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Skyla Dawn Cameron

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

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April 13, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron

Molly

photo (18)

At the end of March, Mum ended up taking in a new dog. In a nutshell, a coworker knew of a family who no longer wanted the dog, and she couldn’t take it but she knew the conditions the dog was living in, and Mum couldn’t bear to see her kept in that situation either, so she took her in.

Molly on Day One.

Her name was Molly.

She was a Great Dane/Mastiff cross, three years old. Ridiculously underweight. Pressure sores on both sides of her body from lying on cement most of the time. The family, who’d had her since she was a puppy, said she was “too big” for the house, so kept her (reportedly) in a garage, where she went unwalked, unnoticed, and I question if she ever had suitable food or water. Her ears were infected, she clearly had a skin allergy, and when confronted with these facts, the owners denied knowing anything was wrong with her. Her collar was extended as far a it would go and was too tight; if she gained any weight, it would’ve embedded in her skin.

Molly seemed to be fitting in with her new family–three new canine siblings, good quality food, constant access to water, and regular play time in the backyard. She was sweet, friendly, and gentle. She didn’t quite know how to play with toys, though she was learning.

But her health still wasn’t great. Despite vet-prescribed medication cleaning up her ears, and new food to improve her coat and skin health, something was still wrong. She became depressed, sensitive to touch, and stopped eating, and was rushed back to the vet yesterday where she was put on an IV, a heating blanket, and monitored while they figured out what her bloodwork said.

Molly died in the night.

Molly and her sister Sami.

The vet still isn’t certain, exactly, what killed her in technical terms; her entire system was on the fritz according to her bloodwork. But what is certain is that this didn’t happen to her in thirteen days. This is weeks if not months of neglect. This is a dog who was exhibiting symptoms–loss of appetite, depression, lethargy–for at least several weeks prior to her death. Symptoms that any reasonable owner, who paid the slightest bit of attention, would have noticed, investigated, and had treated. I will grant that, without knowing precisely what was wrong with her, maybe, MAYBE, her early death was always in the cards. But her suffering was entirely preventable.

“At least she’s in a better place” doesn’t work for me. BECAUSE THIS SHOULD NOT HAVE HAPPENED. And if my mum hadn’t gotten her, Molly would’ve continued to suffer without vet care, love, or attention until she eventually died alone.

This dog was killed by neglect on the part of irresponsible humans.

  • It is not difficult to open google and search for different dog breeds before deciding on a puppy. If you live in a small house, get a small dog. Don’t be afraid to ask shelter workers about the animal you’re considering to find something compatible. Everything is cute and furry but hamsters, for example, are nocturnal and not great pets for kids; rabbits are often not big on cuddling and not great for small children either. Research. GREAT DANES WILL BECOME FUCKING HUGE.
  • Animals are a lifelong commitment. In many cases, this means devoting fifteen to twenty years. Not an “until they’re inconvenient”(“we had a baby”, “we had to move”, “it’s sick”, “we got divorced”, etc) commitment–LIFELONG.
  • Do not get pets for your children. Molly was, reportedly, the kids’ puppy, and they didn’t walk her or take care of her. When you get a pet for your kid, remember 99% of the time the responsibility to care for it–whether it’s a hamster or a dog–will fall on you. If you are not prepared for that, get them a stuffed toy instead.
  • To go with all of the above, pets are not presents. Easter is around the corner and stupid people will be buying bunnies and chicks for their kids. DO NOT DO THIS. Rabbits? They are not inexpensive pets. Did you know females need to be spayed? How about the fact that they can live 10-12 years? (Mine is 11 next month.) They require the same upkeep cats do.
  • Kids learn from adult examples. If you don’t walk or care for your pet, they won’t either.
  • Know your pets. I realize I am in a unique position of being home all day with mine, but even the times when I wasn’t, I knew my animals. They can’t tell you how they feel. You have to rely on cues like behavior changes, weight loss, bathroom habits. Dogs hide some pain but cats are fucking fantastic at faking it.
  • Find a good local veterinarian. This is exactly like getting a doctor as a human: you need someone compatible with you, good with your animals, and if money’s an issue, find one who is upfront about fees and considerate of your budget (mine is).
  • And then take your fucking animals to the vet. I realize vet visits aren’t cheap. But they will always be more expensive IF YOU PUT THEM OFF. Vets *want* to help animals and they understand budgetary concerns, believe me. And you will at least be able to tell yourself you did all you could if the animal passes.
  • Put your pets on good food. Have a dog? Get them the fuck off of Beneful and all that shit. Start here. Again, good food is more expensive, but Molly’s ear infection and skin problems were allergies (I suspected grain). I’ve talked before about the importance of proper nutrition and how so many of these cheap, shit foods cause serious health problems. Understand what nutritional needs different animals require and how best to meet those needs.

