Lessons Learned

Writer's Block

I thought I wasn’t going to be very busy in this week between Christmas and New Year’s. Hubby has the week off, so our 4yo has attached herself to him. Our 12yo has special needs, and she’s with her Personal Care Assistant most of the day.

Silly me decided that, since I wasn’t going to be very busy, I could go ahead and schedule a few extra things for these quiet days.

Big mistake.

First of all, the holidays are a busy time. We have two kids, and out-of-town family, and just because Christmas is over doesn’t mean the festivities are done. I have a crispy Christmas tree that really needs to be carefully un-decorated and taken out to the curb. There are several chores that we had put off until hubby had a few days off. And most importantly, I’m going to be teaching in January, and I need to prepare for that.

I’ve been following the advice “The only thing worse (for a pre-pubbed writer) than no blog is an abandoned blog.” I have my regular interviews on Fridays, and the SciFi Question of the Day every Tuesday. Some weeks I have several additional blog posts, sometimes I only have those two regular features.

I had promised too many people “You’ll have it right after Christmas!” and I ended up having to apologize several times over. I still don’t have the questions finished for this week’s interview, and I usually give those to my subject on Sunday. I did the SciFi Question of the Day late on Tuesday instead of having it ready to go at midnight. (That’s an easy post… copy, paste, edit & format, but it takes a little bit of time and attention.) I had to turn in my proofreading only half finished, something I have never done. I have paperwork to complete for my teaching gig, not to mention my own preparations.

Another big mistake: playing a game. Granted, at the moment, I’m involved in a Castle Age Guild Battle and a Ghost Trappers Raid. But both of those are the kind of games I log on to every few minutes, give a few appropriate clicks, then go back to whatever else I was doing. I’m OCD. I know this. I am careful about this, and I know what I can/can’t handle. For example, when I started on facebook several years ago, I purposely only played a couple of games. I paced myself, and made sure I wasn’t obsessing on the games. But a few weeks ago a friend asked me to play Bubble Island on Google Plus. I’m not playing many games at the moment, so I said yes and dove in. But it isn’t a passive game where I check it several times through the day and give a click or two; it’s more of a puzzle/arcade game where as soon as I beat one level, there is another level ready to go. I’ve spent way too much time on this game over the past few weeks. Last night, I finally beat the last level.

Huge time-suck.

Another lesson learned: If I don’t write every day, it becomes very easy to skip writing the next day, and the next. Soon, a week goes by and I’ve written fewer than 1,000 words. One thing I’m looking forward to about teaching next semester is that it justifies the cost of daycare. Hopefully having my 4yo in daycare will mean I can have time not just for my teaching job, but for writing and, more importantly, revising.

So there’s a gratuitous blog post. Next year, I will plan to not post during this last week of the year. And I won’t make promises I can’t keep.

As for today, it’s time to go make cupcakes with my kid.

I promised.

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-wS

Posted in Commentary & Musing | 1 Comment

SciFi Q of the Day: Muppets & X-Files

SciFi Question of the Day:

If there was a remake of the X Files, which two Muppets should play Mulder and Scully?

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Facebook answers:

   Al Hartman     Doctor Teeth and Janice — “The Teeth is out there!”

   Stacey Lewis     Miss Piggy & Kermit the Frog

   Gwendolyn Wilkins     Bert & Ernie of course!!!

   Juno Suk     I dunno, but the cigarette-smoking man should be played by Gonzo, since that nose of his can sub as a permanent cigarette fixture.

   Robert B. Fredricksen      Mulder = Rowlf Dog  & Scully = Beaker Meep

   Tyler Gurdak     Kate Monster and Princeton from Avenue Q

   Erica Dana     surely henson studios would make special Mulder and Scully puppets.

Google Plus answers:

Sam Webb's profile photo     Sam Webb  –  Kermit and Miss Piggy!

John Johnson's profile photo     John Johnson  –  +sam Webb. Too easy.

Chris Whissen's profile photo     Chris Whissen  –  Sam the Eagle and Gonzo.

Sam Webb's profile photo     Sam Webb  –  I’m on Vicodin. Be impressed that I can still type.

James Mayes's profile photo     James Mayes  –  Animal for Mulder, Beeker for Scully.  Could you imagine them two trying to have a conversation?  Rahraweraherah!  Beepbeep, beep, beeee-eeep.

John Johnson's profile photo     John Johnson  –  Fozzie as Mulder. Kermit as Scully.

John Johnson's profile photo     John Johnson  –  To clarify my answer further (since I was typing from my phone and didn’t want a lengthy reply).

