I'll look at them when I schedule some time in but right now I'm focussed on getting some major creative projects finished whilst the ideas are fresh in my head... oh, and holding down a full-time job too. So no apologies from me. It left me raging for a while. I started to walk into town from Jesmond but then realised I’d not eaten - not helping my mood, so I backtracked to Acorn Road and went into Greggs. Warm pastry - steak slice. Yum-city.  I drifted around the back lanes wolfing it down and feeling my mood lift. Thank you Greggs.

 

 

 

Djr

The day I lost all respect for the UK police

I’ll add more words about this when I find the mental clarity to write some, but at this moment my blood is boiling and my thoughts are seething with disgust.

 

This is a man caught up in the G20 protests in London in an utterly unprovoked action by thugs-in-uniform.

 

Click to watch video

 

Djr

Goodbye Psycho Neighbour - end of Crazy Chronicles

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

19:13 GMT, Monday 6th April 2009.  Rain spattering canopy above my head: I removed one of the cardboard sections since the eye-gouging sun is far from view. 

Sadly nothing major to report.  I came home to be told by Oj that the local neighbours were all-a-gossip about the silent departure of "Bill", our resident madman. There's nothing to remind us of him except for a lovely large pine kitchen table, left abandoned outside the house, and a collapsed stone wall (that's still a mystery).

In one way I'm glad. In another I'm kind of sad: I'd grown to anticipate what his next rant would be about.

Right...time to get my nose back to the grindstone.  I'm burning my brain cells with final ammendments to "Shadows of the Quantinex".  On top of the crazy project demands at work, my head is frazzled. Roll on Thursday when I'll be in Newcastle and the divine bubble of Jesus Mound for a little over a week.

Djr

Traitor - Knowing

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦


12:39 GMT, Friday 3rd March 2009.  Just come back from the Boston Tea Party (Bath) with a half-drunk Americano.  I'd settled down at a table there but then a really loud pair of women took the table next to me and shattered my concentration - I could even hear them through my headphones.

My head's in a bit of a swirl - a thousand ideas for a string of creative projects I'm pushing along at the moment, and not much progress because I've been out most nights this week. So I'm hoping this weekend allows me to get a handle on it all.

I received a fantastic review on the last novel - EDGE – this week; and feedback from the playtesters for Shadows of the Quantinex is proving wonderfully positive – I’m working towards a final release for the 1st Edition for that…hopefully end of April.

I saw the film "Traitor" on Wed night. Very good film.  Lacks all Hollywood gloss.  The integral story is well-crafted although it perhaps leans heavily on the plot meme of "radicalisation of Muslims".  It has only one possible ending but the "getting there" does leave you on edge and guessing.  If I was hyper critical I'd say it was like watching a well-crafted drama for TV (HBO or something like that), but I walked out of the cinema feeling satisfied. Don Cheadle was superb.

Last night I saw the film, "Knowing". A Hollywood special effects package with a thin storyline, but, to give it credit, it pulled all the right levers and was an enjoyable flick, shocking in places with the scenes of mass catastrophe.  The spooky "whispering watchers" in the shadows were also very well done.


 

Shadows of the Quantinex comes to an end

¦ dialling in from the Sky Bunker ¦

16:12 GMT, Sunday 29th March 2009.  Bright sunlight squeezes through the gaps between the cardboard shutters and the frame of glass canopy above my head.  "Time to Fly" by SYNTAX is playing by choice.  Beautiful and blissful sounds.  Matching my mood for this day.

I had a long lie-in this morning...after falling asleep on the sofa last night, lying in front of the roaring fire... flickering flames dancing through the blood red veil of my eyelids, sound of logs cracking and spitting.  It's been a full-on week and I needed the rest.  Just before noon I jumped into Swampy and nosed her down the steep roads leading to the river near my house.  Parked up and did the walk, SYNTAX in my earphones. Wow. I'm going to call it the post-apocalyptic walk.  It's brilliant.  This is the route I discovered last weekend - go figure, I've been living here for over 2 years now.  For long periods of time you're utterly alone, walking through terrain that is wild despite being tamed... it is decidedly eerie in spots, terrain that reminds me of the landscape West of Boston MA (I drove there in the year 2000 on the hunt for mythical Dunwich...or the area I felt Dunwich could be based on).  There's crumbling 18th century ruins barely breathing through the dense tangles of vines and trees pressing up against them...and weird 20th century industrial components jutting out at random points, walls of dirty concrete daubed in sun-bleached graffiti.  Walking by the edge of the river you can gaze across to the line of the vertical cliffs keeping pace with you, or sometimes find yourself dwarfed by the nearly vertical hillside looming close to you, looking up you see trees growing out at angles rather than straight-up, so that they're actually hanging over you... if their roots gave way they wouldn't topple, they'd drop straight down onto you. 

Yesterday was a Yellow Dawn  session and the team reached a concluding moment of Shadows of the Quantinex . They'd discovered the truth behind what caused Yellow Dawn  to happen; defeated the major risks to the world, humanity and the universe, and delivered justice upon the malefactors... only to discover a separate threat: it's down to them to decide whether they're going to try and tackle it, but leaving it and walking away poses no direct threat to the world. However, as Jean-Luc Korda has pointed out, the only risks now remaining... are to them. The surviving bad guys might yet still decide to go after them out of revenge.  The team have been playing "Shadows..." for over a year now.  When I wrote "Shadows..."I set out to create a story as large and enjoyable as Masks of Nyarlathotep was for me (back when I was 16).  I think I've succeeded.  I certainly hope I have.  The campaign book is still available only in Beta, (version 8 now).  I'll leave it in Beta until the team has written up feedback: what went wrong, what can be improved, what went right, and I've had a chance to update the final version ready to publish and promote.

Work tomorrow, and a chance to put into practice the new knowledge I've had iron-branded into my brain during last week's course.

Djr

 

Syntax - My new favourite band

¦ dialling in from the Sky Bunker ¦

20:12 GMT, Friday 27th March 2009.  Man I'm in a good space.  I took a long hot bath to soak away the brain fug from a week of learning... meanwhile, I started playing an unlistened-to album from the big folder of bits and peices I've bought on random whim or been given.  I was in the mood for something new, and a new soundtrack to define the memories of this period of my life.  The album "Meccano Mind" by Syntax was next in the folder.  A random choice.  Never heard of them before, no idea what kind of tunes.  OMG... within 5 seconds of the first track starting... listening to that sonorous voice, edged with gravel, and the complex harmonies of chords, beats and magic...

...getting out the bath I towelled dry them pulled on my big woolly mammoth: my cardigan called Starsky.  Then took a seat in the room with a view and sat there for nearly an hour, watching the sky shift through pinks, oranges and reds as the sun set... and allowing the blissful sounds of this band wash through the house.

I just checked them out on Wikipedia. The album is 5 years old and the band seems to had faded thanks to zero support from the record label. Criminal!

So now I'm deep into writing up a Mythos relic (artefact) for the new Yellow Dawn bolt-on... another hour or so then I'll gear up to head out onto the tiles. Go find Jo who's out clubbing with some peeps and either spend the night in their company or peel off and go into the random swirl.

EDIT: 03:57GMT, ahhhhhh *smiles* what a fab night out.  Hooked up with Jo around 10pm.  Loads of lovely friends of hers, including Andy B who spent over an hour raving about my novel, Edge. I'm deeply flattered. We wound our way through some bars to a club.  Amusing.  Some old ravers like me trying to keep things subdued as the classics came on.  Jo looked amazing.  Jo is amazing.  I'm one lucky chap.  I left her around 3 A.M. and made my way back home alone, much to the bemusement of some of her mates but we've got plans to hook up at the house tomorrow night and we have all of Sunday planned together. Blisto. 

Hmm... I've got to be up in 5 hours to finish prep for the Shadows of the Quanitex session that's starting at noon. Ugh... I could kill for a lie-in after the week I've had.

Sunday.

Focus on Sunday.

 

A week outside reality

¦ dialling in from Sky BUnker ¦

17:30 GMT, Friday 27th March 2009.  I took my final exam today as part of the professional qualification I've been studying for all week.  I scored 89% in my Foundation exam on Wednesday so hopefully I'm around that zone for this one today.  Wow, what a week though.  A solid routine of early mornings, taxi from the corporate HQ to the training centre, learn, learn, lunch, learn, learn, mock exam or real exam... taxi back to corp HQ, drive home brain buzzing, review notes, home work, mock exams... fall into bed and repeat.  It feels like I've been involved for much more than just a week though.  I popped into the office late yesterday afternoon to say "cheerio" to Gonzo Ben and I felt utterly disorientated: this is where I work, these are the people I work with but... it was if they all belonged to a distant memory of a person I used to be.  The course has been massively intensive, but incredibly enjoyable. I never thought I'd like learning so much!

So I'm pretty confident about passing the exam; regardless, I can certainly start applying what I have learnt to my day-to-day job.  Now I'm back in my zone... my study... and I'm trying to coax my brain to stop gripping onto course material and allow my creative thoughts to seep back into the main cognitive flow.

Yellow Dawn session tomorrow, possibly one of the final sessions for the epic Shadows of the Quantinex Campaign; the characters have done really well so far.

