Wednesday, May 7, 2014

I've Moved!

I've Moved Everyone! Check out my other, "newer" home at WordPress: http://wendykwilliamson.wordpress.com/

I have to say...I think blogspot is entirely easier; but they say wordpress is the "writers blog" so I went. I can say I like uploading pics from here though. 

Maybe I'll switch back.  Still, I thought I may as well catch you all up to what has been going on. Here's the lo down since last year:
  1. Published my first book with a traditional press. www.posthillpress.com Only took me severn years and 7500 copies. (I'm tired just thinking of that climb.)You have to do your work and perserverence is key here.
  2. Blessed to get an agent. She rocks, rocks, rocks! (Even though she is more of a jazz singer. She can do and sing it all. Very multi-talented she is. In fact, a little trivia, she has sang on several Bruce Springsteen albums and on the Jon Stewart show several times....)
  3. Am no longer forced to be a webmaster, creator, etc. The publisher had one created for us. What a RELIEF!!!!!!!   Address:   www.twobipolarchicks.com
  4. But....my personal site is still managed by me - geez - and looks like it. Check out amateur hour here: www.wendykwilliamson.com. I did say I got published but never did claim I made the big time.
  5. Oh yes, how about that new book title. That would be nice. Here it is. Get ready it's 12 words. When you publish, be prepared if your publisher/agent want to turn your 4 or 5 word title into 12. Two Bipolar Chicks Guide to Survival: Tips for Living with Bipolar Disorder was born. 
  6. Here's our logo. Woop Woop. 
  7. The artist's name is none other than Miss Kim Sillen. I love her to pieces.  www.kimsillen.com. She can (literally) do ANYTHING!
  8. Book cover:  
  9. We moved, three times in four years. All due to hurricaines. It's been fun; but we do feel very blessed to have landed in a small cottage-like house (as my Mom calls is) just two blocks from my parents. I never would have predicted this growing up. All I wanted was out out out and away from here. Funny to me.
  10. Lastly, here is the link on Amazon for our eBook and paperbook is also avx. You know how to get around A-zon. http://www.amazon.com/Two-Bipolar-Chicks-Guide-Survival-ebook/dp/B00JOW47O0/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&sr=8-1-wordsplitter&qid=1399486518

That's about it. Have a groovy day. Keep reaching for the stars. Fall on the moon? Ah well, at least you went for it. 

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Virginia Woolf, Ghost Ranch and Poetry

The passion, the prose and the west are all rolled up in to one.

Yes siree. 

 

I don't know where this year will lead me, but it's already taking bizarre twists. And I like it!  Let's roll backwards so you can get the timeline here.

 

 

Since the start of 2013, I've moved West, inland about twenty minutes due to Hurricane Sandy. From hotel to here, our new pad. And thank you very much, my ears still feel different, like swimmer's ear waiting for them to come back.

OKAY, so... moving forwards.

My excitement is:

I finally feel alive again. 

 

Let me explain. I am writing, not congruently, but snippits for different books (currently trying to finish three).  

Some would say "concentrate on one."  But to them I would say, it is a different process for each writer.  

 

For instance, I wrote my memoir while living alone. It came spilling out over the course of a year in spurts.  I had a rhythm while I was waitressing at the diner and living alone was a plus. I could control the environment. Music or no music. TV was always off. Now it's different.  I love my girl and wouldn't have it any other way.  

 

Still sometimes I long for quiet and the same five jazz cds circling my old stereo freeing up my subconscious mind so I could write. How do you re-create your once successful environment with no office, two kitties and the love of your life (who also works from home) in a one bedroom apartment?   


I am so out of sorts I don't know what to do:

 

my iPod fell in to a cup of water at the hotel.

 

i am officially without music. 

 

(I do not count the 100+ old semi-scratched CDs)


To say I have to reinvent my writing process is the understatement of my year. I have so many books to finish this year.
Three?  I'd be content.
Four? Perhaps a bit too unrealistic.
Two?  I'm be very behind where I want to be.
But can I pull off three?

See how I get in to trouble?  I can't seem to focus on one. Is it the ADD?  Boredom?  Constant need to switch gears?  Am I settling down, finally, since the storm but not happy with my "office"?