  • Fozzie has the same kind of warm personality as Fox Mulder. He’s also got the believing and somewhat naive (ok lots of naive) personality.
    Kermit has that kind of cynical and worldly thing going for him (cynical for the Muppets anyhow). He doesn’t tend to accept things on faith alone, but wants backup. (Probably comes from running a troupe of amateur thespians.)

    John Moretz's profile photo     John Moretz  –  Scooter as Mulder and Janice, the hot, long haired hippie chick band member as Scully.

    I would love to hear what you think! Even if you are reading this post a year or more after publishing, I hope you will leave a comment with your own ideas on this topic.

    That’s the last question of the year! Hopefully next week I’ll have this feature looking sparkly and new.
    The previous SyFy Q of the Day is Betty White
    The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-wG
    The next SciFi Q of the Day is Waltzing into Mordor
Posted in SciFi Q of the Day | 4 Comments

Interview With Santa Claus

Santa Claus, Saint Nicholas, Papai Noel, Father Christmas… he goes by many names. And when humanity reached out to the stars, with a little bit of magic, Santa came along too.

This week, I’m very pleased to take a short break from the usual interviews of writers, romantics, and science-minded people to share with you the Jolly Old Elf’s explanation of how Santa made his way to the stars.

1.     Is there a scientific explanation for the magic that seems to surround you?

I’d like to say yes; I’d like to say that any level of science sufficiently advanced compared to what one is familiar with will seem like magic, but the simple truth is… no. It is magic, pure and simple.

2.     How long have you been doing this?

Me personally? I’ve only worn the mantle for about thirty years now. But my dad was the Santa for about ninety years before he retired. Of course, our family has been doing this for centuries.

3.     So you’re not immortal?

Oh, no. Long lived, certainly, but not immortal.

4.     Will your son take over for you someday?

I have daughters. Yes, one of them might take over for me, or it might be one of my nieces or nephews. It stays in the family, but “family” could mean a more distant relative as well.

5.     Has there ever been a female Santa?

Oh, there are at least three right now! One of them just goes along with her planet’s idea that Santa Claus is a man, but the other two have some very nice pictures that represent what they really look like.

6.     So every planet has their own Santa?

Basically, yes. There are a few solar systems that share one Santa for all the inhabited planets.

7.     How does this work? Does the new Santa just hitch a ride along with the original colonists when they embark to a new world?

That has been known to happen! But we usually rely on magic. After all, there’s a lot that has to be set up in Santa’s Workshop. Trying to smuggle all that stuff on board a colonial starship would be difficult at best.

8.     When did the job of Santa grow to be too big for one jolly old elf?

In the late twentieth century, it wasn’t too big a deal for Santa’s sleigh to swing by the space station and drop off presents. But in the twenty-first century, when the first moon base was established, and then humanity began to reach farther into space, my ancestors decided they needed to revamp the whole system.

9.     Was that a huge shake-up for the family?

Oh yes. As you can imagine, we’re a very close knit family. So sending one son out to set up a completely autonomous workshop on another planet was devastating.

10.     Are all the workshops autonomous?

They’re independent, but we work together. Earth’s North Pole took on the task of coordinating all the newer workshops. So if one is short on a particular toy, others can help out.

11.     So does that make Christmas Eve exponentially busier?

Actually, since all the inhabited planets have different orbits, and different length years, Christmas falls at different times. Most planets, like Kingdom Come, arbitrarily picked a date close to the winter solstice in the northern hemisphere, and they carry on the traditions they enjoyed on Earth. However there are some deep space stations and, of course, starships, which celebrate the holiday at the same time as Earth.

12.     How does that work? With the spacestations and starships, I mean.

That’s by far the most difficult part of the job. My cousin George is the Santa for outer space. Most of the time he lives at the North Pole on Earth, but then he takes his team on their work-ship, and they have a rather complicated plan they follow to make sure they reach everybody.

13.     Even the ships in FTL?

Yup. Even the ships that are already going faster than light! That’s when we rely heavily on magic.

14.     How is being Santa for Kingdom Come different from being Santa for another planet?

Of course, I only know what it’s like to be Santa on Kingdom Come. But before I took over from my father, I spent some time visiting the other Santas and even lending a hand on the big night. We have it pretty easy here, as it’s a fairly isolated planet with a relatively small population. And that population is only spread over half the planet; we don’t even have to worry about visiting the uninhabited wilderness.

15.     What’s your favorite part of the job?

I love the lights. Some people really go out of their way to decorate for the season, and it really makes my job a lot more fun to see all the fantastic displays.

16.     Which duchy has the best Christmas display?

Oh, hands down that would be Skytower. You can’t compete with a structure that reaches all the way to the stratosphere! And the space elevator even has special lights for the season. That’s a real treat to see from the sleigh.

