Author Archives: Autumn

Headaches

Yesterday, not long after I wrote my journal entry about practising, my Internet connection went kablooey and I spent the next couple of hours unsuccessfully trying to fix it. I ended up turning the damn thing off and going to work in the living room. It gave me writing time, but I had tons of Internet-associated research to handle and correspondence to catch up on, and it made me very cranky. Also, I lost an expanded ETA form of that last post in which I rhapsodized about a particular shift that I love doing in one of my lesson pieces. And the post didn’t actually post thanks to the kablooeyness, I discovered this morning. Gnarr.

However, I managed to play cello for a while longer, and accomplished this as well:

Orchestrated:
New words yesterday: 2,508
Total word count, Orchestrated: 26,246

Uh-oh. The protagonist’s mother came home early and found her with a boy in the house. Alone. Playing music, but still. Also, a date? With someone else? What is this turning into? Where the hell did that come from?

Orchestra last night was good. I don’t know if someone mentioned something about our situation to the guest conductor but he’s really focusing on interpretation and phrasing. Quite nice. And the principal showed me a terrific fingering for the opening phrase of the Wagner clarinet piece we’re accompanying (five flats! dear gods!).

Today I have an awful, awful headache that extra-strength Tylenol is doing nothing to assuage. Thanks to this headache I fell asleep again while the boy was playing this morning and didn’t get him to the caregiver’s till just before ten o’clock, so the day started somewhat later than usual. I did get the Internet connection up and running once more, thanks to an installation CD lent to me by the upstairs neighbours (bless them) so that headache has been taken care of although it took an hour to do. We have groceries for dinner. I have mostly caught up on correspondence and stuff. I have even eaten lunch. There are more errands to run tomorrow morning.

Now I get to do a draft of a ritual, and write some more. My head hurts an awful lot, though. Time to drag out the white flower balm, and hit what I suspect is a baby migraine with some extra-strength Excedrin.

Canny

Yes! The way to successfully avoid work is to practise the cello loudly for an hour!

(I can’t feel my left hand from the wrist to the base of the fingers. It’s a very odd sensation. Or lack of it, I suppose. All that vibrato, you know.)

I am so incredibly pleased with the sweeter tone the luthier coaxed out of this cello with the new strings and the bridge. I noodled about with ‘Itsumo Nando Demo’, trying out different slurs and phrasings, then played through some of my lesson stuff again. All in all I’ve done about an hour. Most excellent.

Standing Still

Lowest voter turnout ever. Well, since 1898. I’m disgusted.

We spent election night drinking Quebec ice cider, Nova Scotia beer, local venison-cranberry pate, and baked local Brie. How much more Canadian can you get?

Far more interesting than the Official Federal Election In Which Nothing Happened was the Student Vote program, a project designed to educate children and teenagers about the election process and the structure of government. Students assessed platforms, debated, listened to candidates who were willing to meet them, and finally ‘voted’ and ‘elected’ 100 Conservative seats, 66 NDP seats, 54 Liberal seats, 44 Green seats, and 24 Bloc seats. Take a good look, people; these are tomorrow’s voters.

In other news, we had an absolutely lovely weekend with my parents. The weather was lovely; the food was incredible (as always). The only drawback was Liam coming down with a cold and his first case of conjunctivitis, which we caught right at the beginning before it got bad and thus was cleared up before we left for home. (Well, okay, there was that other drawback of having to wade through two hours of traffic to get out of Montreal, and experience so awful that we came very close to turning around and going home. Except to go home would have taken us the same amount of time that continuing to get out of the city would take. You know, that whole ‘I am in blood stepped in so far, that should I wade no more, returning were as tedious as go o’er’ thing. And had it taken any longer there very well might have been blood.)

Naturally I have the cold now too, and mine are always worse than the boy’s. It’s like he amps them as he passes them along. He stayed home yesterday and we ran errands together. “We’re going to vote for the government!” he told everyone with great excitement when we went to the bank, the grocery store, the place where I bought pants, and where he got his hair cut. The actual voting was anti-climatic for him though once he’d helped me find the polling booth by number (although he kept trying to steer me toward 126 instead of 136). We were in a school gymnasium, and he was very distracted by the climbing bars and the benches against the wall. I voted very quickly in order to lunge and catch him before he got more than a foot off the ground and up those bars.

After a very overcast day, the sun broke through for the most glorious autumnal end of afternoon glow. There was a warm wind all day. It was a beautiful full moon last night, and when we lit our Happy Full Moon candle at the altar before the boy’s bedtime he chirped, “Thank you, Goddess, for all the things in the world!”

