• About “The Salamander’s Quill”
  • Goals and Definitions
  • Copyright
  • Resources and Library
  • I Like What I Do Because…

The Salamander's Quill

~ We hunt the white whale, and we'll no be goin' back!

The Salamander's Quill

Author Archives: André J. Powell

Migraines Make Shitty Writing Buddies

09 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in Disgusted, Family, NaNoWriMo

≈ Leave a comment

Wednesday. I did not want to go to work today. Now, I know why.

I am so behind when it comes to my word count. Why is this story kicking my ass so hard? Why won’t the debris, the fog, the miasma clear and let me see the story path? These three girls are challenging me on every side. Do I not have a handle on them? I know November is the month from hell with the L.A. Music Awards this week and Thanksgiving planned for Wednesday rather than the traditional Thursday week after next, but there have been some breaks as a few things have been cancelled: Rock-a-thon for one (May His name forever be exhaulted!) and we’ve put off grading the Fall Writing Assessment until December. HOL profs have extended homework deadlines; hell, one of them is even a writing buddy. Still this story is really making me work for satisfaction and I am getting little.

As I was cranking out my lesson plans for tomorrow, what nails me right between the eyes…er, in the eye? A Migraine! WTF! As soon as the aura hit and I started seeing the scintillating scotoma over my right gaze, I knew the anxiety of the last few days was the result of the podrome. Stress, what a bastard! I was at school and so figured I would have to go to my daughter’s house to wait the aura to pass, but I had so much to do for the next day, I decided to soldier on. It was good for a laugh as I tried to write instructions on the board. Luckily the numbness that usually shows up waited a bit longer than usual to make its presence felt—or not felt as the case may be and then it centralized itself in my right hand…luckily after I’d finished writing my instructions! I made it about a half an hour down the road before the pain hit, by that time I had taken some over the counter Migraine meds…nearly useless but usually enough to take the edge off. It did take the edge. Picture a wave, a big wave, and skim about a foot and a half off the top, the rest is on you. Oddly it came from the front this time and just sorta enveloped me real slow. I figure that’s what poison is like and plan to describe it in my journal for some future death in some future story.

I got home, got something to eat and I’m now going to take a long hot shower and try to sleep it off. My mother-in-law is coming at 05:45 tomorrow morning for the L.A. trip. Gods, I hope she doesn’t want me to drive. This is all the writing I’m going to do tonight. No two hours or 2k today. Hell, I’ve yet to get “2k a day” since NaNoWriMo started, and right about now, I could give a shit.

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

The Keyboard and the Quill

08 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in Family, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

I flew home from school thinking I was going to get a few hours with Marirose, but that doesn’t seem to be the case. She was asleep when I got here, not surprising seeing how the next few days are going to be a real challenge for her. It’s now pretty late, or should I say late for me with the 04:00 wake up call, and she has not stirred a peep, so I am guessing I will not see her today.

It is a hard thing to love someone, live with them, share their lives and yet feel lonely, missing them even while in the same house. It would be easy to think of the practice sessions, gigs and performances as interlopers that have come between us. “Wake me when you get home…see you in the morning.” It would be easy to see my place in her life is no longer what it was, that I am now, ‘only’ a best friend, an odd combination of big-brother, crock-pot-full-of-comfort-food, and faithful hound. I am the guy you call without embarrassment when the dog brings a dead rat into the house.

A best friend, is not chopped liver, however. Someone who is truly a best friend tries to focus on the good of the other and not on what their own needs might be. Yes, I see the danger of what might result from throwing myself totally on that path, but no relationship, or even life-point of circumstance, ever stands the balance’s test all the time. Those who believe it should, who require it as a standard, are only fooling themselves. Is life ever balanced? I think not. To expect it to be so, is to assume a skewed and crippled view that leaves one open to dreadful surprise and renders one’s contemporaries a source of disappointment.

