Category: Live It


  • What makes an artist an artist…

    What makes an artist an artist is kind of feeling like you can relate to them but at the same time, they’re like, otherworldly. My experience [in ballet] is that it isn’t about seeing a pretty line or an insanely arched foot. I think most of my favorite dancers that I truly respect as artists don’t even have all of that. But they’ve taken what they have and they’ve made it into this incredible thing. It’s not about their body parts. That’s so easy to come by. You can find a pretty body anywhere and put them in a position, but what makes an artist an artist and a dancer a true dancer is what they make of all of that onstage and what they bring to the audience.

    –Misty Copeland, Soloist with American Ballet Theatre


  • 25 Things Every Writer Should Do (to better understand why it's best to not do them)

    1. Write only when you feel like it.
    2. Follow trends.
      1. and when one trend falls through, jump on another
      2. and another
      3. and another
    3. Move on to a new project before you’ve finished the current one.
      1. and then bail on that one, too.
    4. Eat garbage, never work out, or otherwise treat your body like shit
    5. Put writing at the bottom of your To Do list.
      1. And then ponder aloud why someone you don’t like got a book deal and you didn’t.
    6. Have no interests other than writing.
    7. Set unrealistic goals…
    8. …and punish yourself when you can’t meet them.
    9. Let the fact that you write young adult be an excuse for behaving like a teenager.
      1. A bratty teenager.
    10. Burn a bridge.
      1. or two.
      2. or ten.
    11. Lose your shit over negative feedback.
      1. Lose your shit over anything, really.
    12. Mistake a writers’ conference for a frat party.
      1. or a rave.
      2. or a brothel.
    13. Never finish anything.
      1. and then ponder aloud why that person you do not like got a second book deal.
    14. Submit before you’re ready.
    15. Self-publish just ’cause.
    16. Be a dick.
    17. Surround yourself with losers.
      1. and whiners.
      2. and procrastinators.
      3. and gossipmongers.
      4. and high-maintenance drama queens.
    18. Act like “commercial” is a four-letter word.
      1. and then ponder aloud why that person you don’t like makes more money than you do.
    19. Confuse the real with the fake.
      1. and then spend your free time talking about how you are just the realest motherfucker on planet Earth.
      2. and then email all your friends asking them to comment on the blog post in which you talk about how you are just the realest motherfucker on planet Earth.
    20. Write more than you read.
    21. Spend all your time on Twitter…

      1. or Facebook…

      2. or Pinterest…

      3. or Blogger…

      4. or Goodreads…

      5. or in the comments section of an article that condoned/condemned a hot-button issue in your genre…


      …convinced it counts as “marketing”


    22. Gossip.
    23. Run spell-check and call it a revision.
    24. Plagiarize.
    25. Believe everything you hear.

  • Manic

     

    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: OMG.
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz: LIZ
    Liz:
    LIZ 
    LIZ 
    LIZ 
    LIZ 
    LIZ 
    LIZ 
    LIZ LIZ LIZ 
     
    LIZ LIZ LIZ 
          LIZ 
          LIZ 
          LIZ 
          LIZ 
          LIZ 
    LIZ LIZ LIZ 
     
    LIZ LIZ LIZ
              LIZ 
            LIZ 
          LIZ 
        LIZ 
      LIZ 
    LIZ LIZ LIZ
     
     
    Liz P.: ??????????????????
     
    Liz: shit. i forgot what i was going to say.

  • The Secret Ingredient Is….

    Liz: i found out why my burger was so rubbery
    Liz: i was eating the paper
    Liz: if that’s not scary enough for you, consider this: it doesn’t taste as good without the paper

    Liz P.: LMAO


  • The Demographics Don’t Lie

    Tampax knows me too well.

    I say this because the other day I was in Target, and I was all, Tampax or Kotex? Because even though I prefer Kotex, there’s this whole thing about how I’m opposed to neon tampons and what they represent. Menstruation isn’t a rave, Kotex. Pull your head out of your ass.

    So I was standing there, trying to decide which was more important–my comfort or my self-respect–when out of the corner of my eye I saw this glittery pink box. And this pink box, with its glitter and its pinkitude, I swear, was whispering to me.

