Monthly Archives: October 2013

Flash Fiction: Failure

Chuck Wendig has the flu rampaging through his household (get better, y’all!) but has left us this week’s Flash Fiction Challenge. Not surprisingly, it’s a request for “1,000 words or so” in the form of a “sub-genre smash-and-grab.” I rolled a 14 and a 2 which gives me the format “Technothriller Space Opera”. I can do that! I even did it in only 1,010 words, which is pretty good for me. In addition, as something of a proof of concept exercise, the story was 99% written on an iPad while out in the front yard setting up telescopes and handing out candy on Halloween. Whoo hoo, multitasking!

As always, comments and constructive criticisms are appreciated.

FAILURE

As the final circuit closed to activate the final relay in the final memory bank of the Planetary Defense System, everyone in the room unconsciously held their breath. There were no banks of blinking lights, spinning mag tape reels, or consoles showering sparks everywhere, just a sea of dark computer monitors slowly coming to life and displaying status readouts.

Everyone was relieved to see that all of the monitors were showing “green” as they activated. They were safe. At least, for now.

From their vantage point in the VIP box high above the operations center, the president and his staff could see the first monitors lighting up just below them, followed a few seconds later by a second group nearby. All of the other screens remained blank. Confused, the president turned to the chief engineer.

“Why aren’t they all turning on? What’s wrong?” he asked.

“Nothing is wrong, Mr. President. When the system was initialized, the hyperthreaded activation codes and atomic clock synchronization signals were sent out to the surveillance stations all over the solar system. As each system starts reporting back, we’ll start seeing data displayed from that area.”

“I still don’t understand why those monitors are on and the others aren’t.”

“Sir, the first large group of systems there is data from systems in Earth orbit. We started receiving their data almost immediately, of course. That second group to come on was from the outposts on Luna. We’re limited by the speed of light, so it will take some time for the round trip signals to get back from the other stations.”

The vice-president, a technowonk from California before he became a politician, leaped into the conversation in an attempt to help clarify the procedures.

“Mr. President, you can see several large digital clock displays in various sections of the command center. Those clocks are counting down to the various EAOS times.”

“EAOS?” the president asked, knowing that the VP was just speaking in technobabble to show off.

“‘Estimated Acquisition Of Signal’, sir,” the chief engineer quickly replied, wanting to head off an argument. “You can see those two sections on the left controlling the systems at Mercury and Venus. They should be turning on in just a couple of minutes. We will data from Mars in about forty minutes, then Jupiter in another hour after that. We won’t start receiving data from Pluto until tomorrow afternoon.”

Mollified, the president settled in to watch silently. As the EAOS clocks counted down, groups of monitors activated with data from the L4 and L5 points, Venus, Mercury, Mars, Ceres, Vesta, and Jupiter. Always the screens glowed green and each time the president breathed a little easier.

As the data began flowing in from Saturn nearly four hours after system activation, the president rose and prepared to leave. He began to thank all of the system officials in attendance. As he walked past a gargantuan bank of high-resolution displays summarizing all of the detailed data from the command floor, he noticed one tiny square blinking bright red.

“What’s that?” he demanded.

“Nothing important, sir, it’s just an internal system diagnostic routine of some sort. Everything’s green, so that’s no doubt some kind of a faulty system data compilation sanity verification algorithm that needs to be recompiled. We’ll track it down.”

The vice-president reached over and tapped the crimson icon, bringing up a full display. “Nothing’s ever ‘not important’, especially when the fate of every man, woman, and child is at stake!” The display now showed “ERROR 337788” in bright yellow letters on a red background.

“What is that error code?” the president shouted.

The chief engineer quickly grabbed a binder from the shelf and flipped to the appropriate page. He read quickly before looking up, confused. “It says that as a double check to verify acquisition of accurate data, a small subroutine was inserted into the calculations for the EAOS times to deliberately make them inaccurate by a tiny fraction of a percent. But since all of the data has been received exactly ‘on time’, it….” He looked horrified, the realization of the truth cascading over him.

