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Skyla Dawn Cameron

My characters kill people so I don't have to.

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April 21, 2015 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

Princess Skyla

I thought the blog could use some levity after my de facto eulogy (thank you, again, to all of you who offered condolences), but I’m up to here *points to eyeballs* in work and playing catch-up, plus a new round of tests and appointments with a new doctor (WHEE, ANOTHER ONE), and I haven’t really got anything clever to say.

So anyway, as you may or may not be aware, I have always wanted to be a princess.

Correction: I always pretty much THOUGHT I was a princess. I assumed my mother was an evil witch (hi, Mom!) who locked me in a tower and was very cruel whenever she made me help with housework.

Basically, I was relatively certain this was my life, as I’m sure most children are:

It was a hard knock life, clearly.

And I assumed one day my real, extremely wealthy, probably royal family would come along and buy me things and never make me clean my room, maaaaayyyybeeeee.

Anyway, I’m thirty-two and not yet a princess, and this is probably my greatest disappointment in life (next to the fact that I don’t have any flying monkeys, as eventually I realized I am more likely to be a wicked witch anyway and, goddamn it, I WAS PROMISED FLYING MONKEYS).

A couple of years ago, I ran into a My Little Pony, however, named PRINCESS SKYLA. (I discovered this as people were hitting my site googling “princess skyla” and for a while I was excited as I thought they knew something about me that I didn’t.) Never, in my whole life, have I ever found things with my name. Mostly this is good as I like having a unique name, but you know when you go into gift shops and they have magnets and necklaces and things with your name? That never happens to me, and there has NEVER been a fictional character or toy with my name, LET ALONE A PRINCESS. I had trouble finding a MLP Princess Skyla currently available for sale, however, and never got one.

As my belated Christmas gift this year, however, Aunt Judy got me…

Princess Skyla.

Princess_Skyla_Toy
(Not a photo of MINE, who I will add later, as she’s currently chilling on my dresser with my stuffed saber-tooth cat and my cuddly Koala.)

BUT THAT’S NOT ALL.

No, Aunt Judy ALSO got me…my very own tiara. Which I promptly put on.

And did not take off again.

 

So @bbwriter got me a tiara and I wore it the entire way home to embarrass my mother and it was pretty much the best thing ever.

— Skyla Dawn Cameron (@skyladawn) April 16, 2015

HER LADYSHIP. pic.twitter.com/Tm2zkizeQc — Skyla Dawn Cameron (@skyladawn) April 16, 2015


(It’s black and white because I AM A CLASSY PRINCESS.)

Seriously, we stopped into Mary Browns to take home dinner and I happily strolled in and Mum was facepalming.

— Skyla Dawn Cameron (@skyladawn) April 16, 2015

They put our order under “Princess Skyla”. — Skyla Dawn Cameron (@skyladawn) April 16, 2015

This is the thing about having a chronic illness that will never go away: NO FUCKS TO GIVE ABOUT ANYTHING. Plus no dignity left.

— Skyla Dawn Cameron (@skyladawn) April 16, 2015

I finally said, look, they took fifteen (!) vials of blood today and my father just died and I WILL WEAR A TIARA ALL DAY IF I WANT TO. — Skyla Dawn Cameron (@skyladawn) April 16, 2015

pic.twitter.com/dJsNb5ESET

— Skyla Dawn Cameron (@skyladawn) April 16, 2015

Mum questioned why I wasn’t waving while we were driving. Because acknowledging the peasants makes them all uppity. DUH. — Skyla Dawn Cameron (@skyladawn) April 16, 2015

 

Mum continues to be horribly embarrassed, probably because she knows I’m planning to wear it the next time I buy groceries when she’s working.

