cooking vareneky for a friend's family |
Over the last week or two, lucky as I am, I’ve been catching
up with friends I haven’t seen for some time. These include a friend from
Ukraine—through the wonder of Skype—but also real, live, in-person American
friends who I’ve not met up with in three, four, or—gasp!—six years. It’s
amazing to discover that these people a) still exist in such fully realized
forms, b) want to see me at all, and c) are happy to chat with me and exchange
extended pleasantries. As rude as that first point may seem, I think most of
us, when pressed, would probably admit that there’s only some much room in our
brains for so many active social guests. When we don’t see people regularly, we
tend to seat them in the far-back tables of our minds, promising to return and
chat soon. Is this an awkward image? Anyway, I’m glad to see these friends are
doing well: coaching, parenting, writing, teaching, going to the dacha, and
sharing their laughter with me. Love love love.
November is rapidly approaching, and for the sixth year in a
row, this means one major thing to me: NaNoWriMo! Before focusing on that,
though, here’s THIS! The first day of November has been chosen by Andrew and
Logan to be the ADITLOU3—the third A Day In The Life of Ukraine cooperative
writing project! If you’re in Ukraine on November 1, write about your day, and
share it! You can find out all about it on the site HERE. Yes, loyal reader,
you remember correctly: This is the project that I started last December, and
that Andrew and I co-produced last spring. (Check the links on the right of
this page for results from those ventures.) Of course, this is the first ADITLOU in which my D won't be in U, so I’ll have to make do. I’ve decided to
post a parallel Day here on this site about my November 1 in the US, and if you’re
interested, you can post your Day as a response here, too! I was reading a
Ukrainian colleague’s comment on the ADITLOU3 Facebook event page that she was
sorry she couldn’t participate because she would be in America, and it made me
smile a little. With the chance to travel to America, she was disappointed to
miss this writing project! Surely we can provide an opportunity. So, November
1, if you’re in Ukraine, write about your day HERE. If you’re in America or
somewhere else, you’re welcome to post your day in response to my day on this
page. :)
So, yes—NaNoWriMo! For those of you who don’t know, November
is National Novel Writing Month! If you’ve been waiting for the chance to write
a novel, now is the perfect time, as you’ll have an entire world full of energy
and a technological and social network at your disposal to encourage your
progress. Take a look at the site HERE, get inspired, and sign on up! If you
can write 50,000 words in 30 days—that’s 1,667 words per day—you can win! If I
can meet this challenge, it will be the sixth time I’ve won NaNoWriMo. I’m
taking nothing for granted, though, and am looking forward to an energizing month
full of rapidfire progress tempered with heartbreaking frustration, snapped
suddenly by inspiration and soothed into meltingly rich language… In a rough draft
where the movement is always forward, there’s not too much worry about perfect
sense-making, so the magic generally carries through all month.
field trip to the library! |
In the real world, I’m still job-searching. I’m
overqualified and underqualified, in the wrong place and at the wrong time for
plenty of positions. Happily, in general, I’m really at the right place and at
the right time, because I’m at home with parents who support me and aren’t
pushing me out the door in an uncertain direction. While I search and continue
to apply, I’ve been volunteering at two local organizations. For the Adams
County Literacy Council, I’ve volunteered to be an ESL tutor for a woman from
Ukraine (!), but my main work is basically a kids’ club twice a week during
evening adult ESL classes. The kids are a bit out of my typical age range, but
we generally have a pretty good time, and it’s something useful I can do. I’ve
also been helping with the Interfaith Center for Peace and Justice, mainly with
written materials and a promotional video for an upcoming community fundraising
event. So, good things!
Hope you’ve been well, and that your Halloween costume is
coming together splendidly.
:)
Stumbled here on a whim and was pleasantly surprised by a spankin' new post...
ReplyDeleteI guess I'm only intermittently and randomly observant, but I really like how your site looks now--and if it hasn't changed from before, I really liked it then too!
Yay for ADITLOU!!! (though secretly I'm a bit nervous)
And, just to say, I really liked your back of the room image. A lot. I was a bit jealous actually. *&*
Thanks for your indulgence on the back-of-the-room image. It makes sense in my head, but I don't want it to come off as rude-- 'sorry, friend, you sit in the back!'
ReplyDeleteChanges here have been within the past month or two, as I fumble through figuring how this and my justwrite site will function as I try to write more, write better, and do more with my writing-- you know, the usual.
Thanks for reading, friend. :)