“It means the data being displayed is fake!” the vice-president shouted. “Do you have a backup system to reroute the optical data relay trunks to a secondary auxiliary subsystem and bypass the data formatting protocols into the mainframe?”

“Of course,” the chief engineer said, “but that’s not…”

“Do it!” the president ordered, cutting him off in mid-thought.

The chief engineer picked up a red phone and quickly barked an order. “Execute the Trojan Horse protocol! This is not a drill, I repeat, this is not a drill!”

Within seconds, all of the active monitors began to flash red and yellow, sirens and claxons ringing from every corner of the complex.

Mr. President, we’ve failed,” the chief engineer said. “The Klupthbiq must have known what we were doing all along. Their spies had the system infiltrated from the beginning. Their fleet is already inside Luna’s orbit and we’ve lost control of our defense systems. We’re doomed!”

The President was calm as he turned to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. “You were right, General. They were more devious that we could have imagined. Can we still activate the Armageddon Device?”

“Yes, sir. That’s why we insisted on keeping it isolated from the Planetary Defense System.”

“Do you see any other options, General?”

“No, sir. They’ll be here in minutes. All we can do is take them with us.”

“But, sir,” the chief engineer pleaded, “there has to be an alternative! Isn’t there some way to surrender and plead for mercy?”

“You fool! Don’t you remember what happened to our science outpost on Europa? The Klupthbiq don’t take prisoners, but they do find us…tasty. General, set off the Armageddon Device while there’s still time!”

On the Klupthbiq homeworld, the FTL muonspace communications with the fleet were lost immediately. It was only ten years later, when the light of the supernova in the Sol system reached them, that they knew the dreadful fate that had befallen them.

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Rush Hour In LA & My Faith In Humanity

To be blunt, the former doesn’t do much for the latter.

Driving down to Irvine this morning in rush hour traffic gives a good example. I’m sure folks see this in every city. I’m sure that there are hot spots in every metropolitan area in the world that are a living nightmare on a daily basis. I’m sure that there are places that are worse. (Shanghai comes to mind…) But this morning was startling in how typical it is, at least here in Los Angeles, to nearly die in traffic every single day.

A mere one hundred yards from my house, at a four-way stop, I came within a foot or two of almost certain death. As I stopped, checked for cross traffic, and then started through the intersection, some pin-headed mental midget doing at least fifty MPH came barreling in from my left. He never even slowed down as he blew through the stop sign. FREAKIN’ IDIOT! If I hadn’t seen him at the last second and stomped on the brakes he would have hit me square in the driver’s door and I wouldn’t be here to write this. The only consolation is that his pulped carcass would have been accompanying mine to Valhalla, like a mini honor guard.

For two seconds it was tempting to hang a hard right turn and chase his ass down, or at least get the license plate on the car, but I didn’t have the time. Next time, maybe.

Two miles later, stopped at a red light behind two other cars, it was someone else’s turn to almost die at the hand of some freakin’ idiot. At least this brain-dead cretin had the manners to be honking his horn like crazy as he ran the red light a good three or four seconds after the light had turned. I guess that’s the new international signal for, “Look out! My shoe size is bigger than my IQ and I’m in a hurry! I don’t give a rat’s ass if we both die so I have the de facto right of way!” Driving a full-sized pick-up truck doing about forty, he could have done a lot of damage to a bunch of other cars, not to mention the three or four pedestrians already in the crosswalk.

Once I get on the freeway, the fun continues. On the 405 southbound at the intersection with the 101, the two far right lanes exit onto the 101 transition. The four left lanes are packed and crawling. (Someone about ten miles ahead, at Sunset, had flipped and was blocking a couple of lanes.) So at the gore point where the lanes split, we see dozens and dozens of cars racing along in the nearly empty transition lanes, only to stop (and block the lane) at the last second and then force there way into traffic. Freakin’ idiots!

The first smiley-faced balloon-head to try this was doing it while blow drying her hair. None of this simple “texting and driving” for her, no sir! She’s obviously a very, very important person who can’t be bothered with all of those petty, stupid little traffic rules that only the peons have to obey. So she’ll pass by a mile or more of gridlocked traffic to block a lane before she forces someone to either let her in or get hit by her. Doing her hair while endangering multiple lives? That’s just the icing on the cake.

