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(Gay)Pride and Prejudice

For Indianapolis, Pride Week was a time of celebration, awareness, and most of all, love. But for Orlando, as you all have seen by now, this weekend was a glimpse into Hell. There is so much to say about this act of profound hate, and I have spent so much time weeping for the victims and their families, but I don't want to inundate an already suffering community with too many more words of heartbreak and sympathy. The truth is, I can't comprehend the pain of those who were there. I'm blessed to have not experienced this horror firsthand.

However, there are a few things all of us can do from afar. First, we can act practically, and donate to the Pulse Victims Fund. This is a safe, authenticated place to donate, and I would encourage you to spare a little cash to help make these wounded families financially whole. I donated a small part of my profits from my book stand at Pride. Please stand with me, if you can.

Second, we can stand up to fear and hate. America is not defined by the hateful actions of one deranged citizen (and yes, he was an American citizen, and he acted out of bigotry, not religion). As an ally, you can embrace your LGBT family and friends, you can be vocal for our cause, you can be unafraid of speaking out for what is right. As an LGBT person, you can prove that we are not a community to be broken and sent into hiding. We are here, and we are strong, and we refuse to live our lives in terror. 

Have I told you about the night my fiancée, Kelsey, proposed to me? We had, over the past year and a half, become fairly comfortable being a couple in public. Sometimes, we were hesitant to give a quick kiss, or hold hands, or introduce each other as anything more than a friend (you know, just gals bein' pals, nothing to see here). But for the most part, we felt safe. So that night, we rode together in an admittedly cheesy Cinderella-esque carriage around downtown Indianapolis. I had just accepted Kelsey's ring and we were approaching the end of our ride when a man noticed us from across the street and began to lurch toward the carriage.

"THAT AIN'T RIGHT," he announced, because apparently his announcement might change our minds about being in love.

Then the carriage stopped, and we had to get off, because the brusque driver was clearly uninterested in taking us any further than Kelsey had booked. But we were scared. At least, I was. This insane man was just down the block, and our ride wasn't exactly subtle. He was between us and our car, and what if he had a gun? I was both frightened and outraged. How dare he stain our night? How dare he remind me that Kelsey and I still aren't safe in our own city? Just being ourselves?

I feel that rage in me again today, the kind that boils in the throat, burns the eyes as they tear up. And all the more I can say on the topic is that we should all take steps to transform the anger into positive action, and the hate into love. 

We also need to take care to protect LGBT People of Color right now (and always). Queer Latinx were the target, and they need a great deal of love from us today. Please remember as well that Muslims, queer or otherwise, are not the enemy here. Keep them safe today and always! Please keep them safe and offer them your love and support!

Now, I do want to talk about the incredible atmosphere of joy and love that defined Indy Pride (or at least my experience of it). Because there are good things happening in the gay community, and even great evil cannot crush the great good that is building.

So, buckle up for a bumpy shift in mood.

Oh golly, look at those cuties.

Oh golly, look at those cuties.

This was Baby's First Vendor Booth! And despite months of planning and preparation, Saturday still felt like a whirlwind! Who knew so many gays liked books? Hint: ME. I knew. Of course gays like books. For many of us, they were our safest refuge growing up. But that's a little too heavy to go into today.

In true Abi G. Douglas (shamelessly name-plugs myself in my own blog entry) fashion, here's a bullet list of what I learned at Pride:

  • Regardless of your prizes, spinny wheels are catnip to drunk people and children. Even if your fiancée made the peg-ticker thing at the top out of the bottom of an Arby's Bronco Berry sauce package, when a drunk person sees that wheel, they hear the booming voice of destiny calling them, and boy do they ever answer that call.
  • There are a lot of impressive Indiana artists out there! I have tons of new people to watch for and connect with. Also, did you know there's an LGBT library? I'm ashamed that I wasn't aware...
  • Cops attract a weird crowd. My booth was next to a police booth that was giving out coloring books and other cool trinkets, and they brought in an odd set of folks. One woman was deeply curious about how police might show up at a club (were they called? How long does it take for them to arrive? etc). There were a number of people who just wanted to taunt them. Those officers practically disapparated the second we were allowed to tear down our booths (7 pm, if you're curious). 
  • Banners are hard. Not, like, literally hard, but surprisingly more difficult to display than the internet told me. Hanging that thing on the table required more awkward humping motions than I had predicted.
  • People like stuff they can wear on their heads. Even too-small plastic headbands with alien heads attached on top. People gobbled those up. I'm confused, but somehow warmed that those prizes were so successful.
  • Speaking of prizes, it pays (nah, actually, it costs a crap ton) to make your own fans. People were trading in their piddly single-ply paddle fans for by child-sized (as in, the size of actual children) card-stock tornado-makers. If this whole writing thing doesn't work out for me, I can always go into the custom fan business.
  • It's possible I haven't written about my publishing process here as I thought I had... But now I know that I need to talk about it, because I have been storing up a lot of info!
  • Friends/family can be a huge help, but you run the risk of obliterating your relationships with them. The chaos, the heat, the traffic, the expense... they all contribute to you nearly smashing your significant other in the face with a handmade prize wheel.
  • But in the end, it's absolutely worth it. You meet fascinating people, and see love in action, and even sell some books. 
  • That said, I might take a break from this next year so I can actually enjoy the wildness that is Indy Pride.

