A book that can provoke my thoughts and yield unexpected conversations with both friends and strangers is always a welcome addition into my life. This is why I often ask people who interest me what they are reading, or what they would suggest I read. I’m lucky to have a roommate who values books as much as I do, and it was on his suggestion that I recently read (with some reluctance) Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead.
I stepped on the train and sat down, pulled the paperback out of my coat pocket, and began to read. The shuffle of people was soon lost to me, an extraneous backdrop to the much more real events of my novel. Ah, yes, I remembered where I was, Roark had been threatened and I would turn the page to find his response. I read on. I don’t know when the young woman sat next to me, but it came to my attention that I had attracted her notice as I stretched my neck and she turned away too quickly. She had been reading over my shoulder. The fact did not bother me, but brought an amused smile to my face. I watched her eyes land on another passenger and resumed my reading.
In the days of stage coaches, travel from destination to destination was an investment. One would ride for hours or even days, often sharing the coach with a stranger or two. The duration of the trip encouraged conversation and friend-making, and benches were placed opposite each other, both for economy of space and to accommodate this social need. The practice carried over into the design of early train cars without too much thought, but it soon became apparent that with the reduced travel times and the advent of the commuting worker, the obligation to meet and greet ones traveling companions had changed from an effective way to pass time to an awkward, stressful, an unnecessary social convention.
Before I went to college I woke up to an alarm, and it was terrible.
WONK WONK WONK WONK WONK WONK – not my idea of a good start to the morning. But then I was gifted a radio/music alarm and I was able to start my day with music. This was so much better. I think it happened right before I went to college; the details are fuzzy. Funny thing though, I can still remember most of the wake-up songs I’ve listened to over the years. It takes a special song to withstand the day in, day out abuse of being listened to, particularly once further burdened with arousing my morning state of wakefulness. It’s an arduous assignment, so when a winner is found, I’ve tended to stick with it for as long as I can stand it. (Read more…)
The T-Shirt Project is an undertaking I decided upon after retiring a large number of the T-shirts I had worn for years in favor of a more fashionable, if slightly less eccentric wardrobe. These shirts all have stories, and I want to share them with you. So follows…
Does anyone remember Mad Libs? It’s that game where you filled in the blanks of a story with fun words, and then read the story aloud while hilarity ensued. Let’s play. Come up with:
Okay, so you knew this post was coming at some point. You can’t have a part one without a part two right? It totally violates the laws of common sense, and the laws of storytelling!
The reason I’m so delayed in this post largely has to do with the fact that for the past two weeks I’ve fully immersed myself in a world full of storytelling. No, not the world of theatre as you might think, but the world of video games! Okay, so the last storytelling post talked about video games too, but this is about a particular new game called Dragon Age: Origins, and the game world in which it exists.