you
do
not
understand
how
hard
i
am
trying
to
just
stay
alive
(2023)
you
do
not
understand
how
hard
i
am
trying
to
just
stay
alive
(2023)
Hi, welcome to adult-diagnosed ADHD for women, where today you’ll learn that:
While scientific evidence is still emerging about how changing hormones can impact ADHD Janine feels the link was undeniable. Oestrogen helps to modulate the release of dopamine in the brain. When Janine’s level of oestrogen began to drop as she entered perimenopause, the ADHD symptoms she had been able to manage became much harder to deal with.
ADHD can have a significant impact on people’s lives — even when you’re an adult – ABC News
I was today years old when I learned that. You might not have been masking intentionally. Your ovaries were doing it for you. As their function declines, so does your dopamine supply. An incidental cruelty. Aging isn’t a punishment, it simply is, but that doesn’t make it easier.
Might explain why I recently got back into Drum & Bass. I’m rather a connoisseur of dopamine stimulation (within the boundaries of my enduring motion sickness and terror of deep water) and there’s something about playing a belting dj mix as I rocket around my empty kitchen at 5 am that helps the rest of my day run smoothly. I’ve already invoked some chaos, gleefully triggered some joy. It’s a smooth run from there.
A holodeck and a human actor: a best-case scenario for AI filmmaking. Human actors reacting in human ways to whatever scenario the filmmaker invents, which is not much different from what goes on now.
The thing is, you can’t fake human, and maybe it’s not worth trying. Everything else in filmmaking—sets, props, locations, eldritch horrors—can be represented artistically and therefore generated with digital imaging. It’s the people you can’t fake.
Consider: we pay people to do nothing but be good at emoting. Certain people emote i.e. act more skillfully than others, and we make them millionaires and give them gold statues and big parties and all our attention. One individual, idiosyncratic human with their asymmetrical face and personality quirks and gut biome, singular among all other humans currently alive, can win the hearts of millions. You’re telling me a calculator (which is what a computer is, writ large) is going to be able to fake that any time soon?
AI research has over the years taken up billions of dollars, and we’re still nowhere near faking people. Maybe it can’t be done. A computer as intricately modeled as the human brain might need to be either the size of a mountain or be an actual biological brain, grown in situ.
We are clever soup. But we are like nothing else. We’re cheap to make, easy to teach, endlessly inventive. Why bother trying to mechanically replicate what’s already so abundant?
You know the feeling that someone is standing nearby watching you? What if they were doing that not to make you afraid but because they love you?
I generally like all my characters. If I’m going to spent fifty thousand words or more with someone I have to like them, right?
Then there’s a few who get inside your heart and never leave…
But that’s the thing with love: it’s not always up to us. Sometimes love comes out of nowhere and takes over. Makes you want to take chances. Do things you never thought you could.
And yes, romantic love does this, but so does true friendship. So can mentorship when given with a pure heart, in the spirit of service. So does love for yourself.
That’s all my characters are. Little bits of myself I set loose in worlds I created.
That I can feel such love both for and from these unreal avatars of my unconscious is part of the mystery of the human mind. I’ll take it, though. Unconditional love? We should all be so lucky.

[edit] Look, I don’t mean for this to sound like a complaint, a “I did a cool thing and no one noticed, boo hoo” entitled little sulk. I’m just baffled. I haven’t had *crickets* in ages, maybe never. So let’s stir the pot. Will someone go back and read this?
Interestingly the post had a lot of meaning for me. The next day, I tossed together a stream of consciousness poem and posted it right away, and boom, views. And you would not believe how common that is across the creator-sphere: the thing you pour your soul into gets barely a glance, and the piece of fluff you made for a laugh goes viral. Which is really justification for making as much art as you can. Who knows what will get noticed?
The Post FKA: “The Ides of March? Never Met Him. What’s He Like?’
Three years ago, I self-published my first short story.
Two years ago, I had fourteen titles on sale, was writing a few novels, and felt like I was figuring things out.
Last year, I went over the edge.

Up till then it had felt like I was doing everything right. I don’t think I knew how depressed I was, which is something my mother said in reference to the same time in her life.