Normally I wake up (this past year or so) and handwrite. I loathe handwriting so I started doing it again. Don't know why, perhaps it's because two very important people in my life kept suggesting it to me and I took it as a sign to start again.

I now write pages and pages with my coffee in the morning. Morning turns in to afternoon and sometimes I notice a hand cramp and it's twenty-four pages later - my record. 

 I know what you would say, stop writing in the morning and pull out your laptop.


It's not the same and any writer will tell you. Handwriting your thoughts and typing them are two different animals.  Both derive recorded thoughts, yes, but I find handwriting much more soulful. Questions and anxieties that plague me are calmed when I write.

Typing makes me feel alive. Like I am doing what makes me happy, even if I am not crazy about what I am writing. I may be critiquing while I'm typing. But I'm in the moment, alive and feeling like my puzzle piece is clicked.

A friend from my dear Red Bank Writers Group, from which I have been notably absent due to the storm and moving eight times, (yes eight...and don't get me counted on the four hotel room moves). SO where was I? Ah yes, moving west.  At least away from the shore.

Which brings me to Ghost Ranch, ah yes that's where I was going before Sandy took a front center in my ADD riddled mind.  I received an email from my friend Lynn in my writers group. In it was the information for the Writers Conference for 2013 Ghost Ranch's A Room of Her Own.  (aka: AHRO).  Being relatively new on the scene, since 2009, I am just learning about WIR, fellowships, conferences.  Typically, I'd just sigh and say someday. But THIS time, I applied for the fellowship. I cannot afford to go at this very moment, but pay my way, and I'm there!  Georgia O'Keefe's ranch, when I toured it in 2007, changed my life. I had an odd feeling I'd be back one day. I was doing real estate at the time, smack dab in the middle of my first deal. Texting in and out of coverage as we drove through New Mexico and Arizona and Utah with a very demanding buyer.  I am so glad I am not that person today. And that perhaps, if the God's align and the universe shines some extra special sparkles on me, I may get my chance to go this summer.


STAY TUNED.

Let me tell you why I've fallen in love with Virginia Woolf.


Everyone says:  you can write anywhere.  If this is your full-time job, you should do it full-time. Well, it has been officially three months since I have had a desk.  Writing on a hotel bed wasn't happening. 

She gets it, got it rather, you know what i mean.  She understood that a writer needs a room of her own. That a woman needs money of her own, preferably inheritance or landfall as she described it, so that one may able to write without economic pressure.

I love that she understood the need for good food, beyond satiation into overindulgence.  At times I believe I overindulge, at times I think eating healthy all or most of the time is deprivation. And I'd rather be curvy....but I digress.

Back to Virginia Woolf. I wish she hadn't killed herself, but I understand her motivation. I've been there, though I never heard voices.  

I certainly get wanting to be out of this world forever. Even the love of her life, her husband who she credited for the best years and a wonderful life couldn't save her from her illness.  She tried to drown herself weeks before she actually did, returning wet one day.  Unfortunately she did again with rocks in her pocket. She did in fact write two letters to her husband. I've written that letter. I tried at the same place twice.  I understand this women's brain. Indeed I do...


So I'm obsessed with Virginia Woolf. 

I've decided I want to re-read most of her work while writing my book. She's so clever and i think any modern female writer owes her a great deal whether they know it or not.


I still feel the need to defend myself in my family. Until my generation there has been no one making a living from anything creative.  I have one cousin in Iowa who is a painter.  He barely slides by I don't think he makes a lot, but he is compared to a young Norman Rockwell. The way he is able to paint intricate tractors and capture expressions is amazing to me. I have another cousin who just graduated from RISDe (Rhode Island School of Design).  My painter cousin is my age, my RISDe artist cousin is twenty years longer.  Prior to everyone, there was no one, not a one who ever, ever, ever, ever earned a living artistically.

So naturally everyone in my family fears for my future.  I am learning to do it less and less because I feel when you are in alignment with your purpose in life, a way is made. And for the first time in my life, I am able to support myself without having to punch in anywhere except my desk writing. Thank God for royalties.  

I believe everything will be okay.


And that I am a writer, full time, that this is all I want to do. And I am doing it.  Even though right now as I blog, I should be working on one of my books.  And when I am hand writing in the morning perhaps I should be blogging.

