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My (Not Entirely Biological) Ticking Clock


Like many woman, when I was a little girl one of my dreams was to get married and have children. In fact, by the time I was 14 I had a good idea of how many kids I wanted. The magic number was 4. Ideally, I wanted to start with a girl, have a set of fraternal twins of each gender, and finally have a little boy. I guess, even back then, I knew I wanted to experience pregnancy and labor as little as possible. And yes, I even had ideas about my dream wedding, and my dream husband. But I was never so prosaic as to dwell on any of the ideals. I just knew the basics of what I wanted. I wanted a husband to be a partner, friend, lover and co-parent. And I wanted to be a mother.

Now not everyone has these desires, and some ascribe those desires to media shoving in women’s faces that it is what they should want. I, personally, think that’s pretty silly. The media is always more of a reflection of what we desire, then someone trying to tell us what to desire. For instance, the media doesn’t tell us all people should have certain markers for aesthetic beauty, it reflects those markers we have chosen (right or wrong). And if you think I’m wrong about that, you haven’t spent much time living outside of the norm. But I’ve lived most of my life outside of it, and while I’ve always had ambitions that involve career and success, my dreams have also included a family.

So here I am, 35 years old, and every time I see an adorable baby, I feel this little stab inside of myself. Some would say it’s the old biological clock ticking down, but I finally realized it’s about more than that. It’s about the ideals I had, just how far I’ve missed them by, and that time is running out to even come close.

There were two women in my birthing class, when I had my son. They were both around 40. One had a 18 year old and the other had a 16 and 20 year old. They were both pregnant with twins. Personally, I thought they were both a little nuts. The idea of starting all over, when the work of raising a child was almost behind them, seemed insane. I made a decision then, and I haven’t really wavered much on it since then. 40 is my cutoff. Which is why I only have 5 years left to have more children, and it’s one of the reasons for the pangs I’ve been feeling.

But it’s more than just having more kids, or having any specific number of them. It’s about doing it differently, and having it be different. I love my son, and I wouldn’t give him up for anything, but having him wasn’t easy. In fact, it was rather horrible. Let me explain (and warning, some of this is going to be slightly gross).

When I was pregnant with my son, I spent 9 months incredibly ill. I got sick every day, at least once, and usually more often. At the time, I didn’t have medical insurance, so I was forced to deal with the OB/GYN assigned by Medicaid (before IL had Healthy Kids/Healthy Parents). He didn’t much like women on Medicaid, which I heard from multiple women before and after I knew him. So, despite the fact that I once called him at 3AM and told him I’d been sick 8 times in 8 hours, and I was now seeing little bits of blood in the toilet, he still refused to do anything about my excessive ‘morning sickness’. You’d think he would’ve prescribed something after the 3rd month, when I’d lost about 30lbs, but he just kept saying we’d wait it out.

That summer was also one of the hottest on record, which didn’t help my comfort level. But I did get really good at planning bathroom trips. I knew to make sure there was nothing in my shirt pocket, make sure my glasses were off, make sure my hair was back, what angle to approach the toilet to avoid splashing, and I even got to the point I could hold it until public bathrooms were empty so no one had to listen to me. I became one hell of an expert at losing my lunch with as little muss and fuss as possible. I also learned what foods I couldn’t risk eating, on the chance they came back up. I’d never imagined how painful it is to regurgitate raisin bran.

Then there was the fact that I was single, without much money, and dealing with a lot of stuff at once. It didn’t get easier when I decided that my ex was no longer coming to my parenting classes with me, and I started taking my mother instead. I really had debated on doing that, but I was just too frustrated to do anything else, when he refused to just shut up for more than 5 minutes during the first class, and explained to all the other participants the proper way to relax your ‘woman’ with a pelvic massage.

The night I was sick 8 times, I was working at a store out of town. I’d spent 3 years working for an inventory service, and I was coming up on management level by that point. Or I would have, if not for the fact I had to quit when Michael was born. There was no way I could raise a baby traveling 80% of the time, and working insane hours that no daycare (even in-home) would deal with. But I kept working right up until the holiday slow down in November/December. In fact, when I found out I was pregnant, I was doing “Walmart Weeks” in Missouri. What does counting a Walmart involve? It involves 4 hours of work (almost entirely on your feet or knees) an hour lunch, and then working until it was done, generally 8-10 hours later. I did that for 2 weeks. Luckily for me, the nausea hadn’t turned fully in regurgitation at that point. I also took some temp jobs while I was pregnant. One week I’d worked nearly 80 hours between both jobs. That was the same week Michael’s father told me he’d quit his part-time job at a fast food place, because he couldn’t deal with the stress. As you can imagine, I was a little pissed.

Which is one of several reasons that things got really tense between us, by the time Michael was born. In fact, I told him a few weeks before I gave birth, that I wasn’t going to call him from the hospital until after the baby was born. Some might think that was cruel, but I stand by that decision. We were arguing all the time, and I knew (from family history) that the odds were labor would be hard. I told him I needed to focus on keeping myself calm and as comfortable as possible, and having him there meant that was unlikely. Unfortunately, my sister changed the outgoing message on our answering machine, to inform everyone that we were at the hospital. He didn’t get there until a couple hours after Michael was born, but it was still a bad situation.

I moved into a low-income apartment in November. It was a nice place, in a nice neighborhood, and I was relieved (there are some scary ‘projects’ neighborhoods in this area). But it was also eerily quiet, and very empty. I didn’t have a computer back then, so I had little contact with the outside world. Hell, I didn’t even have cable.