That’s the path I choose to walk. Music is her passion. It has been ever since she was a little girl. It is what saved her through all the tough times before I knew her. It is the stuff of her soul, what makes her unique. The music of who she is led me to fall in love with her in the first place, though the irony of that is not lost on me. Music is for her, what writing is for me. I cannot imagine if my hands were taken. What would I do? Write with my mouth, brush or pen clenched tightly in my jaw. If I could not see, what would I do? Dictate my stories in a voice recorder. Unless I was rendered nearly inoperative, a stroke or terrible accident, I would find a way to ‘write.’ It is my passion. Music is the same for my resident singer-song writer. I will not in any way stand between her heart and that passion with anything as false as a demand for attention. On Thursday she is going to have her abilities recognized for all the hard, hard labor she has invested in them. She wants me there with her to celebrate, to lean on, to support her—that is good enough for me. That is what love, true love—equal parts admiration, respect, affection and attraction—is all about.

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

Why Do It At All?

08 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in NaNoWriMo, Scions of the Moon, Writing

≈ 1 Comment

Sunday was not as productive as I would have liked. To tell the truth, neither day this weekend was particularly mile consuming or memorable. Though I completed a few things, wrote not a few word, it was not enough. I hunger for me.

I d/l-ed a program, Freedom, that helps me control my wild spur-of-the-moment and guild less internet forays that eat up so much time…

I wrote a couple thousand words…

I received my end-of-the-NaNo reward from Amazon. The book, Harry Potter: Page to Screen: The Complete Film Making Journey, sits on my drum table still wrapped in cellophane awaiting my success…

I caught up on my blogging transferring journal notes to the internet, for what I am not sure…

I read part of the Dec/Nov edition of Poets & Writers…

I wrote to some of my Writing Buddies and added a new one…

I changed my mind and decided not to attend a local Write-In on Sunday…

I researched personality types and zodiac sign profiles for Scions of the Moon characters…

I learned how to more confidently navigate Scrivener…

I cooked a crock pot full of split-pea and ham…

I changed my clock…

…basically, I did far, far too much and definitely not enough…not even close.

I am discouraged.

Why write at all?

“All these truths and quasi-truths…about publishing are finally ephemeral…. What is demanding and fulfilling is writing a single word, trying to write le mot juste, as Flaubert said; writing several of them, which become a sentence. When a writer does that, day after day, working alone with little encouragement, often with discouragement flowing in the writer’s own blood, and with an occasional rush of excitement…the treasure is on the desk. If the manuscript itself, mailed out to the world, where other truths prevail, is never published, the writer will suffer bitterness, sorrow, anger and more dangerously, despair…. But the writer who endures and keeps working will finally know that writing the book is something hard and glorious, for at the desk a writer must try to be free of prejudice, meanness of spirit, pettiness, and hatred; strive to be a better human being than the writer normally is, and to do this through concentration on a single word, and then another, and another. This is splendid work, as worthy and demanding as any, and the will and resilience to do it are good for the writer’s soul. –Andre Durbus, “First Books”

Ohhhh…I just need a goodnight’s sleep 😛

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

Freedom!

05 Saturday Nov 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in NaNoWriMo, Scions of the Moon, Writing

≈ 1 Comment

Earlier this month I was reading my latest copy of “Poets & Writers” magazine and came across an article by Ellen Sussman in The Literary Life department entitled “A Writer’s Daily Habit: Four Steps To Higher Productivity” wherein she gives some very good advice about prewriting prep, blocking the internet, the unit system and daily writing. She mentioned a program called “Freedom” that blocks the internet for a certain amount of time as directed.

During the week, I rise at 04:00 to write for at least an hour and a half, usually cutting myself off sometime before 06:00, so I can make it to work on time. It’s the weekend however, and I cut myself some slack. I answer email, send a few notes to NaNo buddies, watch a video or two, check out the various forums I read, make an entry to two, visit a blog or five, make a comment on Ravven’s (only her’s…I at least have that much discipline) and lazily make a stab or two at my manuscript. What I tell myself is, “I have all day…” but the next thing I know “all day” is gone and my productivity summarily sucks major.