Does every writer go through this?  Believing that while doing one thing, they should be doing another?  And PLEASE don't get me started on technology.

I didn't know when I started out as little ole me writer that I'd also have to become a webmaster. (It's not the correct word, web developer? Designer?  Surely master is misleading.)

So I've designed my website, blog, tweeted, facebooked, and done all things media. Emailed my brains out to my fellow Red Bank Writers and all of it, necessary, yes, but all of it takes away writing time. I wish I was so successful that I didn't have to do all that.  I really really do. It's my hope for 2014. To be able to have an assistant.  I don't ever want to stop blogging, and some emails are necessary, yes. But I have no business trying to create and maintain my website.  I don't know what to tweet. I'm not a good tweeter nor am I exciting. And I don't feel that sharing silly details of my life is advancing the world at all.  In fact, perhaps I'll cancel it.

Decision made?   Let's see if my editor/partner lets me get away with that one. 


Okay, off now. Time to eat.  My cat has decided to bat a ball around and "Lockup" is on tv. My partner loves that show. Personally, it gives me nightmares. I will now resume working on a little six page story I began this morning. Odd as I don't write short stories.  Perhaps it's another book.

We shall see.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Bravo Hollywood


Hollywood gets on board

Silver Linings Playbook was an ode to the director's eighteen year old son Matthew who has bipolar disorder.  He decided to do the movie so his son would not feel so alone and I look forward to seeing it.  Given his son has the disorder, I think we have a chance, finally, for an accurate depiction of our illness.  Hollywood is getting on board at last.  Sure, they've all touched on depression but anyone can do that safely.  Bipolar disorder takes balls and someone out there had a heart to the cause and took a stand choosing our mental illness.  Thank you, David O'Russell for your movie.  I expect when I see it this week that it will ring true of a realistic portrait of our disorder.  I don't know how to reach him, but perhaps I could mail a copy of my book to the director if I approve.

Either way, we are finally getting some press. And not the typical, someone has shot someone else and they MUST be mentally ill.  Don't get me started on that.  Tonight's post is not going to touch this subject.  In honor of the SAG Awards, I'll stick to entertainment, thank you.

Back to the arts...

Don't get me wrong, Silver Linings Playbook is not the first.  There was Michael Clayton, the actor's name eludes me at this hour.  Also, I believe much earlier than that They Call Me Anna paved the way.  I remember I went alone to see Michael Clayton and it definitely rattled me for good and bad reasons.

First, the lead character was in an extreme manic state and I, even having been manic myself found it a bit off.  I haven't seen myself on the outside looking in like a movie while extremely manic, so it's hard to gage.  

Naturally, we bipolarians are the toughest critics.  I liken it to if someone is battling cancer, they damn well want to see it depicted properly. And let's face it, mental illness is especially delicate because they are talking about our minds.  You better do it right when you are tackling someone else's sanity or at times, lack thereof.  Delicate stuff and I wish they did it better, just like ourselves, though, there is always room for improvement and no one, no thing and certainly no movie is perfect.

Roughly five years ago, we had our first bipolar main character emerge in the theater in Next To Normal. I used to work smack in the middle of the theater district in NYC in my early twenties but have since been rather disconnected from it. Despite my proximity to the city, I haven't had the funds or gumption to pay attention while in my writing bubble of a world.  So this factoid was told to me as I was preparing query letters but a friend in the publishing industry as a positive point to make regarding my book's popularity.  I thought: 'Wow, a main character.  Now that is progressive and it's about time!'  Hmmm, bipolar had hit the stage and I was thrilled!  We were infultrating and people were paying for this entertainment.  I wish I had seen that play; however my timing was off. Precisely when I had the money and time, it was closing that week and I lost my opportunity.

From the stage to television, I'm happy to report last year Showtime's Homeland marks the first time, I'm quite sure, we have seen a main character with bipolar disorder on tv.  I was elated to hear Claire Danes was the one to play her too, though I realize it all depends upon the script. Without having Showtime, I had to wait until I subscribed to assess the reality of her character depiction.  I've only caught a few episodes but from what I've seen, they bring the issues of medication and sleep to the forefront. I see her taking meds and missing sleep. I realize their job is not to educate, but am happy she at least is seen taking medication.  To me, it's a no brainer to take a medication that solves a chemical imbalance.  But there are people out there that disagree and I respect decision of others to do what they will. Congrats to her for winning yet another award tonight on the SAGs.  After seeing a few episodes (gosh, I remember when that word was nails on a chalkboard in our house) being a great actress certainly helps us.

