Dragon Con 2013 Schedule

Here is Laurell’s Schedule for Dragon Con this year.

Title: An Hour with Laurell K. Hamilton
Time: Fri 02:30 pm
Location: Peachtree Ballroom A-F – Westin (Length: 1)
Description: An audience Q&A session with the bestselling author of the Anita Blake and Merry Gentry series.

Title: Autograph Sessions
Time: Fri 04:00 pm
Location: International Hall South – Marriott (Length: 1)

Title: Autograph Sessions
Time: Fri 05:30 pm
Location: International Hall South – Marriott (Length: 1)

Title: In Booth Signing
Time: Sat 11:00 am
Location: America’s Mart – Level 2 Booth 2135 (Length 1)

Title: Spellbound: The Use of Magic in Urban Fantasy
Time: Sat 04:00 pm
Location: Peachtree Ballroom A-F – Westin (Length: 1)
Description: Authors discuss the magic users and systems that appear in their books.

Title: New York Times Bestselling Authors
Time: Sat 05:30 pm
Location: Centennial I – Hyatt (Length: 1)

Title: First Ladies of Fantasy Fiction
Time: Sun 11:30 am
Location: Regency VI – VII – Hyatt (Length: 1)

Title: Vampires and the Women Who Write Them
Time: Sun 02:30 pm
Location: Peachtree Ballroom A-F – Westin (Length: 1)
Description: Authors writing in the field share their thoughts on their characters

Title: Violence in Urban Fantasy: How Much is Too Much?
Time: Sun 10:00 pm
Location: International BC – Westin (Length: 1)
Description: Is there a limit to how much violence the genre should include before it crosses the line into something else?

Title: Page-turners: Mystery and Suspense in Urban Fantasy
Time: Mon 10:00 am
Location: International BC – Westin (Length: 1)
Description: Authors discuss how and why the elements of mystery and suspense play such a significant role in the genre.

Merry, Merry, quite contrary

Yesterday was an amazing day – day one on sale for AFFLICTION –
but today I get to share some more excitement! I get to answer one of your most asked questions. Will I ever write another Merry Gentry novel? Yes! I wanted to make a hundred percent certain that Merry and I were both happy with the book before I announced it, and when I cleared that first triple digit goal I knew we had it! The new Merry Gentry novel will be my next book to be published, in summer 2014. This will be the first Merry novel since DIVINE MISDEMEANORS in 2009!

Why I’m not Touring for Affliction

It’s the 20th Anniversary for Anita Blake and I’m not touring. I’d planned on it, but what I hadn’t planned on was getting sick for about three months. It started with my doctor thinking it would be a simple fix, and then that I needed a certain kind of medical specialist, but that wasn’t it. After two and a half months of crippling pain and other unpleasant symptoms that kept me pretty much either on the couch, or in bed, just trying to doze through it all, finally found the right medical specialist. One thing I learned from all this is that every doctor has their bias and are more likely to diagnose in certain areas, as opposed to other areas, and if its not in their area than you, as a patient, must be more proactive. It would take me far too long to finally say, enough, and help figure out what medical specialty I needed. But in a way it’s a crap shoot, they test scatter shot and hope they hit it, which is pretty frightening to realize, actually. The right doctor, at the right moment, with the right information, is a true life saver.
When we had to make plans to tour I was still very ill, and didn’t know what was wrong with me, so my publisher and I made the only decision we could. I’m better, and I thought well, maybe we can take a late event, or two, after the book comes out. Then I caught a cold virus, and had multiple migraines in a week, and realized I’d experienced this before, about a decade ago before I started allergy shots. I’ve missed three months of allergy shots. They won’t give them to you if you’re sick, because allergens are hard for your body to deal with, or you wouldn’t be allergic to them. The allergy doctors worry about making symptoms of any sickness worse, so I’m behind on my allergy meds. I’d forgotten how terrible my allergies were before the shots, but I’m remembering. A half hour outside in the woods equaled two hours of being sick once I got home, but with the shots I can go hiking again. The severity of my allergies is actually one of the factors that made me decide not to pursue my masters, and eventual goal of doctorate, in biology. Just think, if allergies hadn’t worsened exponentially in college I might not have been a writer, at all. I certainly wouldn’t have the career that I have, and we wouldn’t be celebrating the 20th anniversary of Anita Blake.

