Category Archives: Rant Alert

Just me ranting about whatever…

Rant Alert: The Separation of Church and State and Same Sex Marriage

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Most of you who may pop by here on the irregular basis that I post something, or who has read at least one of my books and happened to glance at the “about the author” section, knows that for roughly 15 years I was a non-denominational minister. I try not to bring up the subject of religion a ton, especially here, because it can be such a divisive topic, even among those who proclaim to believe the same thing. However, with the legality of same-sex marriage barraging the news, media, Facebook, and just about everywhere else, I felt it was time to address the subject. I am for the legalization of same sex marriage because I believe, from a legal standpoint, homosexuals deserve the same rights as everyone else. It has nothing to do with morality and everything to do with legality. It is a civil rights issue. However, the more vocal of the religious community, and those with a social media account and too much time on their hands, feel the need to evangelize the masses and let everyone know how wicked it would be for gay people to be legally married so they could have insurance and see each other in the hospital. God wouldn’t like that, you see, and it would kick-start the apocalypse, the water would turn to blood, and everyone who supports it will suddenly find 666 on their forehead.

I would like to quote a Lutheran Pastor, John Rallison, in regards to this issue, and why all those “Christians” should probably just stop talking:

“The moment I argue society’s acceptance or rejection of homosexual marriage based on my faith, I am on dangerous ground. We do not want our government establishing a religion we want because, of course, they might later establish a religion we do not want. By seeking to impose on others a definition of marriage based on my faith, I am paving the way for someone else to impose legal restrictions on my behavior based on their faith. I certainly don’t want my wife to be forced to wear a burka because one day the majority of people in America believe that the burka is God’s highest design for women’s dress.”

There is a reason why the founders of our country felt that separation of Church and State was a swell idea, and Pastor Rallison sums it up pretty well. You see, that door swings both ways, and once we start down the path of dictating law according to religious beliefs, one day those laws won’t necessarily reflect the beliefs you may cling to.

More to the point- it’s none of your damn business.

There, I said it. Whether two men or two women want to be legally married and live their lives together- it’s none of your business. It doesn’t affect you, the sanctity of your marriage, or your relationship with God. If it does then I would suggest that perhaps the problem is not actually same sex marriage, but is instead a personal issue that you should examine and address. I know people don’t like to be told that personal issues such as this is none of their business, because everyone wants to make everything about them, however that doesn’t change the fact that it still. Is not. Your business. Your business is that which affects you, your family, and your affairs. Unless you happen to be homosexual, this topic does none of those things.

On the religious side of things: tell me something, oh you of sanctified faith. If Jesus is the ultimate example we all should be living by, then why is it you feel the need to do the exact opposite of the example he set? Show me a passage where Jesus preaches against Rome and demands that Roman law mirror that of the Jewish faith. In fact, many of those who turned on Jesus did so because He DIDN’T do this and they expected, that as the Messiah, He would. Show me where he utterly condemns someone based on their lifestyle. Last time I checked, His response was “Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.” Show me where He ever implied that God “hated” ANYONE. Hypocrisy in the name of righteousness is still hypocrisy, and you only continue to hurt not only your witness but His by going forth in a self-righteous, holier-than-thou manner, as opposed to displaying the same love and compassion that He did. I think Jesus would be ashamed to see the way that so many who proclaim belief in Him carry on and represent Him. I think it’s shameful how they treat other people who don’t believe the same that they do- all under the guise of righteousness. It sickens me and is exactly the very thing that Jesus railed against. It’s pharisee-ism of the highest order, and then they wonder why so many “heathen” just can’t see that Jesus is the way, the truth, and the light? Why would they when you aren’t demonstrating it yourself by your lifestyle and actions!

Pro tip: telling someone that who they are is evil and they’re going to Hell isn’t the right way to go about it.

Try and remember that that other person believes just as strongly in their own beliefs as you do about yours. Try and remember that the world doesn’t freaking revolve around you and what you consider to be “right” and “wrong”. Try and remember the example that Jesus set, where you use love and compassion, not the whip and condemnation, to reach and help others. And for God’s sake, literally, stop invoking Him on your freaking Facebook page to back up your ignorant, hate-filled nonsense.

This’ll probably anger a lot of people.

Good.

Maybe it’ll wake them up.

J.R. Broadwater is the author of the non-fiction book Down with the Thickness: Viewing the World From a Fat Guy’s Perspective,  the sci-fi detective novel You Only Die Twice, and the fantasy novel The Chosen: Rebirthing Part 1- all available now in digital and paperback formats. Sample chapters and more information about these books can be found here.

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Rant Alert: How Star Wars: The Old Republic Has Been Saving My Life

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I’ve made no secret of the fact that I’m an uber Star Wars fan-nerd. I’ve also made no secret of the fact that I struggle with depression quite a bit. More so in the last few months since it’s been getting closer to a year that I’ve been unemployed with only my indie writing gig bringing in any money (read: almost none). I’ve been going through the process of filing for Social Security Disability, which let me tell you can be a stressful, humiliating, and pride-killing process. Family and friends have been encouraging me to do it for a couple of years now, and as my physical condition has gotten progressively worse, especially in the last year, I finally had to admit to myself that it was time. Going over, in detail, all the things that hurt you, are physically wrong with you, can be a painful experience in itself. A lot of times we push things into the background. They become something we live with every day and actually grow used to to the point that you don’t really think about it as much- it’s just how you live. So when you really start to break down just how screwed up your life is and the things you live with every day that most others don’t, it can put a damper on your day pretty quick.