I see no reason to be embarrassed; I am willing to bet everyone’s just jealous. Because I am a princess.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: fun, life, personal

April 10, 2015 By Skyla Dawn Cameron 4 Comments

Goodbye, Daddy

My dad died Monday night. Today’s the funeral.

photo 1 (3)

He was not a perfect man; he had a great many flaws, and a great many demons that often got the best of him. And it left me pretty messed up for much of my life–enough that I could’ve taken (and have) dozens of books to work through it all and barely scratch the surface. To this day, the most vivid memory I have from childhood is one of terror and violence, of being six years old and scared of my own dad as he met my eyes through the spidery cracks of the windshield he was trying to kick in.

photo 2 (2)

But I also remember a man who was generous and incredibly charismatic; he could listen to you like you were the only person in the world, and like what you said actually mattered. Who fought for the underdog. Who is entirely responsible for my early love of politics (even though I fell in a different political camp than him). Who loved arguing for work and twisting other people’s words to make his own point stronger (GUESS WHO INHERITED THAT), and who I think would’ve been incredibly proud of my writing now if he’d ever read it (or at the very least, the Letters of Shame I give to those deserving). Who promised me the world and occasionally delivered the best he could of it.

memumdad-1photo 3 (1)

I remember the man who called me “Munchkin” and faithfully remembered every birthday and holiday, who had me excited to see him every single week when he took me out for lunch years after Mum was no longer involved with him. Who got me my first TV and Nintendo, even if he wasn’t there to play with me. Who took me to Canada’s Wonderland and rode on all the rides with me. Who got so frustrated that I had absolutely no interest in mini golf and when I insisted I MUST have won because I had the highest score. Who, upon leaving our apartment, would slow down after circling the building and wait so I could see him from Mum’s bedroom window and wave every single time, year after year, before he continued driving away.

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And almost as vividly as the trauma, I remember a man who loved his only daughter.

I was born in 1982, the year Willie Nelson’s cover of “Always On My Mind” was released, and I remember Dad saying he heard that song and thought of me, and how he hummed it and said I was always on his mind.

So this is the dad I choose to carry with me, the one I choose to remember, the one I will tell my someday-children about. Because he was capable of tremendous love and that, just as much as everything else, helped shape the person–for better or worse–whose blog and books you’re reading today.

Goodbye, Daddy.

photo (24)

 

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: life, personal

March 28, 2015 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

Accepting Limitations

Yesterday and today were a busy few days at Chez Skyla’s–instead of scrambling to hold onto the ledge at the end of this month financially, I have a little extra to play with (shifting me from Crushing Poverty to Able-to-Breathe-a-Little-as-Long-as-I-Don’t-Move-Too-Much Poverty), so I promptly went out and bought new cleaning supplies and have been mopping floors and scrubbing the tub and cleaning the cupboards and and and–

Yes, I realize this makes me a grownup now, and it is UTTERLY TERRIFYING.

*

So I sat down the other day and made a list of everything I want to write this year, both my stuff and for-pay writing projects.

It was…lengthy.

So from there I broke it down to what I NEED to write, starting with for-pay writing at the top (because PAY, duh), then the Skyla projects I’m committed to, both for Readers and My Own Happiness.

“It’s doable!” I thought. “I got this!”

Then my brain did this little rewind thing, and I actually wrote down the first draft projected word counts of everything. Which changed it all a bit.

In a good year, I can write about 450-500K words. If I push it beyond that, my brain burns out. Literally. I will sit there and words do not come out. So that right there is a limitation. And with everything coming up this year personally, my more comfortable target is going to be 350-400K. I’ve already written about 150K words the past couple of months, which gives me maybe 250K more to play with, if I take care of myself.

Right off the bat, 100K of that goes to for-pay writing. So I have another 100-150K to play with. 75K for Wolfe comes out of that. So, max, I have another 75K to play with, a chunk of which will go to Amends since that funded.

Then I blinked up at my list and made a little sad face.

This is exceptionally hard for me but it actually took a physical illness and worrying about my health to accept: I have limitations. Real, actual ones. The primary reason I have trouble accepting this is due to mental illness–a large part of my disorder insists there are no limitations! I can do everything! I don’t need sleep! I don’t need rest! I am magical! To carry the spoon metaphor over to this, my brain chemistry actually makes me genuinely overestimate the number of spoons I have available and it takes dropping dead of exhaustion to realize I’ve done so.