The Blog I promised

It’s the 20th anniversary for the Anita Blake series, and to help celebrate that I asked you to tell me what the books and characters had meant to you, and how you found them. The response has been overwhelming and wonderful – Thank You.
I’m sitting in my office with just our three dogs for company, as I usually am when I write. It is a very isolated job, writing. Authors spend most of their lives in a room by themselves while the world passes by outside. The inside of my head is full of a slightly different world populated by people so real to me that sometimes it feels wrong that I will never be able to touch their hands, see their smiles across a table from me – not for real. I call them my imaginary friends, rather than my friends, because in years when I just said, my friends, some fans misunderstood and thought that Anita, Jean-Claude, Richard, Micah, Nathaniel, Jason, all of them were based on real, flesh and blood people. So, I started saying my imaginary friends so people would understand that I did not base my characters on real people. It also started cutting down on fans asking for the phone numbers of my imaginary men. But one thing many of you made clear was that my imaginary friends had become your friends, too.
In fact, you told me that my imaginary friends, my world, my creations, had helped you guys get through some really tough times. That the books had been what you read at the bedside when your families were in the hospital, or even been a refuge when you had to face the death of those close to you. Some of you told me that Anita had taught you how to be strong, how not to back down, and that until Anita a lot of women, especially, hadn’t realized how to be strong. I’m always amazed by that, I guess because I was raised by a very strong woman, so strength and being female was just a given to me, but I’m glad I could share some of the strength I learned growing up, and building my life. I’d already lost track of the number of women who had told me at signings that they’d left abusive relationships, because they knew Anita wouldn’t have taken it. I am very proud of that, and I know that Anita would be, too.
I asked who your favorite characters were, and wasn’t surprised by most of the answers. Jean-Claude is big fan favorite, and he’s earned it. I think that he was more surprised by how he and Anita have grown as a couple than even she is, after all it’s not every woman that can surprise a man that’s over five hundred years old, but our girl keeps doing it. I think the key to that is that Anita keeps growing and changing, willing to be pushed outside her comfort zones. Many of you told me that you’ve learned to go outside your own comfort zones from reading my books. You know what? I’ve learned the same thing. I joke that I haven’t seen my comfort zones in at least ten years, and that’s true. It’s not a comfortable way to live, but it’s never boring, and it’s led me to be happier than I ever thought possible. What I hadn’t expected was to hear how many of you had learned a similar lesson. I guess, we’ve all grown together.
Trying to do justice to the hundreds of years of lady’s man for Jean-Claude led me to learn how to walk in high heels, and has totally changed my clothing choices. he’s like this voice in my head that pops up and goes, hmmm . . . what if you wore this today, or that would look lovely. I probably take more clothes advice from him than Anita would tolerate. *laughs*
I expected Micah to be a favorite, and the Wicked Truth, though Damian is very underused for someone that so many of you like. I’m sorry for that, but he’s happy being monogamous with Cardinale and who am I to argue with that? We may be seeing more of him in the future, but I’m trying to figure a way of doing that without wrecking his relationship. Zerbrowski is one of my favorites, too. I’ve actually made notes about a short story that would let us see him at home with his wife, Katie, and their kids. We’ve referred to Anita, Micah, and Nathaniel, going to cook outs at their house with the other cops, but never seen it on stage. Something about hitting this anniversary has made me look around the series and go, “What is it that we’ve never seen on stage that would be fun?”
Richard still has his fans, though admittedly most of you are not. Richard really is in therapy, and is making peace with himself and the conflict between the life he wanted and the life he has, which are miles apart. He’s been talking to me again, and I’m hopeful. I swear, that I brought him on to marry Anita. It was my solution to breaking her up with Jean-Claude and not having to kill him. It would take me years to realize that Richard was my ideal man, at the time, but maybe not hers.
The character that more of you mentioned than any other, either in a list with others, or alone, was Nathaniel. I knew he’d be on a lot of people’s favorite list, but I hadn’t anticipated what he’d meant to you so many of you. Some of you told me that him talking about his own therapy helped you be willing to see your therapy. That’s wonderful, because I’m a big believer in good therapy. It’s made a huge difference in my own life, and still does. I am so happy that sharing Nathaniel’s story has helped so many of you understand that just because something terrible happens to you, that isn’t the end of the story. We can heal, and grow, and learn to be happy. Thank you for telling me how much watching Nathaniel’s journey through the books has helped all of you understand that you can be happy, too. I know that would mean a lot to Nathaniel, too. Writing him has taught me, and Anita, that strength doesn’t always come full blown, sword in hand, but that some of the bravest people are the ones that learn to be brave.
In fact, several of you have told me that my books taught you that true bravery isn’t when you’re not afraid. True courage is being scared to death and doing it anyway. It was such a given to me that bravery is acting in the face of fear, that it never occurred to me that everyone didn’t understand that. It is one of the most valuable lessons I’ve ever learned and I am very happy to share it with all of you.
Thank you for so many of you telling me that my characters have helped you understand that you have to stand up for what you believe, what you want, who you are, and not let society tell you different. Anita and I both started the series so conservative, and now here we are so very not. 🙂
I would be a different person today if I had never written Anita. I would be a different person if I had only written the original three books I was contracted for, and stopped, or even stopped with the first six. The research I did into real crime, real violence, showed me things that I didn’t always want to know, but it helped me make Anita’s police work, more real. I believed that if I wanted people to believe in zombies, vampires, and wereanimals, that I had to make the real life details as real as possible. I haven’t always gotten it right, but I thank all the police and military personnel over the years that have helped me try, all mistakes are mine and mine alone. You guys did your best with this writer that has never worn any uniform for a job. But more than the true crime, the research into alternative lifestyles opened my eyes and showed me a much broader definition of . . . nearly everything.
Some of you have been with Anita and me from the beginning, but I hear from people every day that have just found us. Thank you for being on this journey with us, whether you found us with Guilty Pleasures, or somewhere in the middle, or just watched the video for Affliction and thought, I want to read that. Me, too, it’s why I wrote it, why I still write Anita, because I want to know what happens next.

