Category Archives: reading

Finally Emptying the Dishwasher

When I was 31 years old, I was diagnosed with ADHD. The realization of my neurodivergence was overwhelming and bittersweet. All these doors in my brain flew open at once. It was a flood of realizations about my behavior—past and present—mixed with new strategies to try, mixed with regrets about how I’d lived my life up until the point of my diagnosis.

The first time I emptied the dishwasher after I started ADHD medication, I burst out crying. All my life, emptying the dishwasher had been a daunting task. When I was younger, I had to be forced to do it by my mother, who was desperately trying to teach me responsibility. Each time, after a lot of dragging my heels and griping and crying, I discovered (or rediscovered) that the task was easy. Simple. Quick.

Why had I gotten so distraught? Surely, I could remember how easy this task was the next time I had to do it.

Nope.

Years and years passed with me facing down a full dishwasher like I had been asked to clean all the public bathrooms at UCLA with a single toothbrush.

As an adult, with no mommy to force me to do chores, I ended up using the dishwasher like a catch-all dish cabinet. By the time I emptied it, it had been clean for three days and was already mostly empty from me picking clean dishes out of it on an as-needed basis.

Then I had to face the equally daunting task of *gasp* filling the dishwasher!

Lather. Rinse. Repeat.

(So to speak)

Then medication happened. I saw the full dishwasher. My brain went, “Oh. I should empty that.” And I did.

Why did I cry?

Like I said: Bittersweet. On the one hand, I finally had the answers to a lot of questions. I could look at myself in the mirror and know I wasn’t stupid or lazy. Or broken. “Broken” was a word that haunted me for most of my adolescence and young adulthood.

On the other hand, I could have avoided so much tension and stress and pain and self-recrimination if I’d known earlier.

But what’s the point of steeping myself in regrets on what could have been? The only reality I have to live in is the one in which it could not have been. While I’m not a believer in fate, per se, I do believe that all the past events of my life were, in a very literal way, meant to be. I am who I am because of all the pluses and minuses, the mistakes, the joys, the triumphs. All learning experiences in their own way.

I focus now on the future, on taking my newfound self-awareness and using it to better understand myself and create coping mechanisms that work for me.

I can even tell now why emptying the dishwasher filled me with dread: It’s because my brain could not see a task and break it down into component parts or steps. I saw a full dishwasher and my brain said, “Make this empty.” Step 1: Full. Step 2: Empty.

With medication, I saw a full dishwasher and my brain, for the first time ever, went, Step 1: Take out a plate. Step 2: Take out another plate. Etcetera.

Imagine seeing a jigsaw puzzle and thinking, “I have to make these pieces into a single image in one step,” while simultaneously knowing that’s impossible, and being aware that assembling a puzzle requires moving through it piece by piece, but also not knowing where to start and being paralyzed by the sheer magnitude of the task. It’s like that… for everything. Doing the laundry. Organizing the pantry. Picking up after the kids.

Now I am struggling with a new obstacle. I can empty the dishwasher, in theory, but I am also a stay-at-home-mom to two neurodivergent children. My new process for emptying the dishwasher goes something like…

Step 1: Take out a plate and put it in the cabinet

Step 2: Answer the insistent repetition of “MOMMY” from the other room

Step 3: Get older son a snack

Step 4: Take another plate out of the dishwasher and put it away

Step 5: Investigate the crash you just heard from the other room

Step 6: Try to impress upon your non-verbal younger son that he cannot throw canned goods around the living room

Step 7: Remove another plate from the dishwasher

Step 8: Notice that younger son is covered head to toe in melted chocolate

Step 9: Clean chocolate off of bath-hating younger son

Step 10: Clean up the canned goods that he definitely continued to throw around the room

Step 11: Watch him remove the canned goods from the cabinet again

Step 12: MOMMMMMMMYYYYYY

Step 13: “Ah! Stop! You can’t climb that! Get down!”

Step 14: Give up

It’s frustrating. Not gonna lie. I finally have all the answers to my problems, but I can’t implement the solutions as well as I’d like. Fortunately, I have my husband to help pick up the slack. But I wanted to impress upon you, dear reader, the uphill battle that is coping with newly discovered neurodivergence as an adult.

This all came about because I started reading How to Keep House While Drowning by KC Davis, a book I highly recommend. It is extremely helpful to realize you’re not alone, which is another reason for this post. For me, reading things like the aforementioned book, and web comics like ADHDinos, and social media posts from other Millennials who were diagnosed with ADHD later in their lives, provides regular, much-needed doses of not-aloneness. It’s a revelation, truly, to understand how not-alone I am. How (ironically) typical my experience is. The Internet has done some good things for humanity. One of those things is connecting people who are going through similar struggles. Sometimes it’s enough just to know you’re heard and seen.

