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I’ve found there have been an unusual amount of visitors lately, which is delightful and I’m very grateful! And I’m sorry there’s not much here that’s new.

Historically, I’ve been largely writing into the void. I took a long break from any writing at all—a break that spanned years, some of them quite difficult. As I’ve returned to writing, this site has been pretty quiet and the unfortunate consequence of this is that it got sidelined in favor of other backed-up projects.

The return to writing – mainly pertaining to the characters in my fantasy mythos but other things as well – was either the trigger for my bipolar episodes to resume or the reaction to their theatrical resurgence. Honestly, I’m still trying to figure this one out.

I missed the guys so much, especially Rushak. Once they reappeared, I was both overjoyed and apprehensive. And they brought friends! With weird symbionts! I just can’t trust my psyche. I didn’t know what was going to happen. Hypomania, crushing depression, paranoia … It’s effin’ rocky. Now that I’ve got years behind me, I understand stuff, though, and am piecing together what it means.

There are aspects of this journey I very much want to share in the hope they might resonate and offer comfort, ideas or help of some kind.

I have a lot of ideas brewing once more, challenges and solutions to explore, and I will be throwing a lot more effort into posting material with relevance and at least a semblance of consistency.

Upcoming topics:

Fear of failure

Victory

And probably related fiction and/or poetry (oh joy)

So, thank for visiting, for being here, and I hope to see you again.

The Gold Run Bridge is eight rigorous miles from the highway. The trail consists of steep climbs, rocky passages, creek crossings, close, narrow tracks alongside the roiling whitewater, and precipice-edged climbs leading far above Bear Creek, a distant strip of white, blue or brown, depending on the season. It winds along the mountainside, in and out of forest and exposure. It feels like an epic journey, culminated with a descent to a grassy meadow, a campfire ring, and fishing protocol.

The bridge crosses Bear Creek in a gentle arc. Step off, and Gold Run Trail tugs you onward. Its effortful, steep ascent makes trivial all that has come before, where fire has opened wildflowers to the sky and scree fields cascade downslope like a vast gray river of stone across your path. Two mighty trails, two fragments of the Colorado mountains’ healing soul.

To abandon the pain

It’s long we’ve ridden

to find this haven

to rest at the bridge

before the climb

A swift path into darkness

unknown beckoning mystery

Gossamer strings of light promise revelations

within the lonely tunnel of forest

beyond our ken

Strange to see the sky

arcing over barriers

river stones

heartbreak

 loneliness

Today’s offering is a flash fiction story about feelings.

Difficult feelings, painful to acknowledge feelings, painful to process and face.

Samhain

A.C. Turek

 I sit with Gail under a large oak tree near the sword booth. She twirls a red-slathered autumn leaf by its stem.

“Have you ever seen a leaf this huge?”

“It feels like we’re sitting in another Samhain cliché,” I say. “The fair, the witches, the pumpkins and squash.”

“Yeah,” she agrees. “But for it to be a real cliché we’d have to get pomegranates and start setting out pictures of William Blake.”

 I shift. “He’d like that except, there’s no trace of his spirit.” I’m not speaking of William Blake.

Gail looks down at her leaf, then up again, through narrowed eyes. “Maybe all that talking about it chased it away, or blocked your perception.”

That was not me. I’ve been stabbed. What the hell do you mean?

I said nothing at his funeral, and I should have. It’s a regret. Another knife-twist.

“I’m still so mad at him!” Gail says. “Selfish asshole.” She gets to her feet, limned in the green-gold sunlight. She gestures to the archers on the field. “I’ve gotta go hang with the boys.” With that she takes off, leaving me alone, my grief rekindled.

I sit here, staring through the bent bows, finely drawn silhouettes against deep blue sky. Death by suicide is not what people say it is.

A guy says something, chain mail glitters; Gail’s signature giggle strafes the field. It’s all very purposeful. A collarless dog runs past, brindled and skinny, barking after something. I push myself up to follow it, to find my own purpose, any purpose. I might have taken his dog, had I stood forward and offered. Had my offer had any chance of acknowledgement.

