Winter vacation, day 12

A quiet day, spent mostly watching several episodes of Babylon 5. (I got the complete series for Christmas.)

This evening, I Watched The Day After Tomorrow and National Treasure. (They can’t all be gems.)

I also took a short nap and took the above photo, for some reason. Exciting times, I know.

Simply having a wonderful Christmas time

I didn’t sleep terrifically well on Christmas Eve, more from indigestion than anticipation, more pizza dinner repeating than visions of sugar plums dancing. I got woken up early to take the dog for a walk, and I honestly thought the cold outside might actually kill me. I think I was just unprepared for it, given how unseasonably warm it had been leading up to the holiday, but I couldn’t stop my teeth from chattering until I came back inside.

All that said, however, I had a really very nice Christmas day. I had a chance to go back to sleep for a bit after I walked the dog, which was good, and then we all got up and opened presents. The rest of the day was spent in eating too much good food, playing with the dogs, and talking. Yesterday was actually the first day in the past week and a half that I didn’t watch any movies. I made up for it tonight by watching two Boris Karloff films, Targets and The Mummy. And last night, I did watch the Doctor Who Christmas special. (For good and bad, this about matches up to what I thought.)

It was a pleasantly unexciting Christmas, full of laughter and good cheer, and today was a just a much quieter version of the same.

I go back to work a week from now, but that’s still a week away. It’s been a good vacation so far, and I’m looking forward to the rest of it.

I hope you all had a wonderful Christmas and/or Wednesday as well!

Christmas Eve

I rearranged a sentence or two in the short story today, but that was about it. The day was taken up mostly with little preparations for Christmas tomorrow.

I spent the evening watching Resident Evil: Extinction for some strange reason, then The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, which was also a little strange but a much better movie. I don’t think either one is going to become a new Christmas tradition for me, but it wasn’t a terrible day, as days go.

Winter vacation, day 7

I did some writing today, and although it wasn’t on the ongoing short story — and although it wasn’t necessarily any good — I did feel good to get back into it.

“In this life, there are winners and losers,” Saul said. “There are the people who find true love, and then there are the people who wind up playing second fiddle at the lonely hearts club’s Christmas party. There are the people who make it in this business, and then the people who history gladly forgets.”

This was just one week after Patchwork Media had gone public; it had been an impressive opening, and the company’s stock was performing well, but Todd thought it was a little early to be making grand pronouncements about winners and losers, much less which half of that divide history would place them on. Deep Earth Zombie Bugs had been their only new game released this last quarter, and the sales were still a little below projections. Reviews of the first-person shooter had been mixed. Todd wasn’t going to panic until all of the global numbers were in, and there probably wasn’t going to be anything to panic about, but he also wasn’t going to start celebrating just yet.

But that’s what made Saul the idea man, Todd guessed, and what made him the less interesting money guy. He managed expectations, massaged them if necessary, while Saul laughed in their face. It’s why Saul could make an impromptu speech like this to the troops — half bombast, half pep talk — while Todd just wanted to get back to his office and find out if yesterday’s sales numbers from Taiwan had filtered through yet.

The game had been a risk, a year of development on which they’d staked their IPO and maybe the company’s future. Todd had only played it twice himself, once in prototype and once at the floor of the trade show where they’d debuted the game. DEZB was fun, and novel in that you could play it from the zombie bugs’ perspective, but it wasn’t the revolutionary experience he felt Saul had promised — and had kept promising. Gamers liked, but didn’t love, it, and it hadn’t sparked the kind of sales the company had wanted. It hadn’t been the must-but Christmas present everybody at Patchwork had been banking on.

And there were the rumors that the underlying design had been stolen. Todd wasn’t even going to try talking to Saul about that. He had more important things to do.

The writing prompts here, chosen by the three of us at random from three different magazines, kind of got away from me. I think in my haste to keep Deep Earth Zombie Bugs from straying along maybe too obvious lines, I also avoided anything like an interesting plot. But forty minutes of blah writing is still writing, so I’ll take it.

Afterward, I went to see Captain Phillips, which is very good, though it owes most of that to Tom Hanks. It would still be a modestly gripping story without his performance steering the ship, but he’s definitely what elevates it, particularly in its amazing final moments. (Spoiler warning for that link, obviously.)

Then I read a little this evening. I am laughably behind on my 2013 reading challenge, and being on vacation never seems to help with that, so it was nice to get involved in someone else’s writing for a while.