It’s why this year I’ve had to be careful about time commitments, being clear about work commitments (little by little, I’ve been extending my turn around times for clients–hospital visits and rest days have eaten into a chunk of my time), and now accepting writing limitations means fewer of those commitments too.

Since y’all paid for Wolfe last year with the River campaign, it gets top priority. Which likely means bumping Oblivion to early next year at the earliest. This pisses me off to no end because I want nothing more than for the series to be done with and no longer plaguing me, but it’s going to take a tremendous amount of mental, emotional, and physical energy, because I refuse to end the series with a half-assed book.

And so it waits.

It also means I probably won’t finish another Livi book this year. EXTRA SAD FACE.

*

Also in book news, you can get the Demons of Oblivion Bundle–that’s three novels plus short stories–for 30% off at Kobo this weekend by entering the code GET30 at checkout. Next month, there is going to be a 99c sale for Bloodlines to celebrate Patreon reaching the Amends milestone, and I’d appreciate it if y’all could spread the word then. (I’ll remind you with next week’s quarterly book state of the union.)

Finally, I am a little…irritated that the dumb bint responsible for this is after Damaged now too (which has not been posted, and I’ll admit I have Theories as to who posted Exhumed back then, though insufficient evidence). And you know what? Fuck that. I do not have the energy to police the illegal downloads of this book as well, so it’s coming down from sale everywhere but my site (where I will have your real name and absolutely will come after you if you post it for illegal download). I am also going to do a print edition of the book this weekend so at least I’ll keep all those lovely reviews you guys posted on Amazon, which meant a lot to me.

“But Skyla, you’re punishing all the legit readers–”  

Listen, I wrote Damaged for my friend Danni’s birthday. I almost didn’t make it for sale elsewhere because it was a story for HER, not a story for some cheap bitch who enjoys violating me.

It’s not a huge seller so, like 9 Crimes and Dial V for Vampire, if you want it, you can get it here.

But I do not have the energy for people’s fuckery, and if it saves me some spoons, I absolutely will take my toys and go home. There are limitations on my physical and mental health, and I will do what I have to in order to protect that, including making it more difficult for people to steal from me.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a refrigerator to scrub.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: Demons of Oblivion, life, personal, piracy, update

February 27, 2015 By Skyla Dawn Cameron 3 Comments

The Thing They Don’t Tell You

Yesterday I got excellent news from Dr. M, my specialist. My MRI showed no active disease and I’m not that badly damaged yet, I don’t yet require surgery, and I seem to be tolerating the medication well. I can cut down on my visits to her AND my frequent bloodwork.

I sort of sat there and blinked for a few moments, because I wasn’t prepared for that.

I prepare for worst case scenario, always, because bad news always hurts that much more when you have hope. At least for me. So I was quite prepared for something dire and had trouble adjusting to the idea that, for a little while, I’m okay. It’s that “for a little while” that is key, however. It’s not permanent. It’s never permanent; this can’t be cured. Oddly, it’s a little like mental illness that way. Periods of wellness in between periods of, “Oh, fuck”. There are all kinds of instructions on how to deal with bad news, but the thing they don’t tell you about is the good.

For a brief moment, sitting there with my doctor, I nearly stumbled over words (thank GOD she seems to find me coherent and like me as a patient, at least I’m generally educated on things) and the question flared in my head, “What now?” A different sort of panic than I’m used to, the good news triggering another shuffling of the ground beneath me. I’d mentally prepared me for one path and yet here is another, brighter one.

I recovered quickly, of course. Because the answer to that question is, well, carry on.Maximize this time of wellness, do all the things you comfortably can, and enjoy the hell out of it. Don’t ever squander it.

tumblr_nfegsoSVnX1rsvjzpo5_500

Anyway, this should mean we’re back to our regularly scheduled bloggage about books and such.