I’m going to be honest with you, faithful reader, I’ve been a lot lower than usual the last couple of months. I mean, I’ve always struggled with depression and even suicidal thoughts, but these past few months have been more difficult than just about any other time I can remember. It’s actually become almost a daily thing at this point. It’s not that I really have it horrible right now. I have family that loves me and are incredibly supportive. I have a great girlfriend, something I honestly never thought would happen for me; and while we don’t get to see each other too often due to her work schedule and me being broke and without gas money (she lives about 30 minutes away) she’s still the most loving and supportive girl a guy like me could ask for. I have great friends/family that have been helping me with this whole writing thing as test readers, editors, and Shawn, who is an extremely talented artist that donates his really increasingly short supply of free time to providing covers for me.

But the depression is there, and it speaks to me. It tells me that I’m a failure as a man, that I never really had a chance, that I’ve been doomed to being a dependent on others my entire life, and that all the pain and physical problems I have now are just going to keep getting worse. That I’ve already peaked in life and done the best I’m going to do (and that wasn’t much of anything at all). That my time as a minister was a waste, my time with school was a waste, and that God may be there but He has better things to do than hold my hand. That the writing is just me wasting my time trying to make myself feel like I have some sort of meaning left in my life, that it’s never going to go anywhere, and that I’ll end up being just some nobody that self published a bunch of crap that no one wanted to read. This is the stuff that I go to war with every day from the moment I get up until the moment, generally around 4AM or so, when I’m exhausted enough that I’m able to sleep. When it gets really bad that’s when those thoughts become thoughts along other, darker paths. That’s when you start to feel like maybe you’d be doing everyone else a favor by just putting an end to it now. Maybe you’d just be putting yourself, and everyone else around you that has to take care of your sorry and very large posterior, out of what will only become steadily increasing misery. That’s when being a writer and having such an active imagination becomes not a good thing, because I can start to see, in very graphic detail, all the ways I could make that happen.

So yeah, not exactly puppies and sunshine.

My saving grace for the past few months has been Star Wars: The Old Republic. For those of you who don’t know, SWTOR is an MMORPG- a video game online that you can play with other people. It’s made by Bioware, my favorite game developer, who is known for doing story-focused games. They made some of my favorite games of all time: Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic & Mass Effect 1-3. I’ve never been a huge fan of MMOs, but SWTOR was different in that the storyline for each class is actually really well done, and you can play it solo like a normal video game if you want. I’ve actually made several friends through the game that I play with on a daily basis- something that I’ve never really done to this extent with an MMO before. More importantly, it’s helped me to not think. Whenever the depression starts to speak, when those dark thoughts start to happen, I just jump on the game and play. I get lost in that galaxy far, far away for a few hours and when I’m done, I’m not so down. It has, quite literally, helped to save my life, and probably sanity, on more than a few occasions.

Video games have gotten a bad rap. They’ve become the target of the media and politicians as a scapegoat for all the bad crap that’s been going on- school shootings, bullying, promiscuous sex, you name it. Well, here’s an example of where a game has helped someone. I’m not addicted. I don’t play until I get sick, or starve to death, or whatever. It’s just a release for me. It’s become my “happy place”. We all need something like that in our lives, especially in times like these when so many people are hurting, struggling, stressed out, or yes, depressed and/or suicidal. Maybe you’re there too and need an outlet. If you’re a Star Wars fan maybe you should give SWTOR a try. It’s free to play right now. Go and download it and start her up.

Maybe it’s not a game you’re into. Maybe it’s a book, or a TV show, or a movie, or church, or whatever  you need or have found that helps to get you through. Something that you can get lost in and just not think about all the crap for a while. It’s okay, and don’t let anyone else tell you different. You’re not alone.  For me it’s this video game where I can be an intelligence agent, or Jedi, or an evil Sith and force choke stupid folk in a fictional universe that I’ve always loved since I was a little kid. Whatever that thing may be for you, I hope you’ve found it, because we all need an escape sometimes.

May the force be with you…now excuse me while I go be a Sith Lord and shoot electricity from my fingertips for a while.

J.R. Broadwater is the author of the non-fiction book Down with the Thickness: Viewing the World From a Fat Guy’s Perspective,  the sci-fi detective novel You Only Die Twice, and the fantasy novel The Chosen: Rebirthing Part 1- all available now in digital and paperback formats. Sample chapters and more information about these books can be found here.

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Rant Alert: Adolescent Survival

Video via Upworthy.com

Being a kid has never been easy. We like to look back on childhood, or past eras in general, with rose-colored glasses, but the truth is adolescence has never been easy. While the issues kids have to face may have changed or gotten “worse” over the years, bullying, low self esteem, and abuse of various kinds have always been a part of the landscape. Shane Koyczan, the poet featured in the video above while he spoke at a TED conference, was very poignant with both his story and his words. Having worked predominantly with kids for the last fifteen years I saw this quite a bit. I personally dealt with low self esteem, name calling, bullying, myself when I was a kid, and still do on some levels. I spoke aboutit quite a bit in Down with the Thickness. Here’s a short excerpt:

 

Survival of the Wittiest

The school bus was also the place where I could develop another useful tool in the arsenal of fat people- being a smart mouth. See, when you’re big you really only have a few options for self-defense against the other kids: One, you can be the introverted fat kid that hardly ever talks and prays that the other kids just won’t notice you or care enough to mess with you. Two, you can become a bully and use your size to your advantage, coming from the school of thought that if they’re afraid of you they won’t mess with you. Three, you can become a smart aleck, because if you can make them laugh at something (or someone) else, then they’re not laughing at you.