17.     Besides Skytower, do you have any other favorites?

Several! There’s a duchy out east that does an entire nativity with hot air balloons. And up in the mountains in the north, there’s a Hanukkah menorah where each candle is a huge tower. It’s just spectacular! And there’s a little town on the western edge of Duchy Tailortrain where almost every single resident decorates their homes and yards with colorful lights. It’s really nice to see that kind of community effort.

18.     What do you do in the off season?

Contrary to popular belief, we do get a break! Personally, I love snorkeling. But I do love the snow, and sometimes during the summer we’ll actually take a trip down to the southern hemisphere just to go skiing.

19.     Do you ever worry about being recognized?

Oh, it happens now and then. But I try to keep a sense of humor about it. Most people just say “Ha ha, you look just like Santa Claus!” and I just say “Yeah, I get that a lot!”

20.     Who shot first, Han or Greedo?

I’m not sure anymore. But the one thing I do know is, they were both on the naughty list that year!

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-ww

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Do You Want Kids?

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First, my final ROW80 update: Writing completely fell apart after NaNoWriMo. But I have a good idea of how I want to change things when the next round starts. More about that later.

I have heard many people, both single and married, say “I don’t want to have kids.” It is not an unusual sentiment. And for many people, this really is an honest sentiment and a good life decision.

But not for everybody. Unfortunately, it is currently the fashionable thing to say when dating. Some people feel like they have to say it in order to embark on a relationship at all. Some people actually talk themselves into believing it when it isn’t really true.

I once saw a TV interview, I think the guy had been on The Bachelor or some other reality TV. He said that guys don’t want to think that a woman thinks first “I’d like to get married.” and second “I want to marry you.” He said that men want to think that the woman in their life is, at best, ambivalent about the idea of marriage, until the day they meet him and suddenly decide that he is just so wonderful that he inspires them to want to get married.

Likewise, a lot of people want their prospective mates to say “I thought I’d never want kids, but loving you has made me change my mind!”

Now, this causes a problem. Because there are plenty of people out there who genuinely do not want to ever have children. And there are also a lot of people who say they don’t want to have children, but in some recess of their heart (whether they know it or not) they hope that someday they will find just the right person, and with that person, they will have children.

…like a guy I knew in college who claimed he was only ticklish “for the right girl”…

Why all the pretense? Sheesh… I am so glad I found my hubby. I like being married. I love being a mom. I always wanted to get married and have children, and my husband didn’t see that as a turnoff when we were dating.

I don’t want to say “Oh, everyone wants kids sooner or later.” That’s not true. What I want is for our society to allow people to be honest with themselves and others, without having to pretend they don’t want something when they really do.

I’ll just have to write it into a fictional world.

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-ws

Posted in Commentary & Musing | Tagged | 1 Comment

SyFy Q of the Day: Betty White

SciFi Q of the Day: Which Television franchise could benefit most from a guest appearance by Betty White, and what character would she play?

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Facebook:

   Gwendolyn Wilkins    Survivor and be the last one standing!!!!

   Joel Moore                   The green girl on star trek. Lol

   Dan Bressler               I want to see her interviewing players on Monday Night Football.

   Pony Horton               Terra Nova. She could take over command of the colony.

Google Plus:

Edward Branley's profile photo   Edward Branley                –  star trek, because she could team up with Captain Sulu and Captain Picard…they don’t take themselves seriously, anyway…

Nuno Ricardo's profile photo   Nuno Ricardo                 –  Star Trek as Kurt’s hottest new fling.
David Foster's profile photo   David Foster                   –  I want to see her as a Klingon.
Brian Covault's profile photo   Brian Covault                  –  These answer can’t all be Star Trek! I say Dr. Who in a special, two-part episode in which the Doctor implants a directive into the Daleks rendering them unable to exterminate senior citizens and then sends in Betty White to beat them into submission with a good, old-fashioned, long-winded tongue lashing. 10 hours later, the Daleks kill themselves in a wave of insanity.

Anthony Mathenia's profile photo   Anthony Mathenia           –  Walking Dead — random zombie.

John Moretz's profile photo   John Moretz                     –  Warehouse 13 as one of the artifacts

Glenn Rogers's profile photo   Glenn Rogers                    –  Glee. One of the kids. What the hell.

Tyler Gurdak's profile photo   Tyler Gurdak                    –  Doctor Who. She could play the Doctors grandmother. They could some how write it.

John Moretz's profile photo   John Moretz                       –  Betty White could be Caprica Six’s saucy mom, Caprica Sixty-Nine, on the Ronald D. Moore version of Battlestar Galactica.

She’s always uttering double entendres and causing humorous embarrassing situations for Caprica Six.

O, what wackiness…She’s Sue Anne Nivens of space! (O, Saul Tigh, you sweet, lovable, bald, drunk, final five, maniac, you!)

