I go through these cycles of wanting to purge you from my head. It's a slipperly slope from my head to the keyboard and I'm through with keeping you from falling.
Lately I've been vascillating between opposites. Wrong and right. Idle and action. Love and hate.
I've realized that most of the time, life doesn't present us with one option or the other, but leaves us with a maddening gray area that I tend to spend most of my time fumbling around in.
And it's not fair. Because you see things in black and white and I know we may never understand each other.
Monday, March 31, 2008
Polarities
Posted by Hellafied at 1:23 PM 2 comments
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Awesomefest Prequel?
I got nothin' today except for that my best girl ever is coming to Chicago this weekend.

Not the best of circumstances, but I'm delighted nonetheless. :)
Posted by Hellafied at 5:25 PM 4 comments
Labels: Awesomefest, Chicago, Don, don juan
Friday, March 21, 2008
Genuinely delighted.

The good people at Indie Bloggers decided my below piece was good enough to post.
Definitely check out the site. Some very good writing going on there.
Have a great weekend everyone!
Posted by Hellafied at 10:04 AM 3 comments
Labels: guest blogging, writing
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Why I write.
I write to keep the world in perspective. To knock it back from its skewed axis enough to try and understand it. I write to avoid the ever-feared cliché, to get inside the ring with a paragraph and work it over until it pleads for the bell. I write because I am hopelessly in love with the sound of words. All of my books have haphazardly scribbled in margins and dog-eared pages. A star here, an underlined passage there. I can't think of any other way to read a book than to constantly remind myself of why, if not to write.
Mostly, I think I write to discover foreign lands within myself. I wonder oftentimes about those who take no pleasure in it, why? Perhaps it would be wise to consider leaving the shore more than once in a while.
In a world where what we see is what we get, it is important as writers to brighten that image; to make it accessible to as many people as possible. We can make blades of grass into tiny green swords that swipe at our shins. Skyscrapers become stilts for God. Tree branches are like twisted, arthritic hands. We hold the power of metamorphosis in our hands and all we have to do is get black on white. But we are not magicians. We can’t turn numbness into passion. We can’t use our pencils to erase wrong, and the sting of heartache still smolders even when cloaked in eloquent language.
Sometimes I wonder if the seeds of my existence were watered with the ink of great authors and this is what pushes my pen to the paper at night and on sad days. Or maybe it is simply the need to write. What is true in the world? What is our purpose in the universe? How do I live my life? On countless pages, I deliberate. I spread the wrinkles of my mind flat in order to take more in and then I write.
Sometimes I wonder at the eerie fleetingness of the written word. When a writer settles into his bed at night and picks up his journal to record the slips and falls of his day, it seems odd to me the urgency to get it all down. It’s sad really, the art of writing things down in a journal or diary because when you think about it, we write things down to remember them later. Do I write because I want to remember my own life?
Inevitably, the answer to that question, like many of the wonders of the world, is to write. It is a vicious cycle, like playing duck-duck-goose with myself. I must write in order to understand why I write.
Stepping onto foreign soil is not always the easiest task. There are many obstacles to tackle on the road to self-discovery. Writers are pretentious, arrogant. We belong to workshops, we are serious. We are the most popular kids in school and also the ones who care less about football games and more about Chaucer or scientific notation. We like to talk about words. We hate each other, are viciously jealous, but can recognize a good thing when we read it, even if it is not our own. We steal from Joyce, Hemingway, Baldwin and Whitman with no intentions of returning what we take. We scan the dictionary for the perfect word, and then devour it like wolves. We are ruthless, proud, demure, and calculating, but at least we are all these things together.
A writer’s biggest fear and ally is the world itself. I am sometimes afraid that I will not be able to adequately and justly recount the world around me. It is almost like a blind man seeing for the first time. There are so many aspects to sight: color, space, shade, size, movement, that to realize all these things at once would send any mind reeling.
As a writer, I fear this disillusion, yet desperately seek to capture it. No matter how difficult, if a writer succeeds, then he or she has contained the world---lassoed its rearing, ugly head and corked it in, like a tiny ship in a bottle. From this triumph, we can poke and prod to learn more about ourselves and our lives within this world. We begin to understand from rolling the bottle between our hands how small the world is, and what connects us to its every aspect. Language transcends barriers of race and gender. We name everything, like Adam and Eve voraciously scouring the Garden of Eden, in hopes of lending meaning to what we see. Words act as grafts between cultures. And ultimately, writer or not, we begin to see worth in the art of writing.