Also, I found three pairs of jeans that fit me that were all on sale. And I only have to hem one of them.

Forty Months Old!

Or three and a third years old, for those counting in years.

“What are you going to dress up as for Hallowe’en?” Liam asked us excitedly at dinner the other night. HRH and I looked at one another, and we both grinned. It’s been ages since we did costumes (would they have been for the last superhero party, or the final Hallowe’en party t! threw?). Suddenly here was our son encouraging us to do the Hallowe’en thing, because as far as he knows everyone dresses up at Hallowe’en. We have no time to do new costumes for ourselves; any costume-creation effort will be focused on him. So I gave my costume wardrobe a quick once-over in my mind and said, “I think I’ll go as Belle.” “Oh, Mama,” he said, “that’s a great idea!” HRH has decided to make himself an Incredibles t-shirt to wear to school, so I think that will be the extent of his costume. As for what the boy will be wearing, we are not yet sure. There is the pirate coat we planned for last year that never got made, and apart from that he has alternately decided to be Dash from the Incredibles, Mr. Incredible, and a diesel locomotive. I suspect we will have to set a deadline for a final decision. This year will be the first year he goes out trick or treating, and I believe he expects us both to go out with him (because again, as far as he knows, everyone does it!). Must check with the upstairs neighbours to see if they would be good with handling kids at the door while we go out for half an hour.

Over the past couple of months he has developed an odd use of the third person to describe himself and his actions, as if he is narrating the activity of a character in a story. “Mama, said the [kitten/robot/fish/whatever he is pretending to be today], what are we having for lunch?” he’ll say. It’s interesting.

He’s sleeping really well, anywhere between an hour and a half and two hours of nap in the early afternoon, and ten hours at night. And he’s so close to making it through all those ten hours at night completely dry. Sometimes he manages it, sometimes he doesn’t. And when he doesn’t it’s usually the wetting that wakes him up just before our scheduled wake-up time, and he’s so upset and frustrated. (Jury’s out regarding the classification of the amount of frustration connected with the wetting, and the amount associated with being jolted awake before he would wake up on his own.)

School continues to go very well. They call him their sparkplug (familiar, what?), the one whose enthusiasm and energy gets everyone else active and involved. He plays with the older kids, then goes to the younger kids, and then to the kids his own age, and integrates seamlessly into each group; apparently he’s the only one who ranges between groups like that. The CD player was being fixed when he started school, but when it came back and they did a unit on music he was right there, attentive and interested. It’s his favourite thing there, or at least the one that keeps his attention the longest, we’re told. He brings home new songs all the time (not that we recognize them, because although he is enthusiastic he is not necessarily reproducing them correctly), and loves songs with actions accompanying them. The other day he was making odd vowel sounds to the tune of Frère Jacques, one of the tunes they adapt a lot at preschool, then saying someone’s name: “[vowel sound] [vowel sound] Heidi, [vowel sound] [vowel sound] Heidi…” It took me a half hour of hearing him sing this to himself while playing before it clicked and suddenly it made sense. He was singing the morning welcome song ( “Where is Ashley, where is Ashley? Here she is, here she is!”) in French. Ou est Heidi? Aha.

His food preferences have no consistency that I can see. He refused applesauce for months, and has enthusiastically eaten bowls of it for the past two weeks. Every time I made homemade macaroni and cheese for dinner he’d cry and ask for plain noodles, but last night he dug in to the bowl I put in front of him with gusto and even had seconds. At breakfast he asks for a mélange of Rice Krispies, Cheerios, Shreddies, and organic kamut flakes in various combinations. Cold pancakes are still a great snack. Oatmeal is back. Apparently he wasn’t eating well at school lunches, pushing things around his plate and saying, “I don’t like it,” but that’s been worked out (part of it was low appetite leading into the cold then the tummy bug thing, part of it was a sudden discomfort with the schedule, yet another part was that he was having huge breakfasts and enthusiastic mid-morning snacks and thus not hungry at lunch). The deal at home is you eat three big bites of what’s on your plate and if you decide you don’t like or want it, you can politely refuse the rest, but we’re not going to make you something else. Generally it’s not an issue, and if it is for some reason, he learns that being hungry later isn’t so much fun. We’re not in the least concerned that he won’t eat enough; that will never be a problem!

In general he’s still a cheerful, inventive, imaginative boy with great enthusiasm for just about everything. He loved bringing his carrots into school to share with all his friends there, and told them that he helped plant them, water them, and harvest them. He and Gryff have been celebrating the turn of the season by galumphing up and down the hall, chasing one another. Falling leaves mean playing in piles of them, messing about with sticks, and finding very cold bumblebees to tuck into the garden in hopes that they will find a warm place in which to hibernate. Decreasing hours of daylight means getting ready for the day in the morning when it’s still dark, and going to bed when the sun has gone down. “Maybe it will snow from those clouds!” he says eagerly. Everything is interesting and fun. And it’s good to have someone discovering fun things around.