All in all I'm pleased with the direction we're going.  Tonight, I will rest well.  And I look forward to going to see the movie.

I only wish tomorrow I wasn't attending yet another funeral. Another suicide. This makes number three in five years.  Although they weren't a friend and I am going for support, I am tired of funerals. I am tired of suicide but grateful I survived. 

Many are not so lucky.




Monday, November 12, 2012

Bipolar Disorder for Dummies is here!!!!

The only good thing Sandy blew in was my copy of BP for Dummies.

It is a book I say a few words in....a huge honor for little ole me.  Just wanted to share.  The highlight of this horrible two weeks of cleanup in the wake of Sandy was this delivery. My copy from Joe, the author.

Made my otherwise very shitty (and cold) week.

Happy to be safe, alive and with power and heat!

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Sunday, November 11, 2012

Hurricane Sandy, Sea Bright and Mania

I've been surviving.  Let me explain.  Hurricane Sandy came to town and it has been a mess ever since.

We had a mandatory evacuation and left, moving in with my parents for two nights.
The damage in Monmouth County was extensive...horrific...tragic.  We came home to see if we had power, but like millions in the tri state area, predictably, we did not.

So we froze.  We moved back in to our place.  Our neighbor didn't leave our apartment complex and said it flooded, five feet of water engulfed our whole place.  Car alarms went off one at a time as the water filled them up and totaled them.  It was a mess.  The crawlspaces under our apartment saved each apartment except two buildings which had flooding inside.

We were lucky, no water inside, but it came damn close.  Up to our top stairs.

The perplexing thing is we live 100 feet from the river, we thought for sure this was what would flood us.  We had prepared, all our valuables were taken out and moved.  Our tv moved to our parents' house, picture albums taken out in suitcases, important documents too.  We filled garbage bags with litter and put them in front of our bedroom and front door.  Just in case, it could mean all the difference...  We took this storm seriously, unlike Irene.  We had  feeling it would be night and day to her.

Grateful we didn't sustain damage, we realized how lucky we were.  Had we not moved, we would still be living in Sea Bright.  It was where we lived for a decade, our little beach town, now decimated by Sandy.  Our city in ruins as Bruce sings.  Where beach clubs were ripped up and thrown, some houses in sticks, only one in tact, but flood damage to all. Sand from the beach displaced to ocean avenue and cars tossed like magazine pages on a windy day.

We left Sea Bright because the ceiling of our rental caved in during Irene.  Our landlord did a slipshod job at fixing it and we shudder to think what could've happened had we stayed.  It's an instant shot of gratitude anytime you need one.

Though Sea Bright is closed off by the national guard, we flashed our licenses with our Sea Bright addresses (licenses not changed yet) and they let us in.  Two weeks ago, last week ago, we couldn't go back if we wanted to.

Here are the horrible pics. I had to share them with someone, not sure about Facebook or Twitter, but here they are for you...

 this is our old building, and it's condemned.                  see below how the water line is up to the door.
 " X "  marks condemned by FEMA. 
 


alley behind our old apt.


another view of above bldg.


 This is the front of the building above.  Nothing inside... sad. I used to wave to the store owner all the time.  If business was slow, he'd be outside rocking on his chair.  He moved his store from Rumson to Sea Bright and it proved a bad move.



 This was a home the last mayor of sea bright owned. It was a three family home.  I hope no one was living here and they heeded the mandatory evacuation.  It's three blocks from our old apartment.



The public beach parking lot is now littered with army tents, the national guard, FEMA, police and volunteers.



This was my beach club for fifteen years.  Those were the years.... running around the club. Going from the ocean, to the pool, to the ocean.  Stopping in between to lie in the sand or stop in and get candy at the snack bar.   Very little had been changed to it in forty years.  Now it's a pile of wood.






Ship Ahoy beach club, next to Sands.  Neither did well...

Our poor Sea Bright.  R.I.P.

