I went to Barnes and Noble last week and bought a book called 500 Writing Prompts. Every once in a while, I am going to write responses to random prompts from that book and post them on here. They won't be in any particular order except the order in which I respond to the prompts. You can find them grouped together by clicking the link at the right labeled "500 Writing Prompts."
Yet another journal-type place for Darcy to rant, rave, and/or recuperate from the world.
Friday, March 20, 2015
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
Describe each day of the week as food.
Monday is the cold leftovers of an experimental meal that was only eaten when it was first made because there was no alternative.
Tuesday is a cold-cut sandwich, tasty but without much effort in its preparation.
Wednesday is the meal made by someone else to get you over the hump of the week.
Thursday is a hearty pasta, the comforting realization that work is nearly over for this week.
Friday is a dinner made just for you, in celebration of survival for another arbitrary span of time.
Saturday is a lazy, slow-cooked casserole, and Sunday is a four-course meal, laboriously prepared in hopes that the early effort will make the rest of the coming week less arduous.
Labels: 500 Writing Prompts
Thursday, April 3, 2014
New stories and essays!
I have added a new fan-fiction category: Doctor Who fan-fiction, and added a story to it.
Also, I have added the essays I wrote for college between Fall 2012 and the present. Have a look if you're interested.
I may or may not have a new original short story eventually--I started writing something this past week, and I'm not sure how long it's going to get. If it's short enough, I'll post it instead of trying to get it published.
On a similar note, the original story I was working on turned out to be a novel over 40,000 words long! I have had it revised by a trusted advisor (Thanks, Dr. Taft!), done the necessary revision and/or rewriting, and am now working on finishing up some supplemental material (maps, timeline, lexicon, etc.) before trying to get the whole thing published. You won't see it in any of my online accounts, but once it's published I should have copies of the book to sell, lend or give away.
Finally, I have plans to publish a book of knitting patterns, but work on that is somewhat stalled. I've just got too much to do at the moment to do so much swatching, graphing and pattern writing.
For those of you who don't know, I have completed my Associate of the Arts degree in English/Literature from Frederick Community College. Last November (2013), I started on a Bachelor of the Arts degree in Applied Linguistics from Ashford University. The classes are challenging, but the work is made easier due to the fact that I only take one five-week class at a time--and it's all online.
My credits from FCC finally transferred over last month (thank goodness!), and I should receive my B.A. by the end of October 2015. That is, unless I go for the option that AU offers--working on my Master's degree while I'm still going toward my B.A; then it'll take a bit longer, though I don't know how much.
Thursday, August 15, 2013
What D&D Character Are You?
I Am A: Lawful Neutral Human Sorcerer (3rd Level)
Ability Scores:
Strength-12
Dexterity-10
Constitution-11
Intelligence-15
Wisdom-12
Charisma-10
Alignment:
Lawful Neutral A lawful neutral character acts as law, tradition, or a personal code directs him. Order and organization are paramount to him. He may believe in personal order and live by a code or standard, or he may believe in order for all and favor a strong, organized government. Lawful neutral is the best alignment you can be because it means you are reliable and honorable without being a zealot. However, lawful neutral can be a dangerous alignment when it seeks to eliminate all freedom, choice, and diversity in society.
Race:
Humans are the most adaptable of the common races. Short generations and a penchant for migration and conquest have made them physically diverse as well. Humans are often unorthodox in their dress, sporting unusual hairstyles, fanciful clothes, tattoos, and the like.
Class:
Sorcerers are arcane spellcasters who manipulate magic energy with imagination and talent rather than studious discipline. They have no books, no mentors, no theories just raw power that they direct at will. Sorcerers know fewer spells than wizards do and acquire them more slowly, but they can cast individual spells more often and have no need to prepare their incantations ahead of time. Also unlike wizards, sorcerers cannot specialize in a school of magic. Since sorcerers gain their powers without undergoing the years of rigorous study that wizards go through, they have more time to learn fighting skills and are proficient with simple weapons. Charisma is very important for sorcerers; the higher their value in this ability, the higher the spell level they can cast.