Taking medication was me making a sensible choice for a goddamn change. A grown up, self-disciplined decision to rein in my worrisome habits of thought and behaviour and become (what the hell was I thinking?) a productive member of society.
The results were predictably bad. You may recall that I am manifestly incapable of doing anything directly. Plans adjust themselves, reality reorganizes, and my intentions never end up aiming at my goals. I must approach all challenges and opportunities sideways: improvise, adjust, create new ways in the midst of living them. This is a very durable feature of my personality, and it affects everything I do, including taking medication to regulate my brain function. I’m sorry, but my brain function is a bratty queer with a glitter gun and the first six rows of the audience *will* *get* *wet.* Trying to rein this in leads to wildly unregulated emergent behaviour, and it was bad.
While high on legal speed, I did not buckle down and focus on my writing, which I was suddenly unable to do. Nor did I get really organized and plan my next year, down to the hour. No, in between the bouts of tremors and sobbing into the carpet, I decided to start another blog, devoted not to writing but to (honestly, what the hell was I thinking?) historical menswear.
I swear it made sense at the time. A distraction from the stress of a publishing career and encouragement to do more sewing, and if I was lucky, a back door into being known for anything at all, which somehow optimism and fairy dust would turn into a book career. It became one more task looming over me, one more chore to neglect. I needed to write books, not faff on about cravats on a blog no one would read without me promoting it like crazy.
I took the medication for a week. I quit when they wanted me to up the dosage. Once I recovered from my inadvertent meth bender, I wrote a novella in which a doctor gets punched. I’ve done plenty of drugs under my own recognizance, and if I’d paid a schemy 22-year old in a nightclub bathroom for a pill that did to me, I’d hunt the little shit down and get my money back.
The blog lasted six months.
edit: This blog? This blog I do nothing to promote, that doesn’t sell my books, that does nothing for anyone? It’s coming up on two years. 152 posts. See? It’s just like I said. Sideways or not at all.
come! thou stalwart edge of dawn
and break this calcified intrigue
which day denies
a sightless sigh into the sweating sheets
break, o break the sky
creator
all things you made
unmake
encase me so that I may break as well
dissolve
dissolve
dissolve
dissolve
(2023)
pierced by sunlight
the bars reflected
on a panelled wall
such glory!
(2023)
It’s taken me until this many years old to understand my brain enough to keep it focused on things it needs to do. In this time I’ve gone through countless planner systems, from hand-held Filofax style books in the 90s to Google Calendar to several writer-specific planner systems I’ve trialed in the last few years.
Setting up any such system (let’s not dance around it) fucking sucks. I’ve abandoned enough of them to have some perspective.
What falls apart for me is the transition from Planned to Achieved. Which is a fancy way to say that just because I put an event in my planner doesn’t mean I am going to follow through. I have shunted certain tasks down the line for months. Years, even. There’s no accountability if I don’t do a thing, other than I screw up my own plans. I can pass a buck indefinitely. This is a very dysfunctional situation, and I hope I’ve figured out how to amend it.
I have two planners now. Both of them paper. Emails? Notifications? I can ignore those for months. So it’s got to be paper. One book is for planning. The other book is for WRITING DOWN WHAT I ACTUALLY DID. Caps for my own need, because I am the kind of smart that needs this level of reinforcement.
The thing with having only one planner is that every time I don’t complete a vital task, I need to shove it down the line. For those who don’t have my particular form of high-twitch ADHD and are therefore good at //doing what they set out to do// lemme just say that this is not a sustainable system. I spend more time rearranging my schedule than I would spend just doing the dang work.
But like I said, I’m the dumb kind of smart. It’s taken me until now to figure this out.
Now I have two planners. One that records what I intend to do, and the other that records what I actually achieve. To-do lists aren’t enough for me. I need to keep track of my Didn’t Do’s, so I can make sure they become Done.
stay busy stay too busy to think
this will work for a while
all the tricks work for a little while
but you become immune
too tolerant of everything
too tired of reflecting
you are so tired from thinking that you have no energy for anything else
avoidance is a kind of lying
if you’d only stayed busy
if you’d only not started getting up alone
hours and hours to pick apart yourself
to feel yourself unravel
to knit yourself anew to contain the rest of the day
but you’re fraying
the pattern is an old one
thumb print blurred
missing corners
the needles slip
your fingers cramping
and there is never any less day
stay busy
or you will come
undone
This is the 5th in a recent series of poems and statements building up around a common theme of identity. I am writing them more for myself than the public, as a tool for introspection, which is why this is the first I’ve posted.