...

Okay, I'll admit, I tried to shift the mood, but my heart isn't in it. Indy Pride reminds me that we've come so far, but there is still such a long way to go. I wanted to talk about some funny, silly stuff, but I'm afraid my list fell flat. My heart hurts, and the funny stuff may have to wait until next time. For now, I'm drawing out my feelings. 

Warmest thoughts of love and hope to you all. Stay safe. Stay brave.

Gettin' Hitched Is a Helluva Business

This morning, I wake up to an email from someone demanding $500, which is apparently past due. I'm already running late because my phone has decided to retire one vital function at a time and today that function was the alarm. So I'm standing in a half-asleep panic in my room, one leg in my cat hair couture slacks, grandma-style bra severely misaligned, staring at this email and wondering who I owe money to now. 

There are a few possibilities that I jump to first. To start with, medical bills. Is this unknown person reminding me of yet another unpaid hospital bill? A half hour of "therapy" (for an illness I don't have, by the way, but that's another long, strange tale) that slipped through the cracks? A charge for breathing in the proximity of a hospital, even if I didn't check in? Because I'm still getting random bills for treatment I received 7 months ago, and I'm barely joking about the bizarre charges I've received at random intervals since then.

But the email seems too casual for that. So maybe it's from the small marketing business I use to promote Necessaries? Because working with them has been a little... chaotic. There doesn't seem to be a lot of structure, and it wouldn't surprise me if they forgot that I'd already paid for their services. Hey, it's a small business, and it hasn't figured itself out yet.

And what if it's a scam? Standing partially nude and with my chin still caked in drool, I'm outraged by the thought. So I fire back, announcing I don't know who this is, or what the charge means. If it's a medical thing, this is unprofessional. If it's the marketing service, it's sloppy and incorrect. If it's a scam, don't these people know I'm broke?

At the moment I hit send, I remember the only remaining giant money-suck after the medical and book business options. 

The wedding.

Oh my gawd, I've just sassed the kind woman who is in charge of our venue. I immediately apologize and explain my mistake. I don't remember her telling us about another $500 charge due 6 months before the wedding, but I totally buy it. My head has been so chock full of wedding crap that it's leaking out my ears, and I'm sure I'm losing important details because of that (despite the elaborate wedding planner binder my mother-in-law-to-be provided). 

Between the music and the dresses and the invitations and the photographer and the guest list that is 85% people I've never heard of, my brain is turning to soup. Not just soup. Spicy, angry, bowel-singeing chili. Whenever Kelsey and I have to "real talk" about wedding junk, I have this invisible line I risk crossing between "This is fine and we're getting things done and maybe I'm even enjoying it" and "Why the HELL am I letting this stupid, sexist industry devour my soul, empty my family's pockets, and fill my Facebook feed with advertisements about 'saying yes to the man (lol) of my dreams'?" 

And when I cross that line, I'm one nasty, whiskey-swigging, teeth-gnashing bride-to-be. 

But who wouldn't be? This wedding stuff is insane. There's so much to deal with, and every single person you encounter seems to have a strong opinion on how your wedding should go. You have to make thousands of decisions on vendors, and pay them all handsomely for quality. You have to sort friends and family friends and family (even the family members you think your mom might be making up for the sake of adding more names) before sending invitations and you KNOW someone is gonna have their heart broken, but the venue just isn't big enough. You have to make yourself pretty. Absurdly, fairy tale pretty, even if you were just diagnosed with a disease that makes you gain weight, grow a beard, and become enveloped in acne. 

