Adventure 1 is finished!

It took way longer than I am willing to believe of myself to write out the entire adventure, which was a total of two sessions and 8 hours of game-play. The story is over 60 pages long, totaling out around 8 chapters, including the epilogue.

It is finally done. I’m almost excited enough to make inroads on Adventure 2! But I’m going to make the smart decision here and get myself to bed before I fall asleep at my desk (again).

See you tomorrow, readers!

PS~ If you don’t feel like navigating to the story’s page, here’s the link:

https://swiftscorner.wordpress.com/arc-1-adv-1-epilogue/

5yr has her first pet

In what I can only assume is my way of processing grief, I was moved by a statement from my wife while she and the kids were looking at the animals in the pet store (needed litter box cleaning supplies): “Oh look, this hamster is old! She’s probably already at her halfway point.”

I looked at the thing, decided it was cute, and my daughter needed a pet to take care of. That third part is my rationalizing so I don’t have to think that I’m taking in an old critter so I can process the grief of my grandfather’s death.

So, meet the newest thing to take on my surname: Daisy.

Already angry, just like a Swift.

When Parenting Meets Comedic Revenge

My 5yr has been getting up between 4-5AM and wants to talk to me. This means I’m being woken up a couple hours before my usual alarm.

We have a 45-minute drive to town after my son is dropped off, so she usually naps in the car while I, in my sleep-deprived state, am scowling at the highway traffic.

Little did she know that she got some of her smartassery from her father, who likes to plan ahead.

She was wide awake for morning drop-off today!

*cackle*

A Gentle Giant’s Shadow No Longer Cast

My grandfather, Dr. Edward L Rhodes, has died. I’ve been thinking over how to present this, because the written word is my comfort during stress. But I have two problems as I look into this:

1: The history of this man is phenomenal and constantly surprises me.
2: No matter how old I’ve become, Papa Ed is always that gentle giant to me.

Dr. Edward Rhodes (1929-2022) was a WWII veteran, an unsung hero of medical research, an inheritor of a Texan city, the descendant of a signer of the US Constitution, and most of all, an extremely interesting and funny man to his collection of grandchildren.

The more I’ve dug into this man’s life, the more startled I’ve become. The above paragraph is just what I have in my memories, and I’m all but certain I haven’t explored everything this man has done in his 93 years of life. I can’t write this essay the way I normally would, as a storyteller of his deeds. I still haven’t learned what all he has done.

But I can write it as a grandson remembering the man as I have.

Papa Ed was a blindingly intelligent man and enjoyed testing us grandkids with this intellect. I remember him asking if I knew anything about a given subject. If I told him no, I was about to learn everything he knew about it. I learned more about World War II from this man than I ever did in a school classroom, and I learned the emotions that went with those experiences. He would ask if I had heard about a given subject, event, or person. If I didn’t, he’d launch into an explanation.

Papa Ed taught me how to be a storyteller. He taught me how to keep track of anecdotes and how to set them up, so I’d keep my listeners riveted. He taught me to keep facts tucked away in my mind in order to draw them out during conversations and suddenly have an audience.

I remember this man as an actual gentle giant. He was always a big man to me, even after I became an adult and was technically taller than him. Wherever he walked, his shadow would fall over me. I remember the bad jokes he’d teach me as a child, most often landing me in trouble with the teachers (he loved, loved, limericks) and then he’d be scolded for teaching child-me those lines.

As I’ve reflected on the kind of man I’ve grown up to be, I keep seeing this giant in my childhood memories. Influencing and advising me on the subjects of story-telling.

I was very lucky to have seen him today. We knew that the end was coming and were prepared for it. I went to the elderly hospital he was checked into and was given a few minutes to sit with him. I regaled my grandfather, who was unresponsive and had not recognized my face in years, with stories he told me about his time during the War. I thanked him for everything he taught me, for laying the groundwork for the kind of man I’d become, and for simply being my grandfather.

My last memory of seeing him alive is of me leaning my head down to touch his shoulder and saying “thank you for everything, grand-dad” and his head twitching ever so slightly toward me.

I like to think he was saying his gruff ‘welcome’ and readying another limerick.

Goodbye, Papa-Ed. I’ll remember and retell your stories. It’s what you taught me to do, even if you didn’t know how important being a storyteller would be for me. Your shadow is no longer cast, but I will always remember the comfort your presence brought to us.

Throwback to the day my son discovered Star Wars

It was during one of the harsher storms a couple years ago, when the power was out and we were on the waiting list to get it restored. I had turned on the generator to keep the fridge powered, but there was a second plug and it was just me and the boy in the house for the day.

He asked me if he could watch Star Wars. He knows I love that universe but hadn’t seen anything of it at this point. I knew he’d watch Episode I, because the young Anakin looks so much like himself and his old man, and it was this moment that I knew he’d be watching with intent.

It’s a lot of fun, being a nerdy father and getting your kids to enjoy the nerdy things you do.

Happy late night Father’s Day, folks.

New Players, Old Writings, No Sleep! (And a Turtle!)

It’s a bitter irony that the reason I keep forgetting to do a daily blog writing is because I keep working on other writings meant to be posted here. But hopefully, I’ll start paying attention to the notification this thing sends me to sit down and put together some ramblings of what I’ve seen through the day.

That said, there’s been progress! Four new players have reached out to me with wanting to join in the Star Wars campaigns and I am deliriously excited to see what kind of stories they’ll bring to the overall timeline.

That and they probably knew I wouldn’t say “no”. They’re willing to not buck the Expanded Universe timeline so it can still be a resource for everyone, so I’m willing to add them to my list of “Things to write about”.

The story-writings have been slow, but they have been growing! Hit a rough snag while outlining the novella, but I went back to my old creative-writing notes and figured out the problem: writing fundamentals. The chapter that had the snags was meant to be one where the protagonist proved his trustworthiness while still being very mercenary. Took a bit before I figured it out: add more punches instead of dialogue. Hopefully I can start writing it out in full by Sunday.

The Sidewinder story is in dire need of attention, so after I’ve gotten a start on the novella (at least the first chapter) I’ll put everything else down until I finish Adventure 1 and post it.

With those updates, have a look at the turtle who fell out of a tree yesterday and smacked me in the head while out on the route. I have no idea how he got up there, but I do know, now, just how much pain a turtle kamikaze can cause.

With that, it’s back to the mail, readers. Hoping you all have a good weekend.

-Swift

Teaching the feral kitten about our dogs

So, we’ve had a kitten show up on our back porch. Little girl was starved, flea-infested, and terrified of everything that breathed. It’s been two weeks and she’s flea-free, a healthy weight, and now comfortable with me picking her up. But she’s been wary of the dogs, and I suspect for good reason. But my dogs are all old and patient, so I’m letting the feral kitten (named Lyssa for her rage) sit with the old dogs and get used to them.

Update: she’s sleepy and mad that she can’t unleash her fury when comfortable in the little cat stand we have.

Last bit of sunlight before the storm rolls in

While I may understand and follow the “No rain, sleet, or snow” part of the Postal Creed, I do draw the line when there are lightning strikes happening every 4 seconds. So, I’m sitting in the truck and having a sandwich while the storm rages. Managed to catch a picture of the last bit of sunlight before the overcast took the sky.

Stay safe out there, folks.

-Swift