Twentieth Anniversary

It’s the twentieth anniversary of Anita Blake. It’s weird and wonderful just to be able to type that. I’ve been trying to write a blog about this amazing milestone, but each time it just isn’t right. What was it I wanted to say? I’ve had about four false starts, and then it came to me, exactly what I wanted to say.
Instead of talking about my memories of creating Anita, I want to know your memories of reading her. What’s your favorite scene, or moment, in the books? What has reading the books for all these years meant to you? If your new to my writing, how did you discover it, and what took you so long to come play? *laughs* To all of you who love Anita and the gang, how have the books affected your real life? Tell me what you love in my imaginary world, and which of my imaginary friends has meant the most to you? Comment on the blog and I’ll read the comments, and then I’ll either talk about your comments in the comments, or maybe another blog. It’s just so amazing to me that my characters and I have been through twenty years and Affliction is about to be the 23rd book – 23 books in one series in twenty years – how cool is that?
Can’t wait to read your comments!

Father’s Day and My Grandmother

My parents were divorced by the time I was six months old, so I had never had a father. This holiday was just another reminder of how different I was from the other kids, then my mother died when I was six, and it was just me and my grandmother. Just two women living alone, or two females if you prefer since I was a little girl when the arrangement first began, but the point was that there was no male presence in my home. My grandmother had lived with us since I was brought home from the hospital as a newborn, so living with her was a continuation, we just both missed my mother, her daughter, terribly. But my mother had gone out to work and my grandmother had stayed home, kept house, and taken care of me. In many ways it was a traditional household except that we were all women, but the roles for everyone were very standard in most ways.
If my grandmother and mother could have been a lesbian couple it would have been a happy family, maybe, but my mother wanted to remarry. My grandmother saw this as a threat. Hadn’t my mother’s only husband been cruel to her, broken her heart? My grandfather beat my grandmother for decades, nearly killed her a few times. She left when my mother, the youngest, was old enough to not be trapped with him in some court custody nightmare. Until that time, she fought back, this tiny woman, 4′ 11″, fought back against my much larger grandfather. She never gave up, never gave in, even though she stayed for the kids. She taught me what strength could be, and stubbornness, too.
My grandmother would dress me up in my best Sunday clothes and set me by the door when my mother had a first date. She’d tell me that I was going and it was a treat, and not ask my mother. My grandmother said, she wanted to make sure the man would be nice to me, but really it was to sabotage the date. Having a small girl on most of the first dates she managed pretty much guaranteed that there would be few second dates. I remember some of these awkward and socially painful moments. I knew I wasn’t wanted and shouldn’t be there, even at six. But my grandmother protected my mother and me from the men, and herself from losing us. She would later regret her actions, and come to take partial blame for my mother going into work that day and dying in the car accident. If my mother had only married and been a stay at home mom, it wouldn’t have happened. My grandmother blamed my father for years, if he’d been a good man and taken care of his family my mother wouldn’t have had to work outside the home. Like I said, my grandmother was a very traditional woman in some ways.
My grandmother loved her own father dearly and her own brothers, especially her nearest in age, my great-uncle Troy. But she told me once that if she hadn’t had sons of her own and loved them, she probably would have hated all men after what she endured from my grandfather. She hated men enough, and certainly told me they were evil, and would hurt me, and wanted only one thing. Her attitude towards sex does not bear talking about here, lets just say it was bleak, and that’s putting it mildly.
She raised me to be the boy, the man of the house, and to take the place of my mother who we had lost. By the time I was in my teens, I was lifting the heavy stuff, not her. When I was in college, still living at home and commuting in, an uncle was visiting us. We’d bought a fifty pound bag of rock salt to go into the water softener. I opened the bag, picked it up, so I could pour it in, and he jumped up from his chair as if to take the bag from me. I just looked at him as I poured it, easily, into the water. He looked perplexed.
“Do you think a man springs from the woodwork every time there’s something heavy to lift?” I asked him.
He hadn’t thought about it, none of the family had, I don’t think.
“Who do you think does all this?” I asked him.
He didn’t know. It had never occurred to him what it might mean that there was no man of the house.
If there was a scary noise in the middle of the night, I got up and searched the house for danger. My grandmother stayed back in the bed, while I secured everything. In many ways I was the man of the house.