I started this blog as a place for my raw, ragged thoughts then stupidly went and made it a component of my writer’s online persona. I wish now that I had kept it separate, but anyway I have never been a private person so if this is how I meet the world, so be it.
you are so tired from thinking that you have no energy for anything else
avoidance is a kind of lying
The distance between thought and action (and speaking is an action) can be difficult to bridge. Poetry is such a bridge: metaphoric, image-making, employing rhyme and meter to produce a sense of coherence, a miniature tautology, a universe complete unto itself. Meaning from non-meaning, because the best poems are so light they might blow away on the next breeze.
“It’s dark because you are trying too hard.
Aldous Huxley, Island
Lightly child, lightly. Learn to do everything lightly.
Yes, feel lightly even though you’re feeling deeply.
Just lightly let things happen and lightly cope with them.”
I can overthink anything. You name it, I can lose myself down a rabbit hole of reverie that will touch on any and every topic my pick-n-mix brain can associate with it.
So when it comes to who I am as an author, you better believe I have come at this hot mess of an identity crisis from every angle under the sun. Total anonymity. Full disclosure. Pen names that had nothing to do with my real name, and one that is an amalgam of names by which I’ve been known all my life. This is before I start thinking about gender, both mine and my characters.
Everything feels up for grabs, as if I am remaking the world if only in a very narrow way. But what set me off? Why think about any of this?
I was interested in joining a book promotion with a group of other authors. LGBTI+ books were siloed off in their own category, regardless of genre. Most of the authors in the category were cis-presenting white women writing thinly veiled fanfic of Buffy (everyone’s a dude and they all bang) and/or Brokeback Mountain (everyone’s a cowboy and two of them bang.) If that’s your trot, as Chuck Tingle says, let’s trot,
I usually go a different way. Because I’m a pernicious troublemaker who has never found a foothold in the mainstream. But what does this mean for my career? If I write about diversely queer characters, am I doomed to scrabble at the margins, never gaining a fan-base, never writing a book that other people truly want to read? Can I really survive the long hours, months, years to build a following? Other people are making it work, though they started sooner, have a head start so to speak. My genre is certainly niche, but it exists and the reader base is committed and growing. There is light at the end of the tunnel.
So why didn’t I join the promo?
Because I hadn’t done all this thinking yet. I hadn’t come to terms with the ever more obvious truth that I really only want to write about queer love. Y’all straights got plenty to read. I want to tell a different story. Love is love, however, even if you’re the straightest arrow ever drawn, and being bi (though maybe I should start saying ‘pan’ as gender is a social construct and doesn’t really exist) I’m fine with heterosexual unions. I just don’t much care to read or write about them.
Perhaps the most valuable thought that came up is the difficulty of straddling certain genre divides. It’s one thing to write a historical paranormal shifter omegaverse time travel story and quite another to put both a straight and a gay romance arc into that story. There’s an ick factor around romance a.k.a. kissing that cannot be denied or even overcome. Many people find out they’re a certain orientation by a bit of exposure to what it turns out they don’t like. When that first kiss makes your skin crawl but not in a good way and you realize you can’t kiss that sort of person ever again.
I don’t need people putting my books down because of that mood. Just because my edges are blurry as heck doesn’t mean I can assume the same about readers. In fact, the longer I work in self-publishing the more I understand that I am not my target market. For starters, there’s only one of me, and my tastes are unpredictable. I need total strangers to see, want, then read my books. Then to want to read all the others (in their niche genre interest, that is, which ought to be obvious from a glance at my books’ covers or I’m doing genre fiction wrong.)
The big promo has started and I’ve missed my chance for the year. Such is life, and I can only wish that I’d been thinking clearer that month and been able to come to these conclusions while I could still get involved. We do what we can, and in December 2022 that turned out to be almost nothing while I recovered from you-know-what. Brain fog is real, yo, and it’s a sonofabitch.