Find out What Kind of Dungeons and Dragons Character Would You Be?, courtesy of Easydamus (e-mail)
And because they're kind of interesting (to me, at least) here are the detailed results:
Alignment:
Lawful Good ----- XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX (20)
Neutral Good ---- XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX (19)
Chaotic Good ---- XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX (19)
Lawful Neutral -- XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX (24)
True Neutral ---- XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX (23)
Chaotic Neutral - XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX (23)
Lawful Evil ----- XXXXXXXXX (9)
Neutral Evil ---- XXXXXXXX (8)
Chaotic Evil ---- XXXXXXXX (8)
Law & Chaos:
Law ----- XXXXXXXXX (9)
Neutral - XXXXXXXX (8)
Chaos --- XXXXXXXX (8)
Good & Evil:
Good ---- XXXXXXXXXXX (11)
Neutral - XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX (15)
Evil ---- (0)
Race:
Human ---- XXXXXXXXXXXXX (13)
Dwarf ---- XXXXXX (6)
Elf ------ XXXXXXXX (8)
Gnome ---- XXXXXXXXXX (10)
Halfling - XXXXXXXXXXXX (12)
Half-Elf - XXXXXXXX (8)
Half-Orc - XXXX (4)
Class:
Barbarian - (-27)
Bard ------ (-23)
Cleric ---- (0)
Druid ----- XX (2)
Fighter --- (0)
Monk ------ (0)
Paladin --- (-23)
Ranger ---- (-4)
Rogue ----- (-2)
Sorcerer -- XXXXXXXX (8)
Wizard ---- XXXXXX (6)
It's good to know I don't have an evil bone in my body. Though, how I scored almost as high on Halfling as I did on Human, I have no idea. I thought I'd at least get a bit of Bard too, but woah, -23!
Labels: Dungeons and Dragons
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
302
That is currently the number of photos I have taken in the Netherlands. Tomorrow, I will have some more to add from the train stations and the airports, and hopefully the views from the planes after takeoff and before landing.
Today, I didn't leave the hostel until the "walking tour" started around eight p.m. One of the hostel staff showed us the river and one of the bridges, and we walked over the "Walk of Fame." I took a few pictures of the Walk, including Ray Charles's panel, as well as Johnny Cash's and someone else's--I can't remember whose though.
Around ten, I went back to the hostel and tried to call the states using Euro coins in the pay phone, but it wouldn't let me. So I went and got my computer and called Anna via Skype before uploading the pictures from the "tour" onto Facebook. I'll put them on my portable harddrive later--I didn't feel like bringing that downstairs again too.
Tomorrow after breakfast, I will pack up and check out of the hostel. They store luggage for you if you ask, so before I head to the train station, I will have them store my luggage long enough for me to get some treats for everyone back home at the market on the corner. Then, I will put that in whichever bag it will fit before heading to Rotterdam Centraal.
From there, it'll be about an hour's train ride to Shiphol, where I will check in, check my suitcase, and go. Though I think I'll have at least a couple of hours before the flight even boards, so I will take a better look around the airport than I had on the way in. I'll also have a better look at the Keflavik airport too. I wonder if they take Euros, or some other form of currency?
. . . Nope, not Euros, Krona. If I want food or something in the airport, I'll have to go somewhere that takes American Express then. No big deal.
From there, it's just another six-hour flight back to Dulles, where I will have to go through Customs before I can get out of there. I anticipate getting home around 10 p.m.
Thank goodness I have Friday off work too.
Labels: Amsterdam, Dulles Airport, Facebook, Holland, IcelandAir, Rotterdam, Schiphol, travel, vacation
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Ooh, purdy flowers . . .