I would love to hear what you think! Even if you are reading this post a year or more after publishing, I hope you will leave a comment with your own ideas on this topic.

So… I’m trying out a new look. I think I like it! Now I have to update my artwork so it says SciFi instead of SyFy. I’m also using Betty White’s image just linked from another site, instead of uploading it. We’ll see how that works out too!

The previous SyFy Q of the Day is FTL Within the Solar System

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-w9

The next SyFy Q of the Day is Muppets and X Files

Posted in SciFi Q of the Day | 2 Comments

Young Geeks in Love

Spontaneous Blog Rant!

…which, by coincidence, happens to relate to the Kingdom Come stories.

By Heath Bar, via Flikr Cosplay at Comic Con

I’m watching Geek Love on TLC HD. This absolutely fascinates me… this episode (the first I’ve ever watched, is this a series? Really?) has a bunch of geeks at Comic Con doing speed dating. This means they all enter a conference room with pairs of chairs, and in a very organized manner, they have just a few short minutes to talk with each person before the moderator has them rotate to spend a few short minutes with the next person.

I love this idea. I wish they’d had this when I was single! It makes sense to have a bunch of people who already have at least some thing in common (like, wanting to find a date) get to meet and, hopefully, get matched up.

Unless you’re a superbly charismatic, gorgeous specimen of humanity, you’ve probably experienced rejection sometime in your romantic life. Or if not rejection, then the complete hopelessness of someone who thinks that there is no one out there who will ever love them for who they are.

There’s a scene in A Beautiful Mind (Bear with me… this isn’t a sidetrack, really…) where John Nash is comparing economic theory to dating. Basically, he suggests that everyone would be better off if, instead of all the guys hitting on the pretty blonde girl, all the guys spread out and paid an equal amount of attention to all the girls.

This makes sense. Many people in multiple generations have been in the situation where all the people were looking at the beautiful, charismatic few. If they’d just look at each other instead, they might be pleasantly surprised to find someone with whom they could be really happy.

So why doesn’t this happen? Why don’t people spontaneously give up on the popular choices and just look sideways, instead of up?

I saw a documentary about this once. They had ten men and ten women go into a room and attempt, using only body language, to make the most favorable connection. Sure enough, the man and woman ranked “most attractive” quickly found each other and paired off. The rest of them followed suit, and the result was that they really were matched almost perfectly to their similarly ranked counterpart.

Generation after generation, adolescents and young adults (and not-so-young adults) go through the same thing. They experience loneliness and rejection because they’ve set their sights on someone with no mutual attraction. Men and women alike bemoan these years saying “Well, no one wanted to date me.”

Maybe someone did. Or at least, if there had been some nudge, some hint that perhaps the possibility existed, something wonderful could have happened. Or, if not something profound and lasting, at least a nice, normal,  if short-lived relationship instead of wallowing in self-pity.

I once heard a Junior High School teacher muse that, at that age, kids should be allowed to take a break from their regular academics and concentrate on social interaction for a while. (The theory being that their hormones were raging so violently that it was no use trying to teach them algebra.) This idea percolated in my head for years, and I decided to write it into my stories. It’s one of those aspects I have worked out in detail, although it won’t necessarily get described in the books; it simply exists.

The Kingdom Come year is about 25% longer than an Earth year. Their academic schedules match the four seasons; winter quarter, spring quarter, summer quarter, and autumn quarter. It is common (mandatory in some duchies) that kids take at least one, if not several sabbatical quarters off of school in order to pursue some interest. But the main goal of these sabbaticals is to give the kids a chance to concentrate on the social interaction, and any program that is certified to run sabbaticals must have some kind of process that gives kids the nudge to look, not at the head cheerleader or quarterback, but at each other.

I love this idea. For those kids who are ahead academically, they can take an extra sabbatical or two instead of trying to graduate early and hurry into adulthood. For kids who are lagging behind, a sabbatical might offer specialized tutoring in a specific area, but outside the walls of the school. Kids might stay in their own communities, or go to a camp or even further abroad, depending on their tastes. They might find a program with very small groups, or enroll in a program with a large number of students from all over.

But most importantly, they would be nudged. While having fun doing some activity that interests them, they can make those connections and learn what it means to be in a relationship beyond friendship.

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-wk

Posted in Commentary & Musing | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Interview With Anya Winter

Once upon a time … is how the stories used to start.

Not anymore. Now they start with chocolate (and maybe a little bit of passion).

At least in Anya’s world where passionate pleasures are explored …

One Story at a Time!