Reading some of my writing buddys’ comments and blogs about procrastination, etc. I was reminded of this program, so I looked it up, read about it, then purchased and d/l-ed it. One: was able to use my preferred payment method, nice. Two: easy d/l. Three: easy install. Four: easy to use. Five: it frackin’ works! I typed in 30 minutes on the interface and I was shut out of the internet for 30 minutes: no explorer, no mail, no nada. What to do, what to do? Write! Clickity, clickity, clack!

At the end of 30 minutes a small window popped up: “Close, Tweet Stats, Restart Freedom.” Of course I chose to close and get back on the internet to see if the world had changed. Kinda reminded me of being a kid and re-checking the ‘fridge or pantry every 15 minutes to see if the food-faeries had brought anything since I last looked.

Now some who have a bit more discipline than myself might say, well, why not just unplug the internet and save some money? Well that would be because I can just as easily plug it back in—did I mention having a problem resisting the ‘net’s siren call? As the program sets it up, I would have to shut down and reboot to circumvent the program. Now that’s just a pain in the ass.

At $10.00, the product was reasonable and it did what it said it would. There was a survey that hinted at future version features which would be cool: a timer so the program kicked in at a certain time (talk about setting a schedule for going to bed), a filter that would allow users to listen to music sites (think Pandora, Rivendell and Iceberg radio) and filter that would enable one to access up to three websites (a dangerous proposition I think—I would not like that one) and a few others.

I have a feeling this program and I are going to be good buddies, particularly during the NaNoWriMo but also beyond and for other reasons than writing. An additional program was advertised on the Freedom site that analyzed and charted how and where one spends their time when on the ‘net. I’m not yet brave enough to look at a pie chart of how much of my life I’ve devoted to the machine-god, so I didn’t explore that option, but if Freedom upgrades include a time setting feature…

Not that it really matters to any one in particular, but I give it four and a half stars—as soon as they feature an upgrade wherein I can listen to my beloved internet radio, I’ll give it five.

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

Beware the Creep!

04 Friday Nov 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in NaNoWriMo, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

Day four of NaNoWriMo and I’m finding it difficult to reach my personal goal of 2k-or-2hr-a-day. This month is so busy, it’s seriously cutting into my writing time. On Wednesday the kids did not make their fundraising target of $1,500 and I have to admit, I damn near cried with relief. I was not looking forward to trying to stay up all night or the long process of recovery afterward. Don’t get me wrong, I’m all about supporting student council and I had planned on using the time, when I could concentrate on it, to make up any deficit in my word target. But come Saturday night, when I go to sleep at a descent hour and wake up Sunday morning ready to write rather than going to bed after rocking back and forth all night (the fundraiser was a Rock-a-thon), I am going to rejoice.

That being said, rested or not, I am also struggling with this particular story. As stated earlier, I am using Vladimir Propp’s structure to provide a frame for the plot, but while it might be good for Russian folk and fairy tales, it might not be so good for more detailed fiction. It should simply be a matter of expanding appropriately on the details, but I am having trouble doing so.

I cannot help but wonder if this is due to the influence of The Kevodran. My primary project was just not at a place where I could leave it so easily. I wonder if there might be some subconscious fear that if I do wholeheartedly throw myself into Scions of the Moon—thinking about it, day-dreaming, planning, plotting—devoting my whole attention to it as I did The Kevodran, it will indeed, eclipse The Kevodran ‘creeping’ in as The Kevodran ‘creeps’ out. Heather warns about creep in terms of a writer taking time away from a project and I can feel it might be happening here.

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

Queen Bean Write-In

03 Thursday Nov 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in NaNoWriMo, Uncategorized, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

I arrived at the Queen Bean a bit nervous. It had started some hours earlier and I as late. Because I’d gotten home late from work I’d barely had time to warm up my fingers before my bagpipe lesson with Aaron Shaw of the Wicked Tinkers (Awesome lesson, by the way!), and I had yet to eat, I almost talked myself out of attending and if Marirose had been home, I probably would not have gone as with her schedule I do not get to spend a lot of time with her, but as it was the house was pretty quiet. Besides, the NaNoWriMo and cool get togethers of like-minded and writing crazy individuals because of it, only happen once a year. Just dooo-it, I told myself.

