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Skyla Dawn Cameron

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

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February 6, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron

The Shop Launch and Writing Joy

ICD_buttonSo I moved my design site over here. It’s using Genesis and a portfolio child theme, with an integrated shop, and I adore it.

Whether or not the shop actually works remains to be seen. But for the month of February, you can save 10% on all down payments (currently booking March clients) and pre-made cover by entering the code lauch10 at checkout, and if you do, let me know how it goes for you. I might experiment with other coupons and try something for the pre-made romance covers around February 14 (if I remember). Speaking of, there are a couple of new pre-mades here.

If the kinks seem to be worked out, I’ll probably integrate a shop at my main site as well and start selling eBooks directly here. Not that I get a lot of traffic but another sales option is always a good thing.

Work is going well–nearly all caught up after my week spent in bed (let’s not do that again, okay, brain?), and there’s enough to keep me quite busy this month. I’ve been repeating the mantra, “One thing at a time” all week and step by step, the to-do list is getting shorter. Speaking of, if you’ve sent me an email about something and I’ve not replied in a few weeks, poke me because it might’ve been lost in the pile here.

Yesterday was…not a good day.

It started when I punched myself in the face waking up. Yes, this is an Actual Thing That Can Happen, at least when you’re me and you’re fumbling for your alarm as it blares Kenyan EDM at you.  Then the dog was sick (still is, but I think she’s getting over it), and the cats were fighting constantly which resulted in me having to break up a fight every half hour.

Then I’ve a friend going through serious health stuff at the moment, and though I’ve found myself surprisingly calm and rational about it, apparently my brain is just starting this cool new thing called DELAYED REACTION TO STRESSORS. So yesterday, brain was all, Oh, you think all is well? Let me tell you something:

ku-medium (18)

And then I turned into a ball of worry.

Obsessive, downward-spiraling thoughts are kind of a thing with me, so I nipped that in the bud by saying fuck it to everything and eating Doritos and cleaning and taking the dog out every hour, because my focus on anything else was just totally fucked.

Then this rather remarkable thing happened.

I wrote words. Just…there was the book, third in a series I have in progress, and it was talking, and I wasn’t scared it wasn’t going to come out right or hit a wall or anything.

Joy. It was JOY. I haven’t felt this comfortable and joyful and pressure-free since I wrote Exhumed late 2011. I shouldn’t say anything, in case it up and disappears on me again. My natural inclination is to Analyze Everything, and I’m trying not to do that here.

But despite four hours of sleep last night, I feel refreshed today. My mind feels settled. I feel like myself again. The book was on my mind when I woke up and it’s been there all day. And I whipped through a handful of email today and a flyer design because I can’t wait to go back and play in the book after dinner.

I am certain of very, very few things in the universe, except that this feeling of sinking into a world and seeing the people and discovering their lives feels like I’m home.

(Also, there will be KISSING in this book, and by god, I am excited even to write that part.)

(This is their kissing song. Aren’t you jealous of the eventual KISSING I get to write?)

And this is their other song (it’s a Castle/Beckett video, shut up):

(“With broken words I’ve tried to say/Honey don’t you be afraid//If we got nothing we got us“…oh, West. *sigh*)

Later, I get to write PEOPLE DYING and A BATTLE WITH A YETI. OMG I am ecstatic.

I hope it keeps up. Even if it doesn’t, I know it will eventually. That part of me isn’t broken after all.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: Books, life, livi talbot, personal, work, writing

February 1, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron 2 Comments

I Believe You

photo credit: youngdoo via photopin cc
photo credit: youngdoo via photopin cc

With Dylan Farrow’s story surfacing in this heartbreaking open letter in the New York Times, discussions have been popping up everywhere. Likely due to the sort of people I follow, anyone mentioning the story has been one hundred percent on her side. There are, of course, detractors and accusations of lies/confusion/coaching on the side of Mia Farrow, etc.

I do not have an opinion on any of those things (well, I do, but that’s not the point of this). That is not what I’m going to talk about here.

There are voices lost–voices silenced–as all of this is going down. Women and men, girls and boys, who have not and/or are not speaking up about assault because all of the accusations being lobbed toward Dylan Farrow are exactly what they fear. So I would like to take a moment to speak out to those survivors.