I’ve tried the first option, and I have to admit that it really doesn’t work all that well. For one, when you’re as big as I am you never really “blend.”  When you walk into a room you’re going to draw attention regardless of what you say or do. Plus, when you act introverted and keep to yourself, it’s like wearing a bullseye on your back for all the less-intelligent social predators looking for easy prey.

The second option is very tempting to someone who’s been picked on all their life. The idea of not only fighting back, but having people be afraid of you is great, in an ideological sort of way. Every guy fantasizes about being the Clint Eastwood of the schoolyard where everyone shows you “respect” and all the girls swoon. Unfortunately, the reality doesn’t live up to the hype. When you’re a bully, no one really likes you. They may act like they respect you, but it’s really only fear, and your so-called friends won’t hesitate to turn on you as soon as the opportunity presents itself and they think they can get away with it. Any kind of relationship built on fear is only an empty illusion, and a life devoid of true friendship, loyalty or respect can be worse than living with getting picked on all the time.

Plus, being a bully means you have to hurt people and the reality of seeing someone truly in pain and knowing that you caused it is far different than the romanticized version that we’ve grown so used to seeing in various types of media. The fact of the matter is when you’re a big person you have to be that much more aware of the kind of damage you can unwittingly cause. What is normal roughhousing for most kids becomes something that could be decidedly more dangerous when you add someone twice their size into the mix. This is a lesson I learned the hard way one summer when I was ten years old.

My cousin and I grew up together in Granite City, Illinois. Granite is a small steel mill city just across the bridge from St. Louis, and both sides of my family are from there. I lived there until I was seven and my dad, who worked for the Kroger Bakery as a supervisor, was transferred to Houston, TX. While my cousin and I were always close, he grew up on the bad side of town and tended to have a street mentality about things. By that I mean that if he gets mad he lashes out. If he feels you’ve insulted him he lashes out. Sometimes it means he just decides he’s going to be a jerk for no other reason than he felt like it at the time. I don’t mean to trivialize his issues, because he did have a lot of them. He didn’t have a great childhood or home life to begin with, and once my family and I moved, he really didn’t have many positive outlets left to him.

That summer, my parents had him sent down to stay with us for a while and most of the time he and I got along fine. The rest of the time our “fights” consisted of little more than calling each other names and going off to our respective corners of the house to sulk for a bit. However, one night things escalated into something physical.

The fight started over something pretty stupid, as most fights at that age do. My little sister, who was not yet six at the time, had fallen asleep on the couch while we were all watching T.V. and I wanted to carry her into her bedroom and put her to bed. My dad worked nights and mom was in another room at the time, so I asked my cousin to go in and pull back the covers so I could lay her down. For whatever reason, he decided he wanted to make an issue out of it and refused. We went back and forth a few times until I finally gave up and just put my sister in her bed on top of the blankets.

When I came back out he and I got into an argument about it. He pushed me. I pushed him back. He pushed me back harder and before I knew it we were in my bedroom doing our best to kill one another. Now, because my bed was fairly small my parents had taken the mattress off of the box spring and put it in the floor so we’d have more room and no one would fall and hurt themselves if they happened to roll off of the bed. This also conveniently gave him a frame to use like the ropes on a wrestling ring to jump on my back and choke me. Without thinking, I grabbed at his arm, which at this time was wrapped around my throat and doing a boa constrictor impression, and threw him over my shoulder to land rather spectacularly onto the mattress on the floor. His body bounced a few times before finally coming to a rest, at which point my mom, having heard all the noise, stormed into the room and separated us.

Now, this all sounds like a pretty silly fight like most boys that age have. The problem, as my father pointed out to me later, was that it could have ended up being something much more serious. My cousin was a year older than me, but I was still several inches taller and more than twice his size. Had that mattress not been there to break his fall I could have very easily hurt him. In fact, looking back on it, considering how forcefully he hit I’m surprised that he didn’t end up hurting his neck or back anyway. My dad really made sure to hit that point home with me that night when he got back from work. He wasn’t mad that I defended myself, but he did want me to realize that someone my size had to be extra careful in everything physical that I did, especially with other people. That night I learned that with great weight comes great responsibility to not crush people, and I’ve never been in a fight since.

So, if being the quiet kid just got you picked on, and being a bully wasn’t an option, then that left being a smart aleck. Now, it took me years to really come out of my shell and fully embrace my destiny as the outgoing geek I am today, but by the time I was a junior in high school I realized that when you can make people laugh and are generally a nice guy, they tend to like having you around. Liking you to be around doesn’t really correlate to true friendship or wanting to date you, but we’ll address that a bit later.

So, as a result, I’ve come to rely on my wit and sense of humor when it comes to dealing with people. I don’t do it just as a defense mechanism anymore, though it can certainly become one when I’m nervous or scared. Over the years I’ve genuinely enjoyed having the ability to make someone laugh, especially when you’re trying to help and need to get the other person to open up a bit.

Things have certainly escalated since I was a kid. Now if you say the wrong thing to someone rather than getting jumped after school you have to worry if he’ll come back with a gun and shoot up the place. It’s a scary thought in a very scary world and my girlfriend and I worry about her kid when it comes time for him to go to school. However, in everything there has to be balance, and while you want to protect your child the worst thing in the world you can do is smother them or shelter them to the point when it is time for them to go out and face the world without you they get eaten alive or go completely nuts. Its a very thin tightrope that parents and adults in influential positions have to walk- if you coddle them too much and they become too weak to fend for themselves; go too far the other way and they end up in therapy recounting for someone who makes $100 an hour just how horrible you were and how everything that’s wrong in life is your fault. I think the key to this, as in most things, is just showing them love and support. Knowing that they have someone that they can count on to be there when they need them, who will love them regardless of anything they say and do, will go a long way. It’s a very real reason why I’m still here and able to write this right now. If it weren’t for the friends and family in my life I would have been long removed from this world by my own hands. It’s still something that I struggle with, but that’s just it- it’s my struggle, not theirs. I know I have people who love me and are there for me. It acts a balm when I get low, but in the end there are some battles that can only be fought by yourself, and it’s that love and support that gives us the strength to be able to keep on swinging.

