Lydia: Its removal from Burma is a felony and when triggered it has the power to melt human eyeballs. Giles: In that case I've severely underpriced it.

'Potential'


The Great Write Way  

A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.


Connie Neil - Aug 02, 2004 2:39:50 pm PDT #5947 of 10001
brillig

It's a strange thing, but I've found I can't write any more in my office/library/storage room. I just sit at the keyboard and stare at the bookshelves and think of all the things I want to do in there. However, if I take my cheapie laptop to the bedroom and get comfy on the bed, I have no problems.

Maybe it's a clutter thing, but my bedroom's no more clutter-free than my office. Hopefully this block won't continue much longer, because I like my office.


Steph L. - Aug 02, 2004 3:59:28 pm PDT #5948 of 10001
I look more rad than Lutheranism

Okay, I'm abusing my moderator's privilege and sneaking a doors drabble in under the wire. Drabble topic in my next post....

* * * * *

For years you've ignored this door, pretended it didn't exist...and once in a while, you even forget it's there. But memory is a tenacious thing, and eventually you remember it, this portal to your blackest secrets, your vilest demons. No heavy oaken door could be more difficult to open than this door in your psyche.

It's been locked for so long that you doubt the key will even work any more. Which is good, because surely the danger to you if you open it is too great. Remember Bluebeard's wife, after all. Here be dragons, breathing hellfire, their sharp teeth dripping red with the blood of those who dare to cross the threshold.

Or so you've always believed.

But remember: you built this door, fashioned this lock, and forged this key out of strong metal. It's yours to do with as you like; so, too, are the dragons on the other side. You can slay them. You can make pets out of them.

Or you can find that they're only shadows on the wall, that disappear as the light floods in behind you.

Open it. You can face the dragons within, and you are not Bluebeard's wife.


Steph L. - Aug 02, 2004 4:03:10 pm PDT #5949 of 10001
I look more rad than Lutheranism

Okay! Sneaky last-minute-ness aside, drabble #16 (doors; red) is closed! For this week's drabble, I have one thought:

I love a parade.

Or so the song would have you believe.

This week's drabble topic is parade(s). Go to it. And please, clean up after the elephants....


deborah grabien - Aug 02, 2004 6:04:49 pm PDT #5950 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Parades?

(blink)

Um...

OK. An odd interpretation, but the only thing that springs to mind at first, although this is giving me another idea:

Place de la Bastille, 14 July 1789

The girl, with dirty face and dirty feet, watches the people go by.

She's young, and rather simple. At first, the shouting and the noise catches and amuses her; so many people, with shovels and pickaxes and guns! She recognises a few as she peers out into the street: there is the baker from Rue Jacques Couer, shaking a plump fist, shouting. A bit later in the stream of people she sees Madame Beziers, who keeps an inn in the Passage du Cheval Blanc.

After a while, the great prison begins to crumble and the parade grows bloody and portentous.


Connie Neil - Aug 02, 2004 7:35:04 pm PDT #5951 of 10001
brillig

You can face the dragons within, and you are not Bluebeard's wife

That is such a cool line.


Steph L. - Aug 03, 2004 6:55:51 am PDT #5952 of 10001
I look more rad than Lutheranism

You can face the dragons within, and you are not Bluebeard's wife

That is such a cool line.

Thank you!

Errrr....are people not loving the parade? I could change the topic -- should I?


Connie Neil - Aug 03, 2004 7:04:09 am PDT #5953 of 10001
brillig

No, don't change it! I'm mulling.


Beverly - Aug 03, 2004 7:16:31 am PDT #5954 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

are people not loving the parade? I could change the topic -- should I?

No, mistress. Making it harder just makes us respect you more.

Or something. Nothing wrong with a difficult topic. Theme. Challenge thing.


Connie Neil - Aug 03, 2004 7:21:44 am PDT #5955 of 10001
brillig

What Bev said. Having to work a little makes you a better writer.


Polter-Cow - Aug 03, 2004 7:25:34 am PDT #5956 of 10001
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Having to work a little makes you a better writer.

What? Crap. I thought drinking a lot made you a better writer.