Right... time to try and be creative.

Djr 

 

Sore head

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

20:45 GMT, Tuesday 24th March 2009.  Am listening to "Gangleopods" by Datasette via random selection within a small playlist of new albums I'm currently embedding into my emotive centres:

-After The Gold Rush
-Datassette
-FabricLive 23
-Hefner
-Machine Says Yes

Meanwhile I'm browsing some other artists and buying selected mp3s from their albums such as The Mint, and Howling Bells.

It's nearly nine o'clock in the evening and I've done no creative work tonight. Instead I've just finished my homework.  I'm currently on a week-long intensive course for a professional qualification... we're all walking away at the end of the day with trails of brain matter leaking out of our ears from the pressure of so much material being crammed into the confined space of cranial cavity. I share a taxi back to the centre of Bath, them grab my Park & Ride out to my car and a fast drive home through rolling rural hills... a brief chillout, mug of tea, then down to it. 
Homework every night.

I'm enjoying it, in a kind of twisted sense of pride. When I was younger I NEVER did homework. But now as an adult I'm aware of the benefit of reviewing everything I've been tutored on during the day, and following up with case studies and mock exams to test my knowledge.

And... I'm actually seeing how the skills I'm currently learning can be direcly applied to my day-to-day job. So, bonus, there's a point to doing all this.

First exam tomorrow: wish me luck.

Meanwhile, early mornings and the lunch break are seeing me continuing the revision of Iron Man Project, and I've started a new Yellow Dawn bolt-on called, "Recovered Relics #1", a bit of mental fun / doodling for me, dreaming up new artefacts for the players to find and NPCs to weild.

Right, 9pm. Time to adhere to my golden rule. No computer work after 9.

Night!

Djr
 

Discovering Ancient Ruins on doorstep... WTF?

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker¦

19:03 GMT, Sunday 22nd March 2009. "Starfleet" by Datashat is playing by choice. Red lava lamp glowing.  A faint glimmer of twilight visible through the gaps in the heavy cardboard I've placed over the glass canopy.

It's been a lovely couple of days away from work.

Yesterday I broke one of my golden rules. I'd taken a trip into town, sitting in a cafe with a paper notebook and pen... but instead of writing, I got down to some work...work.  I'm taking a professional qualification next week; a whole week of training and exams; a week away from my projects at a critical time for one of them.  So I decided to do a brain dump and map out all the ideas I've got in my head regarding the "Dynamic Video Solution."

On a different track, I've finished the Yellow Dawn supplement "GM Guide to NPC Revenge - Occult and Mythos" and pretty darn pleased with it.  Rather than a give-away freebie I've decided to make it available as a pay-per-download through lulu.  It's taken several weeks of thought and working through so I think it's a bargain at less than a quid.

Jo vanished for the weekend so after getting back from town, I had the house to myself. I started living between the Sky Bunker and the downstairs lounge (I've resurrected my old PS2 and Prince of Persia).  I left the house again around 9pm and met up with GBH, and went to see "The International" for the second time.  GBH enjoyed it.  Indeed GBH paid me a massive compliment, he said it was like watching a film of one of my books, "In fact, you could have written that David."

No wonder I liked the film so much! *grins*

NOTE TO SELF: don't go to see late night showings of films on Saturdays. Reason: a bunch of chavs stumbled in a few minutes after the film started.  One girl kept laughing through the death scenes.  And at the end, most of them complained about "not understanding it". No wonder. Grow a fekking brain.

Today I woke up to diffused sunlight streaming in through muslin drapes, reflecting and refracting off the brass bed posts.  I decided I'd have a day in the house.  A mug of tea sitting in the Room With A View, then upstairs into the darkness of the Sky Bunker. 45 minute Da Vinci sessions followed by 15 minute power snoozes... most of them spent lying on the bed in the room next door, with Lovecraft Audio stories (Re-Animator) playing out loud. The day passed slowly.  Several small intensely strong coffee's brewed up in the Octagon Caffeine God.  Some time spent sitting outside in the back garden, cool breeze and warm sunlight on my face and bare legs... sitting there with hair sticking up in random tufts, wearing nothing but a T-shirt, thick Norwegian socks and wrapped in my wool cardi called Starsky.  I got loads done, including some four pages of extra stuff for Shadows of the Quantinex. I've added it to the current Beta version in progress (Beta 8) but I won't publish it until after the next scheduled Yellow Dawn session as there's bound to be further tweaks and changes following play-testing.

Around 4pm I decided to grab a bath, throw on some clothes and drive down to the harbourside for a long solo walk and some coffee.  Instead, a couple minutes into my drive, I pulled into a forested car park that sits alongside the river near my house.  The river follows a winding route within a wide but deep gorge, similar in some respects to Jesmond Dene but on a much larger scale. The river route connects Bristol to Bath.  You can follow the edge of the river on foot, or by water craft, to the centre of either location.  I thought "Sod driving all the way into town, I can take a walk here."  I've never actually done this particular spot before, despite living only 300 metres or so away. In the afternoon sunlight I descended down to the river edge and began following the gentle but deep curving route. And discovered a little slice of heaven.  It's hard to put into words but there was something move-like about the whole experience. The location, the rich golden light... the steep cliffs rising up over a 100 metres either side, the dense tangle of forest and gnarled, torn-up landscape... I discovered a labyrinth of dry mud tracks leading in random directions, through a landscape that looked as if some giant had scooped out great gouges and thrown the slops against the side of the cliffs... a rugged, deeply undulating, wildly overgrown and yet passable terrain.  Amongst it all I discovered crumbling 18th century ruins...overgrown and brooding with an edgy atmosphere only kept unthreatening by the beautiful sunlight sloping through the emerald green trees.  I can't believe I’ve been living with this on my doorstep for over two years now, and only just discovered it. Brilliant.  After an hour I headed back and spent some time on a solid wooden bench near the river, and made notes whilst sitting in the intensifying golden light of the setting sun.

Ooooo, “Forest of Pagodas” by BLAME has just come on via random.  I’m whisked away to memories of recent months… snow storms in England, stuck in the house, and a last flight out of Bristol to Newcastle. Good memories.

 

The International – awesome thriller appropriately centred on the corrupt nature of Banks.

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

 

00:12 GMT, just past midnight so technically Wednesday (18th March) although it’s still Tuesday to me.  I’m revelling in the wake of creative brilliance.  I took a solo trip to the cinema tonight, drawn to see The International for no reason other than the fact it had Clive Owen in it.  I’d not seen much advertising.  I was delightfully ignorant regarding storyline.  I sat down, waited for the lights to dim and savoured the opening chords of the musical score….opening credits…

 

This could be any old thriller, right?

 

Wrong.

 

The film starts in near silence. The tension is immediate.  And it just gets better with every moment that passes.

 

I can't recommend “The International” enough. Tight. Soooooooo tight.  A brilliant script, dialogue was first-class.  The actors were given vast space to... well, act... and generate superb character development.  It’s very much a character driven story: you got a real sense that events were unfolding with the natural cause and effect paradigm of decision and consequence.  Twists aplenty.  At one point I was actually sitting with my hands near my face, almost biting my fingers in apprehension.  Then the film starts to draw towards a standard Hollywood ending, somebody caught, the truth about to be squeezed out… but then… the plot takes a sharp left turn and the whole film relaunches… it becomes epic, and I can recall sitting there in the cinema, aware I was grinning broadly like a kid as I realised there was sooo much more to watch.  I didn’t want the experience to end.   Whe it did end I sat right through the final credits even as most people had left... I wanted to savour those final moments.

 

I came home and bought an MP3 of the film soundtrack: I’m listening to it now. Bliss.

 

Watching The International was like discovering Bourne Identity again for the first time. 

 

Of course, when you then discover the film's creator, Tom Tykwer was the man responsible for the German masterpieces such as Run Lola Run, and The Princess and the Warrior... it all fits into place with an "ahhhh" sound.

 

The malefactor of  the story couldn’t be more appropriate in the current climate of financial meltdown caused by the greed and irresponsibility of the banking system.  “Banks strive to shackle us to debt,” is one line from the film.  Look at the origins of banking, the Medici family for example, originally a bunch of Florentine thugs who became respectable by avoiding the Catholic laws on usury.  Forget Islamic Fundamentalists and South American drug cartels as the bad guy: banks are the new blackguard of corruption. What’s really interesting as a storyline, is that whereas not many of us can have direct access to terrorist and machine-gun toting cocaine producers, all of us can have access to banks… they’re plugged into everything from government to grannies. So as a malign network they are literally omnipresent. How do you fight such a Devil?

 

I will definitely go and see it again.

 

Djr

Shielding Sky Bunker from the Light

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

08:36 GMT, Sunday morning, 15th March.  I'm in an elevated state of mind.  I've just finished the first mug of tea of the day, which I drank sitting in the room with a view, on the storey below this one; a sunny day, hazy golden light painting the vast expanse of distant hills and open fields surrounding one half of the view, a patchwork of dark and lighter greens, yellows and browns; and a sea of red tiled roofs stretching away from my position.  A few tower blocks with high windows winking back sharp blades of reflected sunlight.  The world has that familiar feeling of Spring in the air.  This new year is opening up.  I'm starting to see its character.