The worst of it is turning down everyone else's opinion without making enemies or being labeled a bridezilla. What an awful term. You know, every vendor I've encountered is used to working with the bride, not the groom. So the bride is the one expected to have opinions, yet when she does, she's mocked for it. And the groom is just, I don't know, along for the ride? This stuff doesn't quite apply for Kelsey and me, I suppose, but the weird "This day is about you!" vs "Here are my 8,000 opinions on your wedding and if you turn them down then you're a rampaging monster!" dynamic is still there.

It's all part of the business model. It's an industry, plain and cold and simple. And it's an industry that targets women, because the significance of marriage and "our special day" has been pressed on us since birth. So women end up in charge of everything, but society has this weird way of demonizing women who are in charge of things. It's a nasty Catch 22.

But it's OK to still like weddings, even though they're often problematic and overly commercialized. After all, regardless of the venue and cost and guest list, it IS our day. And I'll try to make it as perfect as possible, and I'll get frustrated, and I'll shoot people down if I have to, and it still won't be perfect.

And that's fine. We're not perfect. So we'll throw the best damn party we can, and invite as many loved ones as we can, and pay the outrageous costs knowing that sometimes, you just gotta.

And next time I get a confusing email asking for money, I won't immediately punch the wall and throw a tantrum, and I'll try to think about the dozens of people who just want to help me make our big day one to remember for the rest of our lives.

(Seriously, I bruised my hand.)

(Did I use too many gifs? Naaaaah...)

Kickstarter Portrait Collection!

You know how I offered to draw super versions of the folks who donated at the $25 level or higher for my Pride booth Kickstarter? Well, I finally finished those portraits! And now, everyone can see the results! (Even though they're poorly photographed... my phone is overdue for an update... isn't technology absurd?)

After Deirdre was abducted by aliens, she discovered her eyeliner could be more than decorative. At her thought, her wings extend, lithe and vicious, ready to snap and bind and grasp. Maybe it seems like a silly power. But hers is a strange and uniq…

After Deirdre was abducted by aliens, she discovered her eyeliner could be more than decorative. At her thought, her wings extend, lithe and vicious, ready to snap and bind and grasp. Maybe it seems like a silly power. But hers is a strange and unique ability. It's visual and visceral. And there is no one else on this planet that has the strength she has.

After being abducted by aliens, Chris discovered that he and his dog-child Soleil had become even more connected. They could share thoughts and exchange ideas. The two of them can thwart any crime by working together.

After being abducted by aliens, Chris discovered that he and his dog-child Soleil had become even more connected. They could share thoughts and exchange ideas. The two of them can thwart any crime by working together.

After the aliens left, Joe and Laura found they'd become an even stronger team than before. With Laura's ability to calculate and manipulate probability in favor of her allies and Joe's super-powered bowl, there isn't an enemy they can't knock out.

After the aliens left, Joe and Laura found they'd become an even stronger team than before. With Laura's ability to calculate and manipulate probability in favor of her allies and Joe's super-powered bowl, there isn't an enemy they can't knock out.

The aliens gave Bryanna the ability to almost instantly recreate any outfit she can visualize using any ordinary needle and thread. She can slip seamlessly into a police unit, or mimic centuries-old royal gowns. And, of course, she totally kills at …

The aliens gave Bryanna the ability to almost instantly recreate any outfit she can visualize using any ordinary needle and thread. She can slip seamlessly into a police unit, or mimic centuries-old royal gowns. And, of course, she totally kills at conventions.

The power bestowed on Zach by the aliens was that of a multitalented pied piper. Any instrument Zach can play, he can use to convey powerful (and sometimes crippling) emotions. His listeners can feel profound joy, or darkest sorrow, or paranoia so i…

The power bestowed on Zach by the aliens was that of a multitalented pied piper. Any instrument Zach can play, he can use to convey powerful (and sometimes crippling) emotions. His listeners can feel profound joy, or darkest sorrow, or paranoia so intense they hold on to the grass for fear of floating away. Sure, he could drive people into a rage using a simple plastic kazoo if he wanted. Instead, Zach uses his power to spread cheer and comradery wherever he goes.

The aliens gave Alejandra a playful gift. The creations she crochets come to life to assist her. Whether she needs a ride across town or a fuzzy but effective bodyguard for her adventures, Alejandra can whip out her needles and conjure a friendly fa…

The aliens gave Alejandra a playful gift. The creations she crochets come to life to assist her. Whether she needs a ride across town or a fuzzy but effective bodyguard for her adventures, Alejandra can whip out her needles and conjure a friendly familiar.