    “Buy me,” it said. “Buy me and life will forever be like the time you mixed Red Bull and cotton candy and vodka together and drank it through a Twizzler.”

    By the time I got to the express lane, I was already regretting my decision. And not because hearing boxes of tampons talking to you is code for, “Bitch be cray-cray,” either, though I guess that should have entered my mind at some point before now. But let’s just say there’s a reason I don’t change up my routine. The last thing I need on top of all the other crap that’s been going on lately is to light my vagina on fire.

    Again.

    Anyway. So I’m at the express lane, and this kind older woman is taking it upon herself to comment on every single item I have. Box of corn flakes? She liked them better when there was a rooster on the front. Bottle of water? I’m just paying for tap, you know. Ginger tea? Who’s ever heard of such a thing?

    And then she gets to the tampons. The sparkly pink box of tampons.

    “Hey, Carol,” she calls over to the girl working the other express lane. “You ever seen anything like this?”

    Carol walks over and shakes her head. “Nope. What is it?”

    The two of them turn the box over, trying to figure it out, and for a moment I’m thinking this is reminiscent of some sort of horror movie, that at any moment they’re going to figure out how to work the box and unleash hell on earth. And then I remember that it’s the third day of my period and already the hot flashes are so bad I’m adding ice to my bath water, so hell? IT’S IN MY PANTS.

    A few minutes and two more associates later, they figure out what’s in the box–WHAT’S IN THE BOOOOOX! WHAT’S IN THE BOOOOOOX!–and she hurriedly rings up the tampons and double-bags them.

    “I’m sorry about that,” she says. “I hope I didn’t embarrass you with…that.”

    “Not at all,” I tell her. “The seven candy bars and rotisserie chicken, on the other hand….”


  • Plllllbbbbbtttt

    The other day, Liz Poole IM’d me and was like, “OH MY GOD ARE YOU STILL AWAKE?”

    And I was like, “YES. YES I AM.”

    Because Internet, I am still not sleeping. As in, at all. As in, the shadows are moving. As in, this would be kind of cool if it were in a movie and not in the real world. As in, hold me, Internet. Hold me.

    I’ve mentioned before that I have three or four really good hours in which I’m all GO GO GO! like the zhu zhu motorized hamster Marilyn bought for the cats Christmas of 2009. That’s more or less still accurate, only instead of GO GO GO! it’s CRY CRY CRY!  Because apparently the feeling like shit is the new black. Who knew?

    I say these things not so people will feel bad or to induce pity, but because these days, mind-altering drugs are passed out like freaking antibiotics. Can’t sleep? Try this pill. That pill makes you crazy? Try this one. And there’s a lot they don’t tell you about these pills. Crazy things. Frightening things. Things that would make you reconsider whether or not you just needed to work out more before bedtime or maybe lay off the caffeine. Because hey, what would be the fun in that?

    I remember being sixteen years old and going to my doctor and telling him I didn’t like to take Paxil because it made my face twitch and my mouth taste funny. And my doctor was like, “You’re just saying that for attention.”

    And then it came out that Paxil had been known to cause convulsions in women during the first six months of use.

    Because Paxil sucks, yo.

    Anyway, so the no sleeping thing. It got so bad that last week I went to do a sleep study, and the doctor there was all, “So here is a list of medications. Check off the ones you’ve tried. If you tried a medication that was over the counter, or an herbal remedy, or something not listed here, you can use the slots at the bottom to fill in your answer.”

    And I was like, “Wait, I’m going to need another notebook, Mr. Doctor Sir, because that is how many medications I have been on.”

    And then he gave me a horse tranquilizer and I slept for eighteen hours.

    Which is good except for the part where I haven’t slept but hardly at all since.

    And this not sleeping thing? It totally sucks. I think it sucks worse than any other kind of being sick.

    Because at least when I’m out with the flu or strep throat, there’s this assurance that either I’ll get better or die from it.

    But with insomnia? Fat chance. Even when I do manage to get some sleep, I always wake up anxious. Because what if that was a fluke? What if I never ever get to sleep ever again?