I first started going into labor on December 30th. The contractions were uneven, jumping around between 5 minutes and 15 minutes apart. They weren’t Braxton-Hicks either, they were real contractions, they just wouldn’t become consistent. Finally, about 1AM on December 31st, they were always less than 7 minutes apart even if they still jumped around, so I called my mom to take me to the hospital, during an ice storm. They sent me home a few hours later, telling me to come back when they were consistent. Almost 24 hours later, trying to sleep between them on my mom’s couch, I woke her and said I was finally sure I was ready. This was confirmed about 10 minutes later, when my water broke. That’s when things got really bad.

Every time I had a got done having a contraction, I threw up. Which also meant I couldn’t sleep between the contractions. So I hadn’t slept in days, and I was throwing up so much that I left the hospital 30lbs lighter than when I arrived. Michael was only 7lbs. The rest, the doctors told me later, was due to dehydration from getting sick. I don’t know how many hours it went on, before they finally gave me something. It was a combination of something for the nausea, something to take the edge of the pain (though I never noticed any change) and Pitocin to move the labor along. Despite the Pitocin, he was still born almost 20 hours later. I did count myself lucky, since my mother had been in hard labor for 48 hours with me, and hospitals just won’t let you go past 24 hours anymore.

I can’t remember much about that night. I hadn’t had any real sleep in three days. I was basically a zombie, just doing what they told me to, and trying not to throw something heavy at the uber-bitch nurse who kept telling me I had to quiet down whenever the doctor checked my dilation. I think I might’ve told her to go to hell at one point, but I’m not sure. All I know is, whenever he checked, it hurt so bad I wanted to die.

I don’t remember anyone asking me if I wanted drugs. I took the classes, but they weren’t Lamaze, just birthing classes. They made a point to tell everyone that they had to decide for themselves if they needed pain killers. All I know is, other than that one early shot, I never had any, and I don’t remember anyone asking me if I wanted them. But like I said, I was something of a zombie. I barely remember actually giving birth at all, but I do remember when they gave him to me and he almost instantly stopped crying.

A couple hours after Michael was born, his father showed up. I told the nurses to ask him to come back in the morning. I could barely keep my eyes open enough to nurse the baby, much less have a conversation. It was probably an hour later, when the nurses asked me to please talk to him, because he wouldn’t leave and he was creeping them out pacing the hallway. I talked to him briefly, let him come in and see the baby, and then begged him to leave and let me get some sleep. He was pissed, and that’s when the paranoia really started.

I read about post-partum depression in my birthing books, but I guess it wasn’t something I concerned myself overly with. From my mom’s experiences, I knew the nausea was going to be bad (she was medicated for it though) and labor was going to be tough (which is why she made dad get clipped when they wouldn’t tie her tubes after my sister). That’s what I was focusing on, along with all the busy work involved in preparing for a baby. So when the symptoms started, I didn’t even know it was happening.

The first morning at the hospital, when the ex called, I learned the meaning of fear in a way I’d never known it before. I don’t know if it was his attitude in general, the comments he made for years about being able to disappear off the grid whenever he wanted, or just the hormones, but I was terrified. I called my sister, begging her to get there as soon as possible, and I never let the baby out of my site. I even rolled his little bassinet into the bathroom with me, when I couldn’t wait any more. And when the ex showed up, and asked to take the baby into the hallway so his new girlfriend could hold him, I categorically refused.

Between exhaustion, pain and hormones, the couple days in the hospital was a nightmare. Just doing the birth certificate was a trial, because the ex was absolutely livid that I was giving Michael my last name. I figured it was safer, in case he ever tried to run with the baby (which he had made some veiled comments about doing). When he left the room at one point, the hospital administrator tried to be really nice about it. She mentioned that she wasn’t aware things were so bad between us. I told her that my mother had suggested putting ‘unknown’ on the birth certificate. The nurse actually told me that there was still time to do that. Frankly, that made me feel 10 times better, because I knew it wasn’t just me that was concerned with his behavior. All the nurses, at some point, express concerns over his presence and attitude.

When I first went home, I went to my mom’s, because the whole family was helping her move into her first house. It was ok then, even if I barely got to hold the baby because everyone else wanted their turn. But when I went back to my apartment, it really got awful. I was still so tired, and he wouldn’t sleep for more than an hour at a time. I didn’t find out until a day or two later, that the problem was my unproductive breasts. I decided to nurse for the first six weeks, because it was better for the baby’s immune system, and then go to bottles. But while most women’s breasts stop making colostrum and start making milk within a day, mine didn’t. In fact, no matter what the lactation consultant (assigned by the hospital) told me to do, I never got actual milk to develop. So he was crying because he was constantly hungry. I stopped nursing entirely by day three.

I think it was about a week after Michael was born that I had sort of moved onto my mother’s couch and he moved into his portable crib in her living room. I tried to go home to my apartment sometimes, but it was so hard. I was so scared all of the time. I even accidentally locked him alone in the apartment, because I was too afraid to leave the door unlocked while I went to get the laundry from the car (thank goodness I kept a spare key at Mom’s house). And then there was the crying fits that would just come on out of nowhere, and the panic attacks that were excruciating. At my mother’s house they were slightly less frequent, because there were people around to keep the paranoia from getting to me. But it was still awful. I was tired, sad, panicked and crying my eyes out for hours at a time.

I think it was about six weeks later, when my mom and sister insisted I get some help. Since I didn’t have real insurance, I had to go to the local Mental Health hospital. It wasn’t fun. I told the admin nurse that I was a ‘cutter’, because I hadn’t heard of such a thing, and when she asked, “Do you ever cut on yourself?” I thought she meant verbally. I basically thought she was asking if I was ever harsh on myself, which I could be occasionally. Fortunately that was cleared up a second later, when she asked, “Where on your body do you cut yourself?” They had a waiting list for people who weren’t in immediate physical danger from whatever mental disability they had. I explained that, by the time I’d gotten to the top of the list, the hormones would probably have taken care of themselves. They bumped me up, and I was assigned to a shrink who’s accent was so thick I literally understood every 5th word he said. But, he prescribed me an anti-depressant and pills for the panic attacks.

