Friday, January 27, 2012

Time--Running Out of Somedays

I was listening to one of my favorite songs the other day….

Yeah, one of my favorite songs is sung by a frog. You got a problem with that?

So I was enjoying the part about following your dreams and how you hear destiny calling your name when I heard it:

Someday I’ll find it—
The rainbow connection—
The lovers,
The dreamers,
And me.

And it hit me. Crap! I’m running out of somedays!

No, I’m not ill or anything—I’m just getting old. (I refuse to accept that I’m old now, but I will admit I’m progressing in that direction.)

Not sure what made me so introspective that day, but it got me thinking about how many people run out of time before they realize any of their dreams. Of course, as the rock star said, our dreams change as time passes, but more often we just give up on them—convince ourselves that we’d really do this than that anyway. But when we abandon our dreams like worn out refrigerators, they (the dreams, not the refrigerators, though the thought of being haunted by a refrigerator is amusing in a surreal way) come back to haunt us like bittersweet nightmares.

When I was a child, our mother used to entertain my sister and me by drawing pictures of our favorite comic book characters. She had real talent. Only months before she died, my mother mentioned how she’d once dreamed of becoming an interior decorator, but had instead married young and decorated only her own homes. Did she regret it? Not really. But the dream never died, and she wondered “What if?” all her life. I think many people suffer that same fate. Is it because we choose dreams that are too far above us? Perhaps we just aren’t willing to make the sacrifices necessary to achieve them. Or do we just drift into other things and let our somedays play out without ever moving toward our goals?

When I took my brief detour into melancholy, I had already realized several of the dreams I’d listed when I graduated from high school:

1.     Be first in family to earn a college degree—check.
2.     Become a staff writer for a newspaper—check.
3.     Work for a large company writing and editing their publications—check.
4.     Write novels—check.
5.     Become a published author—oops.

That last one eluded me. But since I’ve cut about 40,000 words, my first novel appears to be on track for publication. I’ve finished a novella, started two more novels, and have plots for three more novellas.

Ok, so I worked for a regional newspaper instead of a national one, for a division of that large company instead of headquarters, and I didn’t get a big advance on my novel. I still feel a little like that country song, “Why Me Lord?” because I can’t think of one thing I’ve done that makes me deserve even to come close to fulfilling so many of my dreams.

Now I find that I need another dream to inspire me through the rest (may they be many) of my somedays. But I did have a Number 6 that I haven’t told you about, and I kind of suspect it’ll be enough to keep me writing as long as I can sit at a laptop—or even croak words into a mike. What do you think?
           
6.     Win a Hugo. *




(*author’s note: Please be aware that the author realizes that her chances of winning any award, much less a Hugo, for her novel are nil to none. The author will be ecstatic if a few people admit they enjoyed reading it. ( - : )

19 comments:

  1. Everybody has a dream, I hope. I rather like yours. Why not a Hugo? Why not you? You have been very diligent in the pursuit of your desires and I'd say the chart is well done, except it isn't quite done. Publication and Hugo coming up! ♥

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    1. I don't think I'll ever write the kind of books that the Hugo committee would look at, but like I tell people, my middle name's Hope, and anything's possible.

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  2. You achieved a lot acknowledge that :)

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    1. Thank you. I think it might be good that I achieved what I said I wanted, but not quite I really had in mind. I've had a good run, tho. I've had the privilege of working for and with some of the nicest people in business, I think, and for several years I worked with a team that made every day fun. And they paid me to do it! You really can't ask for more than that.

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  3. A very thought provoking post. I think if we dream long and hard enough, we find a way to make them come true. And if some dreams have to be abandoned, they were fun dreaming about even if they weren't meant to be. Rainbow Connection is one of my favourites too!

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    1. True, sometimes chasing the dream is most the fun.

      Glad to find another Rainbow Connection fan. I kind of like It Isn't Easy Being Green, too. It fits me as well. Not that I'm green....

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  4. OK, I had to go look up Hugos, and I reckon you have just as much chance of winning one as anyone else! Don't give up on that dream just yet *wink* I liked this post because it resonated with me on a level I'm not entirely sure of. It made me pause, made me think I need to consider something, just not sure what yet. probably a writing dream I've tried not to think about for a while. Anyway, thank you.

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    1. So you learned something new and I made you think. My work is done here. : - )

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  5. Best of luck with your writing pursuits. I have five unpublished novels. It's a tough field to break into. Have you tried publishing in magazines? It's a good place to start.

    Joyce
    http://joycelansky.blogspot.com/

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    1. I published several stories in a local magazine the first year after I retired. I also have quite a few short stories available on kindle and nook under another version of my name, AH Myers. I've just finished the first round of edits on my novel "When the Moon Is Gibbous and Waxing," which might make it out this spring, published by Etopia Press as a e-book. Do you belong to a critique group? They're wonderful help. And have you considered e-publishing, or are you holding out for the big NY publishers?

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  6. Definitely thought-provoking. When I was a teen, my dream was pretty much: be a published author living in a nice cabin in the mountains of Colorado. And have a dog. By the time I was thirty.

    Oops.

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    1. Yeah, I kind of remember that. Well, just remember that you can always revise upward that goal, and it isn't too late till you croak. You know I've been a late bloomer in everything I've done except maybe having a family. So you know that you CAN do things like get a degree at 46 and still retire from your dream job and go on to do things you never really dreamed you'd actually do. Just keep moving--onward and upward! Excelsior!

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  7. We may not achieve our dreams, but I think what we regret is not reaching for them. 40,000 words is a lot better than a friend of mine who keeps talking about the book he's going to write, and has yet to stop futzing with page one, five years in. I'd put his chances at getting published and winning a Hugo a lot lower than yours!

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    1. You're right--what we regret most is not trying, and that's the only real failure--something I keep telling my kids and grandkids.

      But cut your friend some slack. The book I've found the publisher for was in my head for YEARS before I started writing. Then I wrote slowly, then completely revised, then completely revised again, then cut--all in all it took years more to get a version I was happy with. And of course, in the meantime, I was doing all that other stuff that kept dragging me away from it. Couldn't really get serious about it until I retired and had some time. He might still get it done!

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  8. Yup, gotta work on them dreams. Onward, to Hugo Land!

    Thanks for this reminder

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  9. You may realise your dreams posthumously? Is that spelt right?

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    1. I wouldn't know correct spelling if it walked up and slapped me in the face. Let's just agree to say close enuf.

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  10. I really enjoyed this piece. Got you in my Google Reader now and I'm looking forward to seeing more. I don't even know what a damn Hugo is, but you should have one. For sure.

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  11. Thank you for the compliment and the chuckle. Hope I don't disappoint.

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