The second SFBH was a young kid who I got to know as “The Little Drummer Boy”. He also bypassed all of the gridlock, blocked a lane, and played chicken with someone’s bumper to get into the through lane. He then cut straight over another lane to pull in behind me, earning him an extensive horn sonata and a one-finger salute from the guy behind me who got cut off by him. The Little Drummer Boy then proceeded to stick behind me for another ten miles or so, without ever touching the steering wheel with either hand. How could I tell? I could clearly see in my rear-view mirror that he had a pair of drum sticks and was playing along on the dashboard, windshield, mirror, door, and steering wheel. (I’m guessing that it was the drum solo from “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida”.) FREAKIN’ IDIOT! At least he didn’t have the music turned up so loud that it was rattling my windows — he was wearing a full-sized pair of headphones (also illegal while driving, but who’s counting).

While traffic was crawling for us mere mortals, those in the carpool lane were zipping right along. Especially the ones who very obviously did not have two people in the car and weren’t driving a hybrid or alternate fuel vehicle. I don’t have precise data, but I would be surprised if less than 10% of those using the carpool lane were using it illegally. I guess the “$371 minimum fine” signs aren’t much of a deterrent. At least, not any more of a deterrent than those double-double yellow lane markers that would seem to indicate that it’s illegal to get into or out of the carpool lane except where allowed. I couldn’t even guess how many folks I saw crossing back and forth illegally.

Using the phone while driving? (Illegal in California for years if you’re not using a hands-free device.) Texting while driving? (Illegal, period, and incredibly dangerous and stupid to boot.) Probably close to 1 in 20, if not more.

Lest you think that I’ve become my father or some old coot fixated on every little scofflaw (“Rotten kids, get off my lawn!”), I really do understand that it’s a “Not My Float!” moment. Yeah, there’s a tiny little Catholic school voice in my head who wants to punish and get self-righteous, but forty years of LA traffic has pretty much beaten it into submission. I’m much better than I was in my younger days at just watching out for the freakin’ idiots and making sure they don’t hit me than I am wanting to go all vigilante on them. (Except for that little shit who almost killed me at the four-way stop. That’s personal.)

But three hours of driving in those conditions will not do anything to help your belief that people are good, decent, intelligent people.

More accurately, it serves to remind me that probably 98% of the people out there are good, decent, and intelligent — but it only takes that 2% to completely screw it up for everyone. And it sure looks like the 2% are getting away with murder. Watching that right before your eyes for three hours and being so inured to it that you can’t afford to care about it? That’s poison enough to kill your faith in humanity.

P.S. — As I finish writing and editing this, it becomes painfully obvious that a skunk has gotten upset somewhere very close by. As in, “eye-watering, choking, stomach-turning, WTF IS THAT SMELL” close. Perfect.

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Filed under Critters, Distracted Driving, Freakin' Idiots!, Not My Float

Odds & Sods For Tuesday, October 29th

Item The First: Heads up! (Literally.) I’ve seen several folks on Twitter talking about how they’re seeing bright ISS passes listed for their cities in the US this week. Check it out, especially for Halloween night. If you’re already out and about with the kiddies, setting your phone to go off a minute or so early will give you the “heads up” you need to see a pass.

Here in Los Angeles, there was a pass  last night that I didn’t think I would see because of the heavy clouds. But I happened to be taking Jessie out at the right time and found some holes in the clouds to see the VERY bright ISS blinking in and out through the gaps. Spectacular!

For the rest of the week, at least for Los Angeles, there are passes this week tonight (Tuesday, the 29th) at 18:22 and 20:01 (the first pass is higher and brigher), Wednesday the 30th at 19:14, and Thursday night (Halloween!) at 18:23. The Thursday night pass is supposed to be especially bright, rising in the WNW with a maximum elevation of 47.2 degrees, a magnitude of -3.2 (which is much brighter than Venus), and setting in the SSE. You can’t miss it!