It was probably at least 10 weeks after he was born that I really felt better, and a good six months until I was fully living back in my own apartment. The meds kept me from being a complete basket case, but I still had crying fits and couldn’t stand being alone for too long. The ex had seen Michael once, when I brought the baby to a McDonald’s to see him and his family. He called occasionally, but once my phone got cut off, I didn’t really hear from him until the next Christmas, other than at child support hearings. That’s when I realized just how much of a vindictive son of a bitch he could be, when he screamed at ranted at me, and then DCFS showed up on my doorstep a couple days later, saying they’d got an anonymous tip I’d left Michael alone in the car in front of the court house. He was in the car, by the way, but he was with my friend Beth and her daughter was in the car seat next to him. It was a nice day, and we’d been cooped up a lot, so she opted to sit in the car with the kids while I was in court.

Over the years, there have been four calls to DCFS on me, and none of them were founded. Three of them were anonymous (one was my apartment board b/c they’d come in to spray and they were freaked out about a jelly stain on the carpet I hadn’t had time to clean up), and each of those was clearly my ex. He also called Medicaid years later, claiming I was defrauding the system because we were living on the Iowa side of town and I was getting Illinois Medicaid (I was off TANF and foodstamps by the time Michael was 2). After they contacted me, they informed him that he would be in trouble if he made any more false claims, because the apartment the insurance company put us in after the house fire clearly qualified as a temporary emergency residence. Of course, that was after he’d filed for a temporary restraining order against me, two days after the fire, because I couldn’t provide a safe living environment, and I refused to let Michael go live with him until we had a new place to say. The judge pointed out that, between having tons of relatives in town, and the insurance company covering all of our living expenses while we looked for a new house, his request was completely unwarranted.

The ex and I have gotten to a relatively civil point right now, though there’s still the occasional problem. For instance, when I screwed up his plans by dropping the kid off to him 10 minutes late one day (he’s constantly late picking up/dropping off), and he started screaming at me in the alley behind his house. But that’s mostly stopped now. It might’ve had something to do with my getting in his face a few years ago, and telling him he wasn’t my fucking father and so he couldn’t talk to me like he was, even if I refused to do something the way he wanted. Plus, every time he yells, I walk away or hang up the phone. I spent too many years that way, taking his tirades, and refuse to do it anymore.

So what is the point I’m getting at? What does all of this have to do with the pangs I feel almost every time I see a baby? It has to do with memories that I can’t get rid of but maybe, just maybe, I can push back with happier ones.

I want to meet someone who will be an actual partner; not someone who will spend 3 years dissecting me until there’s little left by an empty shell, not someone who’ll argue with the ultra-sound tech on whether that little shadow is really a penis instead of just being happy at seeing his child on the screen, not someone who thinks that responsibility is buying a pair of tennis shoes because the kid’s old ones have gotten really dirty and grungy (never mind the dozens I bought when he was outgrowing them every 6 months), and not someone who’ll call and rant at my pediatrician (one of the most respected in the area incidentally) in the middle of the night because she diagnosed our son with ADD and any perceived deficiency in his child reflects on him and therefore can’t possibly exist. I want to find someone who’ll want to share the experience of having a child with me, and find joy in it together, not act as if he’s some parenting expert and I’m an idiot for not agreeing with everything he says. And I want to make the choices I believe in for my child, without worrying about whether his father will drag me into another legal battle because he doesn’t agree.

I want to spend 9-10 months enjoying the anticipation of having a baby, without feeling so sick that it’s more torture than fun. I want to have someone in my life to take just a little care of me, so that taking care of my baby doesn’t feel like it’s killing me physically and emotionally. I want to watch an ultra-sound with a man who’s overwhelmed with joy at the site of his child inside of me, so we can have that joy together. I want someone holding my hand when our baby is born, who tells me he loves me, and makes me feel less afraid. I want to have a doctor who cares more about my and my child’s health and wellbeing, more than he cares about his own personal politics or views of anyone using state aid, even if only briefly. And I want someone by my side, who’ll fight for me to have exactly that.

Bottom line, I want to have another baby because this time I want to do it right. I want to have good stories to share, about bringing a child into this world, not horror stories that make people cringe. I want to have another baby because, 14 years from now, I want to look back on the experience with happiness not tears.

I love my son dearly, and like I said, I wouldn’t undo having him for anything. But truthfully, having him wasn’t an experience I remember with much fondness. It was more than a year of pain, illness, sadness, feeling desperately alone, and sometimes debilitating fear. And it makes me just a little bit angry. My mother and sister have done what they could over the years, so I’ll never claim I didn’t have any help and did it entirely on my own. But when it came down to it, the only person who was ever responsible for my son was me. Just once, I’d like it to not all be on me. I’d like to share the job with someone else, someone who wants to make a family together; me, him, Michael and maybe a couple more.

I know that hormones are probably a little at play in how I feel, but I learned the hard way how to recognize their influence. I know, now, that it’s more than that. I know, now, that what I really want is a chance to be more than just a mother. I want a chance to be part of a family that takes care of each other. And I want to show my son what it feels like to have a family like that. Hell, I’d like to show myself too, since I have fairly limited exposure to it myself.

And you know what else? I don’t think there’s a damned thing wrong with what I want. My mother rolls her eyes at me, when she hears me mention wanting another kid. Somehow she mistakes the desire for a willingness to do the single parent thing again. But she’s wrong. I would never do it alone again. Well, maybe if I somehow became insanely wealthy so I didn’t have to worry about lousy doctors and living in a too-quiet little apartment. But what are the odds of that?

