30 Day Song Challenge, Day 4

OK, so here we go with Day 4.

“A song for when you’re feeling EMO or introspective.”

When I’m feeling introspective, I tend to listen to songs tied to a particular moment in my past, related to what I’m being introspective about, if that makes sense. This is one of them:

Unrelated: When I was managing a comic store in Atlanta in 89-90, the Indigo Girls were customers of mine. Big fans of Now Comics’ SPEED RACER, as I recall.

30 Day Song Challenge, Days 1-3

This meaningless bit of fun was intended as a Facebook thing (and that’s where I discovered it) — but I’ve been looking to make more use of my blog, so I decided that for this “30 Day Song Challenge,” I’ll put the entries up here, and just link to them on social media.

Anyway, I’m a massive music nerd, so this should be fun for me, if nothing else.

Obviously, I missed the first two days of January, so this entry is my catch-up, where I’ll be answering the first three challenges.

First: A song by fave PUNK ROCK band.
I don’t know if they qualify as my favorite punk band, but this is definitely one of my favorite punk songs, so I’ll go with that:

Second: A favorite song by a BRITISH INVASION group.
I’ll assume that they mean the first British Invasion of the 60s, and not the second British Invasion of the MTV-era 80s. I’m not going to go with the obvious choice of the Beatles or the Rolling Stones (although I like songs by both), but rather a true favorite of mine:

Third: Your favorite DISCO or FUNK song.
ARGH! I have favorites in both categories! Damn it. Guess I’ll have to choose one. Funk it is, then.

OK, now I’m caught up. I’ll be posting a new one of these every day, for the rest of the month.

Should Old Acquaintance (and 2017) Be Forgot…

2017.

Yeah. We all know where this is going, right?

I wasn’t even sure if I was going to bother with an end-of-the-year post this year. Yet, here I am, mostly out of a sense of obligation: I pay for this site, and I’ve barely used it this year, and that (like so much else) needs to change.

I’m certainly not sure that I have much to say here beyond what many others have confirmed: this was a rough one. We thought 2016 was bad — losing beloved artists, and the gut-punch of the worst third of our nation saddling the world with a fascist government in America.

2017 was worse. We can now all say with certainty that we know what it’s like to live through an entire country having a nervous breakdown. It turns out that having the fight-or-flight response of our brains constantly firing through out an entire year isn’t good for us. Outrage after outrage, constant, desperate pleading with our elected representatives to not destroy our health care, our incomes, our lives. It takes a toll.

Every colleague I have whose job involves creative endeavor — books, games, comics, music, art — all reported the same thing. They dragged through this year, barely able to produce. Constantly in existential dread of what they’d lose next. Daily worry about just staying alive. Through it all, the barbaric minority brayed their triumph, even when the government they inflicted upon us enacted policies which kicked *them* in the face, too — they sneered through the bloody, broken ruins of their mouths, taking their pleasure in the fact that WE were hurting. And the media continued their ridiculous assertion that we need to somehow reach out and try to understand that kind of unreasoning hatred.

It would be easy for me to assemble a list of the violations of this past year, and the people that have been lost. Far too easy.

As I sit here, I instead try to summon up those things which were shining stars of happiness in the darkness of 2017. Another year cancer-free. My younger daughter’s wedding. Getting the opportunity to do official work on properties which shaped me as a child — Star Wars and Star Trek. My eldest starting her career with a prestigious law firm. Continued progress, through the invaluable support of my business partner Eric Trautmann in getting our publishing operation, Adamant Entertainment, back on track with regular releases. Being able to help my son figure things out.

In a lot of ways, just making it through the year seems like no small triumph.

A line in Star Wars: The Last Jedi sums up my feelings about the past few years, and the future: “Let the past die. Kill it, if you have to. That’s the only way to become what you were meant to be.”

I have plans — I guess they could even be considered resolutions — for 2018. But generally, I prefer to think of them as hopes. Hoping that things work out. Hoping that my resolve to accomplish things stays strong at a time when the world seems to batter down our defenses daily. To fuel that resolve, I’m taking the fact that we made it through 2017. To look 2018 in the eye, and say “I faced down worse than you.”

Last year, I said that I was taking David Bowie as my Patron Saint for the year, as a reminder to never stop creating. I didn’t stop — although I certainly didn’t accomplish everything that I wanted to. But I kept treading water, and didn’t drown. This year, though, I need to do more than that. Getting through isn’t enough. To reclaim some sense of normalcy — personally, professionally, politically — will require that we be heroes. To actively drive back the dark. We spent a year on the ropes, covering up and taking the punches. Now we come out swinging.

Here’s to 2018, everyone. Get ready.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tgcc5V9Hu3g