Ink & Penwipers

Scribbles, screeds, speculations, and the occasional reference to Schrodinger's cat.

27 November 2002

I feel rather like the earth has moved under my feet.

We had our Thanksgiving a day early because of relatives' traveling issues. I'm not even going to talk about the saga of the turkey, which Jessica was appointed to cook (with me as sous-chef, gofer, and Moral Support). Let me just say that deciding to use Alton Brown's turkey recipe was our first mistake, not because it sucked -- it did precisely the opposite -- but because it flew in the face of tradition and necessitated a number of steps which were slightly incomprehensible to other people and even to us once it got to 4 in the morning. A further complication was that the turkey refroze in the refrigerator at approximately 2 ack emma last night. So anyway, I'm going on a scant minimum of sleep and the drain of socializing with a number of very nice people whom I have just met -- thank God they were nice.

Plus, I'm contemplating a change in denomination. I've been doing the contemporary Baptist thing for about 8 years, and it's been great because it has reminded me of some of my more enjoyable times in church during my childhood. The people I've known have been wonderful, and I've always thought it was just a problem with me that the worship format tended to make me self-conscious. Well, this past Sunday I visited an Episcopal church -- the oldest church in Springfield, I seem to recall being told -- and though I was quite nervous juggling the Prayer Book and the hymnal and the order of worship (Jessica came with me and helped me keep track of myself and the page numbers -- "my Jewish Worship Assistant!" I said, which she thought was really funny), I really liked it. One would think the formality and ritual would make me more self-conscious than the free-form chorus singing. Well, it made me self-conscious, but in a different way: I sensed in the midst of my fumbling with responses and books and kneeling that if I were used to this, I would quickly cease to think about myself at all, and begin to think about the Person one is supposed to think about in worship. In the sort of worship I'm used to, it's kind of up to me to create that worship -- induce the feelings (but not too much! just enough), think about my penitence in the proper way without dwelling on it, and just generally exude an aura of carefree Christian spiritual competence. And I've never gotten used to it. This liturgy and order of worship, on the other hand, is the spiritual competence and experience of hundreds of years' worth of Christians, laid right into my hand and making me a participant in the Body -- I can feel it right there, on a normal Sunday, reading the same Collect that Episcopalians and Anglicans have read year in and year out since Shakespeare's time -- and in Shakespeare's time they weren't exactly making it all up from scratch either. I haven't stopped thinking about it. I downloaded the Book of Common Prayer from the internet and have been poring over it in my spare time. Since most of it comes straight out of the Bible, I haven't found anything in it yet that yanks my earlobe critically. Should my enthusiasm about this be unequivocal? Well, it is, at any rate -- so far. It's very strange to think of myself changing over from a nondenominational charismatic approach to a bells-and-smells approach (Jessica's term; it tickles me), but I feel like something inside me has gone all relaxed. I like it.

Jessica asked me if my ardently-Republican grandmother would still send me a birthday check if she knew I was becoming an Episcopalian Democrat. I told her that to my knowledge she hasn't stopped sending marks of affection to my uncle and aunt in Washington -- and my aunt is a Democrat lobbyist. Which by the way, thanks to all who sent me email greetings for my natal day, and cards in snail mail. The thoughts (and the money!) are much appreciated. Mmmmm-wah.

26 November 2002

Today is my birthday. So here is a spontaneous birthday sonnet.

The Promise of Snow

My birthday used to come with loads of snow.
My parents groaned, but I was not complaining;
And all that fun was half a life ago --
Since then, it's been more likely to be raining.
Ah! snow -- a landscape touch that covers all
The multitude of sins and smooths them over;
I let go, and the drift catches my fall --
Behind, a cold embrace, an angel lover.
And now, the weather forecast gives me hope,
Since I live in the Ozarks now, the chance is
That I might get snow again, of decent scope,
And thus resume my winter-birthday dances.
But now this morning -- oh, isn't it funny --
I look outside, and what is it but sunny.