Item The Second:  Yes, the central scientific idea in my October 24th Flash Fiction story is similar the idea in Larry Niven’s “Inconstant Moon”. Yes, while mulling over the random title I got (“Fire On The Sea”), I did think of Niven’s story as a source of the fire, since I wanted to do something other than just telling a story about a guy in a burning boat or oil rig or something. That’s how my thought processes go. I don’t want to do the “usual”. What else could be on fire on the sea? An oil spill? A large explosion of some sort? Maybe an asteroid impact over the horizon. What about the sun? What was that Niven story? Maybe the guy in my story is dealing with something similar. He’s looking east, waiting for the sunrise, so where does that put him. Jersey? Virginia? Florida? I don’t want to do the “usual”, so let’s make it Africa. OK, that works, so what’s this guy doing and thinking in that situation. (By the way, if you haven’t read “Inconstant Moon”, go do so immediately. It’s a classic and most excellent.)

Item The Third: So far, neither Rocky, Raquel, or “the kids” has managed to pry the screen off of their hidey-hole. Sorry, Pat! But I’ll keep an eye on it. They’re up there on the roof every couple of nights, there are plenty of half-eaten oranges left around, and the dog’s water bowl is occasionally quite muddy from where they’re using it to wash their food – but they haven’t reclaimed their hidey-hole. Yet…

Item The Fourth: Two thoughts on the media’s changing reaction to a certain couple of pieces of music. First, I thought that it was interesting to see Filter’s “Hey Man, Nice Shot” being used as the background music in an episode of NBC’s “The Blacklist” a couple weeks ago. A few years ago, when the song came out, I remember quite a bit of protest about it and folks trying to get it banned. Ditto for “I Don’t Like Mondays” by the Boomtown Rats, which I heard on a middle of the road, “classic rock” FM station the other day. Back in the day, I remember folks hollering for KROQ’s license because they dared to play it.

The second, equally upsetting thought, was the realization that “Hey Man, Nice Shot” came out in 1995 (eighteen years ago) and “I Don’t Like Mondays” came out in 1981 (thirty-two freakin’ years ago!!), so when I casually think to myself that it was “a few years ago”, the only one I’m fooling is myself, I guess. It’s not just a river in Egypt any more…

Item The Fifth: Which NFL team is undefeated at 8-0? Hmmmmm? Face it, coming off of a terrible year in 2012 at 2-14, this year we sincerely hoped that we would be better. Most folks were praying for an 8-8 year, and a few brave souls thought we might get to 9-7 and squeak into a wildcard playoff spot. To say that we need to reassess those goals and expectations is the understatement of the year. I don’t think we need to be reserving hotels and airfares to New York just yet. But it’s much, much better to be 8-0 at this point in the season than it was being 1-7 last year!

Item The Sixth: I swear, someone in the neighborhood has a kookaburra. I hear it almost every night, right around an hour before sunset. It’ll sound off repeatedly, sometimes a dozen times. I have no idea if it’s caged in someone’s house or if it’s on the loose (like Lester), but I would love to track it down and see it, take a few pictures, maybe some video. If nothing else, just to prove that I’m not hearing things and hallucinating.

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Filed under Astronomy, Critters, KC Chiefs, Music, Odds & Sods, Science Fiction, Space, Sports, Writing

A Busy, Productive Day (With Critters)

It might have been a day in which I got a lot done, but it was not one in which I left myself a whole lot of time to do 500 to 1,000 thoughtful and insightful words for this blog. (I’m trying to “clear the decks” of as many tasks as I can in preparation for the big November plans!)

So, have some “emergency” critter pictures from the archives!

IMG_0744_smallI’ve got to admit, opossums freak me out just a little.

img_0750_smallThey don’t do much for Jessie, either. I don’t know if it was this one or another one, but there was a night when she went out just before bedtime to do her business and cornered a mama opossum with a handful of young ones. The babies were hanging tight to mama’s back, mama couldn’t make it up into the tree and was trapped on the ground in the corner. Jessie was “poofed” and going bananas, trying to wake up half the neighborhood. Mama opossum might have been out of her weight class, but there was no way she was letting Jessie near her babies without it being over her dead body. I was just trying to get close enough to Jessie to grab her collar and yank her back without even further freaking out the opossum and having her try to bite me. She had a lot of very sharp looking teeth.