J.R. Broadwater is the author of the non-fiction book Down with the Thickness: Viewing the World From a Fat Guy’s Perspective,  the sci-fi detective novel You Only Die Twice, and the fantasy novel The Chosen: Rebirthing Part 1- all available now in digital and paperback formats. Sample chapters and more information about these books can be found here.

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Rant Alert: DC Comics, Superman, & Orson Scott Card

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Okay, so there’s a big hubbub-baloo going on right now because Orson Scott Card was hired by DC to write a Superman comic. He’s not being put on as a regular writer on a main title. It’s a side series with rotating guest writers. Why is everyone so up in arms? Well, Mr. Card has been very vocal about his stance on homosexuality.  He sits on the board for the National Organization for Marriage which actively tries to prevent gay marriage from being legalized. He is also a practicing Mormon, which I have no doubt has helped to inform his views on the subject quite substantially. So now there are many fans, gay or otherwise, and even entire comic shops that are boycotting the book and advocating for DC to fire him.

Okay, here’s the problem with that “firing” part: personal beliefs should be left out of workplace decisions as long as those beliefs do not affect the work. Card has just as much right to work as any of us, whether you find his personal beliefs distasteful or not; and to fire him for personal beliefs when they haven’t made their way onto the pages of the comics would be wrong on DC’s part. Not to mention it’d be an invite for a law suit were they to do so because he could make a very strong argument that he’d been fired for his religious beliefs. It could be argued that they have fired people for similar reasons in the past, however those instances weren’t as in the public eye as this one is, and they were under a different context anyway. More often than not those creators where publicly commenting on the company or their books, not personal beliefs. Regardless, it’s wrong. Now, if Card suddenly has Superman advocating against homosexuality because it’s not the “American way” then that’d be different.

To demand that Card be taken off the book because of his beliefs as opposed to his writing ability is the same kind of prejudiced behavior as it would be if they were demanding it because of his religion (which it kinda is), skin tone, or his own sexual orientation. In other words it’s advocating for the very thing that many of these fans are fighting against. It’s a double standard. Tolerance doesn’t just go one way, or work because it’s easy, politically correct, or publicly popular. Card has a right to believe whatever the hell he wants. He can sit on a board and advocate for gay marriage to not be legalized because he personally believes very strongly against it; just as much as homosexuals and those that support them have the right to fight for it. As long as he is not advocating for homosexuals to be rounded up and killed, enslaved, or thrown into jail (and he doesn’t) he is not comparable to a Nazi, which is a comparison I’ve seen many make. You may not agree with his beliefs, like it, or think he’s a very good person, but that should, in no way, change his right to work as a writer. That said, that doesn’t mean that fans have to buy his work. You don’t like it? Say it with your pocketbook. That’ll hurt DC more than anything, and I guarantee he won’t be put on another book if this one bombs. Especially since i’m sure the only reason they got him to write this one is because of the buzz about the Ender’s Game movie. Besides, his past work in comics hasn’t been anything to write home about anyway.

Yes, I understand that what he advocates for is hurtful to many, but fighting intolerance with more intolerance isn’t the answer and only makes things worse. Like it or not we live in a democracy. We live in a huge melting pot of cultures, religions, and beliefs and we advocate that everyone has a right to these things without being held apart or treated differently because of them. In order for a society like that to work, everyone is just going to have to deal with the fact that it’s not, as of right now, illegal to be an a-hole. If it were our overcrowding problem with jails would become an epidemic. So don’t add to the problem. Don’t make yourself into a hypocrite because this one man is intolerant to your lifestyle or that of a loved one’s. It’s not going to make anything better.

To address the religious side of this debate: Do I publicly or personally support Card’s beliefs? No. For those that may not know I am a licensed Christian minister and have spent the last 15 years working in ministry in some capacity. That said, I believe homosexuals should have the same legal rights as everyone else. To be frank: whether or not homosexuality is a “sin” isn’t my problem. God didn’t ordain me to be the sin police. That’s between them and God, just as the things I do in my life are between me and God. Regardless of the “sinfullness” of homosexuality, I think it’s pretty clear from the Bible that Jesus wouldn’t love them any less or treat them any differently than he did anyone else that was a “sinner”- meaning all of us.

I think Card is a talented writer. I loved Ender’s Game, for example. However if he wrote something that was hate-filled or advocated against a certain type of person I wouldn’t buy it or read it. I think Card has a right to believe what he does. I think he has the right to fight for what he feels is right for the society he lives in just as much as friends and acquaintances I have who happen to be homosexual have the right to fight for what they feel is right and equal. You have every right to not support his work just as he has the right to make it. if you don’t agree with Card or where his money will end up going then boycott the book. Say how you feel where they’ll feel it most- say it with your money and spend it on something else.

J.R. Broadwater is the author of the non-fiction book Down with the Thickness: Viewing the World From a Fat Guy’s Perspective,  the sci-fi detective novel You Only Die Twice, and the fantasy novel The Chosen: Rebirthing Part 1- all available now in digital and paperback formats. Sample chapters and more information about these books can be found here.