So now I'm one storey higher, sitting on my rickety wooden seat and time-stained table, both of which came from Hotwells (1992-1995) via the Happy Flat (1995-2006).  To my left is a hard-backed notebook, spiral bound, lying open with two white pages exposed, side by side, crowded with hand written notes in blue ink; some sections crossed out neatly in pencil; other sections highlighted and annotated in red pen.  This is the raw thinking of the current Yellow Dawn "bolt-on" I've been working on quietly for a few weeks now, a guide to NPC revenge.  Lying on top of the open notebook is my ancient mobile phone, a Nokia 6110; battered and scuffed its survived being dropped a dozen times and does its simple job: it's a phone. The old fashioned display shows a countdown timer, 00:27, so I've got nearly half an hour before I take a break.

Near the notepad is a 20 year old copy of a thesaurus, on top of which sites a 350GB toughdrive. There's a human skull just peeking around the side of the screen of my laptop. There's a glass hypodermic needle, something of an antique, marked "Made in Italy for ROCKET of London".  There's a plaster cast gargoyle sitting cross-legged and thoughtful beside these items.

At the back of the desk, in one corner is a large stereo speaker, angled towards me, just like its counterpart on the opposite corner.  There's a lava lamp and an array of photographs in different frames: Ramona, Simon, Kelvin, my sister, Matthias, Jo, Tony, my mum, my dad, and Zaniah.

To the right of my laptop there's an old copy of Yellow Dawn, lying open with two pages exposed, both showing a list of Mythos monsters.  Poking out from beneath this is a 100GB toughdrive.  There’s a bright red tea mug with white polka dots.  A pewter letter opener from the far north of Norway. A rectangular bundle wrapped in gold silk, my tarot cards.

I'm playing tracks by Datassette, my new favourite artist.  Don't know much about him other than he's a bedroom producer of low-fi electronica. Half his tracks I've deleted: too discordant and rambling, but the other half are gems of atmosphere with a distinctly 1980's vibe.

Work's been much more manageable this week. Mainly because I feel like I'm getting massive support from the technical bods involved in this Dynamic Video Solution I'm re-scoping and project managing.  It's a brute of a project and is eating away my work-time but so far I'm coping and my other projects are progressing to schedule.

We're half way through March already? How did that happen? Last time I blinked it was late Feb.  I've got a theory.  The fact I'm not pushing myself so hard creative wise the past three months means that time is going quicker.  Reason: when I'm working hard I'm savouring every second, and cramming in as a much as I can into my moments of life.  Since Christmas I cruising on auto with vast swaths of time spent doing very little; time compensates and speeds up.

I'm enjoying the slow pace of revising the novel, Iron Man Project.  Rather than working on a laptop, I'm walking around with a copy of the book in my bag and reading / making notes whilst sitting in cafes and on the Park & Ride bus.  Ironically it means the thing will take longer to revise than originally write, but it's giving me a reason to ease off the pace.

Countdown display says 00:11.

I'm going to open up the NPC Guide to Revenge, make a start before the alarm goes off.

EDIT: 19.15pm Sunday night. Beautiful day.  I spent most of it here in the cosy castle, alternating between the Sky Bunker and downstairs.  Sick of the afternoon sun streaming in through the glass canopy and dazzling me as I work, I've made some blinds out of thick black card, cut to shape and size so that they block out all light.  Am considering using a craft knife to slice some interesting intersecting lines and shapes into the card... hmmm, very John Doe in SEVEN.  Took a drive into town with Jo late PM, parked up and did the walk around the harbourside in the golden light of the afternoon. Bliss. Then a coffee at the Arnolfini. Ahhhhhhh. Divine.

 


 

Those childhood memories

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

23:18 GMT, Friday, 6th March 2009. 

Funny how music can conjure up such vivid memories and intense emotions.

"Running Up That Hill", a massive sample of Kate Bush brought into a snappy-bass electro track by Datassette.  Much of the original track is there.  And so I crash backwards through time and stages of personal development to 1985.

Some people cringe at the 80's, but as we gain more distance and perspective on that era, I think it was an incredible period.  Maybe not the period itself, but the IDEA of the 80s and what it stood for.

1985 and the Hounds of Love.  For me it's a hot sweaty summer holiday, age 14 going on 15, out of School and free for 6 weeks to indulge in the big things that were going on for me back then: roleplaying games, girls, merrydown cider and house parties.  In particular it was the party at my parents house: the party of 85.  It was Live Aid.   It was the summer I bought Call of Cthulhu (2nd Edition) after weeks and weeks of playing Gamma World every day with Ciaran O'c.  Eurythmics Touch Dance.  My first plunge into the books of H.P.Lovecraft.  Nothing would ever be the same again. 

Words, words, words... scrolling left to right, the limitations of this Guttenburg Galaxy... I can't yet convey in a meme the actual VIBE, the euphoric uplifting dream-like imagery that comes with the music and those memories.

I can picture it but it would need a thousand words just to convey a glimpse of it.

But I'm sure you have your own.

So indulge me for this moment of blissful nostalgia.


EDIT: Monday, 9th March 2009.  08:10 GMT.  Not long before I leave for work. A bright sunny day outside. Blue sky. Cold air. THick white clouds scudding.  It's been a good weekend.  Long.  Saturday was a day-long session of Yellow Dawn, further playtesting of Shadows of the Quantinex. That's our 18th session since March 2008... meaning we've been playing for over 100 hours.  The guys are near the end of it now.  I wrote up some tweaks to the current beta version and published them as Beta version 7. Saturday night saw me enjoying a pint with Hagen and DocToc, followed by a trip across town to Showcase and a date with The Watchmen.  Wonderful film.  Sunday was my regular solo trip into town. Boston Tea Party this time.  Coffee and a danish.  Notes via pen and paper. Walking out of the cafe the bright sunny day transmorgified into a black sky and a deluge of rain that left me soaked through to the skin...and smiling.  Back to Cosy Castle, strip off and a hot bath whilst Jo brings me a mug of tea.  Then I'm alone again, up in the Sky Bunker and lost in my creative worlds of words and pictures.  It's good.

I've been listening to a bunch of Datassette tracks over and over again. Embedding the memories.  Forming the tracks into temporal librarians.


 

Show me the way to get home, I'm tired and I want to go to bed...

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

20:40 GMT, Wednesday 4th March 2009.  Sitting at my desk, wrapped in Starsky and enjoying that euphoric headspace that comes with the tail end of man-flu.  Ironic, considering the night I had last night. 

I left work utterly fekked.  I'd started the day leaving my mum's house in Newcastle at 5.30 A.M. to catch my flight down to Bristol... a journey that finally saw me sitting at my work desk in Bath at 9.30 A.M.  But I'd had no sleep due to the fact my man-flu was shovelling glutinous phlegm down my throat every few minutes... so when I tried to sleep, each time after dropping off I'd suddenly bolt awake gasping for breath, choking.  Not pleasant.

I think everyone had a stressful day yesterday and I wanted a pint.  I didn't have my car because I'd come straight to work from Bristol airport, so could drink.  However, the bus back to where I live only comes once per hour.

Gonzo Ben joined me in the Garrick was what was supposed to be a quick one, but nestling down next to a roaring fire in a quaint pub in a historic town with a glass of Leffe in your hand... well, we both got comfortable.  I decided to miss the bus I'd intended to catch.

Time passed. Gonzo Ben and I parted company and I went to the bus stop to wait for the crappy 332 service back to Bristol.

I wait.

And I wait.

Fekking thing doesn't turn up.

Oh, did I tell you it was raining?  And about 5 degrees above zero?

I see Stu K, the Head of my Department walking past. "Hey Stu, fancy a drink?"

So I find myself back in the Garrick like some scene from Groundhog Day.

A few drinks later I tumble out, part company with Stu and go wait for my bus.

I wait.

And I wait.

I'm getting really cold now, and I'm hungry and pissed off.

I see Jen W, a work colleague walking past. "Hey Dave," she greets in her Canadian tone, "Do you want a lift back home?"

OH YESSSS! I'm delighted.  A warm and fast car ride back to my front door.  Jen only lives around the corner from me, so it's perfect.

Except she didn't mention she'd parked a 30 minute walk away.

So through the rain and wind we trudge. Yapping away I'm not really paying attention to the route we're taking.

We get to her car. There's a problem.  The car battery is dead.  We're going nowhere.  "Oh Dave, I'm really sorry."

No worries, I grin, genuinely, with a bead of rainwater running off the tip of my nose. "I enjoyed the walk. I'm, err, going to head back into town and catch that bus."

I trudge off into the darkness of a park I know we walked through.

I'm pissed, as in drunk, I'm ill, compounding the effect of the alcohol on my ability to think: I'm cold and I'm wet and I'm hungry. 

And I'm lost.

Yup, in a big ass park in the total darkness I do not know where the fek I am.

I finally see a car parked on the side of a road. It's a taxi.  The driver is so sorry for me that he gives me a lift back into town for free.  He drops me off at my bus stop. 

The fekking 322 bus service.  I can't believe I'm back here again.

I wait.

And I wait.