So, for the record: You are heard. You are seen. You are not stupid. You are not lazy. You are not broken.

Love,
Bex

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Filed under Humor, marriage, parenting, psychology, reading

Strong Concepts

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the term “strong concept.” It is at once easily definable and as inscrutable as Big Foot’s daily schedule. What makes an idea a strong concept? I hope everyone will agree with me when I say: Every strong concept is an idea; not every idea is a strong concept.

Lately, due to developments that I can’t talk about yet (but OH BOY get ready!), I have been mentally poring through my seemingly unending list of book ideas and trying to figure out which ones can actually be made into a solid story with a beginning, a middle, and even an end.

Something I’ve come to understand is that I often have ideas for scenes that really rock my socks, but just because I have a good scene in mind does not mean that there is a world outside of that moment. It doesn’t mean the characters in the scene are three-dimensional. One good scene certainly can’t carry an entire book. (Unless, I guess, that book was written by Stephenie Meyer. Even then, if I had been given the chance to edit Twilight, it would have turned out differently.)

For example, I have this one scene in my head. A woman walks into a PI’s office and enlists his help to find the man who is going to kill her… at some point in the future.

The backstory for the scene is in my head, too, so I guess it’s really two scenes. See, the woman has a very specific psychic ability–the first time (and only the first time) she touches someone, she gets a brief glimpse into that person’s future. She can’t control what she sees, how long the vision is, or even how far into the future she sees (could be a day, a year, ten years, or any other length of time). One day, she bumps into someone at a coffee shop and the glimpse she gets of his future is terrifying because she sees herself from his perspective as he’s about to stab her. By the time she recovers from this vision, the guy is long gone, and she only has a vague idea of what he looks like. Even worse, she can’t help but shake the feeling that he’d orchestrated that contact, like he’d known exactly what would happen to her and exactly what she’d see. Hence, hiring a PI to help her find him before he finds her.

But… then what? Who is this woman? Who is the PI? Do I even know how PIs work? I mean… I watched Jessica Jones and read The Dresden Files as well as Nora Roberts’ Hidden Star. So… no. No, I don’t know how PIs work. Do I know how to write a competent mystery? I mean… Hellbound has one. But I can’t say I went about constructing that particular mystery in a structured and logical way. Plus, the building blocks of that one were relatively simple. A mystery for adults? One that has to carry an entire novel and involves psychic phenomena? That might be out of my wheelhouse.

Is this a Strong Concept? Hmm… no. I don’t think so. Could it be? Okay, yes. It certainly could be. With some real work put into the setting, the characters (including the villain!), and the plot, I think it could transform into a Strong Concept. But right now, it’s an idea. And I’m not sure it’s an idea that merits the work it would take to make it into a Strong Concept.

Here are some questions I ask myself when I’m trying to determine if I have an Idea or a Good Idea:

  • Why do I want to tell this story? Is there a message the events and characters I’m toying around with will send? Is there something that a stranger could gain from reading about these people and events? Some sort of anchor in the real world and the Human Condition? Along similar lines…
  • Whom am I telling this story for? (It’s tempting to write an entire book just for myself that speaks to my own needs and grievances and hopes and dreams. But my biggest goal is to write for an audience, so if I find myself saying, “I want to write this for me”, I shelve the idea.)
  • What are the characters’ personalities like? Are they more than just cardboard cutouts that I’m moving around from scene to scene?
  • Can I write this book? Do I have enough knowledge and experience to make this story believable? Or will I come off as ignorant and incompetent as I attempt to play in a space I’m completely unfamiliar with?

Feel free to weigh in. What makes an idea a Strong Concept? And what makes you hit Pause and go back to the drawing board?

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Oops! Not Feminist

Hey. I’m back. Let’s pretend I’ve been blogging for the last three years, okay? But if you’re curious: In my farewell post on November 8th, 2018, I said I would go back to blogging if my YA novel, Hellbound, ever got published. Don’t get your hopes up. It’s not being published… by a publisher. But it is being published by me. So I figured I’d share a little bit of the process.

A couple things have happened in my life. My second child, Ari, was born last August.

He’s doing well. Warren is now four years old, but is also somehow ten feet tall. I’m teaching virtual English and reviewing podcasts on Twitter (@BexGoos). And I also have my own podcast that I do with my husband (called Not Again!). Yeah… a lot going on.

So Hellbound. I decided to self-publish after I realized that going the traditional publishing route with this book was probably never going to happen. Even though I wrote it before Lucifer, and The Good Place, and the Hellboy remake… well, that’s all people will see now. Plus, people will probably lump this in with all those fallen angel novels that were popular for a while. For this and many other reasons, I decided to self-publish. With that in mind, I set out to reread Hellbound for the first time in years. And… yikes.