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Rant Alert: Why A Live Action Justice League Movie Will Be An Uphill Battle

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After The Avengers did super-crazy-good at the box office the WB announced that they would have their own big team up movie, Justice League, on track for a 2015 release.  Well, they had someone working on a script but rumor is that’s been scrapped. They haven’t found a director, and now they’re claiming they want to see how Man of Steel does before they move ahead. They also seem dead set on not following the proven track that Marvel has by building the world with solo movies before shoving everyone together. They want to do the opposite because, well, it’s the opposite of what their rival is doing. There have been several articles on why this is a bad idea. Personally, I think Man of Steel is going to do fine. I’ve really liked what I’ve seen so far, and despite fan-geek rumblings on message boards where every quote is taken horribly out of context or blown up to silly proportions (SUPERMAN IS GOING TO BE DARK AND REALISTIC!!!111!!!1!!) I think we’ll get a decent flick.

That said, I think a JLA live action movie is just a bad idea. The Avengers worked for several major reasons. One, they established world building through a series of decent-great movies people generally really liked that linked things together before the big team up. Two, they got a writer/director who knew what he was doing. Joss Whedon knows comics. He knows how to do ensemble stuff well (FIREFLY!!!!). He’s also a pretty great writer. They picked a great person to helm the project. Three, they got the right actors for the various roles. Four, Avengers is just easier to do in live action without it being silly.

Marvel comics have always seemed to be a bit more grounded in reality than DC. DC is more mythological/fantastical while Marvel has always been more sci-fi. Sure Avengers has Norse gods running around, but even that was explained with a more scientific approach- advanced science always looks like magic to those who don’t know what they’re looking at. But all the other members of the Avengers are pretty much just normal humans with sci-fi-explained tweeks that make them superhuman. Stark has a super advanced suit of armor and is a genius. Hulk and Cap have been genetically altered by science. Hawkeye and Black Widow are just crazy good at what they do.Nick Fury is Sam Jackson. See? All their powers are pretty much explained by and rooted in science, granted more sci-fi science, but science none-the-less. It all feels a bit more grounded, enough so when aliens come flying out of a wormhole and Banner turns into the Hulk and smashes the audience goes along for the ride.

With the Justice League you pretty much have a group of gods, and Batman. Sure Flash’s powers happened through an accident and GL is a very sci-fi thing; but you still have basically Hermes who can move at the speed of light and do stuff that just isn’t, as far as we know, even close to scientifically possible and a space cop with the most powerful weapon in the universe on his finger that can make anything he can think of out of pure will. Then there’s Superman and Wonder Woman. You know why Man of Steel is trying to approach the story from the point of view of “how would humanity react to finding out there’s real aliens and they can do all this powerful stuff?” and how Clark comes to grips with who he is? Because that’s more relateable to audiences than a boy scout demi-god flying around in underwear who can do just about anything. Audiences are going to ask “Why does Superman need a Justice League? Couldn’t he just have this whole thing wrapped up in five minutes and have time for a coke and smile before the rest of them even get there?” Wonder Woman is almost as troublesome. She is the daughter of actual gods, after all, and almost as powerful as Superman, depending on which comics you’re going by. Then there’s Batman. The Nolan Batman films played like gangbusters at the box office, and I loved them too. But if we’re honest those weren’t real “comic book Batman” films. They were mob movies with elements of Batman thrown in for flavor. If Batman were a rogue cop and Joker hadn’t had the makeup in Dark Knight you still would have had pretty much the same movie. That’s not the comic book Batman, and it’s certainly not the Batman who’d be running with the JLA. The Batman we’re looking for is the Batman portrayed in the Arkham Asylum games or the animated DC movies and series. Which brings me to my point:

The Justice League Movie should be CGI.

Don’t believe me? Watch this, I’ll wait….

By going the CG route like the example above the WB can avoid a lot of the problems of a live action film and actually make a movie that could still do huge at the box office without being a train wreck. First, people tend to be more likely to suspend disbelief when it’s animation, and you can get by with a lot more without it looking fake and/or stupid. I don’t know a single person who has seen that trailer above, comic fan or not, who hasn’t remarked how completely awesome that was. It was pretty dark, much darker than what they’d want to shoot for with a big movie, but it worked on a level that no live action movie is likely to. In CG the costumes don’t look silly. In live action, they kinda do. In CG you can get iconic voice actors who have been known for these parts for the last 20 years: Kevin Conroy as Batman, Mark Hamill as the Joker…basically everyone who did the old Justice League TV series. They would already have the perfect built-in team to handle it: Bruce Timm, Paul Dini, Andrea Romano. They’re the DCAU trinity of awesome that has made the last 20 years of DC animated products so freaking good. Let them move up to the big time and handle a big budget movie rather than these 70 minute long direct to DVD things. Pixar and Dreamworks have shown that big budget animated movies can do well. Heck, The Incredibles showed that it can work for superheros and make a movie that everyone loves. Its time for Warner Brothers to wake up and realize that their answer to the Marvel movies is staring them right in the face. That’s just my take on it anyway.

J.R. Broadwater is the author of the non-fiction book Down with the Thickness: Viewing the World From a Fat Guy’s Perspective,  the sci-fi detective novel You Only Die Twice, and the fantasy novel The Chosen: Rebirthing Part 1- all available now in digital and paperback formats. Sample chapters and more information about these books can be found here.