Suddenly the bus appears out of nowhere, roaring around a corner and hurtling down the road.  I've stepped away from the bus stop to make a phone call.  I hurry forward to put my hand out... the guy nearly doesn't stop. I shuffle on, there's no other passengers.  I tell the guy where I want to go.  He's Polish.  His English isn't too good.  He scowls at me like I have the problem and says, "eh?"

I repeat where I want to go.

He grunts, "I don't go there."

WTF.

"Yes you do... you're the 332, right?"

"Not at this time of night.  We don't go that far.  We stop at-"

Basically, the bus isn't going to get me all the way home, only about 2/3rds of the way.

I pay the extortionate fekking price for the ticket (somebody should murder the bosses at First Bus company) and literally fall into my seat, banging my head off a handrail as the crazy Polish driver guns the engine and floors it.

I ring Jo and arrange for her to pick me up.

She's already there by time I get off the bus.

Bliss-City.

Hot bath.

1/2 a litre of cold Leffe in a tall glass.

Nice. *smiles*

 


 

Mysterious Pussy

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

08:48 GMT, Sunday 1st March 2009.  I woke up on the edge of a forest this morning; lying on a low wide sleeping surface, in a large and simple room with white walls and lots of windows: grey light outside and a dense expanse of dark green looming close.  One of the windows was open all night to vent out the sun-surface heat of the house and allow in a steady stream of cool night air.  Lying there in a prolonged state of thoughtfulness, not moving, eyes open and gazing, I listened to the growing chorus of birdsong.  And strangely, sadly, my heart sank.  I'm acutely conscious of time passing in this place.  The birdsong signifies the onward stride towards Spring... then will come Summer... and then Autumn. Death is a guest in this house, watching...waiting.

Now I'm up, sitting at the big oak refectory table with the square-latticed French doors to my left.  Trentemoller is playing via random selection on the laptop.  I'm on my second mug of tea and feeling groggy.

10:09 GMT, I've just finished a new mind map to drop into revised edition of Iron Man Project... part of Jean-Luc Korda's character, and a visual aid to allow readers to get a clearer grasp of the complex interrelationships occuring within the story.  My sister's invited me to join her and her mates for a long walk along the coast. Yay. Fish and Chips from Marshalls for me. :o)))

19:19 GMT, I had a great day at the coast.  It alternated being grey with howling wind to sunny and calm.  Sat on a bench beside the ancient ruins of the Priory (11th century A.D.) munching fish and chips with loads of salt and vinegar...washed down with a rare can of ice cold Coca-Cola. *kisses lips followed by a refreshing AHHHHHHHHHhhhhhh sound*

Next door's cat went missing today.  It left the house at 5.30 A.M. and hasn't been seen since.  I took a walk along the edge of the woods at sundown on the off chance it was stuck in a tree or worse...

No sign.

Very strange.

08:34 GMT, next day, Monday.  My man-flu's gone to the next level; lots of phlegm on my chest, a hacking cough and that hot/dry and sticky mucus thing going on in my sinuses.  The sun is out.  I sipped my first mug of tea of the day sitting up on the sofa bed, feet stretched out a view of the broad Scandinavian beyond the door glass doors.  I'm so happy to be here another day. 

15:34 GMT, Monday afternoon.  I did the walk into town through old Jesmond streets of memory and nostalgia.  Then coffee and toasted tea cake at the Tyneside Coffee Rooms before strolling back.

Next door's cat has re-appeared.  2 A.M. with no explanation other than a "meow-meow-meow".

Equally as strange, Bob, the cat that recently lost the use of his back legs has started walking (a bit).  I carried him out into the back garden so the chap could do his business... and he started to walk around.  A positive development for the world of cats.  However, once brought back into the house he's back to pulling himself around on his front paws... sliding along the floor on his belly with his rear legs dragging uselessly behind him.  If he was human I'd say he was a fake cripple looking to claim disability benefit on the scrounge, but he's a cat... so, go figure.


 

Man-Flu and the Jesmond Bubble

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

13:05 GMT, Friday 27th Feb 2009.  I'm back in Newcastle.  An easy late night flight yesterday after work.  Half a bottle of wine and catching up with my sister, sitting in the rocking chair and enjoying the way our relationship has locked together again, old wounds gone; I got the truth from her about mum's health...a seperate story from the brave face mum showed me when I arrived.

I woke up this morning stark bollock naked, face down, spread-eagled on a huge sofa bed downstairs in what was dad's room... layered in sweat and baring my arse to the world.  Mum's got the heating on hotter than the surface of the sun: I'm used to living with very little heating.  I'm surprised I didn't melt into a puddle during the night.

I've come down with man-flu. First time in nearly a year, I reckon.  It's been simmering for a few days but it hammered me on Wednesday at work and been getting steadily worse. 

Work's utterly insane at the moment. A project that's been on the back-burner for a couple months has suddenly turned critical.  An enterprise level solution for delivering video and pre-roll ads across all of the websites in the Business.  I've spent the last few months thinking we're going to deliver one kind of technical solution - and then last week, several bods in the IT division turn round and flag various issues, and suddenly I'm looking at an entirely different technical solution. Fek!  Some steep learning cliffs and a big sense of playing "Catch-Up". I spent Wednesday night tossing and turning in bed, half-asleep, half-awake, running things through my brain and freaking out.  However, yesterday, after a lot of conversations I think I've got it sussed.  We shall see.  Of course, this is on top of everything else I'm managing - so the juggling act continues.  I love it though. Better than sitting twiddling your thumbs in the middle of a recession.

This morning I walked into town and found myself in the art deco bliss of the Tyneside Coffee Rooms.  It's been closed for a few years whilst undergoing a massive refurb and restoration project.  Today was my first visit since it re-opened.  The Tyneside was my original cafe haunt, back in 1989 - 1991, when I was 19 plus.  Memories of working on notes for "Dark Coyote" - blech - awful attempt at a novel - and writing a couple of murder mysteries.  This is all whilst I was still living in Newcastle, before Bristol or my life there even existed in my awareness. I was going to grab a mug of filter coffee and a ham & cheese toaste (old favourite) but I settled for an Americano and a toasted tea cake.  I'm still working on the revised version of Iron Man Project, and a bolt-on for Yellow Dawn called "GM Guide to NPC Revenge". Mawahahahah *evil chuckle*

Mum: Without going into too much personal detail; there is now a growing pain and the beginning of the pain-killer phase.  I'm gutted, because I know as the pain killers increase in strength, things will become less lucid and more difficult...for all of us.

My sister has now moved back from London to live here for the next few months, whilst mum goes through her final... phase.

It's kind of weird to write about this.

To add to the emotional charge of being here  Bob, one of mum's two cats (of the more-human-than-cat variety) has abruptly and mysteriously lost the use of his back legs.  He's not in any pain, so there's no desire to have him put down; and he seems quite content to drag himself around on his front paws - thanks for the shiny polished wooden floors.

I'm here for a few days. Looking forward to the Jesmond Bubble experience.

Djr

Crazy Chronicles 5 - Shouting Back

 ¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

 

07:38 GMT, Wednesday 18th 2009.  Grey murky light.  "Freddie and the Trojan horse" by The Radio Dept is playing on random selection.  I'm barely awake: I'm wearing yesterday's work clothes, crystals of sleep wedged in the corners of my eyes.  I chose the wrong time to re-engage my creative burn.  The head of my department is away for 10 days and work has just gone INSANE... which isn't a bad thing in a recession; it's just there is a LOT to juggle.  So my brain has the slightly pleasurable ache as if it's done a triple-marathon.  No writing last night.  Went out with GonzoBen straight after work and sank a couple of Leffe and savoured a LONG conversation near the pub's fire... talk about life, death, reality. Good bloke, GonzoBen, one of life's rare AWAKE.

 

Awake.  I was kept awake last night.  Things with Mr Sweary Shouty  Man, my nutter next door, have begun to escalate.

 

I think I mentioned seeing him outside the house a couple weeks ago, mid-day, pointing at a house across the road repeating some crazy statement over and over and over again, always ending in an aggressive grunting word: this time Blasphemy.

 

Well, last week Jo and I were leaving the house around 7 at night to go out for a meal and we both heard him, just around the corner, where our street intersects another.  A group of people walked past, all turning their heads to look back with bemusement...so I knew that they had seen him, and were equally surprised.  I took a peek and saw him sitting in his car with the window wound all the way down, pissed, smoking a cigarette and repeating a statement over and over and over again... the final aggressive grunting word(s) this time was: FUCKING PRICK.  Nice, eh, 7pm.

 

I'm thinking... how does he afford to live here?  I mean, this is not a bad area.  He's living in a massive flat, one half of the semi-detached house that is attached to mine.  He drives a nice car.  And yet... he looks like a half-burnt weasel, short black hair, red face, dark angry eyes.

 

Last night I get back home, utterly exhausted, relaxed from the Leffe, ready to just crash.  I cooked up a meal, watched a documentary about our attempts at building a star on earth (Nuclear Fusion), pretty interesting. And then... bed. Ahhhhhh, blisto, bed. Curtains drawn.  Big brass four poster. Sumptuous pillows.  Luxurious bedding.  Jo's away at the moment so I just fell in...still dressed and waited for sleep to drag me under.