No, I won’t do it on my own again. But that’s OK, because I never wanted to do it alone to begin with. I did what I had to do, which is pretty much the theme of my life. But, if I did meet someone before the big 4-0 hits, I think I’ve realized now that I really do want another chance to have the kind of childbearing experience I can remember with a smile instead of a tear.

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Interwebz; input needed. Do I Bare It All?


Yeah, I know. That’s one overly sensational title. But tell me it doesn’t have this cool geek-girl cadence to it?

My habit of meeting people online has come to a new fork in the road, and I’m finding myself torn between two paths (no Frost jokes I beg of you). In the grand scheme of things, it’s might seem a silly thing to concern myself with. But then again, it could have a lasting impact.

So here’s the interesting pickle I’ve found myself in. I really like to think that anyone I’m somewhat connected with has read my blog, and might even continue to read it. I would read the blog of someone I was interested in getting to know better. In fact, I can’t imagine not Googling a potential new friend at some point. If they have a username that’s not overly common, you can get a lot of insight into another human being. But then the issue becomes… do I still talk about what’s happening in my life, in my blog? Do I talk about how I’m feeling about each relationship I have, and discuss my pros and cons list, where I’m almost hoping they’ll eventually read it?

On the surface, the answer would seem clear; of course not you idiot!

But it takes more thought than that. I was reading an article today, about successful blogging. It made some great points, but as I read, I realized; it’s not what this place is about.

Now this blog is actually an amalgam of several blogs over the years (ok there are still some posts I haven’t moved, I’ll get to it!). But there’s a reason I did that. It’s become about the journey I’ve been on for close to 10 years, and the journey’s I hope are ahead. I never cared about this becoming a successful blog. I never yearned for ridiculous numbers of readers. I just wanted to have a place to talk about the things that matter to me, and about the ways in which I see the world, and hopefully make a few people think and laugh a bit. I don’t really talk about the sites stats often, but in all honesty, it gets more traffic than I ever anticipated it would. That’s a pleasant reality, but nothing that makes me ambitious for world wide web domination.

At its core, this blog was always intended to be about me. While I go off on a lot of tangents, you’ll notice I’m usually in there somewhere. It’s not a narcissism issue, I assure you (and anyone who knows me will nod along emphatically and whisper “insecure nutjob” when I look away). It’s because this is my home. CleverTitania.com, and by extension the Rants and Ramblings blog, is my place. It’s where I come to muse, to share, to express, and to release the parts of me that are silenced too often. Or perhaps I should say, the parts of me that have no one to talk to in the real world.

Which brings me back around to the topic at hand. Because, while I have no reason to think that a relationship with someone I can relate to fully would end the need for this outlet, frankly if I had to choose between finding that individual and this blog… well, maybe I’d stop in from time to time for a bit of a chat. But I do want to find someone who inspires and infuriates me into having even more to say. I want to find someone I can really talk to and about. I want to write about a whole new side to life, from a fresh and renewed perspective (that being the opposite of being single).

So I have to decide. Do I talk about all the things that matter to me, including any potential relationships? Or do I keep mum, and not risk scaring or spanking them off?

Ok, yeah, that sounded kinda dirty. But the question remains, and frankly, I’d love to hear some opinions. Constructive ones only please.

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How did I get in this nutshell?


I believe in being 100% me as much as possible. I strive never to change who I am for others, the only notable exception when I’m around my family and at work. Yeah, I know, pathetic. But the only thing I change in those situations, is how much of me I share. I don’t pretend to be something I’m not, I just don’t show the whole picture. But while I am only ever me, I have a tendency to assume that ‘me’ is not someone else’s cup of tea, at little provocation. I’m also always willing to have that viewpoint challenged. I think some don’t challenge because they consider me too much work to argue with. But, truthfully, I’m one of the easiest people to argue with, literally not figuratively.

I reside in the middle of the United States, which it can be argued is the center of the world. I live in a place where people come to lose inflection in their voice, not adopt a different one. Think of that. To live in a place that’s known for having the least accented English in all of the world. And yes; it’s as banal as it sounds.

And I do truly feel like I live my life in the middle of the world. I am an articulate well-spoken woman, who uses the word Dude like it was Aloha. As a result, the more average individual finds me uppity and off-putting, when I use the big words. The more intellectual crowd finds me vulgar and common-place. Oh, and the saying “Sarcasm is the recourse of the weak mind.” is such bullshit.

I’m also an independent strong willed/opinionated woman, who likes other strong willed/opinionated people, of either gender (though not romantically of course). In other words, I actually like men who are willing to argue, so long as they’ll concede when I win. In fairness, I will also concede when I lose, however begrudgingly.

I guess that’s sort of my lot in live, being in the middle. I’m always above average and never normal, but I’m also never exceptional or too far from the norm. Case in point; I did love Friends, but I hated Seinfeld. I dig Southpark in a big way; can’t stand the Simpson’s. I have a very nice singing voice, but a range so short I could never be great. I’m not a half bad dancer, but I have some balance issues. And no matter how much I practice/work, I will never ever be able to type more than 65WPM (though my 10-key was 15,000 KPH once upon a time).

I’m a walking contradiction, even when I’m sitting.

I dated a man briefly, who barely ever watched TV. And when he did, it was usually the History Channel. Now I can get into a good biography on occasion (been reading all kinds of stuff about Anais Nin lately), but the 4 hour long special on how they ancient Greeks fortified their water front cities… (yawn) what was I saying?

I watch a lot of TV (see my fall lineup above). I make no apologies for it. Some people love to knit, or draw, or read (which I do heavily in spurts), play video games… I love TV. I’ve loved TV since I was a small child. I was an actual fan of Remington Steele and Scarecrow and Mrs. King. I watched them regularly and I got the jokes. I was 8 years old. And I just spent half an hour reading an interview with Dule Hill and James Roday from Psyche. Just because.