Today’s Writing

Can’t title this an exclusive Orchestrated update because ye gods, I was productive today on not one but two projects. I scare me sometimes.

Orchestrated:
New words today: 2,338
Total word count, Orchestrated: 23,738

Wow. Somehow the protagonist’s response to the first challenge turned into a standing-up-for-what’s-right. And there are icky politics involved. (Not political politics, the kind that pop up in any organization.)

Harpsichord Dreams:
New words today: 3,287
Total word count, Harpsichord Dreams: 3,427

Hello, gentle reader, meet my new project, the book of music-themed essays sporting the working title of Harpsichord Dreams. I need a proper icon for it. (Yay, a work-avoiding tactic for tomorrow!)

Allow me to record my grand total for the day, because it’s just going to make me smug:

Total words written today: 5,625

Wow. Yeah, that was worth it.

Gentle Readers, Information Is Needed From You!

In this case, I need the help of local musical persons with moving experience. I know there are lots of music-types who read this journal and don’t comment frequently or at all; you’re likely the people I need to hear from in this instance.

Have any of my gentle readers (or their families or friends) in the Montreal area had experience with a reliable piano moving company whose rates won’t gut a bank account? If so, could you leave the company’s name, a brief summary of the fees you paid and your impression of their service in the comments? If you have their contact info that would be a terrific bonus, but if all you remember is their name I have excellent research skills and can track the other info down on my own.

No, we do not own a piano. Rates for moving one must be factored into the budget for the purchase of such an instrument, however, so I need to be armed with the appropriate knowledge as I continue my search for one. If it makes any difference, we’d be moving an apartment-sized piano under four feet high.

Thank you in advance, gentle readers!

Review: Mr. Darcy Presents His Bride

Author: Helen Halstead
Title: Mr. Darcy Presents His Bride: A Sequel to Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice

Publisher: Ulysses Press
Media type: Trade paperback, 320 pages
Release date: March 23, 2007
Reading period: September 2008
ISBN-10: 1569755884
ISBN-13: 978-1569755884
Category: Adult historical literature

[NOTE: This book has been previously self-published and then published by Random House Australia as A Private Performance.]

Everyone knows that when a book ends, it ends. Especially a classic novel such as Pride & Prejudice.

Well, there are slews of authors and readers who crave reading more about Darcy and Elizabeth, and go on to write or read various imaginings of What Happens Next. I’ve read some tolerable published sequels, put others down after a few chapters due to boredom or disgust, and have deliberately avoided yet others. And then there is Helen Halstead’s Mr. Darcy Presents His Bride: A Sequel to Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice.

To sum it up and give away the review in a single phrase: This is the best Austen sequel or spin-off that I have ever read.

Normally I’m happy to let classic stories lie as the author intended and steer clear of sequels and spin-off, but I am occasionally curious about how other people imagine what might have occurred after the final pages of a novel. Helen Halstead captures all the original characters very well, creates necessary new ones in keeping with Austen’s own characters, echoes Austen’s writing style easily and fluidly (unlike some other sequels I have attempted to read, which seem to think that convoluted phrasing equals a Regency writing style), and perhaps most importantly doesn’t throw in a lot of sex or duels or out-of-wedlock characters bent on revenge. The plot is sympathetic in style and ideology to Austen’s original, and for that I heartily applaud her.

The premise of the novel is simple. Once married to a less-than-socially-acceptable woman, Darcy must then integrate her into his social set. Elizabeth melts some hearts with her wit, simple beauty, and intelligence; others reject her, and she in turn laughs and chooses to dismiss them instead of obsessing about it. Throughout this trial by fire, Darcy and Elizabeth reiterate their character traits as firmly established by Austen in Pride & Prejudice, which causes miscommunication and marital friction until the experience stimulates personal growth and new understanding. Halstead handles it all very capably without resorting to lurid or histrionic invention, remaining true to Austen’s originals. Reading her ‘what-next?’ is a pleasure, and one I am happy to recommend to other readers. I read it in a single sitting; I hope others enjoy it as much as I did.

Many thanks to Mini Book Expo and Karma Bennett at Ulysses Press, through whom I acquired the review copy of this book.

(Yes, Mum, you get to read it next.)

Publisher web site: http://www.ulyssespress.com/
Author web site: HelenHalstead.com