 

Thud.

 

Mumble mumble.

 

Repeat, louder this time.

 

Mumble mumble mumble.

 

Some kind of angry sound.

 

Mumble mumble mumble mumble, aggressive grunting word.

 

Repeat.

 

I sit up: Oh-for-Fek's sake!

 

I twist round in bed and glare at the wall behind me that I can't even see because of the dark and dig deep into my lungs to catch a bass-tone: "SHUT THE FEK UP YOU LUNATIC!"

 

He goes silent.

 

I fall back into the pillows. But now my adrenaline is up and sleep dances near me, taunting but not embracing.

 

I can hear Crazy Man moving around. A door slams shut, and then an outside door goes bang.

 

Fek, here we go I think and mentally prepare for running downstairs for some kind of confrontation.

 

He's outside, mumbling, doing something with his bin.

 

Then I hear the door go bang again, and I can hear him moving around in the room next to my bedroom.

 

He's doing his repeating statement thing, but almost quietly, as if he can't help himself...? His voice is heavy-bass and grating and despite the fact he's being quiet my ears are tuning into it and it's driving me to distraction.

 

I want to sleep.

 

"HEY M____ F_____ SHUUUUUT UUUUUPPPP!"

 

He goes quiet.

 

I start to drift into the shadows of consciousness.

 

Thud.

 

Door bang.

 

But he's still inside, moving around. Another burst of angry repeated statement.

 

"SHUT UP!!"

 

Finally silence, or rather, I finally enter sleep: half-fancying I'll wake up in the dark to sense him standing over me, covered in blood, and faeces, grinning before he plunges the knife in. Pleasant dreams for me then, eh.

 

Something needs to be done about this.  It's stopped being a curiosity.

Angela and the Toasted Tea Cake

¦ dialling in from the Sky Bunker ¦

13:32 GMT, Sunday 15th February 2009.  Misty sunlight is flooding through the glass canopy above my head.  Only a week ago we were dealing with blizzards and storms.  I love the swift variety of weather in this country...even the grey moods it has.  "Lifeform" by Blame is playing though choice on the laptop, the heavy bass whumping out through the large speakers mounted on the corners of the desk: the drum and bass beat and the electronic samples merge to create a sci-fi sound. I'm playing the whole album - Into The Void - as I have done, over and over again since discovering it less than 2 weeks ago.

The last strands of the Mood cling to my senses... it gained delightful intensity during the week and now it's fading.

I stayed in bed late this morning; not surfacing until after 10 A.M., snuggled up with Jo. Then I dropped into Swampy and gunned the biscuit tin's tiny engine and made my way to the city... parked up by Dom's old place and walked along the harbourside to the Arnolfini Cafe. Americano and a Pain Au Chocolate.  My head is brimming with ideas and tasks that need doing, so I spent some time jotting everything down, creating order amongst the chaos. 

I have a confession to make.  I'm finally reviewing Iron Man Project.  Or what I mean, up until now, I've never given it a thorough review phase.  It's the 3rd novel I wrote (back in the dark phase at the end of 2004 eary 2005), and came out in 2006 as part of the three-novel launch blast (alongside God Seed and Dante's Fool): I just wanted it out and done with.  I've been putting off the review for weeks... one reason is because I've had a large chunk of time "off" to just relax; the other reason is I hate / dread reading my work.  Ironically, I'm actually loving it.  I'm getting right into the characters again and have the pleasure of opening up some scenes and re-knitting them so give more clarity and sense.

"Forest of Pagodas" has just come on and the Mood flooded my sensorium.  I'm seeing scenes of Bath, Bristol and Newcastle, in my mind's eye, all caught in flurries of snow.  Lovely.

I'm hoping today stretches and gives me a sense of indulgence in the things I want to do.  Yesterday, Saturday, passed in the blink of an eye.  Woke up fairly late and headed over to Gloucester Road, to cafe Number 1, my old haunt during the Uncertain Days of 2006 and 2007... a session of Yellow Dawn was scheduled to start at NOon, at Hagen's place, and I wanted to spent an hour or so preparing notes and local plot lines.

Sitting in a small window bay, with enough room for two chairs facing each other across the table, I took out all my books and papers and became lost in the world of Yellow Dawn.  We're still play-testing the massive campaign I wrote for YD, called "Shadows of the Quantinex".  For the non-RPG literate, it's a piece of work that was as intensive as writing a novel, but a story that is written to be played, rather than written to be read.  If that makes sense.  I launched the Beta version a year ago now, and the play-testing is probably about 3/4s of the way through. I'm relieved to say it's been a good experience... the story has held up to scrutiny and provided some real challenges to the group, and a lot of fun too.  Whilst there, a young woman asked if she could share my table.  I smiled and gestured for her to take the chair opposite.  I got on with my stuff, but then a waitress brought over a plate bearing a hot toasted tea-cake, cut in half. The smell of cinnamon and raisins wafted across me and my stomach reminded me I'd not eaten any breakfast.  I looked up at her and said, "Oh my god that smells amazing."  The woman grinned, and proceeded to spread butter onto the two halves.  I buried my nose back into my notes... then after 10 minutes a plate with half a tea-cake slid into my field of vision, pushed gently by the woman's hand. "Do you want it?" she asked; "My eyes are always bigger than my stomach."

I didn't say no, and I was delighted by the easy nature of two strangers sharing a pleasant moment.

Her name is Angela. So, thank you Angela, Toasted Tea-Cake Fairy.

 

Djr

The Divine Commute

 

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

 

08:57 GMT, Tuesday 10th Feb 2009.  An utterly divine morning.  Snow on the hills and a blazing sun in a blue sky…ethereal light spilling across the landscape.  It’s such a great start to your day when your journey into work leaves you grinning.  Within 5 minutes I’m leaving the city behind.  Open countryside, quaint villages of ancient stone and gnarled trees standing like sentinels on routes created back in Roman times. 

 

Here’s a pic taken during my drive in this morning. 

 

 

Snow Mood and BLAME, a New Soundtrack

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

17:41 GMT, Sunday 8th Feb, 2009.  Darkness beyond the heavy wood-lattice-effect double-glazed French doors to my left; although there's just enough light from the near-full moon to paint the canvass of the sky a Prussian Blue... casting the thick and twisting branches of the trees framing the view in stark black contrast.  I'm sitting at the large oak refectory table, "Forest of Pagodas" from the album called INTO THE VOID by Blame is playing by direct choice... headphones wedged into my ears.  This album has joined ranks with several indivudal tracks to become the soundtrack of this period:
() "Utopia" by Brenda Perry
() "Quicksand" by La Roux
() "To Lose My Life" by White Lies.

This is my final day here in Newcastle. I'll be catching a 5.30 A.M. taxi for a 7 o'clock flight - so long as the current snow storm to hit the UK confines itself to the midlands and doesn't slip up here. Meanwhile, we've got severe weather warnings in place for tomorrow PM and evening down in the South... so even if I make it to work tomorrow, there's a chance I might get stuck there.

It's been a mega chilled trip.  Lots of walking.  A little bit of work on the Yellow Dawn - Metaphysicals supplement (now on precog).  I'm planning to nail a quick review of the novel Iron Man Project over the next several weeks, in response to some feedback about it being a difficult read with there being so many characters and corporations to keep track of... I want to see if I can add some padding to make it an "easier" read.

The Snow Mood references pertains to the increasing presence and strength of a new "Mood".  I'm surprised and delighted to be going through this peculiar thing again, so soon after the return of the Mood last year.  This "smell / emotion" is a different beast, and one that takes me back to 1989... Shadow Run with Adz and Richy L; writing Oakfield; a freezing snowy winter evening out driving my dad's car... with Adz in the passenger seat... pulling handbrake turns on wide roads turned to sheet ice...whooping and laughing like the daft teenagers we were...

...there's also memories of Bergen in 1988, being up on one of the mountains there.

...and of tramping through knee-deep snow up in the Arctic a few weeks later...headphones on, with Thomas Dolby and "This Flat Earth" providing the soundtrack to that period.

...and of early 1996, walking around snowy Jesmond streets with a new Front Line Assembly album on my "new" CD-Walkman.

I love the fact that the Mood remains present in every sniff of air, and grows intense in waves of "emotion" so that every moment feels super-charged with significance.

Darn! This album is bloody brilliant.  It's meshing with the Mood, reinforcing it and becoming part of it.  The track "Immortal" is now playing.  I feel incredibly positive, recharged from my mental hiatus during all of January.

I fell asleep in a rocking chair in front of a roaring fire last night.  Everyone had gone upstairs to bed: I noticed the fire had some embers glowing so threw another chunk of wood on which burst into flames immediately.  I supped a glass of red wine and watched the flames flickering in the cavernous space of this room... and woke up at some point later with a dry mouth and slightly stiff neck where I'd sparked out, catching flies with my gob.

Yesterday I caught up with Richy L, a guy I've known since I was 6 years old.  He's just back from 9 months of travelling the world.  He looks great and seems not too freaked out being back.  I also got a text from Jenny The Park yesterday, who coincidentally has just got back from a year-long trek of the globe... it transpires she's bought a copy of EDGE, and seems to be enjoying it.

