The Ninth Wonder?

“Some stories are true that never happened.”

~Elie Weisel

I love my Macbook.  A lot.  It’s safe to say there’d be no Writer Dad without it.  

It’s possible I might’ve stumbled into writing anyway, but it wouldn’t have been in the ninja in the dead of night way it did.

I feel like I can do anything with my notebook.  I don’t mean curing hunger or bending time, but I can write books, make music, or cut movies.  

Maybe one day paint pictures.

Everyone can be an artisan.  

A limitless toolbox, often weighing less than five pounds, is available to most.

I love to learn.  

The more I learn, the more I understand how little I know.  

I’ve wanted to make a video.  I have the tools, just never used them.  But there are plenty of tutorials and the software is easy to use, so I don’t really have an excuse not to.

Today’s release is an old ditty, in different clothing.  I’m not sure who among us has been here since we last saw it, but it’s different enough to make it worthy.

I hope you enjoy. I’d love to hear what you think, good or bad.  

If you enjoy it, please consider Stumbling, or following the link and leaving a comment on Youtube or Viddler.  

Thanks,

Writer Dad

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Last Friday’s, wee-book: Number One and Two it!

This video would not have been possible without the help of Ian from Indigo Spot, who not only helped me figure out why I was a gimp in the first place, but how I can avoid being a gimp in the future.  Thanks, Ian, and everyone who piled in the tow truck.  You guys were amazing.

The Eighth Wonder of the World 2.0:

I Promise.

“Teamwork divides the task and multiplies the success.”

~Author unknown

Ever since Friday, I’ve been answering emails about Promise.  

Did you really name your daughter Promise?  Is Promise a real person?  How did you write the eighth wonder of the world, and how long did it take to put together?  

The most frequently asked question:

What kind of account will yield that amount of money?  

I have to admit, I love this.  

Though Promise was born only in my mind, her birth is significant.  She is my first character to be given voice to an audience beyond the living room.  We don’t ever really see her, and we don’t know much about her, but I think anyone who reads those eleven hundred words can easily understand Promise’s quintessential truth.  

I’d like to answer some of these questions today, but since I don’t think Writer Dad’s quite ready for a list post, allow me to spin a yarn instead.  If you’re still curious when I’m finished, shoot me an email.  

The story starts last November.  I’d been writing for around two months.  I was all juiced, anxious to start collaborating with Daisy.  ”Come on Baby,” I’d beg.  ”Let’s write a book.”

“When, in our spare time?” (Note: This is not a serious question.)

….. Writer Dad hovering……

“Fine.”

All I’d written up to that point was a chapter book for Mia and my own abysmal short story, which was by then turning into a complicated novel through some kind of mysterious cell division that I seemed to be both in charge, and under the control of.

I wanted to keep tinkering with the novel, but I didn’t want to get lost in a bog.  If I was going to be a Writer instead of just a writer, I needed some good circulation.  We don’t go to the gym, only to beat on the same set of muscles, right?

In two decades of teaching, Daisy’s never refused a book as gift or purchase, and I was reading twenty to thirty children’s books out loud to a room full of children, every single day.  

I wanted to try my own.

Daisy and I have always thought that there weren’t enough children’s books about money.  This is somewhat bizarre, considering that understanding money is essential to the modern world, and something we should learn at the earliest possible age.  

Not enough parents really teach it, and the country’s children aren’t learning it in school.  

Perhaps it’s a subject that makes people feel uncomfortable, or guilty, or afraid.  

I’m not really sure why it is, but I am sure that it’s an empty shelf of possibility.  

Daisy and I agreed to gather our thoughts and meet at the same time and place (in bed after the children are asleep) the following week.

One week later….

You have how many?”

“Five.”

“Five ideas?”

“No.  Five stories.”

“Let me see.”

The room is still, except for the rustling of papers.

I’m sitting in a perfect ninety degree angle, with my back to the bedpost.  I am, admittedly, quite pleased with myself.  Daisy has brought her page of notes; I have brought a notebook.  I did not know until that moment that what I had done was impressive, but I am drinking her expression as though it were wine at a tasting.

“Impressed?” I am beaming after five minutes of silence.

Daisy looks at me.  

I love this look.

It’s the one that says, “Thank you for making babies with me.”  

At least that’s how I would describe it.

That was the beginning of what turned into a long run of weekly exchanges.  We met every seven days, and each time I would try to get that look again.  This is long before any serious hope of publication; long before I would try to dull my voice to please the gate keepers.  

When I first started, I used the books I was reading out loud every day as a template, but soon realized that my attempts to mimic their charm and simplicity were mostly insipid.  

My solution:  Write the stories as though I was explaining things to my own children, or trying to impress Daisy.  

That night, it was the second story I read that you saw last week.  Back then, it was simply called Promise.  Though it has been heavily sanded, its structure of “The Eighth Wonder of the World” is no different then it was that evening, late last year.  

That special evening also yielded two more stories about money that I’ll share at some point in the future, along with two others that might be the clumsiest things ever committed to paper.  

Not every investment pays off, but you should never stop making them.  Promise the girl was born that night, but so was a promise I made to myself: a commitment to find my voice, and make it heard.  

Writer Dad

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If Mom and Dad never cease their contributions, an average annual return of 10% will make this work.

An Old Dream Come True

Whenever Daisy and I reflect on life before children, there are two subjects we can never exhaust: time and money.  It seems we were sick with both.  Unless you’re lucky enough to be one of the fortunate few, once you have children, it seems like someone comes into your house while your sleeping, hits you over the head, and robs you of everything you were stashing under your mattress.  

And that goes for both assets.

Back when we were only two, we often combined our excess time and money into the unforgiving time waster of video games.  Saying that we stayed up late, playing until our eyes bled is only an exaggeration because such a thing isn’t possible.  The lack of blood wasn’t due to a lack of trying.

Daisy married into my obsession.  Before me, it was only Pac-Man, Centipede, and the occasional game of Galaga that rocked her world.  That all changed on September 9, 1999.  

Yeah, I remember the date.  

Sega released the Dreamcast on 9/9/99.  I wanted one, badly, but I couldn’t take off work to waste my time in line.  Daisy surprised me by wasting hers.  When I got home, I had a brand new system and three games waiting.  We popped in Soul Caliber and never went to sleep.  

One of my passions was now one of Daisy’s addictions.

Games became part of our ritual, and we would often talk about that day, far in the future, when we would be playing games with our own children.  I’ve never been one of the camp who believes that games are rot on the minds of the young.  I’m from the school who thinks that everything must be age appropriate, and in the proper measure.  I wouldn’t allow my child to play video games for two hours straight any more than I’d allow them to play Grand Theft Auto (well, maybe when they’re thirty).  But video games, at their best, are wonderful tools for teaching problem solving, hand eye coordination, and spacial relationships.

Life happened, and Mia was born.  We moved, and the game systems were packed away for a long hibernation.  

We have game nights on Mondays and Saturdays.  Last night, Daisy suggested that we blow the dust off the Dreamcast and see if it would still light the screen.  

It did.

We spent thirty wonderful minutes watching our old childlike expressions, newly expressed through our offspring’s eyes.  We watched Max tentatively hold the controller while making careful decisions about what to do next (his job was to make his character drill through the Earth without running out of air), and we could see Mia feel the excitement as she raced her car around a track at a hundred and fifty miles an hour without any possible danger to herself.

It was beautiful – a reminder of who we once were, who we are now, and how close we hope to always stay.  I’m glad my children can make me feel like a child and a father all at once.

Writer Dad

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