    What if I go back to the sleep doctor and he’s like, “I can’t give you any more horse pills, ma’am. Because I think you’re only here for attention.”

    It affects every aspect of your life, too. Like how my house looks like a bomb’s been dropped on it, because with the not sleeping and all, I can’t be bothered to feed myself, let alone sweep a floor.

    But the worst part of it is that when I’m sleep-deprived, my defenses go to shit and I start telling myself things. Things I should never, ever be telling myself. It’s like living with a bully in my head. Or worse, my mother.

    Which is why it’s such a good thing that America’s Next Top Model is back with new episodes, even if they have kind of sucked for the past five years. Because now, whenever that bad part of my mind is getting the better of me, I can rest easy knowing that at least I didn’t just eat my weight in haggis.


  • Side Effects May Include Heart Palpitations and Zombie Nightmares

    So let’s talk about sleeping pills.

    I mean, they sound so great, don’t they? Take this pill and you will rest. You will rest so hard, the instructions tell you, that you probably should not plan on doing anything for the next eight hours.

    Except sleeping.

    But what they don’t tell you–or actually, I think they do tell you this, but in very very very fine print–is that sleeping is only what happens sometimes.

    Sometimes you sleep.  And sometimes you drive to Taco Bell in the middle of the night wearing just your bra and panties, and because you’ve left your house key at home, wake up half naked on your porch swing covered in verde sauce.

    When I was on Lunesta, it didn’t take me long to figure out that I was going to be one of the 0.003% of patients who experience a reaction that is opposite of that which is intended, aka CAPS! LOCK! MODE!

    So instead of thinking:

    “It’s late. I’m tired. I should go to bed now.”

    I kept thinking:

    “I! SHOULD! GO! TO! BED! NOW!”

    “OR! MAYBE! PAINT! A! WALRUS!”

    “QUICK! FIND! ME! A! WALRUS!”

    “NO! TIME! FOR! PANTS!”

    “BUT! MAYBE! THE! WALRUS! WOULD! LIKE! TACO! BELL! FIRST!”

    After about three nights of this, I was like, Dr. Dude, this isn’t going to work. I need something else. Something that won’t try to turn me into a human fast food taco.

    In the meantime, I break my cardinal rule of never reading dystopian and/or zombie novels by picking up both The Forests of Hands and Teeth and The Hunger Games, the former of which because I already had it in my bedroom and the latter because I like to read books before I see movies, and I think the movie looks really good (even though I probably will not be watching it now, thanks to the book).

    I want to take a moment to apologize to all the wonderful writers out there who write dystopian novels, some of whom I know well enough to know they are not at all as scary as their books. Most of them are fine, upstanding, cat-loving people who would never eat another human being. The others are Democrats.

    HA HA.

    BURN.

    But regardless of how nice they are, I cannot read their books. Can. Not. It doesn’t matter how good or popular or interesting they are. I. Can. Not. Read. Them.

    And the reason why is because they scare me shitless, no doubt due to the fact that my grandmother, from an early age, groomed me to fear the coming zombie apocalypse.

    And I wish I was making this up, but I’m totally not.

    Except for the zombie part. She didn’t believe in zombies, just like she didn’t believe in Democrats.

    My point is, you read a dystopian novel and it’s a book. And I read a dystopian novel and start looking for quotes on bomb shelters.

    So picture me in bed, Wednesday morning, unable to sleep thanks to a clap of thunder that woke me up just as I as drifting off, and I’ve just finished reading The Hunger Games. The sun isn’t up yet, but I’ve taken a second Ambien and after thirty-six hours of little cat naps, my vision’s going fuzzy. When who do I see but fucking Effie Trinket in the corner, sawing off her own head, chirping at me about painting the roses red.

    This goes on for maybe half an hour–half an hour of hell–and then I finally drift off to a place where I’m the only passenger on a rollercoaster that has no seatbelts and every time I go upside down, the lettuce falls off my taco.

    “What do you think that means?” I asked a friend in an email shortly after it happened.

    “I dunno,” friend said, “but I hope it’s a euphemism for something dirty.”


