Birthday reflections

I’ve never worked on my Birthday.  The idea is inherently repellent to me. Maybe I’ve been spoiled, growing up in a family that always took vacation during the last week of August.   But I’m breaking the tradition this year.  Truthfully, I did a little frontloading to get this post out on a Wednesday, which happens to be my 42nd birthday.

It makes me reflect on my writing career, which could be characterized (generously) as a slow-burner.  I got my first academic publication before I turned 30.  At that time, I set a goal to have three times that many, and maybe a book out before I turned 40.

Not to be. I managed to get a series of academic pubs, mostly in my early 30s.  Teetering toward the edge of thirtysomething, I got my first fiction break.  The late John Stahle gave me a chance by publishing my retold fairytale The Vain Prince.

I could qualify things by pointing out that I’ve worked a demanding full-time job for the past 17 years.   In fact, through most of my post grad life, I’ve taken part-time work on top of that.  But there’s two sides to the coin. I’d love to have lots more time to write, and I think I’d be more productive and faster if I didn’t need a full-time job to sustain myself.  But there’s also the wise adage: if you want a job done well, give it to someone busy.

I think about my writing in the same way that I think about my coming out at times.  What if I had started younger?  Think of all the amazing experiences I would have had…all the wasted years.  But regret doesn’t stick with me as much these days.  Things happen for a reason.  It’s not a religious sentiment (perish the thought), it’s more like being practical.

Every experience I had shaped my life as a writer, and as a queer man. I could only do what I did at the time with what I had at the time.  Besides, the Japanese just proved that time travel isn’t possible. No going back and switching majors in college or swaggering around campus as a self-empowered queer.

So, my goal for this decade is to write as much as I can, to build my readership, and to try not to take myself too seriously.  I find that last one gets easier with age.   I don’t mean not taking my writing seriously, or not setting ambitious goals.   Ambitious goals are good.   I mean being open to the knowledge that’s out there beyond my inner world.

Socrates put it this way:  the more I learn, the less I know.

The photo isn’t my Birthday cake.  It’s just a stock image I found and thought was funny.  Who wouldn’t want a Chuck Norris Birthday cake?

Publication Pre-Release!

Just found out from editor John Stahle that my first publication is available for pre-release!  Ganymede Stories One, featuring my short story THE VAIN PRINCE, can be purchased on-line here.  My story made it into the anthology along with reprints by some lesser known writers like Robert Louis Stevenson and Oscar Wilde.  (ha, ha)  Check it out and let me know what you think.