Currently roasting new potatoes pasted with butter and sesame seed oil...with lots of garlic and some cherry tomatoes.

Djr

 

Two severed heads in mama's bathroom

¦ dialling in from Jesus Mound ¦

11:09 GMT, Friday 6th February 2009. "Utopia" by Brendan Perry is playing by choice on the laptop.  It's a demo track from Brenda's Myspace page, a sample from the much anticipated and long long long awaited new album from the man.  I've been playing it over and over the past two days... a soundtrack to an unusual period in time. 

Right now I'm sitting at the ancient oak refectory table in my mum's place. Up North.  320 miles from Bristol.  It looks like I'm lucky to get here...and lucky to be here judging by what the news is describing happening back in the South West.

Yesterday started with me being stuck at home in Bristol, unable to get my car out of the drive...and no buses running, all because of the snow.  I nailed some urgent work issues via Email and took the rest of the day off.  In a way, it was fortuitous as I had an incredibly productive day: I finally nailed Edition 2.1 of the Primary Rules for Yellow Dawn... a new release containing fixes for the errata identified during play-testing since the launch of the 2nd Edition in January 2008, and some improved systems.  I'd actually done the bulk of this work during the recent Christmas break in Newcastle... but then that bloody BLANK page crept back in somehow. (Long story, an issue with Microsoft Word after I distilled the document into a PDF, a random blank page kept appearing).  Part of the reason behind launching 2.1 was to get rid of that BLANK page and I'd made extra efforts to ensure it didn't carry across into Edition 2.1...and just after Christmas, when I was just about to release it, I distilled the document and the fekking thing was back. I was furious.  Anyway, yesterday, I found a way to slowly and painfully extract the fekking thing.

Meanwhile, sitting up in the Sky Bunker with my laptop, I'd been watching the data feed from Bristol airport. Most of the flights seemed okay, if not a bit delayed.  So took the decision to make the journey there last night.  Parked-up (cost a fortune) and checked-in... then watched the departures board turning red. Cancelled. Cancelled. Cancelled. Shit!  Amazingly, my flight to Newcastle remained green, and on time.  Flights either side of it weren't happening.  Got on the plane and sat for an age waiting for ground crews to de-ice the wings... all the time I can see snow starting to fall and I'm thinking, "Come on come on come ON!!!"... I could imagine the pilot saying, "Sorry folks, we can't take off."

But I made it.  Newcastle.

I woke up this morning in my old bedroom... different bed, and different wallpaper and different desk, but still the same vibe and the same view.

There's snow here... but it's dry, crunchy underfoot, blue skies and a divine golden sunlight.  Meanwhile the news today is saying that Bristol has been literally "cut-off" by the snow.  The police are saying nobody can get in or out of the city because the roads are so bad.  The bridges across the Severn river have been closed due to ice falling from the overhead cables smashing the windshields of cars. So, as I said, lucky to get here despite the weather, and lucky to be here and avoiding the worst of it.

I padded downstairs in the bright, soft, early morning light and brewed up a mug of coffee. With the dazzling white snow outside and sense of sharp crisp air, I was reminded of childhood times in Norway... and of a particular vibe... I'm aware of something similar to The Mood forming in my sensorium again: a delicious smell/emotion that evokes powerful memories.

Smiling, I walked into the downstairs bathroom... part of the new extension built onto the house so my father could live out his final phase at home - a windowless room, so void of the light that floods the rest of the house.  I started to walk in just as my eyes focus on the two heads... thick mops of hair... severed at the neck and propped upright on a floor-mounted cabinet.
JESUS FEK!
Even as my body's momentum was forwards my body muscles were going into spasm and then surging with adrenalin to recoil me from the room.
Ah!
Then my brain fully processes what I'm seeing.
Not severed heads.
Two wigs on "dummy" heads.
I laugh out loud at my own stupidity.

The weather man is predicting a heavy dump of snow here late on Sunday, and I'm supposed to be flying Monday morning.  Let's hope my luck holds.

Djr

 

Purple Sky - Snowed In

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

07:18 GMT, Thursday 5th Feb 2009.  "Never Never Land" by UNKLE is playing via random.  Big speakers on the corners of my desk turned down low.  It's not the kind of day for loud music...it seems.  There's a hush going on.  Purple sky beyond the glass canopy above my head, and if i was to stand up and peer outside I'd see a world of white.  Massive snow dump last night.  I've never seen this much snow in Bristol in the 18 years I've been here.  Local internet says all bus services cancelled... and I'm not comfortable trying to get across the hills between here and Bath in my little biscuit tin (Swampy). So... I'm going to see how the weather shapes up and the reports filter in before I risk getting stuck on the way to work.  I'm also supposed to be flying to Newcastle tonight... so getting to the airport is going to be an issue, and that's even if the flight's not been cancelled.

Djr

EDIT: 08:11, more snow falling. BBC News confirms that all bus services here and the Park and Ride have been suspended. 

EDIT: 10:27, so I was standing by the front window bay, looking outside, thinking... "it's daylight now, the roads linking Bristol to Bath are bound to be clear," and then I watch a small delivery van sliding down the steep hill beside the house, sliding and turning, sliding and turning into my street...and sliding towards the front wall of my house. Thankfully the guy came to a stop against a mound of snow.  He's just left his van there and walked off. WTF?

Cerebral Awakening

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

07:39 GMT, Monday 2nd Feb 2009.  Small flecks of snow are swirling around the glass canopy above my head.  In London, they’ve had 5 CM and that city is grinding to a halt.  There is some doubt as to whether we’ll get hit as hard.  I’m supping a strong mug of tea, my 2nd this morning.  No more sitting in bed reading a book until the final moment before I head out to work.  After a month “off” from writing and all things laptop orientated, after a month of chilling out and not thinking… my brain is making a comeback.

It’s been a divine weekend.  Got home before 6 on Friday night… cleaned out the fireplace and lit a new one.  Jo brought a bottle of vino home and that was us set really.  Lights off… shadows dancing across the room as gold, orange and yellow flames consumed the axe-splintered logs I was feeding into the fire.  Saturday arrived and for the first time in a month I didn’t have to get up early to visit a garage (part of the car-crash debacle, now resolved).  I went up into the Sky Bunker and started working on a Yellow Dawn supplement – enabling characters to develop Metaphysical talents.  Apart from going out Saturday night with friends (Ms Scarlet’s birthday bash) I didn’t leave the house…and just blazed with creative inspiration.  Sunday started with mugs of tea and toasted fruit-loaf in bed… I left Jo dozing, padded downstairs again and built up another fire: I spent most of the day in the Sky Bunker, but I came down every break-session, to load in some more wood and stoke it up… Jo was working with her laptop in the room so it kept her warm.  We were able to keep the central heating off all day.  Sunday evening I’d finished the first release of the Yellow Dawn supplement and published it via my website, then relocated downstairs… and spent the rest of the night with the fire roaring.  So all in all a very productive and extremely relaxing couple of days.

Djr

*YD* Fire in the mist – Nightwish is soundtrack to a killing

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

12:35 GMT, Wednesday 28th Jan YD+9.  Dense grey skies overhead.  Despite this, and the death I saw this morning, I’m in a good mood.  Amazing how the human mind is able to adjust to a new paradigm.  Perhaps if I hadn’t woken up snuggled in the heat of a woman I love and adore; or if I hadn’t lain in bed with a relaxed smile curving my lips after she left for London, things could have felt different following the event I witnessed.  The truth of the matter is I’m in a good place: mentally and emotionally.

When I went up to the Sky Bunker this morning, I saw the world was encased in a heavy mist.  Fantastic!  My mind enthused, always delighted when I can go out into what I call “horror weather”.  I jumped into Swampy and nosed the car out of the drive, eventually merging with a main road… early morning traffic heading towards the edges of the DZ.  Like everyone else around me, you forget that you’re driving through the boundary of a place rife with infection.  The apprehension fades and the journey becomes just another commute… like things used to be, before Yellow Dawn happened.  Civil Defence Soldiers on metal “fire towers”, wrapped in Gore-Tex BDU’s, smudged by the mist, standing around cradling stubby machine guns or  straddling the padded seats of the flame-cannons.

After 10 years of kill-squads going out into the DZ’s… there’s very little activity these days.

Well, so I thought.

Entering the outskirts of Bath via my beautiful rural country road is always a delight.  Especially with the eerie mist clinging to ancient dry-stone walls and gnarled, bare-limbed trees.  I passed the secure perimeter fence of the Park & Ride, found a space, locked up and joined the queue of people waiting to get into the city.  Wasn’t a long wait.  I had Killing Joke playing via random through my earphones… drowned out by the throaty rumble of the armoured bus trundling to a stop.  Everyone clambered aboard. I noted the tense expression on the face of the guy sitting with the massive chugger-gun atop the bus roof.