And I do think that only the observant eye of a writer could capture all the elements of sight at once. However, unlike a photographer, our negatives develop on paper. Instead of using shadow and light to know something is round, we use adjectives and similes. We can sway a reader by changing the round object into a ripe, fuzzy peach, or a different kind of round, the ethereal sphere of a bubble freshly blown. A photograph cannot intensify the experience, it only documents the reality.
Some say the written world is not real. They claim it is an embellished representation of what one person thinks is real. I disagree. Allowing ourselves into other people’s perceptions is what makes our lives real. By stepping onto their shores, we are given permission to question, to run about barefoot and wonder like a child. We see for the first time all over again.
The written world is the only medium that lets us travel to these foreign lands consistently and without resistance. Writers offer a kind of displacement that one can only get lost in through words. A good book can take you anywhere you want to go. Where else are we permitted to wander and explore the capacities of our own minds and free ourselves of the world we know for a moment or two?
Writing is the fount of our existence. For thousands of years, writers have existed from the primitive scrawlings of the cavemen to the circumspectly structured theories of the philosophers. That is not to say that in order to write, you must be one of the world’s greatest thinkers, this is plainly not the case as so clearly demonstrated by this meager blog. I think some of the best writers do write for a higher purpose, they too, are in search of a safe harbor for their thoughts.
But perhaps writing is for the bold. It is for people who seek to find and don’t stop until they have reached somewhere they have never been. It is for those few who have an irreconcilable need to express. And again, for those who simply wish to create something they are proud of. Ayn Rand said that she decided to be a writer, not in order to save the world, or to serve her fellow men, but for the simple, personal, selfish, and egotistical happiness of creating the kind of men and events she could like, respect and admire. There is a certain poignancy in wanting to assemble something as honest as that. Maybe that's why I was so indignant when the pieces I wrote were published as something different than I had intended. I cared about those words; seeded and watered them until what grew was perfectly in bloom with my thoughts. It's selfish, but for the first time in a long while, I think that's okay.
I sometimes laugh when I call myself a writer. Images of me in twenty years in a dimly lit room with bad wallpaper, hunched over a typewriter, a cigarette dangling from my lips and a short glass of warm liquor on the desk next to me abound through my head. I see my face, and I am shocked at the immutable frown I wear. Then, I look more closely and see the corners of my mouth quiver and upturn ever so slightly and I know this is the beginnings of a smile.
I am revealed, I have found another sandy shore.
Posted by Hellafied at 11:44 AM 14 comments
Labels: why I write, writing
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
So this is what bittersweet tastes like.
So I got my copies of the book today, upon returning to my office. All of the sudden it was Christmas morning again, and I was six years old, tearing into my presents on the floor of my parent's living room.
Only what I opened was not mine.
For two years I have anxiously awaited the moment I see my own words in print. As I paged through the book, my finger carefully following the inked out words, my heart sank.
The voice on the page was not mine.
There are three essays of mine included in the anthology. I wrote all three with that urgent, pulling metaphoric tone that has become my definitive writing style. I feel like you would be able to recognize a Megan Gates piece out of a pile of many. And I like that. And I take pride in that. I have cultivated something that belongs to me. My voice.
All three essays were changed so much by the editors, it was as if someone else wrote them.
I understand that by signing that contract two years ago, I gave up some creative freedom. Honestly, I expected that.
But what they reconstructed is foreign to me.
The last paragraph of "Love Letters for Dummies" is not mine and it's terrible. Where is the edge? The sardonic undercurrent? I wrote them into the words expressly and now it sounds like a sappy, harlequin romance essay. Hmpf.
The work I did was good. I am upset that it was changed and not even for the better.
Am I overreacting? Is this naive?
Every single word was picked circumspectly for each sentence that cradles it. Every comma, deliberate. Every line break, invaluable.
All I have are my words and the integrity of who I am as a writer.
And somehow, that was lost.
Sigh.
Posted by Hellafied at 10:50 AM 6 comments
Friday, March 14, 2008
The Incredible Hulk - Official Trailer starring Ed Norton
Edward Norton and Tim Roth? Why not just throw in Gary Oldman and really excite me.
No seriously. It would be like porn for me.
Can't wait!
Posted by Hellafied at 4:27 PM 2 comments
Friday, March 07, 2008
Hitting the indefinite snooze button on my biological clock.
This Sunday is my niece Samantha's 1st birthday (see above).
The time I get to spend time with she and my nephew is priceless and important to me. They surprise my every day and when I'm with them, I surprise myself.
My brother called me two days ago to invite me to Sam's birthday party on Sunday and out of nowhere said, "You know Meg, I have to tell you, without blowing smoke up your ass or feeding you a bunch of platitudes, you are by far the best with the kids out of everyone in the family."
"Whoa, where did that come from?" I said.