So far, however, I have had a very good birthday. I saw Chamber of Secrets last night and it ruled. I was prepared for the weird Hagrid-love thing at the end, and I realized that it must be an effort to vindicate him after he was expelled. I'm okay with it; if Prisoner of Azkaban doesn't get off the ground, the vindication that comes with Hagrid becoming a teacher may not be delivered to the audience. Plus, that vindication continually fluctuates in the books, and they like to nail things into place in the movies. I dono. I loved the little bit at the very very end -- KB looked like he had so much fun playing Lockhart, and he was truly brilliant. Christian Coulson -- man! The Ford Anglia -- cheers! The Quidditch -- yee-haaaa!

So another year has gone by -- an incredibly difficult one -- and yet I'm still here and there are still things to take delight in. L'chaim!

21 November 2002

Lord, I know: two long posts in one day! But I couldn't resist. Googlism doesn't know enough about lisa inman, so here's the greatest hits of lisa, minus the sex kitten references:

lisa is framed -- Your honor, I didn't do it!
lisa is set to go wild in zambia -- Is that next to Tanzania, or Mozambique?
lisa is crowned
lisa is cool
lisa is absolutely correct -- all the time, and don't forget it!
lisa is a loser
lisa is a 76 year old lady who lives alone in sheltered accommodation and prior to this hospital admission was able to care for herself
lisa is bottoms up
lisa is a race car driver in the pits
lisa is the voice of koran in legend of himiko from central park media -- coming from Disney to a theater near you.
lisa is an outspoken adversary of the left and radical feminism and a proponent of modern conservative principles -- Damn and blast those feminists!
lisa is not an unmixed blessing for a work of art -- a backhanded compliment if I ever heard one.
lisa is kept in the warden's office -- Ah...better not comment on this one.
lisa is a good mother because she is a kind -- of badger that bites the ankles of pestering humans. I don't know!
lisa is dead -- Actually, the rumors of my death have been somewhat exaggerated.
lisa is actively involved in fostering education in globalization
lisa is a dive
lisa is editor -- Lisa, editor, you, Jane.
lisa is a very experienced musical theatre actress and dancer who most recently starred in les miserables
lisa is now a minimal hurricane -- As opposed to the maximal hurricane I used to be. Look out, Key West!
lisa is a non -- Dominican non, to be precise.
lisa is hung in napoleon bonapart's bedroom in the tuileries -- Very well hung, indeed.
lisa is painted over gioconda
lisa is one of the country's foremost illusionists
lisa is an eight year old female in the third grade
lisa is the right coach for me? -- If you want help learning how to stare like a cat, then yes!
lisa is a story about a man named george
lisa is fully functional -- THAT'S debatable.
lisa is more confident on the mat
lisa is home
lisa is the voice behind some of the 1980s' most memorable songs
lisa is a slighly boring character because she's so good all the time
lisa is an enthusiastic and motivated teacher who is totally inspired to assist others in finding their own answers
lisa is used to signify "a woman of great taste"
lisa is used first as an attribute of absolute and absolutely corrupt power -- As people with great taste so often are.
lisa is highly complementary to the large ground
lisa is the author of so you want to start a chronic illness/pain ministry
lisa is a first year mechanical engineering student whose hobbies are playing in a band and -- Oh, don't leave me hanging!...in the Tuileries...
lisa is similar to a dynamic link library -- in that she doesn't return the search you really wanted.
lisa is a spunky
lisa is a terrific editor
lisa is an expert sound designer and arranger as well as the premier new age harpist
lisa is the child of a jewish mother and a black father
lisa is the short one -- Ah! At last, something totally devoid of hyperbole.

Okay, now that I can post again, I'm going to give you storytime. It will make me feel brilliant after yet another job rejection.

Pranks That Succeeded, by Lisa Lockhart.

My family has a history of pranks that backfire, and I am no different. I can, however, point to three times in my life when pranks of mine succeeded, and no, I did not steal these little triumphs from someone who is now under a Memory Charm. Lord knows these pranks can afford me little celebrity anyway.