Two costumed knaves balance on a big log stretched across the irrigation canal, sparring with staves. Thick wheat grass cushions either end. A pony cart passes by, obscuring the contest for a few moments. The pony wears fairy wings, and the driver beams beneath her crown while a camera clicks all over them. It’s that literary dude with the long, gray ponytail, from the newspaper. The dog trots toward the pony, then thinks better of it.

A small commotion ensues at the balancing log. Laughter, rude words, clapping. The smaller man has fallen. His moccasined feet are sticking up out of the ditch, bicycling the air.

I realign myself with the dirt track ahead of me. It leads off toward the alley, edged by a weed-footed chain link fence. A faded wrapper hangs in a thistle. The air is flat and stale, and the dog has disappeared.

Rushak as a Tree

Image: Twisted leaning pinon snag with juniper behind in the gloaming

Image: Rushak as a tree

It’s finally over. February. Having worked its foul, soul-crushing necromancy, as February always does, springlike weather notwithstanding, and launched me into March madness. Let the rapid cycling commence: Mania’s mental modifications to depression’s non-functionality, swapping every 24-72 hours, despite medication adjustments.

So … writing with bipolar. It seldom ends well for the characters. Pain and creativity go hand-in-hand with us, and we’re navigating these talus field crossings as best we can, but the process can be difficult. The main character/protagonist becomes the whipping being for all the angst their creator would otherwise expend upon herself. (Not that there isn’t plenty of damage left to be done once MC’s wrung out.)

The main thing I feel during rapid cycling is helplessness. The creative outlet for this is the writing, the story, my suffering hero, Rushak. He is swept along through the tempest, up, down and through, as my moods carry him (given the opportunity to write). My feelings of helplessness during these times are the main contributors to his lack of agency at various points in the story. Rush makes a decisive move, and lands afterward in a place of helplessness, and has a terrible floundering time getting out of it alone, if he even can. In an alternative universe, on a separate world, Lohar abides. He usually dies.

Hail to the suffering hero. Depression or mixed state is the time of his great helplessness, whether the scenes will end up in the book or not. If there is violence in me it will be wreaked upon him, or result in self-harm. Without him, I’m not certain I’d be alive.

Sorrow mourns over

a year; Rage burns up a moon

Joy sings but a fleet

moment:  hyacinth fragrance

sweet, an ephemeral breath.

sweet on a breeze too soon passed.

sweetens a breeze too soon passed.

sweet, an ephemeral breath.

Losing focus . . . it’s the first sign of change for the worse. It means that I am either stepping up from hypomania into irritable disorientation and rage, or slipping down into useless depression. It doesn’t take me long to figure out which. And the feeling of losing focus, where I’ve been, along with being stuck in a debilitating fatigue, is a terrible thing.

Losing focus is trying to grasp a tendril of smoke that was something else when I reached.

searching among fragmented paths for a way home

fermented clouds soaking the brain

plucking at harp strings of dry wool

bird bashing head against green-glass walls, and frenetic wings continue flapping

slinky nooses around a mind of gleaming burlap in the night

my head hacked on, off, and into . . .

______________________________________________________________________________

So, medical procedures coming up. Over and over again, I get tested for various conditions (seldom the same ones) in the hope there’s a treatable explanation for some of my problems. There’s never an answer “Oh yes, you have X,” on these tests, which one should think is great, because I don’t have any of the things wrong. So we’re back to: Yes, bipolar. Yes, clinical depression. But do they explain everything? REALLY? Huh?

My doctor’s got an answer for me every time.

“We’re all getting old.”

Well good for her. She can afford to retire.

OK, this time, her answer was a phone call with test results that were a disturbing list of things that need follow-up. OK, self. Are you satisfied yet? Well, let’s see what happens. In the meantime, I’ll bust out the mood chart and what.

The river had dwindled to a series of pools connected by grassy land bridges full of wildflowers, broadleaf plants and blooming bushes. Each pool wore a different aspect. Most seemed clean and empty of thought, their blank surfaces rippling with each changing breeze. In some, a smoky murk obscured the depths in a fog of slow, swirling rumination. One sulked in stagnation and decay, releasing putrid-smelling bubbles. He happened on one pool that seemed to smile. Clear and shallow, it sprouted reeds and watercress. Pollywogs swam there, some small and lithe, others fat as toads, and all had hind legs. They clung to the reeds; their translucent, vibrating tails stirred tiny currents.