  • My Three-Hour Workday

    There seems to be a window of a few hours somewhere between midnight and 3AM each night where the stars align and the medication wears off and I feel somewhat normal. I don’t hurt from the being poked. I don’t feel like I’m going to lose my lunch or like acid is going to eat through my esophagus, like what happened to Frankie in THE HOLE. I’m not dizzy. My head doesn’t hurt too bad. And life is as it should be.

    And so what usually happens is, I lie in bed all night and all day, trying to get comfortable but never really getting there because I’m too hot too cold too sore headachy nauseated you name it I am it, and then everything calms for a bit and I hit the ground running, ’cause kitchens don’t clean themselves, yo.

    Usually what happens is that in the span of these three or so hours, I manage to get done twelve hours worth of work. I steam the kitchen while watching TV and power-Tweeting. I blog and edit and write all at the same time. So what if I just fed the cats Rice Krispies and poured milk on my Blue Buffalo? THEY’RE BOTH GLUTEN-FREE. IT WILL BE OK.

    And then I pass out sometime around four o’clock, exhausted and disheveled, with my jeans around my knees, because that’s as far as I got before I fell asleep.

    I talked to my doctor this morning and was like, “DUDE. SERIOUSLY. Last night I took a Lunesta and tried to drive to Atlantis.”

    And he just shrugged it off, like, “OH YEAH. THAT HAPPENS.”

    That thing where I get halfway to sleep and then wake my mind up because I think I am dying? TOTALLY NORMAL. The part about catching myself not breathing and being unable to move to do anything about it? THE INTENDED RESPONSE. Anxiety, hot flashes, and a migraine? YOU JUST GOT A TEN OUT OF TEN, KIDDO, GOOD JOB.

    On the plus side, I’ve hit that space where you’re sick enough to feel sick but not so sick that you’re too sick to care. It isn’t like I’m confined to a bed, unable to check email or snark J.Lo’s Oscar dress on Twitter. There are days I just cannot sit in this house any longer, and so I go out to get groceries or check my post office box or pay bills, and by the time I get there, I’m like, holy shit this was a bad idea And then I have to creep home at 25 miles an hour because the road. won’t. stop. moving.

    I guess what I’m saying is, I can see the light at the end of the tunnel, even if it is warbly. And that’s more than I could say a month ago.

    So…progress.


  • Raw

    So there’s this thing that happens sometimes when my body chemistry changes and the medications I had been taking no longer work the way they should. I get tired. I get excited. I get antsy. I get lethargic. I get all of these and then some all at the same time, and it’s just a big mess.

    In a lot of ways I feel like this is something I need to talk about, because not talking about it has become just one more thing that I have to keep inside, and sometimes there is so much stuff in there it’s a relief just to let something–like this thing–out. And in a lot of ways I feel like this is something that I should never talk about, because it scares people–friends, family, significant others, prospective employers, the FAA. I’ve been fired for being bipolar. I’ve been asked to leave churches and schools because they were uncomfortable with how I might react to things.

    Even now, as I type this, I’m wondering if it’s career suicide. If now or in the future an agent or editor will see this and think, “I cannot work with someone who’s unstable, someone who’s crazy.”

    Because that’s what I’ve heard all my life: that I’m unstable, that I’m crazy.

    When in fact this particular disorder has little to do with being crazy and everything to do with how my brain receives things like melatonin and seratonin and adrenaline and norepinephrine.

    You know that feeling you get when you’re nervous or scared or excited? That “fight or flight” feeling that rises in your gut and makes your heart beat a little bit faster?

    That’s what I’m talking about.

    Because when things go pear-shaped, what happens is I stop sleeping. And the longer I go without sleeping, or without sleeping well, the more my body rebels. I get nervous all the time. Little things become big, insurmountable, life-ending things. My immune system goes to shit and I get physically ill. And I feel like nothing ever stops. Like I’m thinking, moving, doing all the time.

    Not stabbing someone or hearing voices or driving a car full of puppies off a bridge.

    Just…jitters.

    I feel jittery all the time.

    The medications–like Abilify, a mood stabilizer, and Topamax, an anti-convulsant–dull this enough to where it’s not an all-consuming, coming-apart-at-the seams kind of thing. Like tapping a light when it’s buzzing.