So I came home yesterday to the internet losing its damn mind (I still don’t even know wtf) AND the wonderful surprise of Patreon meeting its first milestone(!). This means that not only is my monthly medication paid for, but the Alchemy Red short, Prey, will soon be posted (one scene to finish and then a proofread on my end) for patrons. It’s a lot of fun and contains several familiar faces even if that’s not initially apparent from the description.

rebellion-kindleMarch also continues to be a busy month as things are on track to release the novella Rebellion. This is the first time I’ve revisited the River Wolfe world with new content as a writer since 2008 and for readers (when Wolfe was actually publisher), 2009. I am reasonably certain I am the only one excited for this novella (other than the friend who is currently reading it for coherency for me), but I don’t care: I’m tremendously pleased and I hope River Wolfe readers who catch it enjoy it.

So that’s it for me today. Errands to run, a flat to clean, some naughty assassins to get into trouble with some of your favourite characters, editing to do…

And possibly some nachos. Remission feels good.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: Demons of Oblivion, health, life, patreon, personal, rebellion, river wolfe

January 28, 2015 By Skyla Dawn Cameron 5 Comments

When Mental Health Stigma Makes You Physically Sick

It’s Bell Let’s Talk Day.

So let’s talk.

As blog/Twitter followers are aware, I got seriously sick last year (and I’m in remission, but still recovering). Sicker, physically, than I have ever been in my life–the last time I was so ill I had to see a doctor was when I had pneumonia in middle school.

This is a (very) lengthy, (very) personal post about what exactly happened to me that summer.

*

It started around the middle of May. By July I’d lost around twenty pounds because food made me ill and my persistent cough had gotten so bad I was gagging and throwing up from it. I had to basically be forced and threatened to call the doctor’s office, but understand, again, I have never been sick with anything I couldn’t fight off. I kept thinking it would go away.

I had only met my doctor once a year earlier for a meet and greet plus I wanted some basic bloodwork. Getting in to see one’s doctor can be a bit of a feat here, so I was referred to a nurse practitioner (NP).

I was terrified.

gsgmr5vjpzbi0dv5qnxkTerrified of doctors/hospitals/illness/etc. I had a bad experience with mine as a kid prescribing me a medication she knew I was allergic to. I had bad experiences every time I needed bloodwork. My history with medical professionals involved no one listening to me. Plus I am naturally distrustful of anyone in any kind of authority position. I also strongly dislike using the phone, so even calling for an appointment stressed me out.

So when I say “terrified”, understand I mean paralyzing anxiety.

Prior to the appointment, I didn’t sleep. At all. It was in the afternoon, and since food was making me sick, I also didn’t eat.

So I showed up and had to change into a gown so the NP could listen to my lungs, which just adds a whole other layer of vulnerability to the experience on top of being sleep-deprived, starving, and terrified. We talked about some of my symptoms, what was going on at the time I got sick, and she said I probably had a virus I’d fought off but picked up cough-variant asthma, and she gave me a combo inhaler with instructions to come back in a week for a follow-up.

She also noted the psych referral request in my file and asked about it. I explained that I was undiagosed bipolar and before my doctor would discuss medication with me (I basically just wanted something for emergencies), he wanted something formal from a psychiatrist. That was a year ago and no referral ever came, so she said she’d look into it.

I was feeling pretty good about this, after the appointment. It wasn’t so bad, I thought! The inhaler started to work on my cough and I felt much better. My aunt, a nurse, raised the question of why this NP wouldn’t have ordered a chest x-ray and bloodwork right off the bat, but I was pleased that the inhaler worked.

Within a few days, I’d developed debilitating muscle/joint pain, however.

And by “debilitating”, I mean I couldn’t walk.