My study of film is now on even footing with television. In my youth, movies were so much more a part of my fascination, but as television has grown, so has grown my love. And this year of all years. I mean, think about this for one second. There are Whedonverse alumni on just about every night of the week, and on multiple networks! Tack on guest starring roles (like Amy Acker on Supernatural or Summer Glau on Big Bang Theory), and there’s more Whedonverse members than you can ever ask for. It’s like Elysia. Every channel is littered with shows built to geek and geek-friendly fans. Reality TV is still holding on, but real TV is finally taking it’s place back (my thanks to the cable networks for holding on through the storm).

I watch a lot of movies, and I’m quite proud of my IMDB-pedic knowledge of film. And no, that does not mean I’ve seen every movie ever made, so please don’t try to stump me. It’s annoying. But I’ll kick your ass in Scene-It any day of the week. I say, “I love that movie” at least a few times a week, and I mean it every time. I have a great deal of love to give great fiction (and even mediocre fiction produced properly), and there’s always more love to give. I will admit to the faults and badly contrived moments in any film I love, but it doesn’t make me love it less. I’m not here to judge, I’m here to experience.

I play games on my computer (or my phone if necessary) when I’m watching movies/TV at home. If I could find a way to do it while I read, I would so go there. Some people are always on the go, I am generally on the stay. But my mind is still going without me. I have trained myself to look people in the eye, because my eyes generally like to go off on their own as well. I find that, if I do it too much, I notice it makes some people uncomfortable.

I also noticed that, since I got the purple highlights in my hair, people will avoid looking at me to avoid staring. It’s kind of funny to observe.

So what does this all add up to? A woman who confuses herself more often than she’d care to. But at least no one can ever say I’m not me. I’d rather be this mixed up mess, than something simple and boring. And if I can say that, shouldn’t anyone be able to?

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Dreaming in Emotions: My Inability to Visualize


UPDATE: I have created a new survey to gather some data from visitors on the different types of Agnosia people experience and how the types might be related. Go here to take the survey. It shouldn’t take more than 15 minutes.

As I’ve mentioned in earlier writing, I am unable to see pictures in my head. By that, I mean, whether I am awake or asleep, I am completely incapable of clearly picturing anyone or anything. And if you think zombie dreams are scary when you can clearly see the zombies, and the sidewalk you’re running on, and the door you’re going to hide behind… imagine if all that was just a series of blurry blobs? That’s some night terror.

While this has been my state as long as I can remember, it truly never occurred to me that there was any other way to be. In retrospect, it’s actually slightly silly. For years I’ve heard people say, “Visualize that in your mind.” Why I never thought on the fact that I am incapable of performing the task, I’ll never know. I guess, like a poster of a new forum I found, I just assumed they meant it metaphorically.

There were other things too, that should’ve brought me to really examine this deficiency in my mind. For instance, I cannot draw. I don’t mean I just can’t draw well, I mean I am truly crap at it. I hated art classes in high school, because I couldn’t create anything visually motivated; painting, sculpture, even collages were fairly pointless. Later in life I got decent at doing some graphic work on computers, but even that is usually manipulating other things I’ve seen into a form I like better. Photography is the only kind of visual medium I don’t suck at. I guess it’s because I don’t have to hold an image in my mind to create it. The camera does the heavy lifting.

My turning point, when I fully realized just what I’m missing, happened about a year ago. For a single moment my brain actually worked as (in my opinion) it should. Fiction has commented before on that magical time between awake and asleep. That’s when it happened. Suddenly, there was a flash in my mind, and it was just there; a perfect purple stormy sunset, over an ocean side cliff. I could see the cliff line in sharp relief, the fluffy yet ominous clouds and the light filtering through them to splash colors across the sky. It wasn’t even a memory. I’m fairly certain I’ve never seen that gorgeous vista before in my life, but it was truly breathtaking. Maybe a second or two later, it was gone, and I was asleep.

I wish I’d been awake enough to fully appreciate it, though I wonder if it could’ve even happened while I was more conscious. Sadly, while I recall what elements were in this glorious image, thanks to my defective brain, I cannot recreate even that picture in my mind. But the next morning, as I thought of this vision, I was fully cognizant of just what I have been missing all my life. And I will admit a certain resentment over the facts. My brain has an inability to create visual imagery. Despite the fact that I’ve been told I have a certain talent for writing visual imagery, I can’t actually see it.

It is in moments like these, I really feel a small sense of satisfaction in who I am. Despite this impairment, I learned to create pictures in the minds of others. Even with my attention and memory problems (which I suspect are closely tied to this deficiency), I’ve learned to be an effective technical writer and a manager of a fairly large department. I will never claim that I’ve come close to overcoming these problems, but I can at least admit to myself that I’ve adapted fairly well. I am not a completely non-productive and unimaginative person.

But still… to see that sunset again.

So through a little research, and some self reflection (and we all know how I love to do that), I’ve pieced together this much. For one thing, there is a real condition called prosopagnosia (visit prosopagnosia.com to learn more), but more commonly referred to as “face blindness.” This is why I felt like a schmuck when an old high school acquaintance approached me recently, and it took several moments for me to remember that I’d known her at all. Without the ability to see faces in your mind, it’s fairly difficult to recall them later for recognition purposes. It also means I would be rubbish at describing a criminal to a sketch artist. Let’s hope I never witness a crime. But clearly my issue goes beyond that.

I also found an article, where a german university did a study on people to see how many suffered from prosopagnosia. Of the 689 tested, they found 17 cases. Of those 17, 14 of them had at least one close family member who also had the condition. My sister, as I believe I mentioned earlier, also has the same visualization problems I do (her former roommate does not have this problem, and she is an incredibly talented artist). My mother, like most other people who aren’t afflicted, almost seems to think I’m just imagining the issue. She can’t conceptualize how I see things in my head. Since dad passed when I was 6, no way to know if he suffered. And since my sis and I were over 30 when we came to this realization, he might not even have known himself.

