When last we chatted, my goal was to get my next book out pronto. Nothing happens fast during a pandemic, except transmission. Bollocks!
But with dogged determination, lots of cookies, and too many donuts in the house, my new book is out. Only about seven months behind schedule. I’m giving myself an A for effort. Because I could write like a wild woman in lockdown, but not edit. Brain fade, fog, or avoidance. Let’s assume all three. Then family medical issues, not Covid. Focus can be a challenge. Right?
Please check out my new book, Mission: Canine Hearts.
Enough marketing. Back to our regular programming.
It seems, for some unknown reason, I can upload pictures again. Priceless! Through the power of procrastination, somebody in WordPress-land fixed that debacle from several months ago. Thank you so much. I hope it lasts. So, to celebrate before I lose that capacity again, let’s look at some pics!
@#$%^ Spoke too soon. I have to make my pics smaller. Argh! I’m sure it’s a pixel issue. Let me hunt down the frozen chocolate donuts first.
In that case, let’s look at some videos! This Oregon Zoo video made me howl a few weeks ago because it is exactly what’s been happening in my fiction critique group Zoom meetings. Someone’s tech is always going sideways. For no rhyme or reason, but we plow on. And look a lot like these humongo Hornbills in front of the webcams. Either Claudia’s smoke alarm beeps when we meet, never at any other time, or we can’t see Cindy.
She has tried to get us to see her face. Halfway through our last meeting, Cindy’s face popped up from a black screen and startled the rest of us. I’ve had to hack in from the main web site when the prior meeting email worked fine. Such are the times we live in. I like everyone’s creativity and the willingness to adapt.
Soapbox alert. The Army and Air Force taught me that masks save lives. Mine and others. Whether it’s a gas mask or an oxygen mask, they work. It’s an educational moment to be standing in the gas chamber in Army basic training. You can feel your skin crawl when they pop the gas. You learn to trust your mask in the chamber.
Then they make you take off your mask to really appreciate it. You have to repeat your name, rank, and something else unimportant, to keep you inside long enough to take a fine whiff of chemicals before getting permission to leave. Very educational.
Our scientists, healthcare personnel, and essential frontline workers have become our modern day fighter pilots, like in the movie Independence Day. As ground support crew to them, our cloth face masks are one crucial tool to fight this global enemy and support our new pandemic fighter pilots. Mask up America!
Off my soapbox. Where was I? See, this is what happens during these times. Squirrel!
I’d like to close with a few items I’ve been doing to keep me from going nuts. (And I bet you think it’s not working!)
- Taking walks.
- Listening to Great Meditation on YouTube
- Following The Minimal Mom on YouTube to help edit out the clutter in my home.
- Watching way too many YouTube videos.
- Major League Baseball. (I’m an NFL gal, but I’m enjoying their efforts. Calms me down.)
- Giving myself a break. If we only get one thing done a day, bloody brilliant!
- Taking flower pictures.
- Laughing with friends on the phone and on Zoom.
- Filling up my local Goodwill with donations.
- Writing things in my After Pandemic To Do booklet.
- Being grateful to write the stories of my heart.
Hope you are all healthy, safe, and coping. Hugs to all. We are in this big earth SUV together, so let’s quit fighting in the backseat and get along.
Moving forward together is the best way to defeat this damn virus. Onward America!
We’ve got a lot of work to do.
Right after I chomp on a frozen chocolate donut.
Blessings.
And because we need it. The Red Panda cub at the Oregon Zoo!
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