Category: Current Events (page 48 of 91)

Castles & Chemo

Courtesy Castles & Chemo

Instead of my usual Writer Report, I’ve been asked to say a few words about the non-profit organization known as Castles & Chemo. After looking into this little initiative, I agreed wholeheartedly – they’re a great cause that could use all the support they can get.

Dedicated to raising money to fight cancer through research and support efforts, Castles & Chemo uses tabletop role-playing games to achieve its goals. They publish game supplements, and organize and run fundraising events around the world. The organization is the brainchild of John J. Gillick, who I spoke to about his condition about how he came to found this ambitious endeavor.

My recovery from Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia was relatively quick, though I had a number of issues that arose. Resulting from an infection surrounding my port, I was put into the ICU 5 times (I jokingly say that I died 5 times as part of my treatment, as the first one had a doctor look at me, dumbfounded that I was still breathing with extremely low blood pressure).

My last ICU stint, coincidentally, was for a staph infection, almost exactly at the same time that famed artist Tim Hildebrant died of one.
Mostly, though, my treatment was straightforward, with my last form of chemotherapy being taken, orally, in April of 2009.

I still hesitate to call myself “cured” though. While the physical treatment has ended, I don’t feel as healthy as I did beforehand, and there are still some emotional issues I feel need to be addressed. During my treatment, I had discovered that my first military supervisor, Peter Anderson, contracted and died of the same cancer that I had, and I don’t think I ever really came to terms with that.

Overall, though, I’d say I’ve done really well, considering how it could’ve gone.

Going through cancer is not fun. Nurses hovering over you constantly. The looming threat of infection. The nausea. The hair loss. One of the things that helped me get through it all was my weekly D&D game. For that 6 hours around the table, I could stop being John, cancer patient, and become Alton, halfling rogue, putting all of those concerns behind me.

You can learn more about John’s struggle and success, and how you can help, by visiting Castles & Chemo on Facebook. You can also contribute to their Indiegogo campaign, which ends today.

Writer Report: Let’s Get Personal

Before you read the following, if you haven’t already, you should read this, the return of Hyperbole and a Half and her description of the last eighteen months or so of her life. I know this may seem a bit like I’m riding on her coattails, but after I carefully read her post, I found myself ruminating a great deal on my own feelings, facing some personal demons, and in no real mood to discuss supernatural detective yarns or floating cities or star-spanning empires.

I know I need to talk about these things, and I want to do so in a way that doesn’t come off as whining or seeking attention or making myself out to be a victim or a martyr. In fact, that’s why I rarely talk about these things at all, out loud, with people near me: a few words in and the eye-rolling will start. And I wouldn’t blame them. My sister had a saying: “Suck it up, and deal with it.”

Some days I’m better at that than others.

What really got to me about the aforementioned post was her description of the empty wasteland. It’s the one an individual drags themselves through day after day when depression is the only emotional sustenance on the menu; it’s a drab, flavorless, foully-textured gruel that takes the place of more tangible, weighty, and intricate emotions. And as true as it is that it gets better, it’s just as true that the wasteland never really goes away. All you can really do is build a sturdier wall around yourself, shore up the doors, and pray you don’t wander out into it again.

That’s really the only way I can describe it. Lately I’ve felt I’ve been walking the walls of my psyche, looking out into that wasteland, knowing I’m just a step or two away from falling into it. There are times when this realization makes me downright livid – like, how dare I even consider feeling depressed or succumbing to pressure – and I do my utmost to kick my own ass into not being such a downer. At times this puts me into a more manic state of mind, and I try to do more or spend more or what have you. I’m much more fun for other people to be around when I’m not thinking about how much everything sucks, after all.

But that’s the thing about mood swings. Your mood will always swing back. If you’ve ever encountered a tetherball in your life, it’s kind of like that. It swings in one direction, and while you can definitely punch it to go in the other direction, if you aren’t careful it’ll just swing back around to smack you in the face. I thank my lucky stars that this has only been a daily occurrence of late (if that), and not an hourly one.

I was weaned off of medication some time ago. I even was told by my therapist that, mindful as I’ve become, I don’t need to see her on a regular basis. And it’s true, I no longer have borderline anxiety attacks or suffer from hallucinations or any of the other hallmarks that, several years ago, caused some people close to me to help me seek the care of a mental ward. But I know the wasteland is still there. It’s waiting for me. And every time I see or hear or experience something that feels or sounds offhandedly cruel or wantonly destructive or callously indifferent, I feel its gravity and I actively resist. Because I am not going back to that place again, not without a fight.

There are days where it’s a struggle simply to remain positive. I remind myself that I still have a lot of future ahead of me, and it can be full of better things, and that change is difficult and takes sacrifice and I just have to be honest and work hard to get where I want to be. I’m doing my best to correct my mistakes, improve who I am, and not hurt anybody else in the process. I try to be mindful, respectful, courteous, and kind, and put the needs of others before my own if I can help it. But I can’t always do that. I’m going to choose me over them now and again. I’m going to make selfish decisions. And I’m going to fuck up. I’m a human being. It’s going to happen.

I just don’t want to be one of those sources of cruelty or destruction or indifference, towards myself or anybody else. That’s easy stuff. The hard thing is not giving in to cynicism and doubt and ennui. The hard thing is picking yourself up and continuing to follow that dream. A limp is better than no movement at all.

I’ve probably rambled too much. And I’m saying all of this on a Friday. Hopefully, your weekend is a good one.

And if you want to talk about anything like this, my metaphorical door is always open.

Writer Report: Getting Back On Track

I think my dayjob has been getting revenge upon me for avoiding the office for a week while recovering. Back-to-back 10 hours days have been kicking me hard. I’m very much looking forward to the weekend, and am hoping to get back to working out once I get more sleep and recuperate somewhat.

I have plenty of projects ahead of me and more work to do. Cold Streets is approaching its climax. Tomorrow will be my first live-blogging of a board game, with an after-action report coming later in the week. And I continue to stir several things on the backburner as I keep everything at home on track as well as I can.

So that’s the latest from here. I hope to fully back in the swing of thing next week.

Here We Go Again

Test Pattern

More life is happening, more crises, more fires to put out, more more more.

And I was almost done with today’s post last night. Ugh.

Writer Report: Recovery Period

I’m trying to think of the last time I was seriously injured. I don’t think it happened in conjunction with anything like flat tires and waiting for payday to roll around, however. It’s just been a comedy of errors here all week, and I’m still trying to roll with the punches.

I’ve managed to get a bit of writing done, and Cold Streets is moving along. I’m hopeful that we’ll have at least a working draft by the end of the summer. I’ve had a few ideas for Godslayer as well, and there’s also a non-novel project I’ve been working on that may require more than just an investment of time and words. More on that as it develops.

I’m still working from home and still recovering, I guess. So I better get back to that. Enjoy your weekend!

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