But the article also presented another odd wrinkle. People with prosopagnosia often have a hard time following movies, and can’t recognize actors in other films, because it’s hard for them to follow who is who. Now that is something I’ve never had any problem with. They’ll occasionally be two or three actors I mix up a lot at first (like Thomas Jane, Aaron Eckhart & Josh Lucas), but eventually I get them sorted in my head. But then again, I watch A LOT of movies. My sister does as well, but she does have a harder time remembering actors.

Additionally, the faces are only a part of the problem for me. I cannot see anything, in my mind, with any definition or clarity. So what is that called? Hell if I can find out. I’ve been hunting, and so far I can’t even find evidence anyone has even studied this phenomenon. But I’m not alone. I found a forum where a handful of people were discussing this very topic. I’ve joined, and hope to use their input and my own experiences to research more on this.

Here’s what I’ve learned about dreams and visual imagery in my head. I don’t see anything at all. What my mind conjures are vague blobs of color and substance that my brain can explain as something I want to interact with. What I genuinely experience is my sensory and/or emotional response to said object/person. When I dream, I’m experiencing every emotion involved in a scenario, and it drives the narrative, but because there’s nothing concrete to work with, it jumps around haphazardly. As a result, even when I’m completely aware I’m dreaming, I can’t ever go lucid. It’s simply impossible to interact with nothingness.

Something else I’ve noticed. There are a some faces I can almost see pieces of in my mind. It’s not fully there, but every so often I’ll catch an eye line or an accurate move of the lips. But it’s not my family. It’s actors. Actors who are among the most emotionally expressive can win over my brain… Christian Kane, Jensen Ackles, Michael Weatherly, Zachary Levi… Ok they aren’t all cute guys around my age. Also, Sally Field, Richard Dreyfuss, Alyson Hannigan, Tim Roth, Meg Ryan. There are others, but you get the gist. It’s only certain scenes, in certain films, and certain emotions, but it’s there. I can picture the scene and occasional get a glimpse of a piece of a face, that truly drives my emotional response to their work.

So once again I’m back to the theory that whatever part of my brain is not function the way I’d like, is not entirely broken. That there are brief moments of clarity must indicate that it’s somewhat functional.

I am also aghast at just how little I’m able to find on this condition. This phenomenon would have huge impact on education. One individual on the forum above had serious difficulties with math, as a result of the condition. I was actually fairly good at algebra, but atrocious at geometry. And I do use his trick of figuring out simple multiplication problems, in my head, by using the 5 times table and adding/subtracting from there. And imagine how this affects the ability to learn geography (a class I abhorred almost as much as art). People should be studying this, treatments should be investigated, it needs attention. It may only be a small part of the population, but that also applies to dyslexia. We still realized that we had to adjust our educational model for those individuals. I can’t even find good statistics on how many people suffer from prosopagnosia, much less this more pronounced version that seems to have no definition. If anyone can find more information, please pass it along.

I will continue to do my own research on this problem, and will pass along any insights I can gleam. I’d also love if some of the other afflicted would pass their own stories along. Comparisons to different forms or levels of ability could be useful. And finally, I’d like to offer myself up as a guinea pig. If you are in a position to study this condition, and/or study any possible treatments, I am game. There are several things that I know I could do, if I could only address this short circuit. I am willing to be poked, prodded, MRI’d and electroded. Anything to advance this topic into, at the least, something that the world recognizes and understands. Got a lab? I’m your rat.

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Different Strokes for Different Folks


A CT.com/Intrepid Media Article:

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How I Manage On Twitter


As much as I adore Twitter, there are some things hard to convey in 140 characters. As such, I wanted to put up a post intended for my new followers, to explain how I’m managing my Twitter followers/friends now that I’m approaching max occupancy on the latter.

So, unlike a lot of people out on Twitter with 500+ followers, I actually follow my Twitter stream (when I’m on the computer that is). I genuinely try to read everything coming out of those I follow. Sometimes (like late at night), it’s not so tough. During the afternoon, it gets seriously tricky.

As I come up on having 500 friends on Twitter, I’ve had to be a little more careful who I follow, so I can manage it. Therefore, I don’t just follow everyone who follows me. Basically, here’s my process.

Email comes in from Topify (I like Topify b/c it let’s me see and address spammers right off). I review the few tweets that come in the email, and then I click on their account link to check out their first page. Then I decide if I’m going to follow back.

So what makes me choose between yea or nay? Well first of all, if you’re main focus on Twitter is selling something, it’s highly unlikely I will follow back. There have been a few exceptions, but they are generally artisans who’s merchandise I really like. Also, if you have any posts to “buy twitter followers’ pages, I will immediately block you. I might even mark you as a spam account, depending on the rest of your stream. Why? Because I like Twitter as it’s intended, a way to communicate and talk to people. My followers come to me because they like what I write. I have no desire to buy them just to make myself look more popular, and I don’t agree with the practice in general.

Eliminating all of those issues, it comes down to this: Do we have anything in common? I choose friends on Twitter the same way I do in real life. Do we like the same shows/movies/books/music/etc? Do we have common political/sociological/life views? Are you funny and interesting? Do you have similar goals in life (I do follow a lot of other writers)?

Basically, do I think you and I will have anything to talk about? If so, I’ll follow back. If not, I’ll just wait and see if something else presents itself later, should you choose to communicate with me. If I don’t follow you back, please don’t hesitate to @ me if I say something you want to comment on. Plenty of people I didn’t follow initially, became friends later, because a conversation got going.

I love knowing there are people out there who find what I say of interest and/or who like being informed when I write something new. But conversations are a lot more fun than just having people listen. So talk to me folks.

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Category: About Me  Tags:  2 Comments

What Are They Looking For?