IMG_2523_smallThese guys also drive Jessie nuts, deliberately taunting her and playing “chicken” to see if she can catch them. (She can’t.) There have been multiple occasions over the years where we’ll find dead ones, apparently dying of either a fall or some kind of disease. Jessie leaves them alone, either because she instinctively knows they’re diseased or (more likely) she’s scared of them because they’re not acting “right”. Even when she’s found them hurt and unable to get away or get up into the trees, she’ll leave them alone. But if they’re “acting like squirrels”, then she goes nuts, doing her part to “act like a dog” in return.

IMG_5588_smallRed-tailed hawks are all over the region and they’re so great to watch. There are a couple of pairs that we see regularly, often accompanied by a half-dozen crows trying to “mob” them.

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Filed under Critters, Photography

My Daughter’s Amazing Pumpkin Carvings!

Halloween’s this week, and like most parents I tried my hand at carving jack-o-lanterns when the kids were small. Most of them were crude, i.e., cartoon-like. They went a little bit beyond triangle eyes and nose and slit for a mouth, but not much beyond.

As rudimentary as those efforts were, they must have planted a seed somehow in my daughter, Kat. Years ago she started carving pumpkins and getting better and better, and every year carving more and more of them, and getting more and more elaborate. Let me show you (all pumpkin photos by Kat Willett):

IMG_4825_smallOK, had to start with the visual pun. Even I could do this one.

IMG_4925_smallUnlit, sometimes I have a tough time seeing at first glance what the image is…

IMG_4939_small…but when it’s lit up, it’s pretty obvious. Especially in this set (from 2009, before she went of to UC Davis) which had a Mario Brothers theme.

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IMG_5028_smallA couple of other video game characters might have slipped in there as well.

For years, when possible (given acceptable weather and the cooperation of the “late night and early morning low clouds and fog” that are the norm in autumn) we have set up a couple of telescopes in the front yard for Halloween. We’ll sit out there and hand out candy and let folks take a look at whatever’s up. (Years with a favorable position for the moon, Jupiter, or Saturn are the best!)

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAThis particular year we also set up a table of Kat’s jack o’lanterns. Kids loved the candy (of course), but both parents and kids loved the telescopes and the pumpkin display.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

As I said, the pumpkins above were all from 2009, and Kat’s only gotten more skilled and elaborate since then. She has a gallery of her pumpkin photos on her Deviantart account here. There are several hundred pictures posted there. This time of year, there are more being posted just about every day.

pumpkin_madness_by_joh_wee-d322jyjAs you can see from this recent picture taken from Kat’s Deviantart site, they’re pretty amazing.

Yep, I’m a proud dad!

This year we’ll try to take the telescopes out again, if it’s clear. (So far the weather looks like it might be OK.) Last year it was cloudy and we got dozens of people asking where the telescopes were.

For the past three years we’ve also gotten lots of people asking every year where all of the amazing carved pumpkins are. I can’t help them there — Kat’s the one with all of the talent in that area!

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Open Lines Of Communication

GIt occurs to me that I have not yet put additional contact information on the site, should someone wish (for example) to send a private e-mail about something regarding the site. Or perhaps someone wants to see if I write similar nonsense on Twitter. (Spoiler alert — I do.)

First of all, on e-mail you can get me at any time using:

  • pwillett@ix.netcom.com (my original, ancient account that’s still my primary email account)
  • momdude@gmail.com (my “personal” Gmail account)
  • PaulJWillett@gmail.com (my “business” Gmail account)

On the more pubic and “conventional” social media sites, almost all of my accounts have this picture on them as my ID:Paul J Willett

Paul in a happy, happy place

Yes, of course I’m on Facebook, as “Paul Willett”. There are more than one “Paul Willett” out there (not quite as bad as being a “John Smith”), but I’m the “Paul Willett” in Los Angeles, California with that photo. I read and post on Facebook a couple of times a day. It’s a primary channel of communication for staying in contact with family, high school friends, college friends, and friends from science fiction fandom.