I was going to say “Sorry for this turning into a lecture/rant” but, you know, I’M NOT SORRY. Because most of my cats came in off of the streets or from shelters, abandoned. I work with an animal organization. I talk with the local pet food store about the people who come in wanting bunnies for their small children. I see and hear about, damn near daily, the animals discarded because they’re inconvenient, or expensive, or no longer cute/novel. The animals who needlessly die because of neglectful humans.

The guardianship of an animal is a sacred responsibility. The entire care for another life rests on your shoulders. They have no voice, no options, and they live and die by the choices we make for them. Sometimes sickness and early death is unavoidable, it’s true. But not prolonged suffering.

Molly, a three-year-old dog who was entirely healthy when spayed as a puppy, should not have died.

Whoever you are reading this, wherever you are, be responsible for your pets. Teach that responsibility to your children. Speak up when you see an animal neglected or abused. Spay/neuter. Volunteer. Care. Realize that it is an honor and a privilege to be a guardian for another life.

And on the very slim chance Molly’s previous family comes across my blog: I will mince no words and say this is your fault. And it is in your best interest to turn around and walk the other way if our paths ever cross.

 

Rest in Peace, Molly.

April 2011 – April 2014

Day One, when she first got settled in her new home.

 

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

April 10, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron

Fuck You, Sheep

blanketdogBasically the month keeps getting MORE FUN.

And by “fun” I mean not fun.

EVERY DAY there’s something (TV? Broken! Half the rent money? To the vet! Distressed cat? Shat on me in the car! Big editing thing? Blue Screen of Death LOST OVER 150 PAGES OF EDITS!) but no one’s dead yet, so there’s that.

Blind Cat. The vet thinks I witnessed a mild seizure. Any number of things could’ve caused it but given that she’s seventeen, blind, and has chronic upper respiratory infection, anything done to either diagnose or treat that would be invasive, we are not going to do, but instead focus on her comfort/quality of life and let things run their course. I will sell a kidney for my pets but not at the expense of a little old lady’s comfort. Tests are being done to get a picture of her overall health–if it’s something as simple as hyperthyroidism, that can be treated.

Sophie and (in theory, finances permitting) Miss Dinah get six month checkups/blood work done next month. The former also needs the frequency of one of her meds increased, and it’s just as easy to move all the animals onto a new feeding schedule to accommodate (else I’m prone to forget meds if not given with food since I never know what time/day it is), so that means I’m looking at a really fun few weeks of getting everyone used to that wherein I am possibly eaten by a pack of feral cats + dog.

I endeavor to not be whiny or overly negative, despite the fact that’s where my fubar brain chemistry takes me about 83% of the time, but seriously, in the past ten days there was all of the above plus the previously mentioned repetitive stress injury flareup, food poisoning, emergencies with Mum’s new dog, computer crashes, and my teeth have been bugging me. THE FUCK. I might need to crawl in bed and hide for three days straight in case I accidentally breathe on something else and break it.