Remember, I’m a runner, and have been for years. I’m also stubborn as fuck and hate taking medication. I’ve dealt with twisted ankles, banged up knees, hip bursitis, etc. When I’m injured or sore, I…just keep going. So when I say I started waking up every morning with pain in every muscle and joint so severe it took me ten minutes to actually get on my feet out of bed, I am not exaggerating or being a baby about it.

*

The follow-up appointment rolled around. My anxiety, again, went through the roof. On the ride there, I kept trying to explain to my mother why I found it so terrifying, and I finally said to her: “I’m afraid that I’ll be told everything’s in my head.”

This is something I think people with mental illness, particularly ones that mess with your judgement sometimes like bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, likely understand, and especially if you’ve ever been around people who are manipulative and experienced gaslighting. It’s hard sometimes to trust yourself and there’s an inherent fear that speaking up and confiding in someone will lead to you being told you’re just crazy.

So anyway, here I am once again in the doctor’s office, starving and tired and so anxious I’m almost in tears. The NP is late coming in, finally gets there and asks how things are. I explain the inhaler took care of about 80% of the cough, and she thought I could taper off of it, but finally ordered a chest x-ray just in case. Then I explained about the pain and how I was unable to eat/still losing weight.

She dropped eye contact with me, sat down, looked at my file again and asked if the psych referral had come yet.

*blink*

tumblr_mhh2cblp961qghhigo1_500Me: Well, no, though that’s kind of a concern as well. I’ve been too sick to work much, in so much pain now too that I can barely sit at the computer, and not working = no money = I can’t pay rent/buy food, and that’s stressing me out/making me depressed.

And then she started talking about me taking antidepressants.

I argued, vehemently, saying I wasn’t interested, and, um, HAI, I’m losing this weight–

She said I’m losing weight because I’m too depressed and tired to cook meals.

*blink*

(No, I was too tired to cook ELABORATE VEGAN MEALS; I was capable of zapping a frozen entree in the microwave, which I’d been doing.)

I brought up the debilitating physical pain I was in, pointing out I could barely fucking walk and had to pop ibuprofen, which I *never* do.

She said, and I quote, “Depressed people feel more pain.”

Really?

*blink*

Never, ever, in twenty years of serious depression and suicidal thoughts has my illness *ever* presented with physical pain. But she wouldn’t listen to that. She kept talking about antidepressants.

I said I was bipolar and putting me on antidepressants without a mood stabilizer was dangerous.

She said she’d “feel comfortable” putting me on a low dose without a. a stabilizer, or b. a formal diagnosis. And she could put in the paperwork to get them free, since I don’t have a drug plan. And she was putting in a referral for a social worker, as they work with the mental health department.

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I was in tears at this point. There was this…odd, spinny sort of feeling in my head, like I could literally feel myself spiraling, and the floor tilted, and I just thought: I am crazy. Here was this medical professional telling me, This sickness is all in your head. You are crazy. I am not going to listen to you. I know better than you. 

So I just nodded, said whatever. She reluctantly agreed to order basic bloodwork but said there was no hurry and made it clear she didn’t think anything would come of it.

Then she smiled kindly at me and said, “We’re going to get you well again.” And left the room.

We’re going to get you well again.

ku-medium (18)

I got my x-ray and bloodwork reqs, dressed. Stumbled out (almost literally, because pain + physical weakness because I couldn’t eat) of the office and into the waiting room in a daze, where my mum was. I almost didn’t bother submitting the requisitions but I knew if I didn’t, Mum (and friends DINA and DANNI, yes, you’re both responsible here) would yell at me and make me go back again.

I got into the elevator with Mum and finally broke down sobbing, “I’m just crazy. It’s all in my head, I’m crazy.”

*

Even writing this now, several months later, knowing the entire time I was fucking RIGHT that I was sick…I have this fluttering in my stomach recalling all this. I can feel that spinny, spiraling sensation again, where everything concrete in my head that I was so certain of just seemed to be crumbling.