The mist became denser as the bus slid through the Western DZ zone... a track by Nightwish came on my headphones via random.  A noticed a flare of orange light up ahead, to the side of the road… fuzzy through the murky mist.  Rapid movement.  Something flailing.  The atmosphere inside the bus become electrified.  Everybody strained to see out of the windows… but nobody made a sound.  Four men, two still on horses, quickly reloading cross-bows.  Two men forward, one hosing out burning fuel from a back-mounted flame-thrower, his companion standing ready with a massive axe.  Their target must have been running at the bus… so I’m guessing they were either on patrol (lucky for us) or on point (I didn’t know that was routine) for the bus journey.  Either way… the thing was on its knees, ablaze, grey-blue smoke belching up from the ignited body fats and charred flesh.  Time seemed to slow down.  But the Nightwish track in my earphones was like some surreal perfect score… a movie soundtrack. That’s it… living here now. It’s like a movie.

I think not knowing if it was actually a man or woman… to much fire and smoke to be certain… and not being able to see any human features… that certainly helped avoid any real feeling of horror. I mean, I’m writing about this now and I feel…okay!

So, onto happier things.

I went round to the house of the chap who caused the car crash. They paid up for the repairs… not all of it, but enough to satisfy the issue.

That’s all for now.

Djr

Crazy Chronicles 4

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

17:49 GMT, Sunday 25th Jan 2009. The last light just faded from the sky visible through the glass canopy above my head.  "Boomerang" by Dune is booming out through the speakers on my desk. Solid stereo sound...loud enough to ruffle the week or so of stubble covering my face.  Did I tell you Jo cut my hair?  I was letting it just grow and grow and grow and said, "Can you give it a trim? Keep the length?"  Ahhhhh- I've now learned not to give the girlfriend the power to shape your appearance... not to give her the scissors. A great cut, no doubt about it...but keep the length?!!?! Hah!

I did a bit of writing today.  Some Yellow Dawn stuff.  It felt good and if I hadn't made plans to go out I probably could have spent the whole day glued to my laptop.  Sending out a shout to Alexander in Germany... your email gave me something of a prod, so, thanks!  *smiles*

The nutter next door was shouting last night... slurring into incomprehensibility, and I was too dog tired to make any effort to decipher.  A late night... I fell asleep sitting on the sofa downstairs... WTF?! My dad used to do that when I was a kid, and I could never understand it.  Mind you... I'd had the cast-iron wood burner blazing for the whole afternoon and evening so the heat got pretty seductive. And I wasn't the only one.  Jo's twin sister came over yesterday afternoon.  By the end of the night both of them were asleep too. All three of us were sitting upright, sparked out asleep.  That must have been some funny picture for anybody walking past the window.

Climbed upstairs and was asleep again before our heads hit the pillow.

Then a girl shouting. Outside the house.  She sounded drunk.  Followed by racous laughter.  It's dark outside.  I can hear a few people.  Then silence.

Asleep again.

Only... another girl shouting, and the sound of somebody digging through a pile of bricks, or stones... or something.  Jo's out the bed in a flash, straight to the window, wipping back the curtains... Jo starts banging on the glass with her fist and yells "THAT's MY FUCKING CAR".

I don't know what's going on but I'm already out the bed... out the room... legs like pistons taking me down the stairs... arms out either side for balance as I'm dropping two, three steps at a time.  I hit the floor and sharp right turn... barrelling along the short passage, ripping open the front door.  My lungs explode in a bellow of noise... I'm shouting "HEY!" and I'm outside in the street... figures scattering in two directions.   And I'm stark bollock naked.

Ah!

My blood is up though. I duck back into the house. Grab my trainers. Upstairs and jump into my trousers. Back downstairs.  I head out again.  I can see three of them loitering just down the street.  I start walking in their direction, at the same time my brain's thinking..."Right...and now what dumbass?"  They see me coming and abruptly stop slouching and become alert.  I keep moving in their direction.  They start walking towards me.  We pass.  They give a cocky, "Alright?"  I stare at them but say nothing and come to a stop.  They keep walking.  I turn after them and slowly follow...not quite sure how I'm going to handle things if they react.  But I'm angry.  They glance back once and turn a corner into a different street.  There's about 10 of them, hanging around outside a house a few doors up.  I don't go any further.  I just watch.  They all go inside.

Nothing much left to do.

I check the car. No damage.

I head inside.  The rest of the night is quiet.

So today's been a good day.  At one point I'm chilling out in the master bedroom.  Curtains closed, soft lamps on. I've started the 4th Necroscope book; this one's called "Deadspeak".  I am totally enjoying going through the series again.  And this time I don't have to wait for a year between each one.

Lying on the bed with the book in my hands, I start to hear the nutter next door. But... it doesn't sound like he's inside.  He's outside.  He's doing his usual trick... repeating the same phrase over and over and over, each time ending in an angry shout.  His phrases tend to differ from time to time.  I go to the window, pull back the curtain. He's down near my front door, pointing at a house across the road... snarling, sneering, and saying something about "Blasphemy!".

Hmmm.

Not a healthy sign.

Ooo! I just heard him now.  18:18 GMT.  He's yelling at the top of his voice... so loud I can actually hear him through these solid Victorian walls... and he's at least one floor down... I can almost hear him above my music.  And...he's thumping something around inside his place. A repetitive dull thump... like his head on a wall? Freeeeeeaky!

A shame because he's been so silent for months.  I wonder what's happened to trigger him off again?

Certainly things seem to escalating.

Watch this space.

Return of Swampy

¦ dialling in from Sky Bunker ¦

15:15 GMT, Saturday 24th Jan 2009.  Pale blue sky, thin white clouds at high altitude and pale gold sunlight blazing through the glass canopy above my head.  "Darkness Before Dawn" by Killing Joke is playing by choice through big speakers.  It feels like an age since I've been up here in the Sky Bunker. 

I feel like things are settling back towards a good rythm again... Swampy is back.  Jo crawled back into the house from a night-out around 9 A.M. this morning... nursing a serious hangover and a bad case of panda eyes.  She had half an hour kip before she had to drive me to the body shop.  Swampy was there looking good as new.  Fantastic job the bloke did on fixing her wounds.  Jo peeled away back home to catch up on make-up removal and sleep; I went to meet up with Nice Guy Tony, to buy him breakfast as a thank-you for letting me interupt the last two Saturday morning's when I needed his assistance with resolving the whole car-crash thing. 

Tony and I tucked into fried egg and sausage sandwhiches from the brick hut greasy-spoon on the harbourside... sitting outside in the freezing air, bright sunlight, it was divine.  He and I shot the breeze about times in the Agency.

Tony and I headed over to the Arnolfini cafe for cups of fine coffee... more chinwag: he has lots of ideas, and lots of notes on Yellow Dawn... things that could be turned into player supplements.

Then back to mine...

Tony brought round his mighty-wrench.  Despite my best-efforts earlier in the week, my toilet had broken again... a couple of metal twists and DONE!  Toilet fixed.

Then we settled down to setting up Arkham Horror board game.  Pretty good. Very complex.  I'm not sure how much scope there is for real strategy... but I'm hoping we can arrange a full-night of it sometime soon.

Meanwhile... the wider game group have started planning week-night slots for digging out old board games.  Why should RPG's always get the lion share of time and attention!  This Monday will see us getting into Warrior Knights (80's version).

So... it's the weekend and I'm planning on doing... not very much *smiles*.

Djr

London leaves a bad taste in my mouth

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

13:51 GMT, Friday 23rd Jan 2009, pale sunlight sloping through the tall windows to my right.  A take-away mug of coffee from the Boston Tea Party sits just to my left, oozing a divine odour.  Today is my first day feeling human again, after my 2 days in London.  Despite the title of this blog I had a good time.  Too good a time.  The first day in London… great; the 2nd day I’m a total write-off… shuffling around the city, cursing the over indulgence and desperately hoping my brain will return.  However, I was mentally exuberant and relieved when I got back to Bristol… back to a slower and more civil pace of “civilisation”, away from the scrum of 10 million tourists and jaded citizens of the Big Smoke.  Hmm, does that sound like I don’t like the place?  Not so. London is perfectly enjoyable… in small doses.

Reason for the visit was my sister’s graduation: she’s now got her Masters. Whooo-hoooo.  Followed by a very nice meal at a lovely little eating place called Balkan, near Southbank: a East-European flavour, I’d highly recommend it, fab food and good service. 

I managed to catch up with two childhood friends, Alex and Ciaran.  Alex and I realised we’ve now known each other for 30 years. Gulp.

Saw my mum who was also down in London from the North East; she looked great…crazy to think about that news, doesn’t make sense… doesn’t seem real.  Here’s praying the doctors ARE wrong.

My rebellion against my creative projects continues. Instead of getting up at 4 and writing until 6… I’m staying in bed until close to 8.  Instead of writing during my lunch breaks, I’m going for long power walks with tunes thumping through my earphones.  Instead of coming home from work and spending three hours writing… I’m usually going up to the master bedroom with a mug of tea, life support on, reading or scribbling some notes on a paper pad (casually mapping out Metaphysical talents for Yellow Dawn).  I’ve no idea when I’ll get back into my normal pace again – and to be honest I don’t really care. I’m enjoying the down time.

Hopefully picking up Swampy, my car, after she’s been in the body shop for a week, getting her mangled front-end put right.  The guilty party has yet to pay me any money for it… so, we shall see what occurs in that department.