I went in to grab a bite before I sat down, but unfortunately the Queen had stopped serving meals much earlier. Bummer. As it was 19:30 and I had not eaten since noon, I was hungry. I turned around and headed back to the car with Japanese food on my mind. As I left however, I saw three folk in the corner with their laptops open going for it and figured they were the NaNo contingent, but as they were pretty focused, I didn’t hail them.

After a delicious meal of sushi, miso soup and gyoza at Tokyo Express on J st., I returned to the Queen Been for a cup of Jo and introduced myself to the two remaining NaNo. I recognized one from a forum pic on the Modesto Meet Up site. I sat down, opened up my lap top and had only written a line or two when the barriesta told a customer the café would be closing in about a half an hour. I smiled to myself ruefully, chuckling at how the night had gone so far. I just shook my head and did my best. My new NaNo-friends were having a discussion about various books, fan-fiction, a new spin on Vampires and their own writing goals. I simply listened and tried to key at the same time.

The acting “ML” suggested a word sprint type game in which we randomly drew popsicle sticks pre-marked with a word count—150, 250, 300, etc. (I drew 450) and tried to reach that mark in 15 minutes. The winner was awarded a chocolate. We only got about two thirds of the way through the sprint when, to our disappointment, the barriesta announced that the Queen Bean would be closing shortly! We thought we’d be there until 22:00, but it seems they closed an hour earlier than we’d been led to believe on their Facebook site.

All in all, though I was only there for a short time, it was fun and a foretaste of the larger Write-In at Panera Bread in Turlock on Sunday. I have to say, that I enjoyed the intimate atmosphere of Queen Bean and look forward to meeting there again.

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

I am…a Fundraiser

02 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in NaNoWriMo, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

I set up a fundraising page to help The Office of Letters and Light, “…do the hoo-doo that they do so well…” I am particularly attracted to the Young Writer’s Program and how OLL has made it a point to reach out to educators and young writers. I would really enjoy using the curriculum in my class room as an afterschool extra-curricular option. I am thinking such an effort next year could be a project taken on by an OHS Writers’ Guild. I made a list of friends and relatives who were acquainted with my desire to write and tell stories. I then cut it in half. One list is for this year and the next is for 2012. I figure that way no one is going to feel put upon if I do this whole thing again.

Earlier I made a contribution on my own. I didn’t realize there was a way to set up a fundraising page complete with helps such as template letters and advice. I set my goal at a modest $250.00 and sent out a modified version of the query letter. To tell the truth, there was very little of the query letter left after I basically wrote my own. I made a list of friends and relatives who were acquainted with my desire to write and tell stories or who were involved in either teaching or letters in one fashion or another. I then cut the list in half. One is for this year and the other is for 2012. I figure that way no one is going to feel put upon if I do this whole thing again.

I am happy to say, my meager efforts have born fruit and I am well on my way to my goal: Craig, Jymmy, Renee, Marirose and Randy, you guys are my heroes!

Though I dislike fundraising immensely, I feel I can get behind this non-profit effort as it’s “writing” and writing is paramount to reading and Lord knows, we need more readers who appreciate what it means to write a book, and what it means to write a good book, because there is so much garbage being published out there. Maybe if more folk, both young and old, were to attempt a novel length manuscript, there would be more appreciation for the written word and the work that goes into producing it.

(The latest entries to TSQ are from my journal. I simply haven’t had enough time to post them until now.)

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

“Madness, I Tell You, Simply Madness!”