He replied, "You don't expect anything from them. Not a smile, not a hug when you walk in. You just let them be who they are and don't try to manipulate their affection. They really respond to you and I think you *get* my kids more than anyone else. I think you are going to be an excellent mother."
Out of nowhere this candid conversation with my brother happened and tears started to well in my eyes. Same reaction the first time my nephew told me he loved me.
We were sitting on my mom's couch with the whole family watching the Oscars. My nephew Jack had just instructed me to "get comfy" with him on the couch, meaning he wanted me to tuck him into the "soft blanket" on my mom's couch and cuddle up together. "Auntie Megan, GET COMFY" he demanded.
So we settle in and I put my hat on his head. Out of nowhere, he turns to me and says, "I love you" and opens his arms wide to bear hug me. I barely stuttered out an "I love you too, Jack" before I was again, unexpectedly in tears.
Everyone on the couch "awwwed" and "ohhhhed" and my brother just smiled at me, but I was seriously moved. That's never happened to me before.
I don't know, more or less in the past ten years I've decided that I might be too selfish to ever have kids.
Two weeks ago I was dogsitting for my sister while she spent a weekend with the guy she's dating. Before you roll your eyes and think, "that's nothing like having a child, you idiot", hear me out.
The first few hours I was very reliable, taking her out when she scratched at the door, making sure she got her exercise and giving her the attention she required, but the last night it started to wear on me. As I gazed into her glossy brown eyes I realized...this dog is totally dependent on me.
And where that might be a complete revelation and desire for some people, for me, it was really kind of a turn off. I mean, I want *to want* to have kids, I really do.
I guess I'm just not "motherly". I don't have any kind of second sense or intuition. I'm not patient, unconditionally kind or nurturing. Even in my own relationships, I seek out people that don't require a whole lot from me and run the opposite direction at the first sign of co-dependence.
Even though I hated, hated being in a long distance relationship for four years, there was something about it that always worked for me. A certain freedom that I enjoyed that most couples in relationships don't get a chance to explore.
I need that freedom in my life. In my relationships.
I need to be able to stay out until 3:30 a.m. without having to worry if the dog has peed all over the carpet. If I decide to take a spur of the moment road trip, I don't want to have to plan in advance, pay the sitter, leave instructions.
And when I want to be alone, I want to be alone.
Don't get me wrong, I adore my niece and nephew, I think that's obvious to anyone. I find them both fascinating and there really is something to that "love at first sight" feeling. I would tear your still-beating heart right out of your chest if you hurt them.
But.
There's that ever present "but".
Maybe I'm just not there yet and maybe I'll never get there, but it's hard enough taking care of myself.
I don't eat right. I don't get enough sleep. I drink way too much to be considered responsible. I forget to do things like make dentist appointments and take my vitamins. I leave food in the fridge past its date and I don't pick up after myself. I spend way too much money on shoes and not enough on groceries. I come and go as I please and I do it without mention to where I'll be. I don't send cards to my relatives on their birthdays. And subsequently, I don't feel guilty when I receive their cards. I sleep until after noon on the weekends and sometimes I don't even change out of my pajamas all day. If its a choice between me and you, nine times out of ten, I'll usually choose me, but I'll make it look like an accident. I have like eleven credit cards, all of which I use frequently. I don't save money and I hate when people call me "just to check up".
But then there's those two kids whose expectant gazes just melt my heart.
Could there be hope for me yet?
Posted by Hellafied at 1:14 PM 7 comments
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
This self-promotion is anything but shameless.

My book is published!
And I say "my book", but it's really an anthology of many other talented writers' material as well.
You can buy it here, or eventually on Amazon.com.
Also, the publisher featured an excerpt from one of my included pieces on their website here.
Check it out!
Posted by Hellafied at 10:28 AM 4 comments
Labels: writing
Monday, March 03, 2008
For Adam, who gave my words melody.
Today I swallowed the ocean.
Choked it down until I could breathe again. Tears spilled down onto my clothes for all of those times I told myself I would not give in. But I do. I give in and I can't help it, but I'm not ruled by the same things as you are. This heart forces me to do things I don't want to. It stands at the helm, twisting and turning the wheel, sending me tumbling about below deck.
It's a difficult life this way, but there's nothing I can do about it.
I swallowed the ocean today and it had a bittersweet taste.
Posted by Hellafied at 1:01 PM 1 comments
Sunday, March 02, 2008
These pretty much sum up the trip.
I pretty much had to cash in my 401k in order to ship all the wine I bought home. Good drunks will tell you there is no limit to what you'll spend in order to catch a buzz.
Posted by Hellafied at 2:44 PM 0 comments