After checking the weather, and the hours and entrance fees, I went to the Trompenburg Gardens and Arboretum. Of course, there was a lot of going up and down the stairs--for breakfast, to get my computer, to put the computer away and have a shower, etc. Plus, every time I go upstairs, I have to lay down for a bit, because I'm so winded. But the sinus infection seems to be going away at last, even though the effects still linger. Right now, it's bark is worse than its bite. I still have a nasty cough, but I don't have to blow my nose nearly as often as I did even just yesterday.
It took about 45 minutes to get to the arboretum, then I paid my 6 Euros. I walked to the tea house straight away, because I hadn't eaten since breakfast, and was practically starving by then. I had a sandwich with salmon and cheese spread, which I think was sort of like a bagel with lox--only the bread wasn't a bagel. I also had some coffee, which was very tasty. I think they had real cream or something.
After lunch, I wandered around some more before heading back to the entry building. There, I bought yet another umbrella (this time, one with a plaid pattern and a slip-on cover which cost 14,95 Euros, so it had better not break in a strong wind) and a small hardcover notebook with a small "map" of Rotterdam on the cover. There are 54 pictures in the "Vacation in Holland" album on my Facebook profile from the arboretum alone.
Both on the way there and on the way back (as well as during some other walks I'd taken this week) I kept seeing posters for The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers LIVE. These puzzled me, because that particular movie came out ten years ago, so why even try to have a live version so late? Plus, why only do the second movie in the trilogy? And how is it live, anyway, when the posters have pictures of the same actors as in the films? Too bad I couldn't understand all the Dutch on the posters--at least I got a picture of it, so someone might be able to figure it out and tell me eventually.
That was a lot of walking, so I went straight back to my room for a while and just listened to my iPod before coming down to eat something for dinner and posting all the photos and an account of my day.
I don't know whether or not I actually will go to either Arnhem or Volendam tomorrow. The way I figure it, I believe I have just enough for train fare back to the airport on Thursday morning, plus a bit more to buy gifts for everyone. I can easily get what almost everyone requested (stroopwafels, cheese and chocolate sprinkles) at the market on the corner after I check out of the hostel. Besides, I think I've thoroughly enjoyed myself, and every time I add new pictures to the Facebook album dedicated to this vacation, the upload slows down exponentially further than the last time. There are 273 photos in there, after all.
I almost bought some slippers shaped like wooden shoes for Dylan on Saturday while I was at Madurodam, but he already has slippers, so I decided against it. Maybe I'll find something at the airport that he'll like, or on the way to Rotterdam Central train station. I also contemplated the slippers as gag gifts for some of the adults, but also decided not to do that.
Monday, June 4, 2012
It's raining again!
I got up this morning, saw it was raining, had my breakfast downstairs, and went back to bed.
Why sleep more, you ask? Well, because I'm pretty sure my rampant allergies have now become a full-on sinus infection. I can hardly breath for the coughs choking me, and getting all the way upstairs to my room takes the wind out of me.
I was planning on going either to the Open Air Museum in Arnhem or to Volendam today, but it's raining in both places, as well as here in Rotterdam. The Open Air museum will cost me 14,95 Euros, along with the more than thirty-eight Euros for train fair.
Turns out, I'd have to take a train to Purmerend Overwhere, and then a taxi (yikes!) to Volendam. The train ride alone (both directions, total) will take 35,40 Euros, and I have no idea how much the taxi would cost both ways.
So, I could pretty much go to one or the other--not both--since I have only about 100 Euros left. Tomorrow, I'm definitely going to the Arboretum Trompenberg and having lunch, even if I have to slog through the rain with that silly umbrella. Today, I might walk up to the market on the corner for some cough syrup or some Dutch equivalent of DayQuil. Don't really need Sudafed, because the moisture in the air is doing a good job of draining my sinuses as it is. Too bad it's not this wet and rainy in Maryland. (Just kidding!)