I believe you.

I don’t know you. Not your name, not your story. Not whether the abuse happened in the distant past or a year ago or yesterday or earlier today. I don’t know who abused you, who wielded their power like a weapon and sliced through your tongue to silence you. I don’t know all of the things going through your head right now, or whether you eventually spoke out, or kept quiet; whether you’ve built a new life or are still in a dark place.

But I believe you.

I don’t need to know any of those details. I don’t need to hear the “other side”. I don’t need to ask you questions about what happened or why you didn’t do this or that, nor do I require you to repeat the story a hundred times while I analyze it for errors.

I believe you.

Period. Full stop. The end. Nothing else.

I believe you.

You, there, at a computer screen, who somehow stumbled onto my little blog, who may not know me any more than I know you, or you who might follow me regularly from some place. You, who I might know personally but don’t realize you’ve been through this horrible thing because you’ve never spoken up. You, who I know for a fact has been assaulted.

I believe you.

You. You. The survivor. Even if a thousand voices right now are chanting about lying women and confused children and men can’t be raped and whatever other bullshit: if it helps, if it gives you any measure of comfort or strength or relief at all, cling to this one fact amid all the chaos around you.

I. Believe. You.

I will always believe you. I will never, ever doubt you when you say this horrible thing happened to you. We don’t need to meet, or speak; I don’t even need to know your name.

Whoever you are, wherever you are: I believe you.

I believe you.

 

If you are or have been a victim of sexual violence, there are resources available to help you. Contact your local crisis center or check out RAINN.org.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: personal

January 21, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron

What Going Crazy Feels Like

This took multiple tries to post and I kept getting site hiccups. A bad sign? Maybe.

Is this going to be TMI? Too alienating? Too fucking long? Probably. But you know my pattern by now: if something scares me, in life or in fiction, I’m that much more determined to do it.

So I’m going to tell you today what “going crazy” feels like. There may be metaphors but no hyperbole, as honest as I can be.

Warning: It’ll be long and personal, maybe triggering? I welcome conversation but will be protective over the comments.

You know, of course, what bipolar disorder is, yes? In a nutshell, there are the two extremes–depression and mania–and bipolar disorder bounces between them.

bipolar

Mania can involve any of the following: euphoria, racing thoughts, speaking rapidly, severe attention problems, engaging in risky behavior from spending large amounts of money to having casual sex with multiple partners, a sense of invincibility, impulsiveness, etc–you get the picture. Depression is feelings of hopelessness, lack of self-worth, profound sadness, apathy, lack of motivation, etc (you’re probably familiar with this). Not every episode presents with all symptoms. Bipolar disorder can vary from person to person; in fact I wouldn’t be surprised if this illness presents completely differently in every individual. It’s a tricky illness to treat, because anything given for depression can knock a person into mania, which is just as dangerous, so often something else has to be given to put a ceiling on any “good” feelings.

While a lot of people, even if they don’t suffer from the disorder, can understand those two things, there is another aspect to this: the mixed episode.

A mixed episode is basically the inbred bastard offspring from an unholy union between depression and mania. It is either mania with characteristics of depression, or depression with characteristics of mania. So “mixed”. And as much as bipolar varies from person to person, the elements of a mixed episode can get even more messy, and it’s something even medical professionals don’t entirely understand. (As such, what I describe here may be you, or it may not be you–YMMV, this speaks to my own experience.)

Last Saturday, it began as mania.

 

The Set-Up

Now, I hadn’t slept well for a few days. This is my number one problem, because it weakens me mentally. There is a cycle anyone with mental illness can tell you about: when you’re following your schedule and sleeping consistently, you do well, but the better you feel, the less you think you have to continue engaging in these behaviors that keep you well. This is how people fall off the wagon. I manage my illness with cognitive therapy (more on that in a moment) which means remaining hyper-vigilant monitoring and assessing any and all thoughts and feelings as they come, so I can usually nip this in the bud.

But not this time.