31 Monday Oct 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in NaNoWriMo, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

It’s Samhuinn eve! Samhuinn eve! Samhuinn eve! The two worlds are at their closest and the “beyond” is more accessible than any other time of the solar year. It’s basically what amounts to new years for me and mine. Tonight, I’ll light a fire and celebrate the coming of my grandson and the long night as the dark of year reaches its apex and the light begins to return. How perfect that the boy is to be called “Shining One” and how appropriate that the utter madness of the NaNoWriMo begins tomorrow (tonight) at 00:01. If I did not have to work on Tuesday, I would get up then and start along with more than a few WriMos I’m sure here in the birth place of it all! I am sure S.F. has some sort of start up party tonight. Sometime I should totally go over to The City (about an hour and change depending on the day) and check out the Office of Letters and Light. I am amazed at how excited I am. I think it must have to do with all the energy that comes from knowing this is happening all over the world. My writing buddies are international; indeed one lives in Germany, “Yo, Durfuiniel!” and the other is an expat living in England, “Hey, Ravven!”.

My sponsorship efforts are beginning to bear fruit. My friends are so generous, so huge hearted. Slainte, Craig! Papa Bear gives you a big polar bear-hug, Jymmy! You guys rock! Not since I was 10 years old riding in a “Bike-a-thon” have I actively fundraised. Indeed, I hate asking for money, but the opportunity to write and create provided by the Office of Letters and Light is just too cool not to, especially for young people. OLL’s Young Writer’s Program is definitely special. I’m sure all those young budding writers are even more excited about tonight’s start than I am.

I am humming to start. I have my Propp-esque outline ready, have written a general synopsis and have even test driven part of a scene. I’m starting Scions of the Moon with much more preparation than I did The Kevodran, which should be paramount to feeling a bit more confident. The fact of the matter is, however, that I am rather nervous with what amounts to “…battle shakes…” They have nothing to do with the fear of failure but rather are the product of nervous tension as I approach the moment I have spent the last month prepping for. I have absolutely no fear of starting tomorrow morning at 04:00 and finding my well dry, my lady Muse gone. Oh, no. If The Kevodran taught me anything, it is that she’s there inside me waiting—I see her face and know her name—and as long as I don’t jilt her once we start, like the spice, the words will flow. There will be drama; there will be challenge; there will be desperate moments of doubt, but all I needs do is write…even if it is crap and the words will come. I’m just twitchy, like a hound straining at the start of the hunt.

And the course is full of challenge to be sure. I have school to teach from what amounts to 06:00 to 05:00 including drive time. I have HOL homework that needs to be finished and new homework for the month of November needs to be addressed. I have an APIP meeting on Thursday. I have Rock-A-Thon all night on Saturday. I have student council meetings each Wednesday and bagpipe lessons on Thursday evenings. My lovely wife Marirose leaves mid-week for the Los Angeles Music Awards where she is nominated for no less than three awards—talk about your proverbial nervous race-horse! I follow the next day and we’ll have an amazing over-nighter with her band The Gypsies. I have over 300 writing assessments to grade on the 14th. Because Marirose works the evening of Thanksgiving, we’re angling to have our Turkey Day—the absolute most important holiday of my year as it marks my true new years—on the Wednesday before…thank God I have the day off. I will however, begin preparations starting on the Monday of that week. To this crazy mix I add the NaNoWriMo…LOL! I am insane. There are write-ins each Sunday from 10:00 to 14:00 in the next town over on Sundays at Panera Bread and locally at Queen Bean on Thursdays from 18:30 to closing. I want to make at least one or two of each, particularly the Queen Bean as I’ll only be able to attend two such meets.

Can it all be done? Well…it simply must. The three moon maidens, Hen, Ink and Rain are demanding equal time with Efrahm along with the rest of my not-so-imaginary crew and there it is!

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

Céad Míle Fáilte, Lughaidh!

30 Sunday Oct 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in Family

≈ Leave a comment

A hundred thousand welcomes, laddie! My third grandchild and first grandson arrived yesterday at about 01:30 in the afternoon! My amazing daughter and number-one son-in-law did an inspiring job—his: being a patient solid pillar of strength and hers: the heroic task of bringing young Lùcas into the world. Things were a little touch and go toward the end as mom began to flag strength-wise, but she rallied and brought the boy forth to the delighted applause of about nine nurses, her doctor, husband and mother. Though great-grandmother and I had been shooed from the birthing room as the main-event began, we were privy aurally to all that went on but a few steps away. Later, when we were all allowed back into the room, it was a further joy for me to see big-sister Ceilidh take her first look at little-brother and check to make sure mom was okay. We are all so thrilled. My brother assured me that the lad would be quite please himself to have been born on brathair mo seannair’s birthday

They have named him Lùcas, but intend to call him “Lewey, or Lughaidh the “Shinging One” in the Gaelic…and that suits me just fine—not that seannair’s opinion means a whole lot, but there it is and I am pleased nonetheless.