First, a collaborative effort. Our family had a cat named Missy who sometimes made her displeasure known with a deliciously underpawed style. One occasion when Dad had displeased her, she used his coat for a litterbox during the night. Then a few years later she did the same thing in the tub. Dad complained about this, hinting that we ought to administer some sort of stern justice, and so Mom got the bright idea of molding Tootsie Rolls and putting them on his pillow, with little indentations in the fabric meant to suggest paw prints. So we did; and when Dad came home from work we all boiled around him: "Dad! You have to come see what Missy did!" We preceded him into his room and showed him the catastrophe...and while he was trying to think of something to say, I went over, picked up one of the brown masses, and ate it. Oooh, you should have seen his face!

Second, a solo project. I had long been familiar with the time-honored April Fools' trick of wrapping a rubber band around the vegetable sprayer so that when the unsuspecting victim turns on the water, it soaks them. I did this in the teachers' lounge my senior year of high school. Nothing was ever said, but when I went to inspect the empty room later in the day, I found that the little handle had been torn clean off the sprayer. I never broadcast my success; the violence done to the sprayer suggested that my triumph would be lessened if I revealed my identity. To this day I don't know who the victim was.

Third, a brilliant success that depended almost entirely on chance -- and on a certain underestimation of my talent at accent and inflection. I was working as a floater in the library system, bouncing from branch to branch, and I discovered one August morning that it was my parents' anniversary and I didn't have time to get them a card or do anything for them. I did, however, have just enough time to do something to them. *evil grin* I may as well say at the outset that there is no point in trying to play a phone trick on Mom; she just knows her little darlins' voices too well. Besides, Dad was a more satisfying mark, as the shock waves that go through his consciousness when someone has the audacity to play a joke on him are just too priceless to forgo. Anyway, I called Mom at work and got Dad's work number, saying I planned to call him and prank him -- though I didn't say how, and I barely had an idea myself. I called, expecting to get him, expecting to flub and start laughing, expecting him to recognize my voice straight out of the gate.

I got his voice mail. Using my best Beavis-and-Butthead voice, I said: "Uh-h -- hello? This is a message for David Inman? We, like, have an anniversary sing-a-gram to give him? but we can't find his office. So we'll, like, call back after lunchtime. Okay? bye." And I hung up calmly and went back to work.

My work day lasted late, and so it was dark when I got home to my parents' house. I walked in, and I was the woman of the hour. Apparently Dad never recognized my voice, and had spent the rest of the day hiding in his office, dreading the anniversary sing-a-gram. He told his secretary to keep the sing-a-gram at bay if at all possible. But neither Beavis nor Butthead appeared to humiliate him, so he went home triumphantly and crowed to Mom when she got home, "Your anniversary sing-a-gram never arrived." "What anniversary sing-a-gram?" "The sing-a-gram that you arranged to come to my office. I got this voice mail message from this woman of obviously low intelligence saying they were lost and couldn't find my office. And they never did. So hah." "I never sent you an anniversary sing-a-gram," Mom told him, a glimmer forming in her mind, "but Lisa did call to get your phone number so she could prank you."

GOOOOOOOOOOAAAAAALLLLLLL!!!!!

All of that was so brilliant, I couldn't have planned it better than that.

I am writing this story as my memoirs, because with my family luck, I don't feel I could possibly tempt fate any longer by continuing my jokester career. Which reminds me of a quote from Hank the Cowdog: "When sliding down the bannister of life, be careful not to get any splinters in your career." So, I will sign off for now, and go in search of a mirror and pair of tweezers. *maniacal laughter*

17 November 2002

Hodgepodge day!

A book I heartily recommend is Your God is Too Safe, by Mark Buchanan. Buchanan's an excellent writer; his prose is delicious and his thoughts strike home with great clarity and resonance. I reread it occasionally when I need to get my head on straight -- and sometimes just because it's cool.