One of the pools, an inscrutable, impenetrably deep one, made a home for gigantic trout.

It was from this one, with what could only be a blessing from Iryla, that he was able to snare his supper. Yet it was this same pool, dark and sheltered, the greenery drooping over its banks, that stymied him, barring him from hard-won peace. For it was this pool that looked the most familiar. It was the image of the pool inside him, and he wanted to fling himself there and drown. The cool pool of despair. That it should be the pool to feed him was not even an irony, for was it not his despair sustained him? It was his despair that kept him sane on this walk through a life in which hope would be madness. He tried to share the thought with Drisal, but it only made his brother sad. He should have known this. For he was alone. Aershmela would mock such a sentiment. Cerel would have no patience for it, because he could not understand. Lara would listen and comprehend, but then she would argue with him that he did have hope, that hope was in the Duality, and that faith and hope would save him.

Only Theris would truly understand. Only Theris would not judge the observation as self-pitying. Only Theris would not try to fix it as Lara did; and only Theris would see the point of it without Drisal’s capacity to be hurt by what he saw.

He smiled, thinking of Theris, thinking that whenever he needed to talk to someone he could talk to his memory.

The fish was good. The breeze was gentle and the twisted roots beneath which he passed the night promised him no discovery.

I have moved to the floor out of respect for an older woman who has arrived, a friend of the hostess. The cool of the brown carpet chills me, though at my back the woodstove throws heat which rises up and over me. The long, lustrous brown table, cluttered with fruit and nuts and wine and books and breads and beer, separates me from the man who brought me here. He is sprawled upon the couch opposite, the only male among the gathered poets, the whites of his eyes glowing between the dark curls of his hair and the bushy mustache, darker still.

I look around at the assembly, women all, of every age and description. Some are old and well-read, some seasoned writers; the young ones bring imagination instead of experience to their art. The smell of their wine is something I cannot escape, acute and heady like strong scented flowers. It makes me slightly dizzy.

I have not been to a gathering like this in too many years. Farm life has dulled the edge of my wit. Happiness and acceptance have made me a poor critic. I cannot impress these people, I think, nor even present myself as worthy to be among them.

It has been a long time since I gathered up words like branches and tossed them into huge, tousled piles for the sheer joy of their design, their many textures and shapes making a rat’s nest of forms and colors: iridescent purples, shrieking magentas, dried-out grays, with knobby joints like an old man’s knuckles, or skewer ends sticking out everywhere.

The young girl, who feels the need to clarify that she is not a Rastafarian—perhaps because of her vivid sweater of yellow and orange and green and red—heaves words together with luxurious abandon, bathing herself in in the sound and flash of light, in a glory of enthusiasm and innocence. They mean almost nothing to me, but the sensory experience of them thrills. She belongs here, with the word artists.

The older women, with their carefully written lines, convey in images and strong voices ideas so well-formed that I feel inarticulate. Ideas spark more ideas, criticisms spark inspirations, agreements, disagreements, leaving everyone full and helped. I say little.

Oh, I am keenly interested, but am rendered wordless. I am inspired, but I don’t belong. I write “that stuff–no offense.” I know long before my turn arrives that my visions have no place here. I would like to transcend my genre, but I feel I have to apologize for it. I feel like I need to defend it. I feel like these narrow-minded scholars could benefit so very much from fantasy, if they would only listen.

Like in Amadeus, “too many notes” becomes the accusation against me, but I laugh it off. I know there is a tendency in my work towards abundant description. I am not defensive about it. When I finish, they exclaim and clap.

When can I read this book? What happens, what does he do with the infant?

He names it, of course. If he doesn’t there would be no story, Karla observes. Karla is no dummy.

And here I am, explaining it. Alice wants to know how I can write that stuff. “This came to me when I was only ten, that is why it is the way it is. I write it because I have to.” Why do I write that stuff? “If I don’t, I go crazy.” Natural answers to reasonable questions.

That stuff. The label that sticks.

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