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Rant Alert: The State of Star Wars

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I think I have already established my Star Wars geek cred previously, but given all the news lately and my reinvigorated hunger for the franchise thanks to various things I’ll be discussing presently, I thought it’d be a good time to examine the state of the franchise, what we have to look forward to, and address all the negativity that seems to be the default setting whenever anything Star Wars is mentioned. In fact, let’s just start with the negativity thing, because I’m kind of sick of hearing about it. I understand that the prequels were, lets be honest, pretty craptacular. I just tried to re-watch them on BluRay the other day and it really is hard to sit through. However, as I’m about to show, that doesn’t automatically make all things Star Wars horrible. Additionally I would like to point out that regardless of how disappointing the prequels were, they did accomplish two good things:

1. We got a lot more awesome Star Wars music from John Williams

2. The prequels opened up the universe a bit more for other areas of the EU to explore, areas that were previously off limits to the novels, comics, games, etc. Many of those things, set during the time of the prequels, have actually been quality entertainment, but I’ll get into that in more detail presently.

Star Wars Episode 7 Movie

First, lets look at the most obvious “big thing”. I won’t discuss the sale to Disney because I’ve already talked about that at length. I do want to talk about Ep. VII. While I remain cautiously optomistic, the fact that the people behind the story have massive credit, geek and otherwise, is a very positive sign. We have Michael Arndt writing the script. For those who don’t know, this is the same guy that wrote Toy Story 3 and Little Miss Sunshine– both quality stories. On board consulting is Lawrence Kasdan, the screenwriter for Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi, and Raiders of the Lost Ark (the first Indiana Jones), and Simon Kinberg, who wrote the RDJ version of Sherlock Holmes and Mr. and Mrs. Smith. Now, the addition of Kinberg could make some people balk, depending on how much you liked SH or M&MS (I thought they were fun), but the fact that Lawrence Kasdan is on board has me really excited. ESB is my favorite movie of all time, and what he wanted to do with ROTJ was right on the money until Lucas made changes (in his defense the Ewoks were originally Wookies).

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Okay, so J.J. Abrams is officially directing the next movie. “Lens flare! Durp de derp!” Can we please put a moratorium on the lens flare jokes? They weren’t exactly witty the first time, and now they’re just annoying as hell. Personally I’ve enjoyed all the films Abrams has directed. I loved NuTrek and thought it was an extremely smart way to reboot without throwing out everything that has come before. A lot of die hard fans didn’t like it because it wasn’t “their Star Trek” and that’s fine, but it was still a really fun, entertaining movie, (but yes, there were plot holes and too much lens flare) and I think it went a long way in proving that Abrams has what it takes to do a decent Star Wars film. Also, just to point out for all the “Lost sucked!” critics: Abrams didn’t screw up Lost. He was involved with the pilot episode, and that was pretty much it (it was also the best episode of the entire show). He’s mostly a producer and idea man, TV-wise, and once the productions are up and running he leaves the rest to the show runners. What they do after the fact is on them, not him.

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I already did a rant on Clone Wars, but after the latest episode I just wanted to reiterate just how freaking good this show is. Seriously, the “Maul Arc” was hand-down the best storyline they’ve done, and the final episode of that arc that aired on Saturday is the best episode of the show. Period. It was a prime example of just how good Star Wars can be- my jaw dropped twice in shock and I’m still geeking out about it. Even if you aren’t a fan of the show or have never seen an episode, go watch that episode. Go ahead. I’ll wait… The only bad thing about the Clone Wars, and this has been a constant since Season 1, there is always 1 story arc that is either really kid oriented, boring, or both. This season it was the droid squad arc (though seeing the commando was cool). However, it’s usually just after those “dud arcs” that things get really good, so it’s worth it to throw the kiddies a bone to get stories like the one I just mentioned. If you haven’t given the show a shot and are a Star Wars fan, do yourself a favor and check it out. The series has only gotten better as its gotten older, the stories can be quite mature, but it’s still something you can watch with your kids. Basically it’s like the original trilogy movies- fun for everyone.

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I know it’s become the bandwagon thing to hate on Bioware, but they are still my favorite game company and they still make excellent games. The Old Republic is one of them. SWTOR was a massive undertaking. It’s the first MMO Bioware tried to do, and they wanted to do it differently then everyone else. They wanted to make an MMO that was more about story, and they did. They made a Bioware game that you can play with other people if you want. That’s exactly what I was looking for. I never got into PvP in games. I don’t care about “end game content”. I care about a good story and a game that makes me feel like I’m living in that galaxy far, far away with my friends. I wanted a game I could play predominantly solo, and play with friends when I felt like it. That is exactly the game I got. It’s basically Knights of the Old Republic 3-8. It’s got fully-voiced NPCs and cut-scenes. Each class has it’s own storyline, and while some are better than others, it’s still very much a Bioware game and massively better than any other MMO I’ve played in that regard.

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Sure, there are bugs, and stuff that needs to be worked out from time to time (ALL MMOs, including the vaunted WOW, are the same way). They probably launched a few months before they should have, but right now the game is a ton of fun. I played since beta and took a couple of months off, but since I’ve been back it’s been the only game I’ve played for the last two months. SWTOR is free to play now, and you can play the entire storyline with a character, level 1-50, without ever needing to spend a dime. Sure, you won’t have all the features subscribers have and it may take you a little longer, but you won’t be gimped to the point where you have to spend money in order to play. Still, the subscription is more than worth it IMO. Either way, give it a try if you haven’t. You aren’t out anything doing so.

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When I saw the gameplay and trailer for this during E3 I was blown away. It looks absolutely gorgeous and I can’t wait to get my hands on it. The gameplay looks exactly like the cut-scenes, and that amazes me. Lucasarts is working with ILM and it’s the first time the two have worked hand-in-hand on a project like this:

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It takes place on Coruscant and surrounds the criminal underworld. No lightsabers or force powers, just a blaster and your skill. It sounds like a ton of fun and a nice change of pace. They’ve assured worried fans that the Disney buy-out hasn’t affected production at all. In fact, they say Disney has been incredibly supportive of the project. I can’t wait to see more.

