W.F. Stubbs
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Time to write, time to cook, time to exercise, time to live.

28/8/2021

6 Comments

 
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New Zealand went into their second Level 4 lock-down last Wednesday 18th August on only my second day at my new job as assistant gardener at a retirement village. 'What an opportunity' I thought to myself. Here I was in an isolated cabin halfway down the property tenant's jungle of a backyard garden, a writing desk, a kitchenette (double hotplate, fridge, basin, jug), and time on my hands to continue writing Dim Day.

One of the tenants visits the beach every morning here in Paekākāriki which was great non-verbal encouragement for me to do the same - most mornings I have. Once lock-down arrived I chose to be a lot more discreet about it, running approx. 3km up the coastal trail, checking out how deserted the beach is before finding an unoccupied spot to wade in and feel the rush of winter salt water washing over me before jogging back to keep up my warmth. Occasionally the debris lapping in on the morning waves has left me less clean than when I went in, so on my arrival back I pop around the corner of the cabin out of sight and have a hose-down. A minimum of 21 press-ups, 21 "leg-ups" (lying on my back and lifting the legs up and down) accompany the morning rising from my bed, or the return from the sea, occasionally I do straight-leg sit-ups with my back as straight as possible. The abs aren't quite showing yet, but that's probably the fault of that packet of Toffee Pops and Whitaker's Artisan Chocolate I bought last week (...and the yoghurts, and the salamis, and the cheeses I bought many times before that as well!). But still, as I said to our new flatmate ("resimate" as I refer to the house dwellers on the property (i.e: Residential Mates)) when she expressed the fact that at her current mid-50s age this is the healthiest, both mentally and physically, that she has ever been, I concurred and was able to relate - in my 44 years this is also the healthiest, mentally and physically, that I have ever been. There is a photo of me from 2010 with quite a puffy face - years of Burger King, Burgerfuel, and heavy protein and carb dinners that weren't being worked off. Since moving into my car and living on the side of the river from 2018, all that unnecessary fat has been shed; with a much more consistent approach to physical body toning without any obsessive desire to build muscle, a massive reduction in food focusing on one good meal each day and only snacking (at most) (mostly nuts) beforehand (and coffee with honey replacing sugar) adding up to an average of 1.5 meals a day, I have consistently weighed-in at less than 67kgs for the past four years. There is no guilt should I choose to eat some Toffee Pops, some licorice (unless I eat them all at once, which I have done *shakes head sadly*), because I know that their energy source will get used rather than be stored (I mean, mostly - like I said, my abs still aren't showing *grumpy face*).

Anyway, enough about me. Dinners are coming along just fine. As you can see, tonight I made a crushed Pumpkin and Sunflower Seed curry with mixed beans on pulse pasta instead of rice. A very tasty meal for this lone red cabin dweller. But this is not a lone lock-down bubble (though I would have no problem if it was). Every day of the week, the five of us take turns cooking for one another in the house (back of photo, extra sleep-out to left), and have ranging conversations from gardening (everyone's a gardener, except me - total newbie!), to books, to music, to covid, to "can we trust the authorities???" - it's all up for discussion, and makes the evening over a glass of wine that much more enjoyable.

But what about Dim Day? Yes, what about the novel I've been trying to write since 2009? I have reached 48,000 words with only 5-6 scenes left to either write or finish off, which I expect the total word-count to be around 60,000. This is a good amount, as there has been a bit extra world-building going on, which I am cautious about. Why? Is not solid world-building the goal? Yes, but this book was never meant to describe a 'world' as such; it was only ever meant to describe a place. Imagine walking into a theatre to watch a play, seeing the curtains rise you know that the props in the background are not real, but you suspend your disbelief and invest in what the actors portray. This was always my intention, and I have tried to keep that world-building to a minimum so that the reader doesn't get distracted, so that the reader only knows what supports the story directly related to the characters. This is not science fiction, this is not mainstream 'genre' fantasy, I wouldn't even call it magic realism; there is no magic, there are no monsters and strange creatures, no technology advancing and changing society other than what characters may project with limited knowledge; what there is instead are animal and plant variations that inhabit their own ecological niche, there are people who act and feel like us living in a similar past, but there is only this place, similar, but very different, and the story that unfolds from one dim day to the next...

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6 Comments
Michael long
1/9/2021 03:41:25 am

Mr Stubbs!! Looking forward to Dim Day.

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W. Stubbs link
1/9/2021 08:59:04 am

I look forward to finishing it!!

Thanks for the visit and read. Hope you are well!

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Chris Bentley
5/9/2021 12:33:57 pm

Sir, looks like a swell place to hunker down and build a world. Just a thought, but if you cut down on the toffee maybe you can go more upmarket on the meals; after all this is probably the only life we're gonna know and you're a long time dead (smiley face).Impressed with your fitness routine - keep it up and the abs will surely come. Dim Day sounds like it's growing into an epic of the 'Dune' variety. The trick is to incorporate 'writing time' into your daily routine so that it becomes a habit - I've been told this, but of course I don't practice it (smiley face).

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W. Stubbs link
14/9/2021 08:40:31 pm

Haha, well the toffee pops are my weakness, but they a sweet, sweet weakness I like to indulge in, so, hey like you say - this is the only life we are going to know, so why not eat them while I can!

I don't know about the Epic value! Dune is about 180,000 words. Mind you, most of those words are "he said/she said" - throw most of those out and the book would probably be half the size (and twice as enjoyable!). I have started a glossary though! For such a non-epic book, a glossary seems unnecessary, but I started it more for myself to keep track of certain specifics, but now it's 6 pages in total, so I think it might make a nice separate booklet to include with a hard back copy.

Thanks for the positive words, Chris, and I hope everything is well with you. Look forward to hearing what's happening with your film and any new ideas you are working on. keep in touch!

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Carol Siewert link
14/9/2021 04:35:40 am

Fascinating. I get it. I did something similar (eating, mornings at the sea) on a 3 week vacation and wish I could live like that.

At any rate, you inspired me to write by the idea of place-building over world-building. Love it. Wishing you success, however you define it, in whatever your adventures.

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W. Stubbs link
14/9/2021 08:31:05 pm

Thank you Carol!

Breakfast on the sea is fantastic. During last year's lockdown, once NZ entered into Level 3, I made my coffee and walked 2 blocks to the beach and sat with my notebook letting salty thoughts fill the pages...

I've always been fascinated by John Crowley's first novel The Deep set on a platform at the bottom of a giant pole that goes up to... no one knows! And that's basically all the reader finds out. I had to force myself to not extrapolate Dim Day out into a science-fictional universe and just let it be this singular creation. After-all, world-building is soooo much work, and I ain't got time for that!

Thanks for visiting the page. Al the best to you too.

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  • Home
  • About
  • Buy
  • Poetry
  • Blog
  • Music
    • Selections & Links
    • Opus List
    • Proposed Albums
    • Songs Without Music >
      • 1993
      • The Hunter's Knife (Lyric)
    • Music Reviews