Checking something. . . . Perhaps if I bike the last leg to Volendam?
. . . It would take 34 minutes, one way, by bicycle. But both trips together would still cost me nearly 80 Euros. Bah.
Arnhem or Volendam? Volendam or Arnhem? I can't decide. And it will have to be either tomorrow after lunch or I'd have to get back before the walking tour of Rotterdam on Wednesday.
I'll decide later.
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Vacation Update
I just talked to Susanne over Skype. For some reason, no matter whether I'm calling home or somewhere in Holland, the connection is always bad. There's a lag, and also both parties in the call get cut off mid-word often.
It was a ten-and-a-half-minute phone call, and we managed to sort out the confusion about church. Apparently, her daughter is in the Rotterdam First ward, but she goes to Spijkenisse. *shrug* The people in the ward here were nice enough anyway. One girl translated for me in Relief Society, and then they had someone translating over headphones during Sunday School and Sacrament Meeting.
Susanne asked about my plans for the rest of my vacation, and I told her I didn't really have any, that I've been kind of making them up as I go along--which is true. Pretty much every morning, I get on my computer here and go through the (short) list of places Grandma recommended to me to see where I want to go that day. Then I look up and write down directions from either the hostel or the nearest train station to that particular place.
Since the connection was so bad, and we'd been talking for more than ten minutes, we both hung up after saying goodbye. She said to have fun and be careful, and that if I need help I can call her.
Now, I think I'll go upstairs and get my blanket--it's chilly down here, and I can work on my story without needing wireless internet access.
Labels: church, Holland, Rotterdam, Spijkenisse, vacation
Okay, so that wasn't her ward.
Those of you not religiously inclined, please feel free to skip over the next five paragraphs.
I called Grandma last night, and she said that Susanne actually goes to church in Spijkenisse, even though the Meetinghouse Locator at LDS.org says that she's assigned to the Rotterdam First Ward. Whenever I search anything in Hellevoetsluis, it always comes up as Rotterdam First Ward--doesn't say a single thing about the Spijkenisse Ward, even though there is definitely a meetinghouse there, and it's about halfway between here and Hellevoetsluis. Weird.
Yet, the people at the church today knew her name when I said it, so they've probably at least met her, which is even more puzzling. Grandma thinks that the building I went to today is the Stake building, but it's so tiny, how could it be? Sure, the Stake President was there today, but that could have just been because that ward was getting a whole new bishopric.
Oh, well. At least I packed my Kindle (which I have copies of the scriptures and the hymns on)--not even my mini-quad and my mini hymnals would have fit in either bag I packed for this trip.
Anyway, I got up and got dressed, surprisingly, at 8 a.m. One of the other people in my room snores, so I figured it would be easier just to get up, especially since I had a long walk ahead of me.
After breakfast, I headed out, and it was pouring down rain. I had that umbrella I bought at Madurodam yesterday, but the wind blew so hard that the umbrella turned inside out, and half of the extender arms broke! Both my jacket and the bottom half of my dress were soaking wet by the time I got there. The rain stopped long enough for me to get back after church though. Oddly enough, their meetings are in reverse order of the ones back home. We had Relief Society first, then Sunday School, and then Sacrament Meeting.
So now I'm back, and I'm hoping to do some laundry later, because I didn't pack nearly as many t-shirts as I thought I had, and I've run out of clean, full-length pants. In other words, all I'm left with are warm-weather clothes, and it's pretty chilly here right now.
Or maybe I'll try calling Susanne in a little while, and do laundry tomorrow. Though that might not be a good idea, for the same reason I just said above.
I didn't take any pictures while I was either walking or at the church, since I was just trying to stay warm, and my camera was inside the jacket. Opening the jacket to get the camera would have been dumb--not to mention, my hands were already pretty frozen as it was, carrying the umbrella and the Kindle.
That's about it for now. Maybe I can get some more of my story typed up or something.