My Lost Kitty has now been finished

I’m done. I mean done done, with my novel “Lost Kitty”. I’ve combed over it again and again, then read it through front to back while running it through Grammarly since my grammar skills are lacking.

It feels completely weird to be done with this novel that I’ve been working on off and on for years. This is the novel that drug me out of the dark story-less hole that being on pain medication put me in. I would have eventually started writing again as I’m finally off and living with the pain, but I’d have had to start from scratch.

Now I have no more excuses really, it’s time to actually get off my ass and get this ball really rolling.

I keep staring at my computer screen thinking “How can it be done?” NOW I can finally turn my brain onto a new story, I’ve been doing my best not to think of anything new so I wouldn’t leave this behind for the shiny and new.

Thanks to everyone who helped get me this far.

Gaps gaps gaps

I started writing when I was 12; I had always been somewhat creative, but up until that point, I mostly drew. My life was somewhat messed up at that time, and I had just discovered reading as an escape. I read “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy, and a little light went on in my brain that that was something I could do. 

      Like I imagine with most writers that start young, I was gung ho, positive that I would be published no later than my early twenties. At the time, actual paper magazines were still a thing, and the internet wasn’t, so for a while, that’s where I mostly aimed my efforts. Yes, I sent stuff out, and yes, I got rejections. A few were content-related, but no doubt, most of them were because of spelling and grammar issues. I moved around a lot as a kid and ultimately went to 12 schools before dropping out in the 11th grade. When you move around that often, especially within the state of Florida, you end up missing a lot of information.

      Toward my later 20s most of my attention was focused on trying to have children, I still wrote, I was ALWAYS writing, but for a couple of years, I put aside the attempt to get my stuff out there and published. I’m old enough that the online options we have now didn’t exist then. Sadly I was never able to get pregnant.

       When we turned 30, my husband and I moved back to Alaska. The first few years I slacked off, there was time, and I was still young. I wrote, and keep lists of different publishers, but I didn’t send anything out. I believe in part because my style was massively changing at the time. 

      Four years later, everything changed. I discovered that a couple of the discs in my spine were crushed, who knows why not like anything happened! I was at work and suddenly noticed that one of my big toes was numb, I left my job and went to see a doctor. Two weeks later, I was in surgery to trim up the squished up parts of my discs. From the moment I woke up until now, I’ve been in constant pain that even two more surgeries and tons of other treatments didn’t change.

      Slowly I stopped writing, not only just not writing stuff down; it was as if the writing switch that had always been on had been turned off. The stories were just mostly not there, and I was too miserable to care all that much. For years I assumed it was the pain that had turned off that switch. I still wrote from time to time, but nothing at all like I had my whole life up until then.

      Then something like six years later, I was lucky enough to have a doctor who was willing to let me get off the morphine I’d been on almost from the start. It wasn’t as extreme as the word “morphine” makes it sound, but it was morphine none the less. The why I was put on morphine is way too long a story to get into now, being in the pain management cycle is awful, and sadly not from the pain, it’s all politics. 

      That’s when I found out that it was the morphine that had turned off that switch. Once finally off it, the switch was not only thrown; it was as if the switch had been blown away. For a little while, the story that would become “Lost Kitty” came to me all at once in a flood while I scribbled it down in whatever order it occurred to me, then I had to shuffle the story together. 

      Finally, it’s time to get off my freaking ass and get back to it. I suppose none of you were asking why I’m not trying to get published until my 40s, but some part of me felt the need to explain. 

Shout out

I want to take the time to give a shout out to the people who ultimately managed to get me this far.

Thank you to all my fans on Literotica, you are the reason “Lost Kitty” even exists, and therefore a huge part of how I returned to trying to be a real author. You were there begging to know about a girl I’d only intended for a single short story. When I was in a dark place and the drive to write mostly gone, you were there poking at me, reminding me that I’d left everyone hanging. You taught me that I could drag myself partially from that darkness and nurse a seed of an idea, that as long as I kept feeding that seed, even when I didn’t know what it was going to become, it would grow into something unique and beautiful in its own way.

Thank you

Obviously, there are plenty of other people that deserve a shout out, but “Litty Kitty” got me this far, and my Lit fans got “Litty Kitty” this far.

Welcome

Welcome to my first post! I know a lot of non-writers have a lot of questions about writing and what drives people like me to do what we do; I’m hoping to answer some of those questions here. At very least give you my personal experience.

I want to open up my brain and give you a peek inside there. Just a small peak though guys, I don’t want anyone to drag mud in there or anything. To that end, if you have a question, feel free to ask. Want to know what drives me to write? Just ask. Curious about how I handle rejection? Ask me. I’ll do my best to answer the ones I can.