The crazy fekker next door has started-up again.  A couple nights this week I’ve heard him screaming and shouting… thank God for solid Victorian walls.  Lots of army and Neo-Nazi chants now: he says the same thing over and over and over and over again, in his grating Canadian accent.  One of the Yellow Dawn play testers was parked up outside my house the other night, waiting for me to get there… and he had the experience of this crazy neighbour coming outside and pacing furtively back and forth behind his car: the play-tester spent 10 minutes staring at his rear-view mirror waiting for…”something”….to kick off.

Djr

 

Two handed axe brings sweaty delight

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

 

13:18 GMT, 19th Jan 2009.  A bruised, blue and grey light is oozing through the tall Napoleonic windows to my right. There’s a promise of rain, and lots of it.  A bad day to be catching a bus, but Swampy, my car, is now with a garage whilst mangled body work is repaired; so I had an unpleasant return to public transport… rush hour… a hundred shitty kids.  The media is full of messages about how we should be doing our bit to “save the environment” for future generations to come: I’m sorry, but the future generation is primarily arrogant, rude, selfish little feks… so to hell with saving the planet for them.  I’ll save it for the Dolphins and the Whales.

 

Despite this wee rant, I’m in a good mood. Had a great weekend, including 2 hours of splitting logs with my lovely two-handed axe.  There is something immensely satisfying about seeing & feeling a solid mass of wood shattering apart from a might blow with an axe.  There’s then the satisfying moment you carry all the shards of wood back into the house and stack it up. 

 

I also “finally” fixed my toilet, after the shit-fest of last weekend. I’m referring to the play-testers of Yellow Dawn, who come round to my house every three weeks or so for a solid-Saturday of RPG (currently going through Shadows of the Quantinex, beta).  I’m not sure what these boys feed themselves on, but one of them managed to block the toilet entirely… he came down with a sheepish look… and when I went upstairs to investigate found myself confronted by a brown “forearm” sticking out of the water, surrounded by half a toilet-roll’s worth of paper.  One of the other guys must have had about 6 shits in one day. And then as a pièce de résistance, at the very end of the night, one of them broke the toilet handle and then slunk away without a word.  Not even a "bye the way", or "Sorry...".  It’s not like this happens when I have other guests round… so what’s so different with these boys?  Anyway… it’s taken nearly an hour of fekking around with pliers and tape to fix the damn handle again.

 

Raaaarrrghhhh!!!!

 

My brain is starting to get restless again. I’m finding it difficult to just spend time relaxing. No bad thing, although I was hoping for longer.  So it looks like I might start getting back into the swing of writing the next novel and working on Yellow Dawn in the next few weeks. We’ll see.

 

I saw “Slumdog Millionaire” this weekend. Wow. Just wow. What an incredible film. Danny Boyle raises the bar on yet another genre.  The man is a legend. 

 

I’m heading out to see “Baader-Meinhof Complex” tonight… looking forward to that.

 

Djr

 

*YD* Slaughter outside the Dead Zone

 

¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

 

17:35 GMT, Friday 16th Jan, YD+9.  Maybe I spoke too soon on Wednesday, when I said the Infected never stumbled out to the edges of the Western DZ.  I left the house early today, only a smudge of light seeping into the sky from the horizon… within five minutes I was beyond the protected corridor leading out of Bristol and the Eastern DZ…and straight into a massive tailback. Shit.  This never happens. Traffic stacked up as far as I could see, clogging my road through the hills between Bristol and Bath.  A patrol car from the Civil Defence Force barrelled past at one point, blue lights flashing, so I thought maybe there had been an accident or something.  I thought about tuning into the Survivor FM but decided I’d wait to find out what was ahead, put my headphones on and enjoyed UNKLE and tracks from the “Berserker” album by Gary Numan.  A few riders on horseback trotted past, taking advantage of the lack of traffic coming back from Bath.   

 

I zoned out, thinking about how everything has changed and yet not changed, since the Incident.  Crawling past a fuel-station I pulled in, rather than risk hitting empty whilst anywhere near the DZ.  Bristol might be a success story, in regards to being a Living City with a healthy support zone flourishing beyond the DZs, but the cost of bio-fuel is still a shock.  As was the wary-glance from the cashier when I dragged my sawn-off out from the passenger footwell and dropped it on the roof of my car.  WTF?!  Obviously she’s spent too long getting cosy again.  Point in case about some things nothing really changing.

 

A little heads-up…I live in an area partially classified as a DZ…and although there’s tons of Civil Defence patrols, there’s still that tiny risk that I’m standing outside my car there when a Thing comes shambling along and takes an unhealthy interest in me.

 

So, back to this morning. A large group of riders on horseback trotted past at a fair speed, crossbows slung over their backs, swords and axes slung from their hips… and lots of heavy padding around parts of their leather armour.  A kill squad.  So then I realised what was causing the car jam.

Sure enough… an hour later I’m driving past a scene that looks like something out of a Danny Boyle horror film… from what I could see, a car sat at the set of temporary traffic lights got hit by some random Infected who was way beyond the DZ.  The next vehicles through had the ability to nail the poor sods… and stop a major incident.  The tailback was caused by the wrecked car and the rubber-neckers looking at the butchered cadavers.  Go figure.   

 

I was glad when I got to work, comfortable chair… secure building.  Mug of coffee. How easily we can pretend everything is normal again.

 

Djr

Ghosts in my house?

 ¦ dialling in from workstation ¦

12:53 GMT, Thursday 15th Jan, 2009.  A curious incident last night...

I’d arranged to meet up with the guys in the Arnolfini Cafe after work.  Alt.Dave called late afternoon to suggest sharing a car. Good idea.  Alt.Dave was waiting for me outside my house when I pulled up, so I parked in the drive, grabbed my bag and jumped into his car.  An easy journey in.  At the Arnolfini I grabbed a coffee and had just sat down when my PA rang (vibrated in my pocket). I ignored it.  A few seconds later, it vibrated again.  I supped my coffee.  Then it vibrated again! Somebody was apparently desperate to get hold of me.  I looked at the embedded hardscreen and saw it was Oj.  “Hey, what’s up?” I answered.  She nearly sobbed down the phone, “Thank God….oh Thank God…I thought you were dead!”

“Eh?”

It transpires she came home from work, saw my car parked in the drive, so naturally assumed I was in the house.  When she tried to open the front door, she got the locks open but the door itself wouldn’t budge. Something was jamming it shut, something on the inside. She “naturally” thought it was my body!  Anyway, we agreed that I wasn’t dead and that I was safe and sound in a café.  However, she was still stuck outside unable to get into the house.  So Jo bailed back into her car and joined me in the café.  Of course, I’m there to see friends, but I’m aware she needs to get into the house… so eventually I say my farewells and head back with Jo.  Reaching the house, I unlock the door and…push it open without even a shove.  WTF?

A total mystery, until I told somebody this morning who suggested it could be…a presence?  And then I abruptly recalled all the strange little incidents that have been happening in the house the past two weeks.  Lights and appliances being on when I was convinced I’d turned them off.  Hmmm… me wonders.  A haunting?! On top of everything else.

What this space!

Djr

*YD*Adrenaline Rush, Killing Joke Brings Me Back to Life

¦ dialling in from work station ¦

 

13:47 GMT, Wednesday 14th Jan, YD+9.  Bright sunny skies beyond the tall Napoleonic windows to my right.  I’ve just come back from a big old power walk, striding through the ancient roads of Roman Bath, headphones on, the harsh chords and manic vocals of Killing Joke pushing me on.  I followed the river to the edge of the protected zone, then skirted up, past one of the flame-thrower towers by the South gate.  I love this part of the rivers because there’s no barriers blocking the view of the water… although you have to be clever with your gaze, not let it stray too far to the other side…where the buildings are collapsing into decay, and where sometimes you see Them…silent and mournful, until  they detect your movement and then they start that awful screaming (turn headphones right up when that happens).

 

These walks are a new lunchtime tradition I’ve been building up since getting back last week…initially a way of burning off the excess emotional charge following my bumpy re-entry into the new year.  “Trust” by Corrado is playing via random selection through headphones.  Yesterday was my first day feeling human again…after my New Year began with me having my spirit ripped out of my chest cavity following news about my mum, and then having a car crash a day later.  This was all last week.  Since then I’ve been drifting through my days like one of those Things beyond the protected zone.  Even the drive out of bath, and the short corridor of risk, passing through the Western DZ, didn’t stir me.  I've never seen one of Them this far out, but I think if I did I'd probably ram the poor wretch...hell, my car's already mangled up at  the front.  Not so sure about cleaning it up after though... reminds me I need to check the Decontamination Note that came through the letter box other week...it's been sitting on the side table for weeks, unread.

 

Since getting back from Newcastle (Christmas/New Year) I’ve been spending much of my spare time reading Brian Lumley’s Necroscope series (now on book 3).  Ignoring everything to do with my writing and other projects; I’ve even been ignoring the stack of personal emails and messages on Facebook… I’ve just wanted to relax, and that’s what I’ve been doing.  It’s worked a treat.  Yesterday had a Board review of a new site we’re about to launch, which went well… and led to that whole critical period of tension when you start making it live.  Massive adrenaline rush.  I love this job. 

 

Yesterday also saw me playing new tunes I’d downloaded for my headphones.  Four Killing Joke albums – fantastic.

 

Djr