Novel month 2021 – Day 13

Today’s word count: 2,554
Total word count: 32,580
Daily average: 2,506
Projected total: 75,184

First off, actual good news. This is a victory for everyone who loves liberty. Time will tell if it sticks, but this is one moment where I’m finally proud to be a Tennessean.

As for the writing, Chapter 5 is in the books. I had planned to write more, but the timing didn’t work out, and I don’t want to spend my whole weekend sitting in front of the computer. I get enough of that at work. So Jeff’s side of the story has to wait until tomorrow, but I’m sure I’ll have a lot to say about that. It’s only a scene I’ve been anticipating for about 7 months.

The things we believe in

(Title is a song by Orden Ogan, a great band that doesn’t get nearly enough love even in metal circles.)

In another timeline, this was the day I proposed. No, really. A few months ago, when I was still riding the high of getting a job, I let myself believe that. I planned for it. Today would be the day I drove 100 miles to the home of my beloved, got down on one knee, and asked her to be mine forever.

In this timeline, things went a little differently. I haven’t talked to her in over a month, and the reason is quite simple: I don’t feel deserving. Of her, of a relationship, of happiness itself. I haven’t for a long time, but the past few weeks have made that feeling (or lack of feeling, I suppose) grow by leaps and bounds.

I don’t believe in myself. That’s just a fact. Not only do I not, but I can only question those who do. Why? What have I done that would give you the impression that I’m worthy of that? Why would you think I have an upside? Because I certainly don’t see one.

The question I’ve been reflecting on lately, then, is a natural extension. Since I don’t believe in my own abilities or worth, what do I believe in?


I’m not a religious man. I think I’ve stated that often enough. I grew up in a very evangelical family, and that experience turned me off organized religion, although I still subscribe to a kind of “cultural Christianity”, as it is known. Growing up as an inquisitive, rational thinker, I studied faiths of various sorts, looking for the inspiration so many have claimed to find. What I’ve determined is that the metaphysical is not something that can be studied. It can’t be explained by reason or scientific methods, only personal revelation. As I’ve never had any of those, I consider myself an agnostic in the literal sense of the word: one who does not know.

I also call myself a humanist (in that same literal sense) because I truly have faith in humanity as a whole, in progress and the ability for us to overcome obstacles set by the environment or our fellow human beings. The past two years have shaken that faith to its very core, as I have seen more than half the population of this country, including some of my closest friends and relatives, abandon the notion of cooperation and the Enlightenment ideals I hold dear, replacing them with divisive hatred and prejudice. I continue to believe that we can be better if we all work together toward the common goals of liberty, equality, and prosperity. I am fast becoming a believer in the idea that we unfortunately won’t get to that point without a lot of bloodshed.

I strongly believe that knowledge is power. Learning opens doors. Hiding information harms us all. My brother and I often argue over that tired old thought experiment: What if we discovered aliens? Should the discoverers keep that a secret? He says yes, that the potential for mass panic is too great. I counter by arguing that the knowledge itself is worth it, that the benefits of understanding that we are not alone in the universe outweigh any possible negatives. Ignorance, in my opinion, is not bliss. It is a prison.

I wholeheartedly believe in the necessity and indivisibility of the family. I come from a broken home, and I long ago vowed never to create one of my own. Today, even this has become political, as the very idea of the family unit is under attack, so I must side with the political movement that supports healthy families over single mothers with a string of divorces, or hormone replacements, or eugenic sterilization. If that makes you think of me a bad person, so be it. I admit that some of my allies on this issue hold views I find repugnant. Politics, after all, makes strange bedfellows.

The last point I want to make here is related, and it is, in a sense, the belief I hold most dear. While I don’t believe in any divine purpose to human life (see above for my reasoning), I absolutely believe that we are born with one natural purpose above all: reproduction. Our first goal, as per Darwinian evolution, is the survival of the species and our genetic lineage. If we do that, we are successful biological organisms. If we don’t, we’ve failed. It’s that simple.

Maybe it’s too reductionist, but it does have its advantages. Cries of overpopulation have no effect on me, because I know that this planet is nowhere near its carrying capacity, and progress can only increase that limit. I see through the transparent attempts at population control via the “climate crisis”, the “pandemic”, and other nonsensical notions. Anti-family propaganda merely makes the belief more entrenched.

Belief is nothing unless you act on it, unless you are willing to accept its consequences. Thus, I must accept the logical conclusions to which my beliefs lead. I will not sign an NDA or attempt to gain a security clearance, because I believe knowledge should be available to all, not hidden away for only the eyes of the supposed elite. I will not do contract work for a public school that teaches the harmful ideology of critical race theory. While I support the legality of abortion, I would not consent to it in the case of a woman I impregnated unless she was in mortal danger. I would not accept or pursue a no-fault divorce, especially if children were involved. Finally, if I ever reach the point of knowing with absolute certainty that I am no longer able to fulfill my most natural purpose of fathering a child, I will commit to take steps to ensure I am not a drain on humanity’s collective resources—if absolutely necessary, that would include preparing to end my life by whatever means are available.