    But sometimes things change, and tapping the light doesn’t work like it used to. And when that happens, you have to find other ways to get the buzzing to stop.

    Recently I read a book in which a teenage girl goes off her meds and feels numb. And I’m not saying that can never happen. I’ve been on enough medications over the years to know that there’s telling what might happen in that situation. You could come up to me and say, “I stopped taking Prozac cold turkey and saw through a blue haze for three weeks after!”

    And I’d believe you. Because that’s what happened to me.

    But numb? Numb is the least of it. Numb is a blessing compared to what it feels like to titrate off one medication and onto another, only to have that medication not work, and have to titrate off it and onto something else.

    The last time I went through the this, the transition took nine months and six medications. I had earaches and vertigo and tinnitus (a ringing in my ears) for the majority of that time. I lost chunks of hair, my skin dried out, I gained a lot of weight, lost a lot of weight. I forgot what it felt like to not have a headache.

    I remember going to my doctor and crying for over an hour, not saying anything, just crying, because I would rather go back to what I had been taking and be sad–just sad–than feel like crap all over.

    Eventually, though, we did get everything worked out. I started sleeping again. I started feeling normal again. And all the other stuff faded away.

    I know this is going to turn out like that. That somewhere down the line I will look back at these past five or so months and say, “I went through that and it was hard but everything turned out OK and I am fine now.”

    But being in the moment, feeling raw like this…it is hard. And I’m so tired of being tired. I wish the world would just stop moving sometimes so I could catch my breath.

    But it doesn’t. That’s not how it works.

    So in the meantime, I have to stop. Not, like, literally, in the death sense or anything, but in the forcing myself to stop and get well, to let some things go (for now) and trust they’ll be waiting on me when I’m strong again.

    And these aren’t necessarily writing-related things. Some of these things are people whom I’ve been taking care of, who maybe need to take care of themselves for a while. Some of these things are relationships that have grown toxic or abusive that need to end, period.

    Some of these things are dreams that need to remain dreams for the time being.

    I’m sorry if I’m letting you down. I’m letting me down, kind of, too. But I know I’m no good to anyone like this, afraid of my own shadow, freaking out over the tiniest things, things that aren’t even worth a second glance, let alone an all-night worrython.

    But things will sooner or later go back to normal.

    They always do.

    Eventually.


  • Liz Breaks Down

    Every now and then the shit hits the fan in such a way that I’m left alone in the PetSmart parking lot, sobbing into a slightly used McDonald’s napkin, wishing the earth would crack open and swallow me up, because somehow everything has gone to shit.

    Everything. Shit. All of it.

    I say this, and people are like, “OMG WHAT IS WRONG?”

    And I don’t know what to tell them. EVERYTHING is wrong. NOTHING is wrong. I am wrong.

    There’s this thing that happens when so much of who you are is wrapped up in any one thing. If something goes wrong, if you get get sad or despondent for no apparent reason, they automatically assume the reason why is buried somewhere in that part of you.

    Which brings me to Sunday night. PetSmart. Parking lot. Salty McDonald’s napkin. And a friend on my cell telling me to calm down, calm down, there will be other books.

    “WHAT DO YOU MEAN THERE WILL BE OTHER BOOKS?”

    “Just that…Not everyone…Maybe you should focus on other things right now.”

    “OH MY GOD YOU THINK MY BOOK SUCKS!”

    “What? No. Of course not. But if you’re upset about it–“

    “I’M UPSET BECAUSE I RAN OUT OF CAT FOOD AND PETSMART IS CLOSED AND THEY DON’T SELL IT ANYWHERE ELSE AND IT’S RAINING AND MY HAIR IS STUPID AND I GOT THE WRONG CLEMENTINES AT WAAAAALLLLL-MAAAAAAARRRRRRT…”

    Truth is, now more than ever I’m grateful for writing and reading, and even my new Kindle, even though it took three hours to convert all my Nook books over to Kindle format. Every day is a struggle to keep my head above water, to keep from melting down or crippling with fear, and every minute I get to check out of this reality and find sanctuary in another truly is a blessing.