A CT.com/Intrepid Media Article:

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If Age Is Just a Number, What’s the Point Of Counting?


A CT.com/Intrepid Media Article:

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To Tweet, or not to … screw it, TWEET!


[quick note: A lot of links in this post, but all are what they appear. Either the sentence clearly indicates what is being linked to, or if the link is on a name, it is to that individual's Twitter account]

I originally avoided Twitter, quite diligently. Not as greatly as Facebook, but still, I tried to stay away. I probably knew something then, subconsciously, that’s only coming to the front of mind now; once I got in it, I wouldn’t be likely to leave.

Twitter was designed for someone like me. Now, don’t mistake me. I’m not suggesting I’m all that entertaining. At the risk of sounding like Augusta Elton, I have been known to make a few people laugh, on occasion. What I mean by, someone like me, is a person who feels this insane desire to share random wacky crap in their head. For a person like that, Twitter can definitely be perceived as addictive. I don’t think I’m quite that far gone, but I look at it like other vices; as long as the major things in life are getting done, how I choose to spend the bulk of my free time is nobody’s fricking business. So some weeks I just watch movie after movie. And some weeks, I’m writing constantly. And others it’s getting wrapped up in some thing that’s pissing me off in the world.

But the amazing thing about Twitter is, I can incorporate that into most of my other activities. And for me, that’s actually a good thing. In many cases, it’s hard for me to focus on just one thing at a time. It is, literally, trying. For instance, when I watch just about anything on the TV or computer, I am also playing something like Sudoku or an Escape The Room game (thanks to @feliciaday turning me on to these). In fact, it’s probably also another reason I love commentaries, and I turn on the subtitles to read while listening. With Twitter I can just engage in a conversation, find insanely cool stuff online, hear about projects by some of my favorite artists, or just riff and play. And I don’t have to focus on doing just that, as I would in a chat room. And then there’s the other side of Twitter, the side that makes me feel a sense of connectivity to a world I covet.

For anyone unaware, Kevin Pollak has created an online weekly chat show. The show is, in a word, sublime. But I’ll get back to that in a moment. On tonight’s installment, Illeana Douglas said, “I am a student of film.” I am so far beyond rapture, just hearing those words come out of her lips. The reason being, I now feel like 70% less pretentious for the fact I’ve said it 100’s of times myself. Granted, Illeana being one of the indy-movie queens, a certain level of pretension is expected from her. But I’ve never found her to be remotely full of her own virtue. She’s just far too cool. I’ve always had that opinion, but in her description of how she feels about the business, and how she is interacting with co-stars, plus using that phrase; I have a girl crush now (in a bromance way, not a Katie Perry way).

I don’t just love film, I love the art of film making (and TV of course), and the environment that creates it. I’ve talked about that before, in regards to why I watch commentaries, behind-the-scenes, outtakes, etc. I absorb everything I can about the making of films and TV, and the people involved. Does it mean I troll for gossip rag stuff? Hardly. But I check the IMDB news board occasionally, to see what’s going on. I skip the Britney Spears/Lindsey Lohan/Paris Hilton drama of the week. I also love watching interviews, and things like Inside the Actors Studio and (now) Kevin Pollak’s Chat Show. Through this form of conversational media, I get to learn a little bit about who they really are, and what their working lives are like. Sure, there’s a little personal life in there, but even that is nice, because it’s only as much as they’d likely tell in a long conversation at a dinner party. It’s only as much as they want to put forward, and I respect that. But it still affords me a glimpse at their lives, which I greatly appreciate, and admire.

Now, with Twitter, I get another glimpse, and it’s interactive! Sure, you could send a dozen tweets to any of the NKOTB guys, and odds are they’ll never reply directly to you. That’s fine, I have no big issue with that. Imagine the thousands of @’s they get? I still enjoy watching Donnie actually rouse a group of people in front of their computers, like they were looking up at a revolving stage. John’s real attempt to talk actively with people, is very endearing. Joe also makes me smile regularly. But I have had a few actual replies from some interesting people; even people I would never have imagined having a chance to share such a brief interaction with. I mean, Nellie from Little House on the Prairie followed me! (Sorry Alison aka @Arngrim, just couldn’t help myself). But beyond that, I get to learn about important things going on, things I might not have seen, because through her I’m expose to www.protect.org. And through Felicia Day, I’ve been exposed to things I would never have dreamed, inside and outside the Whedonverse (and yes I have caught Guild fever). Plus I wouldn’t have known about John Cleese podcasts if not for his new Nigerian Scam Mailing List (The Scientist at Work is my favorite so far).

And then there’s the kinds of interactions that just blow your mind out the back of your head. Tonight, anyone who was watching Kevin Pollack’s Chat Show got to hear Kevin almost correctly pronounce my handle. Hell, my brand name, one could argue. I certainly have turned CleverTitania into it’s own little multi-tiered entity. I guess the time my former nome de binary (Yliandra) was actually turned into an ARG game character, kind of went to my head. Oh, and then there’s the whole MotherMagi/Browncoat/Wikipedia thing. Wow, ok, let me let some air out of my head. Mustn’t let it get too full. Ahh, remembering the time I auditioned for a school play and forgot to breath, nearly passing out. That’s better.

Where was I? Oh right, tonight on the #kpcs (<–if you’re on Twitter, you’ll recognize the hash), Kevin asked Illeana Douglas a Tweet 5 of my creation. The Tweet 5 is just 5 quick questions (usually of the either/or variety) submitted to the show via Twitter. It’s just one of the great ways that Kevin has chosen to get really interactive with the show’s audience, and it really does enhance the experience. I’ve enjoyed hearing how other Tweet 5’s will surprise a guest (and occasionally Pollak), I enjoy the Larry King Game entries (Nia Vardalos is now the champ) from Twitter, which Kevin sometimes reads aloud. I like that he truly views the show as not about him, or about stroking egos of his guests and taking a 10 minute sit-down to promote their newest project. He is actually having a real conversation with people. He encourages them to say anything and everything. He’s their peer, but one who manages to stay a big dopey fan too. And like me, he yearns to know more about their lives and careers, and he chooses to share those stories with us, and give us a chance to interact with them a bit too. How could I not love this show?