So I wasn’t sleeping much, but I was feeling good, probably with hypomania (that’s the other thing–moods fall along a scale, so it’s not always I-want-to-kill-myself or I’m-queen-of-the-world, but a mood in between with varying severity).  And as I wanted to get some work done, I drank a few cups of coffee Saturday morning. Which is the next issue here–caffeine can often mask early symptoms of mania for me. So I was primed for something bad to happen.

 

The Trigger

Now, was there actually a trigger? Well, yes and no.

This is the other thing I think only people with the disorder will understand: it’s not the trigger that matters, it’s the state of mind you’re already in. It can be anything. Something as minor as the cat knocking a plant over, or a dish breaking. What you brush off one day might make you homicidal another day. “Skyla is a terrible writer and I hated her book but I want to read the next one and, oh yeah, I’m going to look for a pirated version publicly because I’m an entitled bint, despite how easily it can be bought.” See, for a writer, that happens on days ending with a “y”. You grit your teeth, internally flip the bird, and move on.

But not if your brain is already a perfect storm of fubar chemistry. That minor annoyance becomes the focal point of everything.

With few exceptions, I don’t believe most people suddenly “snap”; I think there have to be a lot of things in place for a crazy episode to go down. Part of that is for the brain to become prime ground for crazy to breed, and the other part is one or more disturbance to latch onto, and then it’s All Aboard The Bipolar Express: Next Stop Insanityville.

 

Snowball

Dysphoric mania is the technical term for this episode. It has the elements of a manic episode–high energy, impulsiveness, racing thoughts–but the bad feelings of depression.

jenga_tower

To visualize how the next several hours went for me, picture a Jenga tower that’s already missing a few blocks and start pulling more out, removing pieces and stacking them on top at an exponential rate. Every thought is plucking a block out and making the whole tower less steady until the whole thing is teetering.

“Irritability” seems too mild a word to describe the hair-trigger rage hovering under your skin when this is going on. This isn’t a matter of being bitchy or snippy; this is being a breath away from all thought emptying from your head and then physically lashing out and causing someone harm. I will throw things, kick, break stuff, all in a fit of rage I don’t remember afterward.

Twined in there are the racing thoughts of mania. Everything in your brain is moving too quickly to hold on to, jumping from place to place; it’s disorienting and scary. (Did you read Sunrise from 9 Crimes or Lineage? Fragment that story even more and you’ll get it.) I found drafts for six different blog posts here that I’d started that evening–titles, and a few quick notes, but no actual posts because my thoughts on these topics weren’t coherent enough to form into sentences.

Add to that no focus whatsoever. I can’t just put on a silly movie or play a video game (with the latter, there is too great a risk of me breaking something expensive if I’m gaming; the minor annoyances of missing a jump or getting shot turn into blackout rage). I can’t write. I can’t read.

Simultaneously I was having panic attacks. Hyperventilating, crying, pacing, shaking, all while having Hulk-rage and unable to slow down. The more I realized something was wrong with me, the more panicked I got; the more panicked I got, the worse all the other symptoms became.

go-crazy-o

Both self-harm and violence towards others is an extreme risk in a mixed episode, but everyone is fine. I used a spray bottle of water as a buffer to keep the animals away from me because I literally couldn’t predict my own behavior. I also become extremely self-destructive (oh, let me tell you about the time years ago when I deleted all my writing files from my computer and destroyed the backup disc) when this happens. I hacked seven inches off of my hair because I felt like I had to destroy something. I wore an elastic band around my wrist and snapped it against my skin for about an hour straight, until the elastic broke. This isn’t “I don’t want to go on living” self-harm–it’s an entirely different thought process.

Despite complete and utter exhaustion, I couldn’t stop moving. I couldn’t sit for more than ninety seconds. I paced from room to room. My memory is particularly blurry–I retained only fragments, because I think everything was going so fast, nothing was imprinting on my memory. I remember talking, but I don’t know to whom or what precisely I was saying. And I was apartment-bound because it would be dangerous to head outside in my state of mind.

I retained just the barest thread of awareness from all my cognitive therapy work, which kept repeating, “You are not okay. Don’t do anything rash. Get off of the computer. You’re not okay.” It wasn’t enough to fix me, but that constant reminder pinging to the forefront of my mind prevents a lot of bad, impulsive decisions on my part.