Mom and bairn are doing great and hope to go home this evening. What a wonderful, wonderful day…a day that will only be matched when my fourth grandchild, another sweet lassie this time, is due in but a few short weeks!

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

Write-Ins and Age

27 Thursday Oct 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in NaNoWriMo, Observation, Writing

≈ 1 Comment

The local NaNoWriMo group seems to be shaping up. This region is without  a Municipal Liaison this year and appreciative local writers are feeling it. There were two very active, and older, MLs that played the role of ramrod and organized things quite well and consistently. Due to various reasons they are neither one participating this year and are sorely missed. Presently the membership is active, about a dozen and have decided to meet at Panera Bread in the next town over on Sundays between 10:00 to 14:00 or 11:00 to 15:00 (no one has yet to identify a definitive time, but it really doesn’t matter).

Will I go? I am not too sure. For the most part, folks seem nice but are fairly young ranging from 13 to 33 with numbers weighted heavily toward the 20 somethings. As the next town over hosts a university, this is not surprising. I have no real problem with the demographic, but I do have my reservations and it has to do with the age disparity. I am with young people all day long, so I’m used to the timbre and character of their energy and even thrive on it. That being said, I can also attest to their ability to alienate and exclude, with or without malice, those whom they consider ‘outside’ their comfort zones. While this ‘herd’ mentality is somewhat natural and therefore understandable—one I am used to putting up with and indeed, breaking through—it just might not be something I want to try to navigate on a day off. I have done my share of said silliness and feel my time too precious to expend on the effort.

Of course I plan to give it a go; I would certainly never pass judgment and act upon it without trial. I hope to be pleasantly surprised, but will not be if things do not work out. I wonder…of course these programs are heavily weighted toward the young. The world is what it is (shrug). By the same token however, the 50+ crowd is nearly in the majority anymore—or so journalists would have us think. I wonder how many closet 50+ would-be writers are out there in my area and writing silently, steadily and very much alone? As many as there are young would-be writers not in the closet? Sigh…what I would not do to have a talk with an older, more experienced and wiser writer than I.

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Unknown's avatar

A wanna-be writer and sometime poet trying to live, love and learn as much as I can with the time I have left.

Recent Posts

  • How?
  • NaNoWriMo’19 Day 1: 1292
  • NaNoWriMo ’19
  • Outlining: What-If Exercises and Variants
  • I’ve Decided to Set Aside WIP 6.1

Archives

Categories

Artist blogs

  • Gracesidhe Decorator, writer, model and librarian!
  • Ravven's Glass Amazing wirter, artist and friend
  • Story Monster Storytelling at its finest–Heather’s site never fails to put a smile in my heart!

Blogroll

  • Magical Words A fantasy/scifi author group
  • Sword and Laser Online book club
  • The Office of Letters and Light NaNoWriMo parent organization
  • The Piper Who Came of Age Too Late My bagpiping blog
  • The Slootsian Dialectics Wizard and scholar-piper

Writer blogs

  • Ink-stained Daydreams The writing blog of Justin Beeman
  • Invisible Ink The fantasy and writing blog of Whitney Carter
  • Story and Somnomancy Writer, Good Friend and Ravenclaw princess

Writer Guru

  • Pocket Full of Words Holly Lisle: author and creator of How To Think Sideways

NaNoWriMo 2017

NaNoWriMo 2013

NaNoWriMo 2012

NaNoWriMo 2011

JulNoWriMo 2011

So Say We All

read the printed word!

Goodreads

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 61 other subscribers

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • The Salamander's Quill
    • Join 61 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • The Salamander's Quill
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...