I’m on Twitter as “@momdude56”. Occasional rapid-fire or live-tweeting silliness, 140 characters or less at a time. Twitter is rapidly becoming my primary source of news and updates on what’s happening with things I’m passionate about, like the space program, astronomy, writing, my favorite sports teams, and so on.

For business type contacts (you say you’re looking for a jack-of-all-trades type accountant or controller with over twenty-seven years of experience?), you can get me on Linkedin at www.linkedin.com/pub/paul-willett/4/156/482 (there’s that picture again!)

In the last month I’ve just started an Instagram account. You can find a growing album of pictures there at “momdude56”.

Let’s stay in touch!

 

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Juicy Chunks O’ Wisdom For Friday, October 25th

‘Cause Fridays used to be better, that’s why.

  • What is it about this time of month? (Just realized a possible answer as I used that turn of phrase…) I noticed that the “Juicy Chunks” posts for August and September were on the 27th and 25th respectively.
  • It sounds like they’re having a good time at the football game at the high school two blocks away. I wonder who they’re playing?
  • Last night there was a really loud owl somewhere in the trees either in our back yard or the neighbors’ back yard. It was beautiful listening to it hoot once a minute or so for over an hour.
  • We can always tell when there’s a big rivalry game at the high school because our street fills up with overflow parking.
  • This whole passive-aggressive thing with Joey Chan (the cat) is really getting old. She sits under my chair and whines and begs to be on my lap, refused to jump up on her own, but if I reach down to pick her up and put her there, she takes a swipe at my hand.
  • I’ll bet the noise from the football game scares the owl away tonight.
  • It occurs to me that Joey Chan and I might be playing different games. She might be totally uninterested in sitting on my lap. Instead, she might really wants to claw me up for whatever feline reasons her almond-sized brain has.
  • The passive-aggressive thing is just what she’s figured out to get me to put my hand down there where she can get at it. I mess with her head using the laser pointer, she messes with mine by pretending that she wants on my lap. Ahh, perspective…
  • I wonder how big that owl was and if it was big enough to take out one of our full-sized raccoons. Maybe not. But squirrels or rats, for sure. Probably could take out a cat as well.
  • When I was seventeen I really wanted to take the summer between my junior and senior years of high school and go to Europe.
  • I was going to stay at hostels, get a Eurail Pass, and backpack through a dozen countries.
  • I did not go to Europe when I was seventeen. I did not backpack through a dozen countries.
  • My mother informs me that she has gotten another dog, a Yorkshire terrier of some sort. I’m glad it makes her happy and it’s great that she rescued an abandoned critter. But I still look at it as just a pair of “little rat dogs”.
  • Our high school football team was not very good. From memory, I think we were 1-7 and 0-8 in my junior and senior years.
  • That wasn’t the reason I wanted to go to Europe.
  • Imagine our surprise at the 35th anniversary high school reunion when the current football team rolled by in the parade carrying the state championship trophy.

Remember to keep some “emergency” rockin’, upbeat music at hand for when it’s time to feel better.

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Filed under Cats, Critters, Dogs, Juicy Chunks, Travel

Flash Fiction: Fire On The Sea

Chuck Wendig is back from his Australia-bound carcass flinging and this week we again have a new and exciting adventure for our Flash Fiction Challenge. It’s the usual “1,000 words or so” and the random song title I got from my iTunes collection (11,752 songs and growing) is track number one on Heather Alexander‘s “Insh’allah – the Music Of Lion’s Blood” album. Amazingly, I was able to get in at only 825 words, a rarity for me. As always, comments and constructive criticisms are appreciated.

FIRE ON THE SEA

Omar sat on the beach, facing east. The hard sand was cool after it had bled away all of the day’s heat. Before him the sea was angry, the waves rolling in, the surf steadily crashing higher and higher. A dim bioluminescent glow lit the foam. Just audible over the growling of the surf were the sounds of chaos, sirens and explosions, coming from the city behind him.