*

If I didn’t have my mother insisting I wasn’t crazy, I wouldn’t have gone through with the bloodwork–I would have just gone home and continued getting sicker. That bloodwork showed an elevated sed rate–inflammation in the body–which led to my own doctor insisting on follow-up bloodwork, and slowly got the ball rolling that eventually led to a diagnosis…almost four months after the initial appointment with the NP.

If I had accepted I was just crazy, I would have just gone home and never gone to the doctor again and continued getting so sick with this autoimmune thing that I likely wouldn’t have gotten help until I required an emergency room visit.

If I had gone on the antidepressants she’d insisted on, god knows how those side effects would have masked or affected the symptoms of my disease and made it that much harder to diagnose later. Also? Given how steroids knock me into mania, antidepressants likely would have as well, which is very fucking dangerous.

And speaking of–the inhaler she put me on? One of the possible side effects was EXTREME MUSCLE/JOINT PAIN. Which she should have known before giving it to me. And the ibuprofen I was taking for it? Seriously bad for the disease it turns out I have, and likely caused more damage to my body.

This will be my reaction should I *ever* encounter this NP again.
This will be my reaction should I *ever* encounter this NP again.

I was sick for much longer than I should have been, in part because I was passed off as a crazy person by the medical professional responsible for helping me. Possibly irreversible damage has been done to my body. Countless work hours were lost, which–all these months later–is STILL affecting me as I’m in a terrifyingly bad financial place.

All this occurred because of a psych referral request in my file; this woman assumed, then, that everything had to relate back to my mental health and wouldn’t listen to me.

I have no doubt in my mind that she meant well. That she seriously thought she was doing the best thing for me and invested in my well-being.

But even well-meaning healthcare professionals who are good at their jobs have their prejudices and blindspots, and can be seriously damaging for people like me.

This is mental illness stigma, folks.

This is what happens when you assume a mentally ill person can’t be trusted to know their own body.

This is what happens when healthcare practitioners don’t listen to mentally ill patients.

Mentally ill = crazy, and crazy people can’t be believed, right? Everything is in their heads? They are always out of touch with reality?

Isn’t this what we’re always told? Isn’t that why so many of us are afraid to see doctors in the first place, so we lack any experience needed to properly navigate healthcare?

*

As a result of this experience, I had to have a talk with my mother about my wishes should she ever be made a substitute decision maker for me, since this is now a very real fear of mine.

As a result of this experience, I have to think long and hard about whether I want to pursue a psych referral and formal diagnosis, because if merely having it in my file is enough for someone to completely disregard me when I have a serious health problem, it’s not worth it.

As a result of this experience, I am hesitant even bringing up my mental health concerns during doctor’s appointments (if I had, I might’ve been warned how badly prednisone would fuck with my moods).

As a result of this experience, I’ve had to re-learn to trust myself and stop living in fear that my brain is constantly lying to me even when my moods are stable.

*

tumblr_mmmex24RgZ1r0a7fqo1_500Navigating healthcare, trying to seek help, while encountering prejudice, misinformation, and stigma is daunting and dangerous. My example here is just one of many encountered by so many people dealing with mental illness. And I am fucking lucky that I had the support of friends and family; others don’t.

And they are at the mercy of decision-makers who insist “We’re going to get you well again” yet don’t even have a grasp on what’s wrong with you.

Yes, let’s talk about mental illness. Let’s talk and talk and never stop. Talk to friends and family, talk to healthcare professionals, talk to policy makers, talk to anyone who will fucking listen. Talk when it makes you uncomfortable. Talk when it’s scary. Talk because your life and well-being depends on it.

Encountering stigma naturally stifles our voices, pushes us back into the dark, but the only way to change it is to keep talking back.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: bipolar, life, personal

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MEET SKYLA DAWN

Writer of urban fantasy, thrillers/mysteries, and horror.
Fifth-generation crazy cat lady. Bitchy feminist.
So tired all the goddamn time.

My characters kill people so I don’t have to.

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Writing Waverly 8 and revising Waverly 4.

I'm not inclined to resign to maturity.