It’s another of the wonderful things I have found with joining Twitter, and another reason why I will not bother with the haters. I never got into MySpace. For me it was just like a blog, on steroids, that existed in the Saved By The Bell universe. It just never felt very interactive, and went way past self-aggrandizing and Jr. High-esque. Twitter actually feels more basic. It’s like a giant chat room where we don’t all feel that we have to talk constantly, just when a thought pops in our head, or if someone else says something interesting, we might throw our thoughts onto the pile. It’s remarkably low maintenance, actually, when compared to the original chat room craze (this from a veteran of Yahoo user created rooms w/CheetahChat and IRC). And beyond that, we share things with each other, and create a real location to learn about the amazing evolutionary jumps taking places on the new WWW.

Is Twitter going to be for everyone? Of course not. I also don’t fault those celebs (and ‘normal’ people) who avoid it altogether, or setup accounts they barely ever use. You have to want to share these things, and if you don’t, it’s a chore. Honestly, we don’t want you there out of obligation. But if you’re game to play with us, in the giant adult bounce-around; Melissa and Sara are the ones jumping like mad with their kids, Kevin Smith is watching the hockey game by the entrance, Ashton and Demi are hanging out in the doll museum (creeping us out with the pics), Amber is producing a movie, writing a book and promoting 65 things at once (slow down girl!) and Russell is peacocking by the pool slide (ok, yes, your one sexy bitch darling). Much like my little corner of the intervision (as Kevin Pollak likes to call it), it’s never a dull moment.

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Passion & Compulsion


There are things I am compelled to do. One of them is to write. One of them is to absorb all the input around me, like a less shiny Johnny 5. One is to learn more about the people who I admire and am inspired by. While some of these compulsions can be time consuming, they are still relatively easy to keep doing, and cause mostly manageable stress.

But there’s another one, that’s a bit harder, and makes me just a touch edgy. Though on rare occasions, it’s as simple as taking a slow breath. That compulsion is to ask myself questions, and wonder how others like me would answer.

Let me first clarify; others like me. Some of this might be rather arrogant sounding, but hopefully my true intent comes across. Think of it like Simon telling the Firefly crew about how vastly he intelligent he is, to make sure they knew just how smart River is, when he volunteers that she makes him look like a drooling idiot. I’m trying to establish my question targets here.

As I’ve said in a previous blog, my sister and I are very alike in some ways, and we are able to communicate in a way that leaves some people genuinely stunned. I won’t say those people aren’t as smart as we are, they just aren’t as articulate or quick as we can get, especially bouncing off each other. Yet, despite how similar my sister and I are, one little fact makes us worlds apart sometimes. That’s my passions and compulsions. She doesn’t really get those, and therefore she doesn’t understand how mine work.

My sister isn’t one of the people the current question, the one milling around in my mind, is intended for.

I’m watching some podcasts tonight, of John Cleese. And I found myself experiencing a rather surprising reaction. I found myself, being intensely grateful, that his faculties are still in order (or at least as in order as they ever were). And while that last sentence sounds a little glib, it’s actually a quite literal comment. We are talking about a deep sigh, the kind you feel in your ribs, kind of relief. It only took a few moments to register, why I was so calmed by this simple errant thought.

I saw George Carlin, live, a couple of years ago. My sister, Steph and I went. I remember, thinking that night, that I didn’t think he’d be with us much longer. It wasn’t his age, or the slight crouch to his back, or how white his hair was. It just felt like, a part of George was slipping away. Now this was early in the particular tour, and I am aware of how comedians at George’s level work. They build the material in the tour, and it’s only completely together in time for the next TV special. But even with that knowledge, the spark and quick shifting wit just didn’t feel as present. It was like the shine was finally coming off the new coin. And it broke my heart. A small piece of me wonders, did it break his too? Did he, perhaps, finally leave us, due to a broken heart?

George is the kind of man I would’ve loved to ask my question of. The incomparable Mr. Cleese is someone I would enjoy having an hour long conversation with, dissecting every nuance of my question. There are many others. Writers, actors, directors… people for whom the written word drives their existence; these are the people I want to ponder these thoughts with. So what, you might be just spitting to get answered already, is the question?

How much do you dread, that your mind might one day leave you? How does it hurt inside, when you imagine that a time could come, when you will simply not be as sharp anymore? How dreadful do you think it will be, to feel yourself dulling with age and/or infirmity?

I realize that’s more than one question, but I think you understand the scope of the thought. I, in my obsessive compulsive way, come back occasionally to these thoughts. I try to avoid them. I’ll even duck into a shop and hide out, if I see them coming down the road. But they always manage to find me eventually, generally when I’m too tired to carefully scout all pedestrian traffic.

To lose my mind, my rhythm, my ability to pull thoughts and words from nothing, to lose the things that drive and compel me; that is the most unfathomable black hole I can conceive of. It’s a pit that promises nothing but despair and a sedimentary existence, which I am not sure that I could bear.

Somehow, I think asking others how these thoughts feel on their own shoulders, might lessen the burden on my own. But then again, perhaps I’ll learn that I’m giving them more weight than they deserve. I don’t think there’s a good way to find out. I mean, it’s not as if James Lipton is ever going to add it to his final questionnaire. I don’t think it’s dark and ominous enough for a HBO to let me produce a documentary. And I would Tweet it to John, but I really think it would lose its rhythm in 140 characters.

Oh, well

*sigh*

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