Other solitary watchers sat on the beach with Omar, all of them silent and lost in their own thoughts. A few families were scattered across the beach as well, but the children were all quiet and sleeping, innocent and oblivious.

Overhead the stars were crystal clear and beautiful. Orion was high in the east, rising up on his side above a mass of thunderheads far off on the horizon. Above the ancient warrior, closer to the zenith, the last quarter moon and Mars hovered near Taurus, the red planet preternaturally shining far brighter than the red giant, Aldeberan.

As he watched the wall of clouds race toward him from the east, Omar could hear a few of those near him praying quietly. He had never been a very religious man to begin with, but after cancer had taken his wife when she was not yet thirty, Omar had found few occasions to want to speak with Allah. The sons he had raised without his beloved were now spread across the country and would have to decide for themselves if they needed to meet their fates as holy men or not.

Earlier in the evening, one of the television stations had been taken over by an armed mob of religious zealots. All night they had been shouting and wailing their theories about how Allah was punishing the world of men, cleansing it with fire. Without a shred of evidence to back them up, they continually promised that the faithful would be saved in order to rebuild the world in Allah’s name.

Omar didn’t know why the world was being destroyed. He had listened to the increasingly horrible news reports showing the cities of Europe and America burning before going silent. Some commentators had tried to interview experts to see what precautions should be taken in the few brief hours they themselves had. At first there had been speculation that the flames from the sun might be just a flare that would die out in a few hours, leaving those lucky enough to be on the night side to survive. Those hopes had faded as the night went on. With Japan and Asia starting to burn with the sunrise, Omar had come down to the beach to face the end on his own terms.

Throughout the city, thousands of others had chosen a different path, spending their last hours looting, killing, and raping. Others panicked and were desperately trying to flee with whatever belongings they could, although there was no place safe to flee to. Omar had simply left all of his belongings behind and managed to avoid the mobs until he reached the beach. After that he had turned up the coast and walked away from the madness until he found a quiet spot.

Omar did not have any family left in the city. The few friends he had were not that close to him and would face this in their own way. Alone with just his dignity and his self-respect for many years now, he had decided that he would do what he could to keep those things with him until the end, meeting the end of all things as he had lived his life.

While it should still be over three hours before sunrise, Omar could see that the eastern horizon was starting to brighten. The line of the horizon far out to sea was being defined by the constant flashes of lightning smashing down from the turbulent wavefront being driven away from the burning Pacific Ocean.

An intensely bright, white line appeared and grew in the sky parallel to the horizon. The tops of the clouds beyond the horizon were being illuminated by an amazingly intense light. Stretching up higher than any clouds ever seen by humans before, the inferno’s fury was rapidly hemorrhaging the planet’s life off into space.

Driven before this final storm to end all storms, the wind began to pick up, soon going beyond hurricane force. Carried on the wind was a rising wave of heat, raising the temperature beyond anything Omar had ever felt, even here near the Equator.

Omar could see the clouds and lighting were approaching unbelievably fast, towering up into the stratosphere and beyond. While many of those around him hunkered down and faced away, Omar chose to stand and face his fate. Holding onto a tree with all of his strength, leaning into the howling, blast furnace wind, Omar watched as the sea rose and the world turned to fire around him.

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Filed under Science Fiction, Writing

The Plan For November

It’s good to have a plan. As Colonel John ‘Hannibal’ Smith said, “I love it when a plan comes together!”

November’s coming, and that means that things are going to get really, REALLY busy.

First of all, above and beyond and top priority over everything (which could completely derail and invalidate everything below) is the job hunt. Gotta find something. Priorities and all of that.

Between sending out resumes and checking out Linkedin and so on and so forth, for the last six months there’s been this blog to write and post every day. This is not a bad thing! Developing some writing discipline was (and is) one of the primary purposes for this blog’s existence. Participating in things like Chuck Wendig’s weekly “Flash Fiction Challenge” exercise is also a great part of the blog.

As I’m now joining the “Wednesday Writer’s Group”, I want and need to start actively writing again on two different old first drafts. I probably won’t be able to write on both every day, but it would be nice to set a goal of 1,000 words a day or more on one or the other. At least enough to keep ahead of the group and have something to hand out for critiquing every week.