1     Why did you decide to use a pseudonym?  Is there a story behind the name you chose?

I think the ‘pastor’ aspect had something to do with it 🙂 How many pastors do you know who write kink? Wait .. Don’t answer, I actually know a few (shhhh)  I wanted to be sensitive to those who knew me as a pastor until I realized that it really didn’t matter if I kept it quiet or not.  Anya Winter … I love the name Anya. My one daughter actually gave me the name and I thought it fit.

2     What do you have published under other names? Will your future stories all be Anya Winter stories?

Ack – no! I also pub under my real name – Steena Holmes. Anya will be kept for my kinker stories. My plan is for the heavy kink to be under Anya and slowly move all my other stories under Steena.

3     What did you do to have Tiffany Reisz name a character after you?

How did you find that out? LOL … I was thrilled when the fabulous Ms. Reisz named Daniel’s lover after me. OMG he’s hot stuff. When I first read her 7 Day Loan I fell in love. With erotic romance and with Daniel.

4     What was your path to publication?

My path makes me shake my head. I wrote a story in 6 months (an inspirational romance) and won a publishing contract with a small press back in 2005. I was estatic until someone pointed out I basically self published. AUGH. Back then, that was the kiss of death. I let it hold me back, I didn’t think what I wrote was good enough. Until I received an email from someone who had read that story and wanted more. WOW. That opened my eyes – hey, someone who didn’t know me liked what I had written. Go figure. So I wrote a supernatural thriller and got it torn apart by an agent. Ouch. But I kept trying. I wrote another story that tore my heart and while I was recovering, I decided to try my hand at a novella – just for fun. Well…that ‘just for fun’ story ended up getting sold to Liquid Silver Books – The Master.

5     Have you always considered yourself to be a writer, or was there a time in your life when you decided that is what you were?

I never thought I could write. I love to read, always have – but writing was for those who were gifted. Or so I thought 😉 I didn’t really know what I wanted to be. Deciding to be a writer was really my choice – when I realized I could, so I did 😉

6     Do you have any of the proverbial first books shoved in the back of the drawer, never to see the light of day?

I have a few. I think we all need them, don’t you? But I refuse to let them collect dust. I’ll use them one way or another.

7     Tell me about the Masquerade Series.

Right from the beginning, the idea of secrets and how we hide behind them fascinated me when I began to write Maddie’s story in The Master. Maddie is a woman who wanted to shelter herself from her inner passions.

For Eve in the Mask, she hides behind her mask – literally. It takes a strong man to show her that the Mask does only one thing – reveals her true character.

The Masquerade Series is about looking past the masks we wear, the facades we work so hard to maintain and coming to the point where we can accept who we are for what we are.

Throw in a little bit of passion, chocolate and some kink … and you have the Masquerade Series.

It’s heavy on the chocolate, decadent with the passion and just a hint of kink … almost sounds like a steamy cup of hot cocoa 😉

8     What social media do you use? Do you combine your personal and professional or keep them separate?

Facebook, Twitter and my blogs.

9     What is your favorite electronic or digital writing tool?

My Mac. OMG. I love my Mac.

10    What is your favorite non-electronic writing tool?

Non? I have a notebook and pen in my purse if I need it … But I find I’m so tech oriented now that it’s just as easy to make a note on my iPhone or pad and email it to myself. LOL

11     Is it true “Once a Pastor, always a Pastor?”

Absolutely. The term isn’t a job or even a career. It’s about the heart. About the passion to serve others, to see things that others gloss over and want to do something to help. I think if you were to breakdown what it means to be a pastor it would be simple, so clear – its all about love. Loving others. Putting others first. Its sad its been warped..but that’s another story 🙂

12      Why did they call you “The Sex Pastor?”

I tend not to be shy about certain things. Go figure 🙂 When we were in churches, we worked with youth and young adults. Hey – sex is a HUGE part of growing up and it’s not okay to sweep it under the rug and pray the kids will be smart about their bodies. So I’d talk about it. Still do 🙂

13     Is there anything about Christianity that is anti-sexual?

I think that depends on who you ask. Me – no. God created sex. Sex is fun. Sex is also sacred and complicated but being a christian or atheist or muslim or … It doesn’t matter … Sex is a part of life – not matter what life you live.

14     What other roles do you fill besides (former) Pastor and author?

I’m a mother of 3 girls, married to the love of my life for 15 yrs now.

15      Where do you get the images for the covers you design?

The usual sites – Dreamstime, Shutterstock …

16    What is the best form chocolate can take?

Melted. In my mouth.

17     What is your ideal writing environment?

Quiet. With a cup of coffee or a glass of Coke and Rootbeer flavored Vodka (or chocolate flavored).

Have you ever been able to create it?

I work from home as a virtual assistant so as long as my kids aren’t home, I’m good. Or late at night.

