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Jan. 24th, 2005 08:00 pm
brigdh: (<3)
[personal profile] brigdh
Gacked from [livejournal.com profile] childofatlantis

"Write what you know."

What aspiring fantasy or sci-fi writer hasn't heard that advice and cringed? We don't want to write about *us* - our lives are so boring and mundane. Or are they?

Everything you do that seems deathly dull is probably unknown and new, even alien, to someone somewhere else. Even if it's not, as a writer you should be able to make it seem that way to your readers.

Pick up the challenge. Take a slice of your normal, dull, boring daily routine and write it the way you would a fic. Keep it true but make it interesting. Write yourself in third person, the hero/ine of the newest chart breaking novel about a student/office worker/mother/net geek/whatever. Write what *you* know best.




Brigdh got out of bed at a quarter of ten in the morning, which was just enough time to get dressed, brush her teeth, and spend ten minutes attempting to fit all her textbooks plus a binder plus a manga plus a scheduler plus food plus a laptop into a messenger bag. Of course, it would have been easier to simply carry less stuff, but that would have involved leaving something behind, and you never knew when you'd desperately need the adventures of gay Japanese rock stars. The bag was old, plain, and solid black, without even a 'kiss me, I'm a geek' button- which her backpack had- to brighten it up. However, it did have the advantage of being able to carry a laptop, which is generally a plus.

Outside, everything but the streets was snow-covered. There'd been a storm over the weekend, but it hadn't left much more than an inch of snow. Brigdh felt almost cheated. The news had been predicting life-or-death situations and blizzards conditions for days beforehand; it was disappointing to see it turn out to be no more than a flurry.

The streets and sidewalks had been churned into a mud and melted ice mix that resembled a chocolate slushy. It was the worst sort of groundcover: a single thread hanging loose off the hem of her jeans was enough to soak the dirty water nearly up to her knees, where it would take hours to dry and leave swirls of dust-colored marks as it retreated.

Her first class was in Lord Hall, which was also where the offices for her major, Anthropology, were. Lord Hall was an old-fashioned-looking building, built of brick with a white, wide staircase leading to the front door. Random graffiti marred the faux marble, names and hearts and one pretend cave drawing with a stick man hunting a bear. Lord Hall was several shades darker than the surrounding buildings, more chocolate than cinnamon, and had air conditioners protruding randomly from several windows on the third floor. It was set at an angle from everything else, disturbing the neat, parallel rows aligning the mostly one-way roads. It had been condemned since the 70s. It also violated quite a few state laws, mainly having to do with providing accommodations for the handicapped, and didn't have enough offices for its professors, leading to many boxes of files stacked haphazardly in the hallways of the upper floors. The walls and bulletin boards inside were decorated with posters, advertising upcoming classes or lectures, and providing application information for field schools held during the summer. Scattered among the more intellectual papers were propaganda for the still-forming Grad Student Union and a few flyers for Jesus, left behind by very different groups.

The Economic Anthropology class started at 10:30 with a discussion on Marx's ideas about market value. The professor was Brian Tucker, who was so young that he actually wasn't technically even a professor. He spent every summer in Madagascar, living with the Mikea, a group of hunter-gatherers there. He had the warped sense of humor that teachers occasionally have, and tended to use doughnuts and sticks of chalk for his 'supply and demand' examples, if he couldn't come up with anything even stranger.

Brigdh took her notes, filling the margins of the paper with doodles and hiragana charts. She hadn't been able to hold pen and paper without sketching something in years, and a typical class just wasn't enough to hold her attention. If she didn't distract herself with something small to occupy her mind while she listened, she'd end up completely off in a daydream, and wouldn't remember anything of what had been said.

This class was a bit more interesting than most days, if only because of the giant roach that wandered into the room halfway through. It was nearly 6 inches long, with clear-ish wings over a dull orange-red body, and wildly spinning antenna. Several people suggested squishing it, but although people were ready to shout out ideas, no one was ready to have quite that much bug guts on their shoes, and it was allowed to walk around unmolested for a time. It spent a while underneath Brigdh's chair, while she squeaked quietly and tried to keep any body parts, clothing or bag straps from touching the floor and allowing it to climb up. Eventually, someone flipped it onto its back and it squimed helplessly in a corner for the rest of class.

It reminded Brigdh of another experience she'd had with a similarly giant roach, involving bug spray, senile nurses, the foothills of Appalachia, and little girls ceasing to breathe, but it's a long story and best left for another time.

When it let out, at 12:18 because her university has weird time issues and declared that all classes must end at either 18 minutes after the hour or 12 minutes before, she headed to the library. Her next class wasn't until 3, but it was a test she hadn't yet studied for, and she had two reading evaluations to write before that. The library was a big, stately building. It had something like 12 floors- something like because there were the small hidden floors 2A and 3A and others that made it hard to count accurately. Once she got above the second floor the building seemed deserted and empty and slightly scary. The rows and stacks of books made it hard to tell if anyone else was nearby; someone could hide mere feet from her and she'd have never known.

She opened her laptop to write the evaluations, both critiques of the Pardoner's Tale by Chaucer, though on different aspects of it. Theoretically, there was wireless internet in the building, but she couldn't get it to work long enough to check her email. She ate a Rasberry-flavored Nutrigrain bar, which was the only food she'd had all day, and then learned to ask "How many hours a day are you in class?" in Japanese. She also learned the word for a day off, which is yasumi, and decided that she could use more of those.

At 3, she arrived at Hagerty Hall, which was a brand new building. It was shaped like a hollow square, and had a courtyard with trees in the middle. She found it horribly easy to get lost inside of it. All the walls were the same blank white, and there weren't any windows or oddly shaped doors or computer labs to differentiate one hallway from another. Too many long, empty rooms made the entire place seem like a labyrinth. Her TA for the test was Murazumi-sensei; Brigdh had a tendency to run into her at the coffee shop she frequented, which always was slightly weird. It ran over, unfortunately, taking twenty minutes instead of the usual ten, and she had to run for her next class at 3:30, surprised to pass her roommate on the way.

That was Medieval Literature, which was taught by a small Scottish man she adored. He spent most of the time being unreasonably quiet and timid for a professor, but every now and then would begin to discuss the Middle Ages' Penis Police, or translate a line of Chaucer into Modern English as "Yoquisha, you my boo." She found him very funny.

Afterwards, she came back home, very thankful to get out of the cold and to have something to eat. She made dirty rice, which was good, but caused one of her roommates to comment yet again that she only eats weird things. Brigdh refrained from responding by pointing out that said roommate ate TV dinners twice a day, and that was far grosser than anything she could possibly eat.

And then, finally, she got to read email and check livejournal, and lived happily ever after.

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