If I’d been raised differently would I have been less drawn to so many masculine hobbies, and interests? Who knows? But I’ve spent most of my adult life being the only girl, or the minority in a room. Martial arts of various flavors, a biology degree, though I have an English degree, too, and that’s heavily weighted to woman, or was when I was in college. Somehow, I doubt that’s changed. It would be Robert E. Howard, creator of Conan the Barbarian, that would be the writer that made me want to write horror, and heroic fantasy. Before my mother’s death I wanted a pink canopy bed, to be a ballerina, and have a white pony, or a white cat. By the time I was fourteen I was writing horror stories where most characters died horribly. I hated pink, and if I got a cat, I wanted a black one. I’d always loved horror movies and scary ideas, that wouldn’t have changed, I don’t think, but the rest . . . Is it nature or nurture?
We didn’t have much money so I didn’t worry about clothes. It was more important what I could do, than what I looked like, besides my grandmother didn’t encourage me in my looks. I believe she thought since my mother had been the pretty one and it had done her no good, just attracted a bad man, that she determined I wouldn’t think I was the pretty one. She did a great job of convincing me, as she put it, “No man will ever have you, so you better be able to work, and take care of yourself.”
I took this admonition from my childhood to heart and worked to get my ass out of there, because no one was going to save me. My grandmother, the only parent I had, told me that no one would save me. Look what had happened to her after she fell in love with my grandfather. Look what had happened to my mother. Men weren’t the answer, standing on your own two feet and not needing anyone was the only way to be safe.
She didn’t intend that I become quite as independent as I did. She complained that I was, independent as an old widow woman, because I didn’t just not depend on men. I fought to be independent of her, and that she had not planned. We fought most of my early adulthood as I tried to break free and she tried to keep me. Worst fights we ever had were when I fell in love the first time and wanted to marry my first husband. It was a horrible time, because a man, an evil man, because all men were evil, had come to take me away.
My now ex-husband was a good man then, and he still is in many ways. He’s a good, traditional guy, not a guy-guy, but conservative. One of the things that would later fuel our divorce was that the conservative girl he married became a liberal, but that would be after a decade of being pretty happily married.
Actually, my grandmother only approved of two men that I dated. One cheated on me, and the other tried to abuse me – I say try, because one incident of it and I was done with him. She had a nearly unerring radar for bad men, just like my grandfather had been. She was drawn to abusive men that would not be faithful, perhaps its a good thing she gave them up after my grandfather.
My first husband was kind, calm, hard working, serious about college and his future, and our future. To marry him I had to defy my entire family and be told that if I did marry him, I was dead to my family. By the day of the wedding my grandmother had relented enough to come, because she realized I was going to go through with it. I thought, and I still think today, that marrying my first husband, even if it had cost me my birth family, was a good deal.
Oddly, nearly twenty years later when I told her that my ex and I were divorcing she was devastated. She had made of our relationship a Romeo and Juliet drama, because I had defied them all and seemed happy, and we had a child, and . . . My grandmother seemed to feel personally betrayed that it had not worked, because she had built it into something more dramatic and more “love of my life” than I had. But I didn’t know that until I told her it was over.
She expected me to come home and bring my young daughter with me. My mother had been out of the house less than two years when she divorced and brought me home to my grandmother. I had been out of the house for fifteen years. I had done what my grandmother raised me to do, had a job that could support me and my daughter after the breakup. I was independent and fine on my own without a man, or my grandmother. She took it hard that I didn’t come home crying and needing her. Her reaction totally took me off guard. The two of us never really understood each other.
When I got engaged to Jonathon, my husband, my grandmother was very upset. Again, it was a man, and she didn’t like, or trust, them. She would eventually make peace with this marriage, too, but she never understood me marrying a second time. I had my daughter, and I was divorced, why did I need another man?
The men I married have been all the men I have known in a home situation. I had no basis for what a husband should be, or what a father should be. I had to create that reality for myself through therapy and years of effort. My daughter, Trinity, is lucky enough to have two fathers. Normally, my ex would split this weekend with us, but work has interfered this year. He was disappointed, but they will have other weekends. So, this Father’s Day, Trinity and I are helping Jonathon celebrate that he’s her dad. I’ve loved watching them grow into the great father/daughter relationship that they have, and I’m happy that my first husband is involved in her life. I had no father and it makes me very happy that Trinity has two.