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I own just about every Star Wars novel there is. I used to be a huge fan of the books and release day was like a holiday for me. The books have been incredibly hit or miss in the last ten years or so, unfortunately, but there are still gems that hit every now and then, like the book above. I’m really hoping with the new movies we might get an in-flux of new talent and fresh stories, because I really miss sitting down with a good Star Wars novel and jut getting lost in that universe for a while. Plus, as a writer it’s still a dream of mine to be able to write in that universe one day.

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The one aspect that does bother me about the Disney buy-out is that it means that Marvel is going to get the franchise for the comics. Dark Horse has done an amazing job with the franchise and has constantly released quality books. Marvel’s track record…well….isn’t as good. I still have hope that maybe Marvel might surprise me, but I’m not convinced they can deliver the quality that Dark Horse has.

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Overall, despite the setbacks of the prequels, Star Wars is still a viable franchise that is alive and well and is hopefully heading into a new age of revitalization and quality. As fans we have a lot to look forward to. Here’s hoping that our optimism will be rewarded.

J.R. Broadwater is the author of the non-fiction book Down with the Thickness: Viewing the World From a Fat Guy’s Perspective,  the sci-fi detective novel You Only Die Twice, and the fantasy novel The Chosen: Rebirthing Part 1- all available now in digital and paperback formats. Sample chapters and more information about these books can be found here.

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Rant Alert- Depression

depression_1-ad78d208bfd0907a122c249a74cd8f6ff184705e-s6-c10(Photo from NPR)

Depression sucks. This is not news. Though I think people get the wrong misconceptions about it sometimes. I think generally it’s because of how it’s portrayed on T.V. in various ways. Most of the times when people see depression it’s on commercials for some type of medicinal treatment where people generally look mopey or tired and then the next minute they’re running through fields with some pretty person and a puppy. There’s also a sort of stigma around it and I think people, in general, don’t know how to handle not only having depression, but how to interact with someone who is suffering from it. For most people it is not a temporary thing. It’s something that is always there, kinda lurking in the shadows, just waiting for an opportunity to pounce. Often it happens when you least expect it. Things can be fine one minute and then the next you catch yourself thinking about all the negative things going on in your life and how nothing works out right and everything sucks and it never gets better and why should I even bother trying and everyone and everything is annoying and I’m just so tired and I wish I could just make everything go away and why are they staring at me like that? Oh right, because I’ve been staring at the same spot for the last 5 minutes looking like a comatose patient.

People tend to have varied reactions to depression. For some they just don’t want to get out of bed. Sometimes it physically hurts. For me I just generally feel like hammered crap and little things make me feel like I want to just curl up in a ball and die. It doesn’t take much to set you off into an internal rant of self-loathing. You feel very alone. You intellectually know that there are people who love and care about you. They may even try to cheer you up, which sometimes can only make things worse despite their best, well intentioned efforts. Often I crave solitude, because it just takes too much effort to interact with people and try to be “normal” when I feel this way. Ultimately suicidal thoughts aren’t too far behind. It doesn’t take much to set it off. For me, the bigger stuff doesn’t bother me nearly as much as small things. When the “big” negative stuff happens it generally just pisses me off and makes me want to fight back. It’s the little things that needle me and set me off into depressive, often borderline suicidal, bouts. I’ve been feeling that way a lot lately.

I went back and looked at what I wrote about depression and suicide in my book Down With the Thickness. I wanted to see if, a few years later and in the midst of depression, I’d feel the same way. Here’s a bit of what I wrote then:

What aided me most in helping other people deal with depression and suicidal thoughts or tendencies was simple: life experience. I may not have a doctorate, but I do have a lifetime of experience battling depression and suicide. In that regard, I’d consider myself somewhat of an authority on the subject.

Dr. Phil can bite me.

I was eleven years old when I tried to commit suicide. Let that sink in. Eleven. Years. Old. It wasn’t a joke. I wasn’t playing a game. I really intended to do it.

Some friends of mine were hanging out with a new kid who had just moved in and I felt pretty left out. I didn’t have a lot of friends at the time. My dad worked nights so I only got to see him maybe for an hour or two out of the day, if that, just before he went to bed or just after he woke up before he got ready for work. My mom loved my sister and me very much, but she was left alone to tend to everything while he was gone and the stress, mixed with a lot of other factors, meant she had her own issues she was dealing with. I knew, intellectually, that friends and family members cared about me, but when depression sinks its talons into you what you know doesn’t matter nearly as much as what you feel.

I think I’ve established that I was picked on constantly at school. Most of my aforementioned “friends” were my friends when no one else was around, and tended to be less friendly in a crowd. After all, I was the fat kid, the hang-around. I was the kid they tolerated and let hang out with them out of pity or so they’d have someone to mess with and amuse them. I felt like no one cared, that I was alone, and that I always would be. You may think that those are pretty deep thoughts and feelings for an eleven year old, but kids are like that beneath the surface. They’re just little people who may not be fully developed yet. They can be just as complex and deal with just as many issues that are, to them, as serious and stressful as those that adults deal with every day.

For me, I decided that I wasn’t worth much and maybe it was better that I just end it.

To be honest, I just wanted to see that people cared. It was like having dueling banjoes playing in my head; feeling like no one cared and wondering if after I was gone they’d miss me. I wanted to make my “friends” feel bad for the way they treated me. I wanted attention and to know that I mattered.

I got attention all right, though not in the way I’d hoped.