The ultimate expression of one’s beliefs is the willingness to die in service of them. Martyrs, crusaders, war heroes, and ideologues the world over have done it for lesser causes. Maybe I’m not yet ready to go that far, but I have been thinking about it. I have been wondering what, if anything, is worth risking my life. Freedom, certainly. Knowledge, most likely. But what else? What else do I consider that valuable?

Novel month 2021 – Day 12

Today’s word count: 1,477
Total word count: 30,026
Daily average: 2,502
Projected total: 75,065

I stopped early, and I make no apologies for that. This one scene took a lot out of me, because it was another one of those “Michael putting into his characters’ mouths the words he wants to say” deals. Write what you know, right? And I know a lot about apologizing to the woman I love.

The hard part, if you must know, is doing that when the character I’m writing for is also a woman.

Novel month 2021 – Day 11

Today’s word count: 2,231
Total word count: 28,549
Daily average: 2,595
Projected total: 77,860

Almost halfway done with Chapter 5, and I’m going to call this the midpoint of the story. The later chapters probably don’t have to be quite as long. For this one, I didn’t have a lot of ideas about where to go, so I just put some of my own words into the mouths of my characters. That usually works. The things I wish I’d said become the things they are saying, and that’s…cathartic, if nothing else.

Novel month 2021 – Day 10

Today’s word count: 2,307
Total word count: 26,318
Daily average: 2,613
Projected total: 78,954

Another chapter down. That makes 4 out of 9, and it doesn’t take a math genius to tell you that’s ahead of pace for the 1/3 mark of the month. But this math genius is telling you it doesn’t matter. I still have 20 days to go, and anything could happen between now and then. Remember: the goal is 50K. The stretch goal is finishing the story, and that’s the one I’m aiming for.

Novel month 2021 – Day 9

Today’s word count: 2,397
Total word count: 24,011
Daily average: 2,667
Projected total: 80,036

More writing, but I can’t say I had less work. I hit a groove, though, so that’s good. I’m most of the way through Chapter 4 now, and almost to the halfway point of the 50K already. Utterly amazing, if you ask me.

I still haven’t found myself. I’ve started to wonder if I ever will. But I feel like I’m starting to find the writing spirit again, and that is one of the parts I least wanted to lose.

Novel month 2021 – Day 8

Today’s word count: 1,805
Total word count: 21,614
Daily average: 2,701
Projected total: 81,052

Monday means back to work, and a correspondingly low output on the writing front. Chapter 4 was going to be a little shorter anyway, so I’m not too worried. Besides, I still did more than an “average” November day, right?

I also had to explain the character of Joel to my boss today, who told a story during today’s meeting that almost nailed my perception of Adventures in the Otherworld’s major guest. This is happening increasingly often.

Inner turbulence

(Title mostly from Dream Theater’s Six Degrees Of Inner Turbulence, probably one of the most personally meaningful albums I’ve ever listened to.)

Someone posted this just as I sat down to get a few things out of my head, and it struck me, because it was very closely related to what I was going to write here anyway.

Yes, the possibilities for anyone are nearly infinite. That’s the beauty of free will: we don’t know what’s going to happen, but we do know we are not bound by some cosmic force pushing us onto a predetermined path. Our choices are our own, although our opportunities are not.

The problem lies not in the paths available to us, but the very real possibility that none of those many paths lead us to what we seek. When no road takes you forward, what then? Theists have no answer but to tell us to keep trying, that it’ll all somehow work out in the end. Nihilists can’t even offer that much. Neither extreme is fulfilling in any real sense. If we have no purpose, why bother continuing on? And if our purpose has already been set, why bother playing along? In both cases, we are not the masters of our own destiny, so can we say our lives truly belong to us?

I have been on that road to nowhere for a very long time now. Unlike the creator of the above picture, I don’t see infinitely many paths ahead of me. Rather, I see them, but I can find no way to change my lane to get to them. Those paths, as far as I can tell, are for other people, stronger people, people who haven’t been beaten into surrender and submission by the world around them.

Acceptance is the final stage of the grieving process, we’re told. I now wonder if it is the final stage of depression itself. Should I accept that I’ll never stand at the altar beside my beloved, that I’ll never have the chance to hold in my arms the child I fathered? Do I accept that I’ve failed in my attempts at building a life for myself, and try to create something of the wreckage that is left?

None of those paths look very promising, if you ask me. Yet I can’t help but think all the good ones are already closed off to me.

Novel month 2021 – Day 7

Today’s word count: 4,236
Total word count: 19,809
Daily average: 2,829
Projected total: 84,895

I’m done with Chapter 3. That’s the only reason I’m posting this so early, really. I feel like writing even more today, but I need more time to think about what happens next. Fortunately, this push sets me up for a week that will, I hope, be less stressful on the novel front. And I’ve even managed to tie this story in with Seasons Change. I’d planned to do that all along, mind you; it’s only how I did it that surprised me.