One Month to Affliction

One month from today Affliction will be on the shelves! I know I’ve conditioned you guys that the new Anita Blake novel hits the stores in June, but I needed the extra month to write a longer book. Affliction has a page count of 570, which makes it the longest book since Incubus Dreams. It would have topped 600 pages, but a choice in printing format means no extra pages at the end of chapters, so you lose a few pages that way, but they would have been blank, or half blank pages, so now every single page is full of story!
I would love to give hints here about some of the surprises that await you in the new book, but I truly suck at hinting. I either don’t give enough information, or I tell far too much. I will run hints by my agent and editor and see if we can come up with some that don’t give away too much, but for a Sunday lets let all the hardworking people in New York have their day of rest.

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The Ordinary Extrodinary

I sat at the corner of the kitchen island at 6:42 AM eating breakfast, and gazed towards the hall, and the dining room beyond, a shine caught my eye. The sparkle comes and goes, there, then not. I realized that it was the morning sun reflecting on the Grandfather clock’s pendulum, so that not only the pendulum shines, but the reflection goes out into the hallway flashing gold here, then gone, here, then gone. It’s a tiny golden road in the middle of the hallway that lasts only seconds at a time.

I’ve lived in this house for twelve years and never noticed this before. There is always more to see and notice in the everyday surroundings. The old isn’t just made new again, it is new. Because I’m not rediscovering the shine of the clock as it paces the hallway, but seeing it for the very first time. By 6:48 AM it is almost gone from the hallway, as if the shining path of light were never there at all, only the gold of the pendulum one hallway and room away still flashes at me, and even this is beginning to fade.

What chance that I would sit here at exactly the right time to see our grandfather clock paint a golden road down our hallway for a few precious minutes? The effect has nearly vanished now at 6:52, but it was magical while it lasted.

So many artists bemoan that they don’t have a good idea, a different enough idea, but moments of beauty, surprise, wonderment, happen all around us, nearly constantly. Do not bemoan that you have no inspiration, open your senses see what is around you and understand that ordinary does not exist, anymore than extraordinary does. They are intermingled and waiting for the right person to notice them and see how truly special one quiet moment can be.

Memorial Day

Happy Memorial Day, everyone, but this message is especially for those who have served in our armed forces. Thank for your service whether it is in the past, or the present. If you are all having a great day of barbecuing, or sports, family reunions, whatever makes you happy then take my thanks and go back to your day.

The rest of this blog is those of us who aren’t having that great day. You can walk off the battlefield bleeding, but fixable. The wound heals, maybe you have a scar, maybe not even that, but you survive. You survived, and part of you is happy to have survived. Embrace that part of you that enjoys life, celebrate it! But it’s okay that theres that other part that feels, why did I survive? Why did I crawl out of the mess and stink and the chaos? Why did I make it and my friend, my brother, my sister . . . Why didn’t they make it out? Why couldn’t I save them, too? Why didn’t the person who saved me, save them? Why me? Why not them?

If I had an answer I would give it to you, but I don’t know. I know that sometimes you leave people behind, because you can either drowned with them, or live without them. Is that the worst guilt? Maybe? Or is when everyone lives, but they come back in pieces broken beyond the ability to have a normal life, let alone a happy one. And you feel guilty about that too, how dare you have family and happiness when your friend, your brother, your sister, is a ghost of what they could have been. Why are they the walking wounded and you aren’t?

