Happy Thanksgiving

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone! (Or Thursday, if you’re so inclined!)

We didn’t go anywhere or invite anyone in this year for a change — my sister’s at her mother-in-law’s — and instead my parents and I enjoyed a surprisingly quite nice Thanksgiving dinner at a local restaurant. And I’m spending the rest of the evening watching Mystery Science Theater 3000. Just like the Pilgrims!

Wishing you and yours all the very best, even if it is just a Thursday. Maybe especially if it’s just a Thursday. You know what Arthur Dent always said about those.

Training sessions

Today was more comics, more writing, very little work e-mail, and rounded out with an episode of Quantum Leap and tonight Strangers on a Train. The latter is great mostly for Robert Walker’s performance…and for this amazing climactic scene. I can’t in good conscience recommend you watch the clip if you haven’t seen the movie, but I’m not exaggerating when I say it’s one of the most amazing and outlandish things I’ve ever seen. It’s Hitchcock at his most entertainingly insane.

Anyway, that was…what was it, Wednesday? I mean, I also went to the bank, having been reimbursed for my Maryland trip, and I finally got gas for my car, now that there are no more rationing and day-long lines. But I spent most of the day writing, even if I didn’t write a whole lot.

I’m just glad I wasn’t on the Long Island Railroad tonight.

Endless possibilities

It’s possible I spent today doing nothing more exciting than reading comics and Kaleidotrope submissions, doing a little writing, and playing way too many games of online backgammon. I may have also done a little bit of e-mailing work.

Yes, it’s possible.

Monday

Today was a pretty good day.

I’ll admit, I did spend a little bit of it on my work laptop, checking e-mails and sending chapters out to reviewers. But before that, I actually enjoyed some of my vacation.

I watched last night’s episode of The Walking Dead. The resolution of last week’s kind of weird cliffhanger ended pretty much exactly as I expected it to, and in the least surprising way, but I thought it was handled fairly well, particularly in the brief scene between Hershel and Rick. I’ve had my issues with the show in the past, and I was not a fan of the comic, but this season so far seems to be doing a lot of things right.

After that, and breakfast, I went to see Skyfall. Last night, I started watching On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, but I have to admit I fell asleep maybe about halfway through. (Diana Rigg is gorgeous, and there are some good action scenes, but George Lazenby is no Sean Connery. He’s barely George Lazenby at times. I plan to finish watching it, but I’m almost surprised I stayed awake that long.) No such problems with this new Bond, which, I have to say, is probably one of my favorites. It’s beautiful to look at, for one — I saw it in IMAX, after some Twitter chatter suggested I should, and I don’t regret the added ticket cost — and exceptionally well staged. I enjoyed the heck out of it, and highly recommend it.

And then I did a little writing. This short story I’ve been working on since Saturday keeps wanting to change the century it’s set in, but I think I’ve finally hit upon the right time frame.

And then there was the work e-mail. Though I promise, not a lot. I am, after all, on vacation.

Saturday

I’m pleased to say that while I did absolutely bring my laptop home with me from the office yesterday, and while I have glanced at a few e-mails since then — on the iPad, not the laptop — I have yet to do any actual work beyond that. I still might, if only because I have so much of it to do, and because the end of the year is fast approaching. (I also feel like I need to justify bringing the computer home with me in the first place, after Windows Update caused me to miss my earlier train.) But today I largely ignored it. I don’t officially go back to work until a week from Monday, and I am, technically, on vacation.

It’s a vacation more in spirit than in deed. I had paid time off I needed to take before the end of the year. My sister, who’s visiting this weekend, recently went on a cruise to Turkey and Greece, and my parents have taken to travel in recent years as well, now that they’re both retired (or weeks away from it, in my father’s case). It must be nice. Apart from a day trip to Danbury, Connecticut, and a few days on campuses in Maryland, I haven’t been anywhere all year. Even my next work-related trip, if I can set it up, will probably only be somewhere out here on Long Island. The last time I went anywhere, it was to Canada for a week a year ago. And before that, Vegas, which — and I had to double-check this to be sure — was way back in 2009. I’m not looking for any great globe-trekking, but something a little more exciting than a week stuck at home — of which I’ve had, several this year, thanks to sickness, weather, and PTO — would be nice.

This evening, my parents, my sister, and I drove out to Port Jefferson for a birthday dinner for my aunt. The restaurant was okay, but unremarkable — a dessert sorbet was basically a large, unappealing dish of frozen cranberry juice — but it was a nice evening.

The rest of the day I spent doing not much of anything. Though I actually wrote some, working on the start of a short story, which I haven’t been doing in way too long. Maybe it was Heather‘s tales of her recent writing residency, maybe I was just feeling inspired by the prompt I stumbled upon. But it felt good to flex those muscles again, even if I didn’t end up writing very much.

As much work as I have to do — and I do — I think I’d be rather pleased if I actually spent more of the coming week writing something that didn’t involve textbook pedagogy and using my “vacation” that way.