Jessica has been telling me I should try my skills as a playwright. I tend to be better at dialogue than narration, and my characters do things in groups. My stories, however, tend to be novelistic. We'll see. I'll let that simmer on a back burner and see what develops.

My birthday is coming up, and Jessica has promised to take me to see Chamber of Secrets. Last year, she was all set to take me to see the first one for my birthday, but I ended up going to the emergency room instead. What great fun, I can tell you. Never get acute panic disorder if you can help it. I ended up going to the first one with Mom a few weeks later. But this year, my health is better and I've been reading spoilers on people's blogs and I am way ready to enjoy myself on my birthday this year.

Oh yeah, and I discovered you can't get the DVDs to Good Eats except on the Food Network website. So, no trip to Borders will do. Darn.

I've still been working on the third novel rather than the first of my little trilogy. The plot of the third one has been somewhat difficult. I'm trying to get my characters together, and that's all I really care about; but the first two stories fall directly into the suspense genre (or indirectly, if you're me and picky), and something else needs to happen to strengthen the thread of the story. So what I've done is make up a story that is pretty much a conflation of the plots of Gaudy Night and Busman's Honeymoon. Am I ashamed not to be sledding down a virgin hillside? I feel a little dubious, but we'll see when I get to the bottom of the hill what it's like.

By the way, go visit my brother's blog. He's fifteen and brilliant, and he should post more. :)

15 November 2002

Ha! Guess it's all that James Herriot I've read.




Jolly good, wot! Anyone for tennis? That'll be ten ponies, guv. You're the epitome of everything that is english. Yey :) Hoist that Union Jack!

How British are you?

this quiz was made by alanna



Of course, there's such a thing as too much of a good thing: A.S. Byatt remarked on NPR a few years ago that some people have T.B. -- Terribly British syndrome. I think that she ought to include herself in that category; she probably does. Yet another author who rules.

10 November 2002

This has been a somewhat uneventful week, except for seeing Nikki Giovanni at a Drury Convo -- quite an experience -- and except for getting turned down for yet another job -- and except for Jessica getting the DVDs of Sports Night and having a Sorkinfest over the weekend. Oh, and I drew a bad cartoon inspired by a recent episode of Good Eats while Jessica and I were hanging out in the Mudhouse....

And I wrote a kissing scene. It's a really sad commentary when my characters are getting more than I am, but then again that's the story of my life. Can you tell I'm slightly depressed?

04 November 2002

Oh, and did I mention that Good Eats is a really good show? It's the Bill Nye the Science Guy of cooking shows.

Dad H. came home from the hospital yesterday, in time to talk to my family before they left for home. It was stinky that he had to be in the hospital for most of the weekend; he was looking forward to talking to my mother, sister, and brother at length. But he got to talk to them; and I got to see them, which was wonderful. Mom looked great, and Sam's grown more so that there's no doubt he's taller than us girls, and J was quietly enjoying herself. Mom bought me some clothes, which I sorely needed. And she got me something I wanted, which was a pair of shorts Sam found -- yellow, with One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish on them. (I'm wearing them right now; they're great lounge-around-the-house shorts.) And Jessica bought me Alton Brown's book, I'm Just Here for the Food. Which makes me VERY happy -- just imagine me grinning. Yeah, I have a thing for Alton Brown, so sue me. We stayed up last night till 2:30 a.m. to watch Good Eats again.

*grins again*

01 November 2002

Well, this has been fun. Dad H. and I went to the mall as usual this morning, but while we were having our coffee in the food court, he suddenly came over dizzy, then felt worse, then lay down on the floor and passed out. There were people and nurses around, and a lot of hullabaloo, and he was taken to the ER, where I followed. This was not very much fun; in fact, it was awful. But he's stable now, and they're keeping an eye on his heart in the CCU at St. John's, so I'm going to plotz for a little while and not worry. So, to distract my mind somewhat, I'm going to do this week's Friday Five:

1. Were you raised in a particular religious faith? My parents converted to Christianity when I was young, first Mom, then Dad. Then I was raised in a nondenominational charismatic Christian home. For this reason, I don't have the urge that many do to identify themselves with a particular denomination as if it were my religion in itself, but I do consider myself as having been in an orthodox environment for a long time. However, it took me a long time to stop pretending to myself that I was a Christian and actually be one. I was the one who had the right answer in Sunday School, but never felt like it made a difference to me.