But here’s the real secret, just because we walked away, bandaged, healed, old scars, doesn’t mean we aren’t still wounded, too. We walked out of the chaos, we survived, but every day is a choice to keep surviving. We survived, the wounds healed, but the haunting of it calls us back again and again, and we know that we choose every day to keep surviving. Sometimes just continuing through the memories the sounds, the sensations that wake you from a sound sleep into a cold sweat. That you have a heartbeat to remember that this person beside you loves you and would never hurt you, and isn’t the nightmare that tried to kill, so you double check that they are your spouse, that your kids are asleep down the hall, and your dogs, your house, you life is intact, and sometimes you can go back to sleep, but sometimes that flash of remembering haunts too hard and you sit up waiting for the dawn, because you don’t trust what awaits you when you close your eyes.

What do you do? I’m contacting my therapist again, because I will survive. I will keep surviving, and I will try to explain the survivor’s guilt, the choices not taken, and that feeling of throat closing terror that the smallest sound, the lightest touch, a smell, a moment of seeing something out of place and you’re right back there in the bad place. We don’t remember, we are haunted, as my best friend said today. He’s a non-practicing Marine, and ex-cop. I’ve never worn a uniform this lifetime, my bad stuff was all as a civilian, but we’ve discovered that it’s given me a unique perspective into the after effects of certain things. PTSD isn’t just for uniforms, and neither is survivors guilt.

If you read this blog and think I have been impertinent, my apologies, but if one person reads this and understands that it’s not just them, that you aren’t alone, then that’s what’s important. We survived, and it’s okay that we did, don’t let the guilt, or the confusion take away the victory of just surviving. Now, our next battle is to thrive, to succeed, to let ourselves be happy. There are moments when being happy seems harder than any of the rest, doesn’t it? But if we survived all the rest, we can conquer the hardest thing of all, ourselves, the ghosts, and enjoy that we lived.

Bloody tears, and Surviving the Internal Storm

I dragged myself into the bathroom this morning to stare in the mirror, and thought what is that in the corner of my eye? I turned on more light and though I was crying blood – that can’t be good. In fact my illness befuddled brain went straight to Ebola, and other nasty terrible things, then I calmed down. I was still cocooned in dreams from last night and my dreams are not always the happiest. All you fans that say you’d love to live in my head for awhile, I wouldn’t advise it. My imaginings are often quite terrifying, like thinking I’m crying bright, red tears. What I had done was vomited so hard last night that I’d broken blood vessels in my eye just by the tear duct, so it does look as if I have shiny scarlet tears just waiting to be shed, but they aren’t wet and don’t come off on Kleenex. It’s a weird and nicely disturbing effect, look for me to use it in some story in the future. I’ve thrown up so much and been able to tolerate so little food during this illness that I’ve lost 9 pounds in a week, according to my doctor’s scale. I’d meant to lean down a little, but not like this, this has been pretty terrible.

I was in the emergency room earlier this week, which is how I got the rather gruesome picture of my arm bleeding in the shower. They told me I could shower, but I just didn’t realize The IV site would still be bleeding that much. I tell everyone that my veins are small, deep, and tend to roll, so pediatric needles work best, but no one ever believes it. They always think, they can get it, sometimes they can, but mostly not. They took blood, pushed drugs in, and basically did their job, but there was more blood than one hopes to loose during an IV, and even more to lose during a shower. Watching the reddish, orangish, blood trail down my body and entering the drain totally put me in the mood to write Anita. I know it’s a lot of blood when it goes from red, to orange, and only goes pink at the end. Usually the blood pinks-out much more quickly.

I feel purged and clean today like a shell washed up on the beach, as if I’ve survived the storm and now it is time to rest and figure out what I’ve lost and what remains. Like the debris of some treasure ship broken upon the rocks and now I get to pick through gold coins, sparkling crowns, rare spices and teas in their water tight bags, and mourn the things that burst open and were destroyed. Some things are gone, no salvage possible, but I will trust that I didn’t need them, that I had out grown them, and that what is left is mine – is me. I will gather my shiny pretties, my dangerous toys, my stocks and provisions from the edge of sea where we all washed up after the storm of this last month and I will rebuild. A tropical tree house, perhaps, with a waterfall trailing beside it, and only vines to climb up or down, so that everyday begins with effort and the reward of moving my body through the trees. Or perhaps a small cabin in a meadow full of exotic butterflies, and noises in the night of creatures far stranger than anything I could imagine.