OLD CAT WITH A NEW TRICK

July 9, 2008

Pumpkin, my old, yellow, fluffy cat, is over 80 years old in human years.  She’s had a stroke and limps with one back leg from that event.  She is partially blind in one eye from an infected scratch.  She has constant goopy eyes because of allergies.  She sneezes a lot, throws up huge hairballs frequently, and she occasionally misses the litter box with a big one.  Besides all this, she was declawed on all four paws and cannot hold onto anything very well. Oh.  I forgot the arthritis in her back, too.

However, Pumpkin is also smart and wise.  And clever.  She has figured out how to unlatch the cat door to the cat run.  We don’t know how she does this, but she manages someway to pat it just right so it unlatches. 

The other three cats, all of whom are much younger, know now that she knows how to do this, but they can’t do it themselves.  They, however, do know how to persuade her to do it!  This means that, while Pumpkin herself might not go out into the cat run at night, she can let the other cats do it and does let the other cats do it! 

We latch the cat door when it gets dark because, despite the wire walls of the cat run, we do have very large racoons and possums and rats that roam at night, and we don’t want to take any chances.  Now, we have to block the cat door shut with a large weight as well as latch it because of Pumpkin, the oldest and the most physically frail of all four of our cats. 

I don’t think we can train her not to unlatch the door because we can’t seem to catch her in the actual act of doing it; she’s always just approaching the act or just completing it.

What is true of Pumpkin can also be true of an old person who is writing for children. 

An old person can produce a new book.  Age has its advantages.  You tend to remember your childhood more clearly as you get older, the early years.  And, if you’ve been writing and reading for most of your life, your ability in these skills can greatly increase with the years. 

Laura Ingalls Wilder wrote new books in her 60’s.  Some critics want to give her daughter, Rose, the credit for Laura’s books, but you see, Laura had been writing and reading for over fifty years.  She read good books.  And she wrote good writing long, long before she wrote her children’s books.  As old people, do, she started to remember more and more clearly what her childhood had been like.

She didn’t produce one new book for children in her old age.  She produced several in the last years of her life.  Somehow, old age seemed to unhook the latch for her creativity.

It’s why I don’t worry that much about when I sell a new book.  Unhooking the latch is what matters for me!

Here’s a rindalink to Laura:  http://www.lauraingallswilderhome.com/

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WRAPPING UP MY WRITING WEEKEND

June 30, 2008

It’s late tonight, and I’m slipping in a quick post here in my very tired, spaced-out, jumbly mind set from typing too much into a computer screen.

I notice that my new theme is called “Contempt,” which I think is VERY funny, considering how clean and elegant this theme actually is.  I’ll get to redecorate my blog whenever I like with so many well-designed themes out there for WordPress.

The only thing wrong with this new home is that WordPress does not accept java script.  It used to, I gather, but it doesn’t anymore.  It has lots of lovely gadgety stuff on its ownsome, but…it does limit my blog decorating a bit.

As if we don’t have limits in our creative lives! 

We do have limits, and any writer who won’t admit that he or she faces limits in his or her writing is not being honest–or creative.  Limits can spark your creativity in reality, really spark it.

I found myself outlining an entire early middle-grade book after long hours of crafting a wiki and writing e-mails….the outline came very fluidly and easily although I was tired.  Maybe my fatigue had something to do with how quickly I wrote the outline–or maybe not.  Maybe it came quickly because I made myself work within the limits of the outline!

Then I went again to Google Sites and got myself a free wiki to play with and maybe even publish with!  I was amazed to find how easy their software is to use.  And it’s all online–nothing to buy.  It’s free with no ads!  Yumi, yumi, yumi……..

SUPPORT THOSE WHO SUPPORT YOU!
http://www.booksense.com/ to locate your favorite independent bookseller!
http://www.powels.com/ for books old and new. Check out my kingdom: http://www.rindarealm.com/ and http://www.wellscribedwords.blogspot.com/.

**COPYRIGHTEDMATERIAL: DON’T PLAGIARIZE! You may not profit from my copyrighted material online. This rindawriter blog is under full international copyright, 2004-2008, by Rinda M. Byers. In addition, this blog is subject to the terms of a Creative Commons License. http://creativecommons.org
You may share FULL-LENGTH blog postings only on your blog. Be kind. Be fair. For PARTIAL QUOTES from the rindawriter blog, please get permission from me first, via the blog e-mail. Subscribe in a reader Add to Google Reader or Homepage Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

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