Next, some of you may know that November is “National Novel Writing Month“, or “NaNoWriMo”. For the third year, I’m planning on trying to participate. That’s an average of 1,700 words a day every day in November in order to hit the goal.

It’s true of many of us human critters that we dislike pressure and working on tight deadlines. It’s also true that many of us perform much better when working in a high pressure situation while working on tight deadlines. (That’s why bosses, teachers, and editors use them – duh!) I recognize that I’m someone who both dislikes and needs the pressure. I’ve learned over the years that I can subvert any procrastination inclinations by proactively setting myself up in advance to perform in a public spotlight. I’ll hate it later and wonder why in hell I did that – but I know why, both now and then. (Kind of like the halfway point in a marathon. Every time I wonder what in the hell I’m doing and I swear up and down that I’m never going to run again and I’m going to throw in the towel at any second – but I don’t quit and I always do run again.)

So for my NaNoWriMo project this year, I’m going to post the daily “zeroth draft” manuscript here. Every day. Or else I’ll have to post (i.e. “confess”) here that I didn’t write that day. Every day.

Understand that this will not be polished, smooth, edited, publishable-ready prose of the highest standards. This is the “puke words onto the paper and keep writing” stuff, the draft before the first draft, the mother of all “Flash Fiction Challenges” where instead of “1,000 words or so” it’s “50,000 words or so”. Hell, I may even ask for plot suggestions and directions from the followers of this blog and go with those ideas. It will be an “adventure”.

It also means that many days in November will have two posts per day here. Over the last 177 days I have posted 182 articles here, one per day with five days that had two articles. I expect to be posting one entry a day for the “usual” We Love The Stars Too Fondly stuff (simple astrophotography, Odds & Sods, critter pictures, Random Blatherationings, book reviews, semi-sane rants, and so on) and then a second post with that day’s NaNoWriMo output. The writing on the project(s) for the Wednesday group will not be posted here – that will be a surprise in a year or so when it gets published.

If you start seeing a little daily “scoreboard” as part of every day’s post, you’ll know what it’s about.

Oh, and then on Thanksgiving weekend the annual Christmas lights madness starts. We haven’t talked about that yet… Heh, heh… Heh, heh… *rubs hand together and drools a little*

That’s the plan! (You’ve been warned.)

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The Grand Canyon (Part Three)

On our bus tour on our first day at the South Rim of the Grand Canyon, we visited Hopi Point and Mohave Point. From there, the bus headed back to the Grand Canyon Village and stopped at Trail View Point.

Trailview Point mapGoogle Maps

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IMG_0398_smallThe squiggly white line across the lower mesa is the Bright Angel hiking trail down to the bottom of the Canyon from the South Rim Village. As you can see, you descend a couple thousand feet to get down to this lower plateau, hike a couple of miles, then pretty much drop over that far cliff and down another few thousand feet. The total hiking distance is only 9.3 miles, but the total vertical drop is over 5,000 feet – and then you get to hike back up. I would love to do it someday, but I’ll need to be in better shape than I am now.

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IMG_0415_smallThe South Rim Village is built at the edge of the Canyon, near the center of a huge horseshoe-shaped bend, so that there are “arms” of land sticking out to both the east and west of the Village. Trailview Point is on this western arm of land, and here we can look back and see the Village, perched on the edge.IMG_0423_smallEmbiggenate this picture to see most of the South Rim Village on the top of the mesa, with the Canyon falling away below it. You can also clearly see the Bright Angel trail descending down from the Village. Even if you can’t hike all the way down to the river, it’s not too terribly strenuous to hike down a half mile or so (YMMV!) always keeping in mind that you have to go back up.

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IMG_8404_smallAs spectacular as the scenery was, one of the best highlights of the day was seeing a pair of condors soaring in the thermals rising up just off the edge of the cliff. The both came within fifty feet or so of us as they circled up from below the rim, riding the thermal until they were way over our heads. I had never seen on in the wild – they were spectacular, and HUGE. Watching them was special.

 

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