********************************************************8
Our Routine:



Each day our routine was the same.  We woke up cold, bundled up in coat, gloves, hat and scarf and headed out for our ice.  Upon return to our place, we iced up our remaining food in our coolers, organized our candles and set up for our return later.  Off we went for Carol's, my aunt, in Monmouth Beach past the National Guard to work on her house.  And each day we worked until dark, home in time for mandatory curfew at 7:00.

People began looting, it was expected.  As we were glued to our am radio, we first heard of it in Rockaway, NJ.  We watched the liquor store across the street and figured it would be the first to go.  Sure enough, it was hit the third night.  Cars circled around the lot until someone got up the courage and broke in.  Thereafter people went in, like they were going in to their pantry for pretzels.  We called the cops once, believing people were in there.  Turns out it was an unmarked cop car.  It was crazy: we were calling the cops on the cops.  Things were out of control.  They even looted the Welsh Farms.

With a foot of water in her house, three in her garage, she needed massive help in order to gut her house for the mold doctors to get rid the wet walls and floor. It was a big job, one that took many hands and 65 boxes. Seven days later, her crawlspace was dry, the boxes packed and the crew came in to take her walls down and floors up.

Exhaustion set in.  And we still had another friend to help who had a wet garage to deal with.  Meanwhile, our heat and electricity had still not come back.  So each night we froze, bundled up in blankets in the forty degree weather.  It felt bleak.  And while the rest of the world watched the news, we listened.  Only aware of the streets and towns around us, not having any idea, visually, of what devastation was around us.

Around the seventh day, there was a FEMA station built five minutes from us in the Monmouth Racetrack parking lot.  We began to go there for our ice and water.  Housing was set up there for folks who were helping from out of state.  And there were families brought in from other shelters.

But then I took a mental hit.  I began to go from healthy to the left side of crazy.  It crept up on me, like the wrath of Sandy herself.  Pressured speech, hard time sleeping, hard time eating.  Most major signs were and are there.  My partner noticed it first, and had to point it out to me.  No matter how much awareness you may have about your illness, it is still often noticed first by your loved ones around you.  And I am no different.  I can sometimes notice a little speediness, but when it goes from zero to sixty and I'm distracted, it's often the insight of someone else.

And so I'm a tad manic.

While I was busy helping my aunt, and worrying about myself and others, mania had packed a suitcase and headed for my place.  It stayed, silently on the couch.  Side by side, saying nothing until it's presence was made known.  And it sucks.

Now I have to pull back, take extra seroquel to sleep and have less time to help others.  The garage of our friend will stay soggy longer.  I have guilt over that, but there comes a time where you have to take care of yourself.  And during a hurricane/storm of this magnitude, you are on a wheel of madness.  When the wheel slows down, as your life returns to normalcy, it's not easy to stop your brain at the same time.

The only thing I can say is i'm grateful to be home.  I'm grateful i have loved ones who help me pinpoint mania has come to town, before it's out of control.  And I'm taking it easy.

When mania is here, and i'm on the right side of crazy, I have to stop my world a little while.  Until I can get back to center.  And that is part of the reason this is such a disruptive illness.  It takes a giant time out to get well again.  This is one of the main components of our illness that people fail to understand.  It's okay, I don't understand everything about diabetes or cancer.

It's accepted people can't work because they are having chemo.  It's not accepted that people aren't able to work because they have to take care of themselves and get back to wellness.  And rest, reducing stress and often relaxation at home is one of our medicines when mania has arrived.  This is when people mistake laziness for a prescription for wellness with our illness.  And it sucks.

The number one reason people don't understand our illness is they don't have it. I can't fault people for that.  But I can fault them for not trying.  Especially those who love me.  I have one relative who has "given up on me" in the words of my mother.  I knew this many years ago and it hurts to the core.  But I can't change other people.

Regarding hurricane Sandy, the jersey shore will recover.  Not as fast as me unfortunately.  It will take years and we will never be the same.  Fortunately, though, I will bounce back much faster.

peace,
me xo


Friday, October 12, 2012

air drums and tootsie rolls

I need a little break from writing DinerGirl. 