2. Do you still practice that faith? Why or why not? As will be seen from above, I am not still a Christian; I became one after a lot of wrestling and struggling with God. I eventually figured out that if I was angry with God and wanted to rebel, I might as well be honest with Him about it, since He probably knows anyway. He hasn't zapped me yet. :) In fact, in these times of struggle, I got closer to God than when I was parroting right answers to keep Him and other people at bay. I practice the Christian faith because I believe it's true, and because by being true it makes an actual, real-life difference to the way I think about the pains in my life, whether caused by me or by others. In an age when declaring one's Christianity is seen more as a political act and less as a religious one, I have to think long and hard about the way I say this, so here it is: What Christ did on the cross makes a difference to me because it reconciles me to God. I guess that's the bottom line.

3. What do you think happens after death? Death scares me. From what I hear in church, it's not supposed to scare Christians, but it does me; Philip Larkin's "the anesthetic from which no one ever comes round" puts it just right for me now that I've experienced general anesthesia. What from my experience will contradict the feeling that my consciousness will just end? The good news to me is that this struggle is built into the New Testament. Christ is called "the firstborn from among the dead" to give people hope that some form of spiritual and even bodily life will be ours after this life is over -- because people don't have the guarantee that it happens. The first Christians had no illusions about what the breakup and darkness and molder of Sheol really was: and yet they had found some Person they could trust through all this. I'm not sure how it will pan out, but I believe the Bible and I know who I'm trusting, and that's what I always come down to when I'm scared.

4. What is your favorite religious ritual (participating in or just observing)? Having grown up, as I said, nondenominational charismatic, I participated in no rituals that were supposed to be called such except for Communion. Communion used to make me mad because it seemed like people were getting all spiritual about eating a little wafer and drinking a cute little cup of grape juice, and I meanwhile felt nothing at all when I did this. After I became a Christian indeed, I began to understand the exercise. But I'm still tempted badly to fret about what I'm feeling during the act rather than just do it, so I couldn't call it a favorite ritual. My favorite rituals are actually Jewish ones: especially the part of the Oneg Shabbat when we all drink wine and give each other pieces of challah bread. That, and singing the Shema. Isn't this essentially the same act (eating and drinking) as Communion? Yeah, but we're not all watching ourselves to make sure we're doing it "worthily". I'm not dogging Communion here; I'm dogging the attitude I've seen taken toward it, that we have to reach some level of Realization before the ritual is worth anything. The Catholics have it better; even if you don't believe in transubstantiation, their form of the ritual makes it easier to think of the act as renewing the Christ-life inside you, whatever you happen to be feeling. Oy, don't get me started. Well, I am started, so oh well. The soul mimics the body better than the body the soul, so just do it and worry about feeling right later. Not that you can't err in the opposite direction, but that isn't my problem at the moment.

5. Do you believe people are basically good? Existence is a good thing. Intelligence is a good thing. All people exist, and most people have some intelligence, so it isn't an evil thing for anyone to exist. The big BUT is that people have the choice to pervert their existence and their talents so they can have their OWN way about things, and we're now wired to want that. A lot. "Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds," says the Bard, and he's right: It's because we are basically good that any evil in us is such an abomination. I get very impatient with Christians who boil it down Jonathan Edwards-style by saying that we just suck and God hates the sight of us. If we really sucked through and through, God wouldn't get so exercised; he'd just flush us down the toilet and then go raid the heavenly fridge for some ice cream. If, however, we are good enough at least to know better, I can see God the Parent counting to ten and pinching the bridge of his nose, eyes closed.

My brain's mush. I'll blog more later.