Big Bear is now live and ready for your reading pleasure at T-Zero. It’s a funny short story that is actually based on a true story from my days tending bar in Milo, Alberta.
Read, enjoy — it’s good, I promise 🙂
Big Bear is now live and ready for your reading pleasure at T-Zero. It’s a funny short story that is actually based on a true story from my days tending bar in Milo, Alberta.
Read, enjoy — it’s good, I promise 🙂
My incredibly short piece entitled “A Dozen Things” is now published and viewable at Poor Mojo’s Almanac(k). It’s not -really- fiction…unfortunately. I hope you enjoy it 🙂
My BDSM sonnet, Bondage Whore, has been published at Oysters & Chocolate 🙂 I’m really quite impressed with Oysters & Chocolate and hope to see more of my work there in the future…of course, that means I need to submit more LOL In the meantime, please check out the poem IF you are over 18 and IF you’re not easily offended.
When I popped over to SHINE today to check out my poem, Sandcastle #5 that was due to be published there yesterday I got an interesting surprise. Not only was my poem published, but my WMD drabble was as well. I knew I’d submitted it but according to my records I was still waiting for a response. As far as surprises go, that’s a good one 🙂
So yeah, check out my haiku, Sandcastle #5 and my WMD drabble at SHINE 🙂
Vampiric Fluff has now officially been reprinted. The April issue of Static Movement has just gone live and it includes my flufftastic iambic tetrameter vampire poem (I just love saying iambic tetrameter, it sounds so pretentious and cool 😉 ). Take a peek, have a giggle, it’s all good 🙂
My story, A Merry Christmas, has been published at Poor Mojo’s Almanac(k)! Yay! You’ve got to love any magazine that is edited by a giant squid, don’t you? 🙂
I’m very happy that my stories based on the Word of the Week at NaNoLJers have been so well-received. Now I just need to find some time to write a few more of them.
My poem, Vampiric Fluff, is online at Adventures for the Average Woman. You should read it — really. It’s pretty lighthearted and funny. I wrote it on a lark, but when I re-read it months later I went, ‘Hey, people could read this and interpret it to mean blah blah blah’. What’s on the surface was my intent, but hey, if you can find more meaning to it than that more power to you 🙂
When Laurie Notch emailed me this morning to let me know the online version of the magazine was live and the hardcopies in the mail, she said, “ was down in DC and Philly plugging for the magazine and already I got some wonderful commentary on your work.”
Double yay!
This is a great way to start a day 🙂
My Fatherhood drabble has been published at SHINE. You can check it out here –> Fatherhood . 🙂
I’m very pleased with this drabble, it’s been published at two places so far and I think it’s pretty well done. It confuses me, however, that flash stories I’ve done since then that I think are superior to it keep getting rejected LOL Perhaps it’s the subject matter — things being left unsaid is something everyone can relate to, but maybe not everyone ‘gets’ stupid gangsters or visits from beyond the grave.
Food for thought I suppose, but I’d be lying if I said it would be likely to affect what I wrote in the future 🙂
My flash story, A Merry Christmas, has been published at Flash Flooding — yay. You can read the story by following that link, and if you do, please rate it — but do it honestly, I don’t want any gratuitous 5s.
Aside from that and the usual process of writing and submitting nothing else is new that’s related to my writing. I continue to work on the Haven novel-in-stories and I’m editing the ‘On a Mission’ novella to take out about 3 chapters and make it a tighter read. Exciting, no? 😉
My drabble ‘Fatherhood’ was published at A Long Story Short on the 7th. If you want to read it all you need to do is follow the link below — it’s all there, complete with my ‘Evil prevails’ email signature LOL I wrote ‘Fatherhood’ in response to a challenge on NaNoLJers for father’s day, and, as I’m sure you can imagine, I had my stepfather, Clark, in mind when I did.
Fatherhood
by Rhonda Parrish
What Can You Do?
By Rhonda Parrish
The ice caps are melting, oil companies are destroying pristine land, children are starving, genocides continue unabated, oceans are being over fished, forests pillaged and human rights are being trampled everywhere you look. What can you do? Everywhere you turn there are wrongs that need to be righted, things that need to be changed — but you’re just one person! What can you do?
Well, you can sit around feeling bad and thinking about how much better the world would be if people listened to you, you could talk to your like-minded friends about why the world is going to hell and why the human race deserves destruction or you could do something about it.
So you’re only one person, so what? What starts with one person can grow to be more — and if you’re just going to give up rather than TRY to do something to make things better what makes you better than all the people whose actions you despise? I hate to say something as trite as ‘if you’re not part of the solution you’re part of the problem’ but to some extent it’s right. Sure, you can’t save the world all by yourself, but you can make a difference — if you try.
What are you doing to prevent global warming? To protect the environment, stop over fishing and over farming? What are you doing to stand up against the oil companies you rage against? Oil companies, the fishing industry and the lumber industry all spend millions, probably billions of dollars to protect their interests; they advertise, they lobby, they put their money where their mouth is — do you? Have you written a letter to your mayor? Your premier? Your senator? Prime Minister? President? Have you donated time or money to the causes you DO support? Do you refuse to buy products with too much packaging? Recycle? Compost?
Children all over the world are starving, living in poverty without clean water to drink, food to eat or schools to go to. What are you doing to help? “The governments of those countries are so corrupt,” you say, “that when we give them money only a fraction of it makes it to the people who need it.” So? So what? In a world where $100 can make a huge difference in a child’s life, isn’t it worth spending $400 to get that $100 to where it needs to be? So what if most of the money doesn’t get where it belongs –do you think not sending any is the answer? It’s only money. How much is a child’s smile worth? The feeling of a full belly? A mosquito net to prevent malaria? Clean water? How about supporting impoverished children in your home country? Are the food banks too corrupt to deserve your donation?
Genocides occur — still. Despite all the protestations of ‘never again’ they go on. What are you doing? Have you marched against them? Written letters? Sent money to support those who are there dealing with displaced persons and war orphans? Have you educated yourself about what’s going on in your world, or have you just covered your eyes and ears and waited for it all to go away?
Don’t say you can’t afford to do anything — many things that you can do won’t cost you anything — hell, lots of stuff will save you money. Have a yard? Grow your own vegetables. Walk to work instead of driving or take the bus if that’s not plausible. Write your government officials — let them know how you feel. Refuse to support companies whose practices you don’t approve of. Educate yourself and other people about issues going on in the world. And yes, put your money where your mouth is. It’s ridiculous to say that you can’t afford to donate anything to the causes you believe in when you sit in front of a big screen television every night, eat good food and have a roof over your head. Donate something — anything. Give $10 to the food bank, or to feed hungry children in other countries, or buy mosquito nets. Adopt a child in a developing country through Foster Parents Plan or a similar organization. Give money to Amnesty International or environmental groups.
Do something! Anything is better than nothing — the only thing that doing nothing accomplishes is ensuring the status quo. While one person may not be able to save the world all by themselves, they can make a difference. And who knows if people see what you’re doing they may just decide to follow your example and then you just might save the world after all.