It does bear mentioning that, should you feel inclined, you can…

  • get a pre-made cover from my design site if you’re self-publishing and want something inexpensive (and often sexy)
  • shop for ebooks direct if you’ve been thinking about checking out one or more of my titles
  • toss a fiver in the tip jar if you’ve been enjoying Soulless (and haven’t already)
  • buy stuff by some of my clients so they can afford to hire me again (some I act as an assistant for)

…if any of those appeal to you. And if not, hey, that’s cool too. Would someone just come over with pizza, beer, and a TV for a while?

Now I have to go do–

Wait, nope, I’m not doing anything tonight. Because fuck you, sheep*, that’s why.

Llama-cant-deal-with-it

G’night.

 

——

* “sheep” being the month of April, of course. And fuck my fucking horoscope.

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

April 7, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron

The Week Begins

eoyreTuesday we launched the fundraiser for Julie.

Tuesday night my body said “NO NO WE ARE HAVING NO MORE OF THIS TIME TO STOP BREATHING“.

Wednesday was an emergency vet visit with Mum’s new dog.

By Thursday night, I had food poisoning.

The weekend was recovering and some house cleaning, which is just as well because mostly I just feel like poisoning everybody. And then Sunday night my elderly blind cat…well, I don’t know. Had some sort of little episode. I lean toward *maybe* some kind of seizure, though I’d like to rule out a stroke, so it’s time to see if our vet can offer anything a bit more concrete. Most of my pets are elderly. Which suits me just fine–my GOD I do not like kittens/puppies–but the bunny’s eleven, dog’s fourteen, and three of the cats are fourteen to seventeen, which means they’re all slowing down at about the same rate. I grew up with animals, have never *not* had a dog, a couple of cats, and a smaller caged mammal, but it makes absolutely no difference–I can never wrap my head, or my heart, around the fact that their lives are so much shorter and more fragile than ours.

There is a very full work week ahead of me with being knocked on my ass last week–edit letter to finish, content edit to finish, two cover drafts to get sent off, and knitting (oh god, all the knitting). And it’ll involve being offline for long periods of time as I’m ODing on the internet as it is (it’s odd, the way constant interaction seems to make me jittery and exhausted). I can’t take new work for a few weeks yet but I’m running a pre-made cover sale as those are quick to customize and a few of the critters have six month checkups soon on top of Blind Cat’s visit, so a bit of a $ cushion would be helpful.

And there in the background, the current WIP is at the point where it’s eating my brain.

I’m at around 80%, with less than 20K words to go. I might play with a chapter or two throughout the week, but then I’m blocking off Saturday through Monday to finish it, because once I get going it’s going to be a mad dash, stabbing and stabbing the damn book until it’s dead. I wouldn’t trade this feeling for the world–not after regaining it after such a long absence–but I can feel myself turning into that snarling, absent-minded, twitchy creature who doesn’t bathe or clean or move except to re-position the keyboard before diving back in again. I’m already having trouble sleeping again and carrying on conversations with humans (not the animals–they don’t mind), and it’s only going to get worse before I emerge bleary-eyed, incoherent, and exhausted next week, a total mess but one completed WIP richer.

I’m definitely looking forward to it.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: life, personal

April 3, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron

The Body Knows Best

photo credit: HereIsTom via photopin cc
photo credit: HereIsTom via photopin cc

Tuesday night, after the launch of the fundraiser*–and on the heels of even more hours a day on the computer than I usually spend–I was working on one of the campaigns when the upper back/shoulder pain I’d been feeling throughout the day intensified. Not dull aches and pains but sharp shooting ones that made it impossible to sit/lie done/stand or hold any position for more than a few minutes. It crept around my right upper ribs, making it hard to breathe.

There might’ve been flailing. Okay, there WAS flailing.