This is not me being self-deprecating, okay? I am genuinely surprised that an editor wanted to get this published at one point. The story is okay, but the writing… you can tell I wrote it when I was nineteen (twenty?). It’s quite juvenile. On top of that, I realized that I unconsciously wrote the novel as a brainwashed drone of the patriarchy. There were so many problematic aspects, and I actually had the gall to consider myself a feminist at the time.

I considered the book itself to be a feminist work! So I updated it as best as I could. The first thing I had to do was pull back on the patriarchal nonsense. Then I had to modernize it because a lot has changed in ten years. I find this stuff fascinating. Maybe I’m the only one? I’m just gonna list the things that had to change to address both of the aforementioned issues. The book will be on sale later this month!

To make it more feminist…

  • Original: The two godlike deities that were echoes of humanity were both men. (I was like “Oo one of them is gay! Edgy!” God, twenty-year-old, me. Shut up.) Now: Tor remains male (as far as all-powerful godlike entities can have sex or gender). His sister Lux is a gay woman (Though, again, she is an all-powerful godlike being; she’s probably pretty open-minded when it comes to relationships).
  • Original: Almost every woman who gave birth to a Re-du-Tor died in childbirth. Tor would literally just kill women with his penis. And I never once thought, “Should women be considered disposable?” Now: It’s a fluke that Aiden’s mother died in childbirth. All the other women who gave birth to Res-du-Tor “prayed” for such an encounter, seeing it as kind of an honor. Like being visited by a deity. It’s not a perfect fix, but I had to work with what my idiot younger self gave me.
  • Original: I specifically noted that Aiden’s sister in her hellhound form looked “sleek and female.” Please be careful about rolling your eyes too hard. They might get stuck that way. Now: I took that piece of description out. Good Lord. I just deleted it. After I unstuck my eyes from being rolled back in my head.
  • Original: Tor (Aiden’s father) had created some kind of replica or clone of Aiden’s mother? It was because he loved her and couldn’t stand the idea of letting her go, but the question of her free will was one that I did not give more than a second’s thought to. Now: I made her more of a shade than a clone, and I implied she existed because of her own will mixed with Tor’s love and loneliness. I also made it clear that Tor couldn’t actually touch her or be physically intimate with her. Again, not perfect, but… I worked with what I had.
  • This doesn’t quite fall under the umbrella of feminism, but it still is important to admit how many subconscious biases were ingrained in me. I used to have a line that Nicolette looked like an “angel” with her “blonde hair and blue eyes.” I thought nothing of it for so long. And then one day, I reread it (this was actually years ago), and I was like… wait… Am I saying that I am pro-Aryan race? My grandfather was a Holocaust survivor for Pete’s sake! So I took that part out.

To modernize it…

  • I removed all mention of Facebook, though I had to keep in some form of social media site. So I just made one up called ConnectMe. ConnectMe will never become obsolete because it doesn’t exist. Fun Fact: I reused it for a different book that will likely never see the light of day.
  • I removed all mention of asking for directions and replaced it with using an app.
  • I had to change Elysia’s alarm clock (yes, a physical alarm clock) to her phone.
  • No one looks for the time anywhere other than their phone now, although I think they might still look at a clock if they are in a classroom.
  • I removed some mention of listening to the radio since a lot of cars have Bluetooth or USB hookups for phones now. I know some people still listen to the radio, but it’s rare to see that exclusively.
  • I had to take out a conversation about Trogdor, which broke my heart. I love Trogdor. But he is a reference the youths of today simply will not recognize.
  • I changed the high school students’ physical paper notebooks to electronic tablets. Most schools have gone 1-to-1 on electronic devices by now. Pens and pencils are the way of the past.
  • One of the main characters, Nicolette, got a part on a TV show. But streaming wasn’t a big thing at the time. Yes, Netflix and Hulu existed, but it would still be several years before people started “cutting the cord” entirely. So I updated it to her getting a part on a streaming show.

So that’s that…

Now I have to begin the arduous and cringey process of combing through the archives of this blog and unpublishing the posts that are not fit for human consumption.

Indie podcasts I’m listening to right now (the non-indie ones don’t need my help):
1. 10ish Podcast (To Ten Lists, Comedy, Fun Facts, Explicit)
2. The Green Horizon (Audio Drama, Sci-Fi, Comedy, Explicit)
3. Doomsday: History’s Most Dangerous Podcast (History’s Greatest Disasters, Graphic Content)

The Socials/Support Sites:

Find me on Twitter and Instagram @BexGoos
Buy Me a Potato
My Website: www.potatoladypodcastreviews.com
Everything else: https://linktr.ee/PotatoLady

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Filed under books, Humor, reading, writing