18     Do you have rules for how steamy you write your sex scenes?

As long as its safe, consensual and fun then I’m good.

19    In all you’ve published, were any changes suggested to you that you were reluctant to make?

I trust my editor and beta readers. If they feel something needs to change then its for a good reason.

20    Who shot first, Han or Greedo?

I can’t believe you’re asking me this! Who is Greedo? OMG! All I remember of those movies are the cute little ewoks! When they first came out I would hide my head during the shooting scenes, or bury my nose in a book … But once those cute little creatures showed up … Wait … Hans was cute wasn’t he? So … Sexy Hans HAD to have shot first … He’d want to protect the princess right? (I totally need to rewatch these movies.)

Anya will give away a copy of her book The Master to a random commenter, winner to be drawn next Friday, December 23!  To enter just tell us what your favorite form of chocolate is.

 

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-vV

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How Much Time Do We Have Left?

Um… A Round of Words in 80 Days… we started in October… then NaNoWriMo happened… then I put that away and moved to something new… when is our 80 days up?

How am I doing? This is going to sound familiar. I’ve written the same thing for several Wednesdays now.

Strep.

It has robbed me of my energy and my brain for several weeks. One round of antibiotics did not kill it, but since I’m feeling somewhat better, I think the second round of antibiotics might have done the trick. I’ve done very little writing. I’ve done very little of anything other than taking care of the kids. Even though hubby just finished taking care of the girls while I spent two weeks in North Carolina with my parents, he stepped up even more to cook dinners and take care of me while I was sick.

Of course, he’s the one who gave me strep.

On a brighter note, it looks like I will be teaching again in the Spring. I taught Excel until my daughter was born, and I’m looking forward to teaching just one section. This also means we might be able to afford to send my 4yo to preschool/daycare, and that might give me more time to write without being disturbed.

The shortlink for this post is http://wp.me/p1qnT4-vS

Posted in Commentary & Musing | Tagged , | 4 Comments

SyFy Q of the Day: FTL Within the Solar System

This thing has FTL? Really? Amazing what I find on Wikimedia...

Before I even started this blog, I would occasionally pose a SyFy Question of the Day to my facebook friends. Sometimes, it was directly related to what I was writing, and I really did want some input to help me decide what direction to take with the story. Other times, it was purely fun.

Here’s one of my favorites, from December 2011:

SciFi Question of the Day: Assuming the starship has something like FTL, would it be able to “jump” directly from orbiting a planet, or should they have to maneuver to a suitable position in the solar system first?

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Alan          I’m not a scientist but, based on my perception from popular science-fiction (ST, SW, B5, Farscape, Firefly, Dune et al) hitting your FTL whilst in a planet’s gravity well would have pretty dire consequences. Also, the gravity at your point of origin might screw with your trajectory and thus destination. So, send out a probe in advance (years?) to map the minimal / null gravity points in a star system. When you want to jump go to one of those points on sub-light, enter your destination co-ords and hit “Go.” Hopefully you’ll arrive safely. Of course, safe arrival assumes that your chicken soup machine technician hasn’t tried to replace one of the drive plates 😉

Gwendolyn     I’m with Alan on this one – “jumping” within a gravitation field just makes every SF fiber of my being scream NO!

“Jumping” *into* an orbital position though would be kind of a fun hot shot maneuver ;P

Dan          Heh. It would depend entirely on how the FTL is accomplished. In Star Trek (if I remember right) the warp drive is actually warping space, much like gravity does. It would seem logical that a planet’s gravity well would interfere, but there are many counterexamples to this.

If your FTL engine is of the “it goes really fast” variety it probably wouldn’t matter. Witness Firefly, where the only restriction seems to be that you can’t hit it while in atmosphere (the consequences of hitting atmosphere at FTL velocities don’t even bear thinking about).

The more important question is probably “Is it better for the plot to allow this, or not?”

Alan           If I remember my Trek correctly (from the novels) a warp drive was activated in a planetary atmosphere with disasterous consequences for both the planet and ship. Something about linking two singularities. Someone wanted to prosecute someone else with war crimes. So, away from a gravity well.

Also away from *any* matter. If it’s a reaction FTL drive then it ejects force out the rear end. You don’t really want that force acting on “space dust”, pushing it at near-FTL velocities and having it puncture anything.

Best bet is to ingest a whole load of melange from Arrakis and then fold space like a Navigator.