Luckily I have a friend who Knows Medical Stuff and after *mumbleanhourandahalfofhorriblepainmumble* some time she was like, oh, yeah, you have Mouse Arm and something’s spasming. So after alternating hot and cold compresses, taking ibuprofen, and contorting my arms into all sorts of positions so I could massage the affected area, and I was at least able to sleep. But I have to take a few days off of the computer (and I can’t really knit, either, my GOD I am so fucking bored). Pushing it yesterday had the pain flaring up again last night; yes, I really have to listen when the body says, “Hold on a minute, I need to rest”.

So that’s where I am. No Soulless chapter this week because PAIN; stuff I don’t get paid for always drops to the bottom of the priority list when shit like this happens. There is, of course, still work to be done, and I can’t afford to get another week behind else my clients will probably hunt me down and kill me (they’re lovely people, but really, they can’t be expected to wait because I broke myself), so I’m thinking I’ll extend my new internet-free Friday (wherein I get housework and day job work done in spades) by having an internet-free long weekend. This coincides with a massive, 958 pg book on post-independence history in Kenya that just arrived, so alternating a couple hours of work with resting and reading should clear things up.

The body knows. Chronic illnesses aside, when a sudden injure flares up it is almost always a sign to slow down. Which I have tremendous trouble with, but I know that if I ignore those warnings, I’ll set myself up for something even worse down the road.  And so I retreat.

At least until I can get cyborg parts to replacing the existing ones causing me trouble.

———-

* Fundraiser runs all month. There are lots of awesome packages of signed books.  $15 will get you a few things including Whiskey Sour, the Zara and Juliette short story e-collection.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: life, personal

March 10, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron 2 Comments

Why I Write the Terrible Things I Write

photo credit: Leanne Surfleet via photopin cc
photo credit: Leanne Surfleet via photopin cc

This post came from this essay in the sense there were a few lines I’ve heard repeatedly in a lot of conversations over the years, which got me thinking on these topics, but it’s not a response to said essay. So while I may be using it as a jumping off point as it’s the most recent time I’ve read these sorts of comments, it’s not about that other post and if you have problems with that essay, it’s best to take it to the original site in question.

[Rape]’s a part of our entertainment. Of course Top of the Lake or The Killing didn’t spare me from the gory details of their fictional gang-rapes. Why would they? We’re used to this. We aren’t horrified anymore because it happens so fucking often. Women are victimized, women are victimized, women are victimized. Bodies chopped up. Invaded. Buried. The end. Tune in next week. There is an entire Law and Order series dedicated to sexual crimes. We tune in to watch it with a tacit acceptance. A sigh. Yes, this happens. What a shame. We shrug and watch and feel better that fictional justice is meted out, but don’t worry about the fact that no one helped her in the moment.

This is, I think, a valid criticism worth a lot of discussion. Some authors have come out over the past few years to say no, in their fiction, their heroines will not experience rape. Yes it’s part of life for many, yes it happens in the “real” world, but it doesn’t have to happen in their fictional worlds. They are going to tell stories full of conflict and not have their heroines raped because it’s such a shortcut, an easy way to give a woman a painful backstory or explain a prickly personality.

Again, valid. I respect the hell out of that. That choice is no more wrong than my choice not to maim kittens in my books or another writer’s choice not to harm fictional children.

But I am coming out to say the opposite.

You write a lot of books, you start to notice themes you come back to again and again. I keep coming back to betrayal, self-reliance vs accepting help, self-harm and self-loathing, abandonment, the capacity to commit violence, insanity. I’ll probably continue writing those subjects. And for the foreseeable future, I will continue to write about sexual assault. Sometimes as part of backstory, sometimes in the novels themselves. Not every hero or heroine, not every female character, not in every book. But it will be ever-present in my fiction and it will never be off the table.

I am just as tired as others of seeing sexual violence, in particular (but not exclusively) against women, be treated as exploitative, titillating, and lazy storytelling. I’ve been really hurt by these depictions by authors who didn’t bother to understand the psychology of different survivors, or who treated sexual assault as a plot device with no consideration of realistic consequences. But I think the two responses–one of not having a heroine assaulted and one of approaching assault with care and nuance–are both valid and dovetail one another’s efforts to combat rape culture.