Sometimes I have my iPod on, sometimes it's too much.  Usually I can listen and write.  Sometimes I'm listening to the news in the background because my partner has it on.  When they started to hash out the vp debates all over again, I decided:  iPod goes back on.  I watched, I have my opinions, I know who I'm voting for and I could care less what the news people think of this or that statement.

So iPod back on. Among my close to 1000 tracks, over 100 is a book.  So that leaves nearly 900 that are songs and I always have it set to shuffle.  Little surprises come and go.  Some sad, some fast.  I have to share with you this.

I'm chomping on tootsie rolls. (I'm working my way through the big bag of sugar...ie: halloween candy that no trick or treater will ever get to eat.) Tootsie pop after tootsie roll, starburst, etc.  I'm washing it all down with a giant glass of water.  Suddenly the cat comes over and plops herself down to the left of my keyboard.  Problem is she is on the caps lock.  So every letter is coming out in CAPS.  Sorry kitty, you've got to move over. But this table is big enough for the 2 of us I promise.  Rita is usuallly glued to me and Leo glued to Nora. Rita is the baby, the runt who was found in Spanish Harlem and a waitress I worked with had rescued them from a mission in manhattan.  Well, technically HER sister did and she brought 4 from the litter to NJ. 

Anyways i don't know why i'm telling you all of this cat background.  rita sticks to me like glue.  and loves to sit on my laptop. or on my hands.  i had closed the blinds for better vision on my laptop and she was swatting her window-stuck toy through the blinds about to snap them (for the millionth replacement) when she wins. I lift them up.

Ten tootsie rolls later I'm listening in the background to HLNs cover story of Obesity in America.  And I decide to keep eating my bag of Halloween candy.

See I have 1 rule while writing.  I eat candy.  With no restriction.  I'm not talking giant chocolate bars, but high sugar, gooey, hard candy, whatever. I have always, even as a baby, sniffed out the sugar and pulled out drawers to get it.  They took away my Easter Candy upon a shitload of cavities at the dentist when I was maybe 8?  And I searched for that damned easter basked for at least a year.  Never found the damn thing.  They lied they didn't keep it. They threw my poor basket out.

I would take my pennies and nickles (yes I'm that old) and go up the street to buy my Swedish Fish.  Occasionally my friends and I would all throw our money together and buy the whole damn thing. 

Let me tell you, someday, and that someday is coming, I have to start working out again soon.  Until then, I am eating my damn candy to finish DinerGirl.

I have to tell you though, the whole reason for taking a break from writing today is to tell you this.

The tv is on.  Nora is asleep on the couch.  The kitties are both behaving (ie: they are asleep!)

And I am rocking out.

Oh yeah, big time.

Like a song came on and I lost it.  Playing all kinds of air drums.  The whole 9.  No one is watching, not even a pet.  The only blind that isn't drawn is one that no one can see in to the dining room.

And I suck at air drums.  But i play them anyway.... because the most awesome air drum song came on.  Do you know "Iris" by the band called:  Live?   OMG great fucking song.  I can curse, it's my blog, why the fuck not. 

"We are Family" is on now.  Too funny, because we sang that song during sorority rush about a thousand freaking times over the years (plus at every single dance and formal we had.)  So in college it was a bit overplayed in the stereo of Wendy's mind.  But today.....

DAMMIT:    we are family....
                           get up everybody and sing!!

Now, it's Chris Brown (ugh) and Jordan Sparks : )  singing " No Air"  a song that rocked me to the core the summer it came out.  It was the summer that I fell in love with a woman for the first time.  And we will be married in a few months.  Crazy shiz I know.  But let me tell you, it was like my universe clicked and AT LAST everything made sense.

I will write as I was in DinerGirl. Yes, it's a book about me when I was a diner waitress. And at that time I thought I was straight. I was living that life. COnfused.  And so lost I didn't even realize just how confused I was.  Tragic.  At least halfway through life I figured it out.  It's about time I'm in love.  SOme people have it once in their life, some never, some several times.  
Love 
  has
     finally
          arrived.

(well 3 years ago... but at 40 that took a while!)

okay that is my little summary.  more outta me the next time i need a break from DinerGirl.  You all rock. Thanks for reading and being you.

love,
dinergirl  xxoo

hmm i kinda like it no caps...  

p.s. new on my iPod:   Amos Lee.  "Colors"   He's genius and mellowing me out.