 

The Crash

I came very close to heading the ER, but I wasn’t sure if that was even a thing I could do (I’m told now that yes, it is, and they will handle a mental health crisis). I desperately wanted to call my mum to come over and watch me, but it was 2am and I knew she wasn’t equipped for it. I didn’t immediately know of any mental health crisis things you can contact in the middle of the night on a weekend.

Realistically, heading out at that hour and trying to get help was feasible, but I figured help would consist of trying to find the right drug to treat the mood (likely an antipsychotic) and heavy sedation. Well, sedation I can do at home. I took a high dose of melatonin to take the edge off, and that slowed me down enough to get in about two hours of fitful sleep. The following day, I picked up at OTC sleep-aid and have remained in a constant state of self-sedation for three days straight. After mania I tend to crash pretty hard and I’m also very susceptible to tipping into depression, so being drugged and groggy seemed the logical choice until I was sure the worst was past.

 

Crazy

And now we come to why I’m even talking about this.

lawrenceplaybook-thumb-500x201-121949It’s fine, intellectually, to say “illness is illness” but in practice it’s a lot harder. You can call in sick to work because you have the flu, but a mental health crisis, even as a rarity, can mark you as something “different.” Something “other”. Unpredictable, possibly violent–it changes you in the minds of others. I can say, “I had to take three days off of work because I was sick in bed” but I can’t say, “I had to take three days off of work because my brain chemistry is fubar and I lost my fucking mind.” One will get you sympathy and well wishes; the other will guarantee you won’t be hired again.

Feeling this way is absolutely terrifying. Mixed states are extremely rare for me–like years in between them–and it is the closest I have every felt to losing my mind. Depression and mania, anxiety–I’m an old hat at all these things, retaining awareness and handling them fairly well. Dysphoric mania? The most frightening moment is not when you realize you’re losing your grip on reality, but when you know if it snowballs any further you will lose the last threads of self-awareness. When that’s gone, anything can happen, and you can become someone you don’t recognize

Crazy is very much an “other” sort of thing. It’s a label we use to designate people and things that we perceive as being distant from us. Unknowable. Although little by little people are picking at the stigma surrounding mental illness and opening up about how depression and anxiety affect lives, “crazy” illnesses–like a mixed episode, or schizophrenia or paranoia–are still very much separate. It scares people. It’s unpredictable and frightening, both to those around the person going through it and the sufferer his or herself. We throw the “crazy” label on people who say and do things that seem so foreign we can’t possibly understand.

And that’s what makes it worse. That’s why I can’t pick up the phone and call someone, or reach out and ask for help. Because I know no matter how much people care, this is a scary thing. This is associated with violence and horror stories. Looking at it from the inside, I know how scary it is; externally, I’m aware enough to know it looks like most depictions of crazy, and the thought of being seen that way terrifies me almost as much as the mood itself. This isn’t the Skyla people know–this isn’t the Skyla I know–and I know seeing me like this is not something people can handle (with one exception–you know who you are). I don’t want people to have to walk on eggshells around me, or treat me like I’m about to break, or give me That Look. I know I am a very high functioning bipolar person, I keep myself on a tight leash, and as such I’m able to control what people do and don’t see from me. This kind of episode would change that.

(This moment? From Homeland? That’s it, when you know you’re not okay, and someone’s giving you That Look.)

Crazy is not a manic-pixie-dream-girl quirk. It’s not something you can just “calm down” from. It’s not a “nudge-nudge, wink-wink, yeah, I know how it feels” sort of issue. It’s bigger, and darker, and scarier than most people realize.

But it happens a lot. It happens to people you know. It doesn’t make them bad, or evil, or criminal. It’s morally neutral; like you can’t control your immune system going out of whack, or cells multiplying into tumors, or a broken bone, you can’t control when the chemicals in your brain decide to clash.

 

In Conclusion

I don’t have anything uplifting or hopeful or helpful to add to this.

I’mtumblr_inline_mvven1z1lF1rg0g8s okay right now. I’m exhausted but my thinking is fairly clear and mood is stable. I’m going to make dinner and lie in bed with the cats some more.