I write these stories, in short, because I need to. And I know others need to read them.

I wrote this post specifically because someone very close to me was molested as a child by a family member and to this day no one will talk about it with her. Her family won’t acknowledge it. She was repeatedly silenced as a young woman when she tried to come forward in an effort to protect another child, and when leaving an abusive marriage as an adult in the 70s, she was once again silenced. And the more I listened to her, the more I realized how often she’d been shut down and no one had said those very simple words–I believe you–because it made them uncomfortable to acknowledge it, the more determined I became to tell these stories and explore all facets of being a survivor.

The survivors who fight back.

The survivors who don’t.

The survivors who learn to be okay again.

The survivors who continue to struggle years later.

The survivors in denial.

The survivors who become self-destructive.

The survivors who are believed.

The survivors who are blamed.

The criticisms of, say, a show like Law & Order: SUV are understandable. My heart goes out to those who cannot stomach it and find it triggering. But there is no denying the number of survivors who find it cathartic–those who watched an experience start similar to their own but play out in a way where the victim was believed, where authorities fought for him or her. That catharsis is just as important and valid for them as the choice not to watch those stories.

Choosing to view or write these stories, to utilize them in order to help process and heal, and to safely explore in a self-controlled setting a subject that is about having control taken away, is valid and important.

My characters exist in worlds where sexual violence is a real, sometimes experienced threat, just like I and others in my life do. But unlike ours, these fictional worlds allow me to go beyond and show more. Men who force women aren’t romanticized. Consent matters. Survivors are believed and their experiences are validated. Wounds scar but heal. Assaulting and being assaulted has consequences. Characters find strength even when they’re bruised, broken, and betrayed. In stories, despite it being a fictional account, I can say in the text that I believe you. I believe this thing happened to you, and I’m sorry, and the world isn’t always fair to people who have been through that but you have and will continue to survive.

These are stories I still need to tell and to explore. What happened to Zara in Exhumed and how she continued to deal with it in Damaged was a story of hers I needed to tell and something I needed to explore. The other books of mine on my harddrive you’ve not read but that deal with these subjects are areas I needed to explore.

I just handed a book to my beta reader with a scene where a woman who has survived previous intimate partner violence fought back during an attempted date rape. It was difficult and ugly and a scene that would likely trigger people. I had to get drunk to write it. It still makes me queasy. But the story needed it, the character needed it, and I needed it. I needed that moment when she decides not to be frozen, or passive, or “nice” for once in her life; I needed the moment she faces the terror of saying “This is not okay” when it’s been ingrained in her to just lie back and accept; I needed the moment when she fights back; I needed the moment when she realizes that has just as many consequences as not fighting back. And as she says in the current WIP:

“They get away with it. They have everything. And I have to live with it. The times I didn’t fight back and the time I did. Every goddamn day, I live with it.”

My books will (likely) always explore what it means to live with it.

Above entertainment and to make a living, I write to give myself strength. I write to change the things that happen to me and others. I write to explore the people I know I’m not and the people I’m afraid I am. I write to process and to understand; I write for catharsis; I write to express trauma and transmute reality. I write to give the darkness in me a place to go. I write to have and to give hope.  And I write what I write because it’s necessary for me to survive.

I have nothing but respect for those who don’t want to live with it in fiction when they already do in their real lives, and who provide stories without rape. Many readers need that.

But no matter how weary the subject can make me, no matter how tired I am of this reality, I can’t. And it’s okay if my books aren’t for you because of that. I write for those who, for whatever reason, need these stories to be told.

I write stories about terrible things because I need to tell them.

———–

Note: This was a difficult thing for me to post. Behave in the comments.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: exhumed, feminism, life, personal, writers and readers, writing, zara lain

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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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