Whew! It's been a while since I drew actual people. Like, faces of people I know. Did you know I'm a bit face-blind? I'm generally good with friends and family (though I did recently fail to recognize my uncle, at whose business I currently work). But I don't remember faces as easily as many people do. I break down faces into 2-dimensional figures in my head, so if I see someone in a different angle than usual, I can be really thrown off. However, this mental "flattening" comes in handy when I draw faces. I'm told the above drawings match up pretty well with their subjects, but (ironically?) I can't really say for sure. Anyway. There's your Abi trivia for the day. And also an explanation in case I don't recognize you in public. 

One last thing! I've been crafting with my misprint copies of Necessaries

A big ol' wreath!

A big ol' wreath!

Magnets! And my parents' dog, Mowgli. 

Magnets! And my parents' dog, Mowgli. 

That's all for now, folks! Sorry it took me so long! 

Audiobook Edition of Necessaries Available Now!

I was going to try to do some kind of April Fools stunt related to making an audiobook... but then I actually made the audiobook. Well, a first chapter. A very amateur first chapter... but one with music and intro/outro tags and half-decent editing. Yeah... I have a long way to go, and I still gotta figure out how to do Lucy's voice. But it's a thing! A fun little thing!

OK, I know you're waiting for the Rick Roll. Dude, that was so, um, however many years ago that was. Stop being so paranoid.

Anyway, I'm a big fan of audiobooks and podiobooks. I listen to free podiobooks when I exercise or draw or when I'm doing monotonous work. They're a great way of reading when you don't actually have the time to read. If there are other folks like me out there who prefer their books read to them (even by an amateur like me), maybe I'll release more episodes. 

Let me know if this is something you want more of in the future. If enough people are interested, I'll continue recording and releasing chapters as a free weekly podcast. So tell me if you're interested!

By the way, the theme music for this episode is "Waking Up (Instrumental)" by Dexter Britain. Go check him out!

I Stood on a Stage and Did a Thing

Picture of me doing the thing I said I was doing in the title of this entry.

Picture of me doing the thing I said I was doing in the title of this entry.

Right in the middle of a big misprint fiasco, I attended the 2016 Gathering of Writers in downtown Indianapolis. My nerves were shattered from finding a giant mistake in the printing of the version of Necessaries I was finally able to get onto Amazon, so I wasn't sure I could get in the "HELL YEAH WRITING" mood. 

Despite being a pouty poop, I volunteered to read first at the open mic, and I'm so, so glad I did. It's been a long time since I've been on a stage, and when I got off, Kelsey used her fancy sci-fi phone to check my pulse. 130. Appropriate for running from bears and/or reading a small passage from a self-published novel. 

Anyway, I didn't get a recording of my reading, but wanted to share the excerpt here! Enjoy!

The ceiling of the old stone church was so high and black that it should have contained stars. Preston’s eyes were magnetically drawn to the vast space above, hoping for an indication that there was in fact a roof and uncharacteristically anxious about the fact that he couldn’t tell. For the first time in a long while, he felt the urge to run from the magnificent unknown. He gripped the edge of his pew to prevent being sucked into the nothingness above, knowing full well he was acting like a child hiding under his sheets from make-believe monsters.

”I can’t believe how many people are here, can you?” Bernadette whispered to him before noticing his hold on his seat. “Hey, are you okay?”

”Only a little impatient,” Preston replied. “We’ve been here for twenty minutes now, and I haven’t seen anyone else arrive or depart. When’s your ‘Danielle’ going to show up?”

Bernadette frowned. “She didn’t give me an exact time. If I didn’t know better, I’d think we’d been tricked into attending a vigil.”

The atmosphere of the abandoned church did resemble a vigil or prayer meeting. The heterogeneous congregation that filled the crooked, rotting pews mostly sat with their heads bent and hands folded. Aside from the occasional cough, the sanctuary was silent. The stone walls kept the place cool and dark, and the only light came from the candles arranged around the pulpit. Their glow illuminated the busted, half-canvassed stained glass behind the altar. What was left of the enormous window depicted an awkwardly cubist-inspired crucifix. In it, Christ was a gangly, angular, gray-bodied humanoid on his bloodied cross. The red of his many wounds blazed in the candlelight against the gray and blue-scale background. Someone had thrown a rock through Jesus’ face.
— Necessaries, Chapter 20