I’m still recovering, and I had to just say fuck it to work and treat this episode like I would a physical illness–I’m going to be a bit behind in things, and if that means bill payments will be late or bounce or everyone fires me, so be it. I’m still on the lengthy waiting list for a psychiatrist referral, which I have been since the spring when I asked for one (so the first person who tells me “you need to get help”: YEAH I’M ALREADY ON IT AND MAYBE DON’T CONCERN-TROLL/ANTAGONIZE THE LOONY CHICK, M’KAY??).

But I get tired of seeing “crazy” as shorthand in books and TV shows for “I’m too lazy to come up with motivation for the villain”. I’m tired of “mental illness” being thrown around with whispered gasps every time some horrific crime occurs, like it is the only link in the chain that leads to violence. I’m tired of feeling like if people saw how “bad” my definition of “it’s bad” is, they’d start avoiding me. I’m tired of sweeping this under the proverbial rug. And while I don’t want you to see me going through this, I want you to know sometimes it happens to me and other people, and it doesn’t make us broken. We weather the storm and make it through to the other side. We don’t need pity or worry, just understanding.

And I know that if I’m tired of these things, if I feel how scary and isolating it is to start to lose it, other people do too. That someone out there is trying so hard to maintain a balanced state of mind, afraid of what people will think of them when they see how ugly it can get. That someone doesn’t want to ask for help because it means letting people see them in their most vulnerable state.

I can’t tell you what to do or make it better, but I can tell you that you’re not alone. And whoever you are, wherever you are, I’m in your corner. 

——————

(Comments are on but moderated and I’m not checking email and stuff right now, so it might be a few days before they show up–I love hearing from people, don’t take silence personally.)

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

January 1, 2014 By Skyla Dawn Cameron

New Year’s Resolution

small__1850212999
photo credit: Lauren Manning via photopin cc

This year’s resolution is simple and yet hard for me. It is only one thing.

Leap.

It is sort of an ongoing thing in my life I find humorous: if I want something but don’t do it–and the reasons can vary but usually center around me being a control freak who doesn’t like change–I’ll get knocked into it anyway.

If I don’t leap, the Universe will push me.

So yeah. I get it. I can take the hint. I will start leaping.

To that end, I decided a few days ago to entirely scrap my writing schedule for January – March of this year. I had deadlines jotted down including for-pay projects and other writing I wanted to do, but you what? I busted my ass in the fall and I have writing money coming during those months that’ll cover most of my bills because of it. I’m taking January to fast-draft a book I really want to write. I’ve earned it.

I might regret that when I get nothing for April royalties, but this is me taking an opportunity I worked for and leaping.

What are you resolving to do this year?

 

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: life, personal

December 23, 2013 By Skyla Dawn Cameron Leave a Comment

On Self-Harm and Narcissism

I did it the other day.

I accidentally read the comment section on a news article.

ku-mediumlll

For those of us who strive to provide–and interact in–a safe space all the time, it can be easy to forget just how bad it is out there sometimes. Oh, I got a reminder, though.

But it pissed me off, not only reading it but recalling how many other times I’ve heard others say it, and thinking about how many other people probably believe it without saying it.

It’s the notion that depressed people who commit suicide are narcissists, focused on their own problems to the point that they forget about those around them. It’s repeating, again, the bullshit myth of suicide being “selfish.”

So come with me, my friends. Take a little walk into the brain of me and other people who have seriously contemplated suicide at one time.

Narcissism means one is preoccupied with oneself and one’s greatness. Suicidal people do not believe they are great; to the contrary, they feel either entirely inconsequential or that they exist to the detriment of others.

Do you suppose we aren’t thinking about our loved ones when we’re having these thoughts? That we’re not considering those we’d be leaving behind–that we aren’t aware of our responsibilities? Let me tell you a secret: we are. We are very aware of these things.

And the truth is that we honestly believe those we love will be better off without us.

When you are not depressed, it is not a rational thought, I know. I have known people who attempted–and in some cases completed–suicide. Mothers who left behind small children. Husbands who left behind families. Teenagers who left behind parents. Friends who left behind a circle of people who loved them. When someone you love succumbs to the lies of depression, it is a natural reaction to wonder, “How could s/he do this? How could s/he leave me?”