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Rebecca          My knee-jerk reaction would be placement in a suitable position first, but… that is the beauty of science fiction. If you can justify the jump in your multiverse, then all is fair play.
Linda           I have seen it both ways. In the Star Trek Universe, FTL within a solar system is strictly prohibited, but of course that rule along with every other rule is just there to be broken at some point. I have seen some FTL travel put a ship THROUGH a planet, but that kind of pushes the line of credibility with me. I see no reason why a ship could not go to FTL right from an orbit, unless their emissions were directly harmful..
Brian          Given the complete integration between space, time and gravitational distortions, I think Einstein’s theories would support the idea that large gravitational bodies would still affect a ship traveling faster than light.
That’s kind of an armchair physicist’s take on the matter, but it’s worth consideration.If the question is related to an actual story, I think that authors tend to go with whatever drives the plot best. If the limitation of distancing the ship from planets is an essential plot element, then they go with that. If it is not consequential, then they either go straight from orbit into faster-than-light speed, or the author may not even mention the issue at all, seeing as how it can be a distracting detail rather than a helpful detail.But I’m sure you already knew that. 🙂
RK          In general, I’d assume they’d have to jump to that system’s La Grange point and maneuver through the gravity well.It is scifi, though, so as long as it doesn’t strain credulity too much, you could do it just about anyway.
AmyBeth      I like La Grange points! Some stories have ships reaching the other solar system almost instantly, then spending days or even weeks maneuvering within the system. Counter-intuitive, but it makes sense.

Brian          No different from having a network of airports around the country, flying from one to another in just half an hour, then having to drive two additional hours to your final destination. 🙂
Jim               In my scifi universe, I had it that all FTL travel was done by taking a shortcut through “shortcut space”, a set of subdimensions with different properties than the regular universe. Fairly common, right? Well, my Shortcut Space is mapped around the real universe’s gravity, meaning that the stronger a body’s gravitational pull is in our universe, the more real estate it takes up in subspace. That makes leaping from star system to star system easy as pie, since there’s generally not that much between the two of them… but it makes exiting subspace dangerous, since 99.9% of the points you would randomly select would have you exiting inside a “gravity event” in the real world (aka a planet, a star, an asteroid, a black hole). Therefore, as a general rule (at least in my writing universe) you can enter FTL anywhere you want, it doesn’t matter – but you’ve got to be really picky about where you exit.


AmyBeth     That’s a neat rule! In +Sara Creasy ‘s SciFi, you have to enter and exit via nodes. It’s great from a plot POV, because the node might be near inhabited space, or in the middle of nowhere.


Sara            It worked for my plot, but in sci-fi things tend to work as the plot requires. (Just as the ship travels “at the speed of plot”, per J. Michael Straczynski.) I wanted a story with long stretches of time stuck on a ship. If you want a story set primarily at the destinations, having a ship jump directly from planet to planet works nicely.
AmyBeth     That’s why Star Trek has transporters. It had nothing to do with Science or Tech, and everything to do with “We need to move the action… they must be able to quickly go from ship to surface.”
Sara            Not to mention (in the classic series anyway) it was cheaper than making a lot of shuttle shots. Blakes 7 copied the idea but they had to wear special bracelets for transport.
Jim            Bracelets which functioned reliably… only when the plot called for them to do so.


Troy            In order to travel FTL, one would need a constant subspace shield or bubble to to protect from the effects of traveling at that speed (inertia, running into a dust particle, etc..) and facilitate reintegration into normal space-time when the destination is reached. That being the case, a ship or very powerful self contained transport device is necessary. As this device would have limited power, it would need to make course corrections (assuming a limited knowledge of the multiverse as one would have to when traveling at FTL) to avoid anomalies or obstacles that it could not overcome due to its limited power (black hole, sun, etc…). The result being a transport device capable of making course corrections as soon as the obstacles are detected.

I would love to hear what you think! Even if you are reading this post a year or more after publishing, I hope you will leave a comment with your own ideas on this topic.

Post Script: Besides changing this to SciFi Q of the Day instead of SyFy Q of the Day, I’m thinking about retaining some of the formatting when I copy/paste from the social media sites. That would keep each poster’s thumnail profile, as well as a link to them, and their full names instead of just first names. What do you think?

Also… this post has some weird formatting going on. I’m going to publish it anyway, and look at giving this meme a makeover for the new year.

The previous SyFy Q of the Day is Flying Cars

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The next SyFy Q of the Day is Betty White

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Interview With Fez, AKA Jaime Sanchez

I, Jaime Sanchez am a Star Trek fan… of all things Trek. I have been for the past couple of years worked on the fan production of Star Trek, called Phase 2 re-creating the original Star Trek. Here you will find Interviews with Trek cast members and crew members of all the various shows both Hollywood and fan made and Reviews of Star Trek episodes with the same notation.

1.       How’d you get the nickname “Fez?”

I originally got the nickname Fez in high school in my Junior year Spanish class because according to the person next to me thought I looked like the character from “That 70’s Show”. I got the nickname on the set of Star Trek: Phase 2, when I was doing my impression of Fez and James Cawley just happened to catch it, and asked who I was and then proclaimed… “I’m going to call you Fez!” and I have been that since.