On the other side of it, however, things look a little differently because depression lies. If you do not have a mood disorder/mental illness, that is the best description I can give you: your own brain starts distorting your thoughts and lying to you, and because the voice speaking in your head is your own, you believe it. 

I’m a burden on other people.

They will be better off without me.

I’m a terrible, weak person, and I don’t deserve to be here.

This feeling/numbness will never go away.

These are the thoughts that go through your head. This is one of the reasons why suicidal people often don’t reach out and tell someone what they’re going through. Every time I have been in a horrible, dark place and unable to get out of it, I honestly, truly, 100% believed that my mere broken, useless existence was a burden and everyone in my life would be so much happier without me. Everyone. My mum, my friends, my family. I think not being here anymore would be the best thing for everyone.

When I’m well, am I aware that’s not true? Of course I am. I know people love me and they are happy to have me in their lives. But when I’m in an episode, everything changes.

Depression is the little Iago whispering in your ear, exploiting your weaknesses, distorting your thoughts, and outright lying to you.

To fight against a depressive episode and thoughts of self-harm means to argue with something that feels true. Everything is flipped in your brain: the voice that tells you everyone would be better off without you feels true, and everything countering it, listing the reasons why people care about you, feels like the lie. Right now, right this very second, I want those of you who are not depressed to tell yourself that you’re worthless and a burden on your family and should die. Go ahead. Does it seem silly? Did your brain automatically say, WTF are you talking about?

Being suicidal while depressed is the complete opposite of that. Everything in you rebels at the idea that you deserve to be here.

This is why they call it a mental illness.

Now comes the important part: to those of you who find yourself spouting these insensitive misunderstandings, in particular in a public forum, I am curious about something. Are you truly sad when someone loses their life to depression? Do you truly want to put a stop to suicide?

Stop making suicidal people feel even worse.

Someone else’s suicidal thoughts and depression is not, actually, about you and how uncomfortable it makes you, and idly tossing around thoughts aloud about your opinion on this is actively causing harm because you don’t know who is listening to you. I guarantee someone in your life is, has been, or will be suicidal at some point, and they already live in a culture that tells them they should be ashamed of what they’re going through. When a person in pain is wondering if they should seek help, the last thing they’re going to do is open themselves up to someone who will cause them more pain.

If the voice in their head is already telling them they’re a burden, you will only reinforce that by telling them they’re a terrible person for even thinking it. If you want to save lives–if you want people to get help–you have to create a safe space for them to do it. If you want the people you love to come to you or seek professional help if they’re having thoughts of self-harm, you have to change the way you think about them and their disorder. If you parrot the myths of suicide being selfish, narcissistic, evil, or a moral failing of any kind, you are contributing to an environment that kills people. Stop it.

Shame and stigma do not save lives; they take them.

I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt: you don’t realize how you’re hurting people when you say these things. But this is why I’m talking openly and why I encourage others to do so as well: speaking from the point of view of someone who has been–and continues to be–at risk, I am hoping you’ll listen and alter how you see this issue, because I don’t want to see more lives lost. And if you want to help–which, I mean, y’know, you SHOULD, considering you’re such a wonderful thoughtful human being who cares about the lives of others, right?–start here with what to keep in mind, and here in case someone comes to you with suicidal thoughts.

If you come across this blog post as someone who suffers from depression, mood disorders, other mental illnesses, and thoughts of self harm: you are not alone, you are worth saving, and you are not a bad person for feeling this way. Read this before you take any actions if you’re in a dark place.

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

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  • Liz on “Why is the pandemic mentioned so much in Dweller?”–Media Literacy and Real-World Consequences
  • Skyla Dawn Cameron on Rebranded (and a Little Nostalgic)
  • Lena on Rebranded (and a Little Nostalgic)
  • Buy Your Paperbacks Directly From Me – Michael W Lucas on It’s Done
  • CRussel on Torching Kindle (and Probably My Career, YOLO)
  • Anna Blake on Torching Kindle (and Probably My Career, YOLO)

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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What I’m Working On:

Writing Waverly 8 and revising Waverly 4.

I'm not inclined to resign to maturity.