2.       What is your earliest Trek-related memory?

My Earliest Star Trek memory is watching Star Trek The Next Generation episode “The Best of Both Worlds” with my mom and dad when I was about 5 years old, just before my first convention in New Haven, CT.

3.       What is it about Star Trek that makes you such a devoted fan?

I don’t know what makes me such a devoted fan, but I know why I love the shows… Gene Roddenberry’s vision of the future has always appealed to me and the fact that for the most part each series has had excellent stories compared to the junk shown on television today.

4.       Which of the network television series is your favorite, and why?

When I was growing up it was Star Trek The Next Generation, now at 22 going on 23  (on Christmas) it is The Original Series… James T Kirk, is my idol as a human being and many of the episodes in the Original were more character driven and conflict driven something that most of the other shows lacked in some fashion.

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5.       Which of the films is your favorite, and why?

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, isn’t it obvious ….. KHANNNNNNNN!!!!

6.       What do you think of the direction JJ Abrams has taken with Trek?

The Direction is one that I think was necessary for new people to become fans however the movie itself had to quote a friend of mine “Plot holes that you could drive a starship through”… besides it felt more like Star Wars rather then Star Trek.

7.       Do you have any interesting Trek memorabilia?

I have two things, a novel that was signed by David Gerrold  (writer, “the Trouble with Tribbles”) who wrote the introduction to the book: At the “Phase 2 Origins” shoot and My “Mindsfiter” script which was signed by several of the main cast members and 2 Producers and the Director.

8.       How did you get involved with Star Trek Phase II?

I got involved with it because I loved Star Trek and I applied to be one of the crew members for “Kitumba” in 2009

9.       What jobs have you taken on with Phase II?

I have had several jobs on the set, I was a grip for “Kitumba” (2009), I was a Production Assistant and a Continuity person for “Origins” (2010), and was The Script Supervisor, First Assistant Director and Extra for the first half of “Mind-sifter” (2011)

10.   How does Phase II decide what stories to tell?

First it has to go through the story editors and then the final say is the Executive Producer’s call.

11.   Is there anything you’d like to do with Phase II that you haven’t done yet?

I really want to be on the set as the writer of an episode or as an actor, as Mr. Spock is fond of saying “There is always possibilities”

12.   What is your favorite memory from working with Phase II?

I think that this previous shoot was one of the best times I have had on the set, had so much fun hanging out with James(Cawley), John and Annie Carrigan, Brandon Stacy, Jonathan Zungre and Charles Root and the rest of the crew.

13.   How much of the slate work you taught me to do did you have to fix afterwards? 🙂

Not much, but you needed help it was your first day on the job.

14.   Why did you decide to start blogging Trek?

I started writing the blog after a bunch of the cast and crew of Phase 2 told me that it would be interesting to have me review star trek episodes with my perspective of being on the set of Phase 2, it was also during the genesis if the blog at the “Mind-sifter” shoot, that my knowledge of Trek was compared to two members of the Phase 2 Crew: Greg Schnitzer (Prop expert and co-execuitive Producer) and James Cawley ( Captain Kirk, Executive Producer, Costumer…..ect) and I was really flattered.

15.   You’ve interviewed a number of Phase II folks on your blog; which interview was your favorite?

I at the moment don’t have a favorite because these people that I have all interviewed are all my friends that I think of as family and it would be like if you had to choose between your brothers if you had them.

16.   Tell me about Starship Saladin.

Starship Saladin is an animated fan-film based on the destroyer-class ship Saladin, following Captain Ray Martin and his crew. The episode that is in post-production is called “Invasion”, it is set during the Original Series episode “Errand of Mercy”… I am playing several well known characters in the episode, I can’t get into specifics yet until it is released.

17.   Do you have any hidden talents?

Hidden Talents… well, I write, I sing, I do impressions and I am funny… I guess

18.   Besides working on scripts for Phase II, what other writing do you do?

First when you say I am working on scripts, I want to clarify that I am writing story ideas that may be taken by Phase 2, hopefully. I am also working on writing for another to be named Star Trek fan series and I write short stories and poetry

19.   Besides Star Trek, what other Science Fiction shows do you enjoy?

Star Wars, but it’s not a show… Television in my opinion is in the gutter, there are only a few shows that I do watch: Law and Order SVU, The Big Bang Theory and That 70’s show.

20.   Who shot first, Han or Greedo?

Han, I hate it when George Lucas changes the Star Wars movies… besides it speaks about his cold-heartedness before going off his adventure with Luke and Obi-Wan.

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