The new kid had a skateboard ramp in his back yard. Like I said, he was the cool kid everyone wanted to hang around. Having a skateboard ramp of his own made him the center of attention in the neighborhood. After all, this was the early 90’s when skateboarding was a big thing. So I decided that I’d show them. What better place to go out with a bang? I found a length of rope and tied it to the top of the skateboard ramp, tied the other end around my neck, and slid off.

The rope was too long.

I was probably lucky that I didn’t seriously hurt my neck. The rope was just long enough that my tip toes could reach the ground, but short enough that it was still doing a pretty decent job of choking me. When I realized that I wasn’t going to die, I did the next best thing that an eleven year old starving for attention could do – I faked it. I stood there like that, half choking myself, and waited for the other kids to get back from wherever they had gone to. When they finally did come around the corner into the back yard I didn’t get the reaction I was hoping for.

They started laughing.

Considering I had my tongue lolling out of the side of my mouth in the classic “death pose” I can’t say I really blamed them. I started to laugh with them and played it off as a joke. I knew that if anyone really believed I’d tried to kill myself I’d be in big trouble. Even then I knew there was this stigma surrounding suicide, and I didn’t want to sacrifice whatever “cool credit” I had with these kids and go from being the fat kid they kept around for laughs to being the crazy fat kid that tried to hang himself. Needless to say, my parents didn’t find it nearly as amusing as the neighborhood kids, and I spent the rest of the summer sporting a very trendy rope burn around my neck.

I remember being afraid of how my parents would react. I knew that they’d freak out, obviously, but I wasn’t sure how far they’d take it. Would they take me to some doctor? Would they have me committed in one of those places on T.V. where everything is padded and white and you aren’t allowed to have shoe laces?

Well, I was right. They definitely freaked out. They weren’t mad at me like I was afraid they’d be, they were just really scared. I mean, their kid just tried to hang himself. Who could blame them? My mom wanted to take me to see a psychologist, but my dad convinced her that I’d be fine; that it was just a stupid thing that I did and I was just dealing with a phase. In reality I really wasn’t fine, but I think my dad was so scared for me that he just really wanted to believe I was. He needed to believe I was.

Incidentally, no, I haven’t seriously attempted to kill myself since, but I’ve had moments where it was a very close thing. Being suicidal isn’t something that just goes away on its own. It’s not a “phase” that you grow out of.  I’m in a war with myself every single day of my life. Depression is an enemy that is always there, always striking, and some days it hits harder than others. Some days outside factors: people, events, stress, act as mercenaries for the enemy’s side and can overrun your defenses. It’s on those days that you literally have to fight for your life. In that regard, I’m Patton.

Mindfreak 

I can’t profess to know what it feels like for other people. I only know how it feels for me. It starts as a sort of pressure, not just on your chest but all around you. It’s just this blanket of gloom that drapes around you like one of those old, heavy quilts. People tend to associate negative things with coldness, but when depression first strikes me it’s never cold, it’s hot. It’s got its own kind of warmth to it that grows and pulses the deeper you go. It’s not a comforting warmth, but oppressive, like the hot fog of a sauna that’s far too thick, and it helps to amplify every negative thought and emotion I have.

That’s really the problem with depression, at least for me. It’ll start out small, just a feeling of irritability or melancholy; but for every negative thing that happens, be it something someone says, a small event like accidentally dropping something- small things, it stokes that fire inside. Things that you’d normally shrug or laugh off suddenly makes you want to scream and lash out. The really frustrating part is I feel all this pressure building up inside but I don’t know how to vent it. There’s just this impotent rage building and I just can’t let it out. When I do finally end up exploding and start cursing at the top of my lungs or hitting stuff, I end up feeling like a complete moron for acting that way afterwards. That only helps to feed the frustration even more and it becomes a self-sustaining cycle. It’s when it gets to this point that my overly creative and active imagination takes over.

Normally my creativity is a positive thing. It’s the reason I’m good with kids. It’s what makes me (I hope) a good writer. The flip side of that is it can also be used for negative things. When I’m really angry, if I let it, I’ll play out scenarios in my head: replaying negative events, arguments with people that never took place, violent daydreams that I’d never actually do in real life.

When it’s really bad a lot of that stuff eventually stops being about other people and is replaced by negative thoughts about myself: Nobody understands. Nobody cares. Nothing I’ve done has ever really made a difference. My life has been a waste. I’ve been nothing but a burden to the people I care about. I’m worthless. I wish I’d never been born. I never asked to be here. What if I just took that knife and ended it? Would anyone care? Mom would freak. My family would be devastated, but would anyone else care? Would it really matter? I could stop hurting. I’d be at peace…

This Little Light of Mine

Being suicidal is a very dark place. It’s like being caught in a tide or the pull of a black hole. If you don’t manage to pull away as soon as it starts happening, you just get dragged deeper and deeper until thoughts and dark daydreams start to become actions. Often we try to reach out, desperately, to find someone or something that’ll make it alright. That makes it incredibly unfair to the people trying to help us. You’re so hypersensitive, like a bundle of raw nerves, and it’s always hard to tell just what might set us off and make things worse. What you might think of as being comforting could just end up, from the other side, sounding trite and cliché.

 As a couple of examples: the popular “Well, it could be worse” line, or comparing the depressed person’s situation to someone who is “worse off”  are two of the worst things you can say to someone who’s already depressed and/or suicidal. First, by saying “it could be worse” you’re not giving them anything positive to focus on, instead you’re just pointing out that it could be worse.

“Well, I feel like there’s nothing positive in my life, and everywhere I look it’s just negative, but thank you for reminding me that it’s possible that my situation can get worse. I appreciate that.”

Of course you don’t mean it that way, but you can see how it’s easy for someone who’s already in a bad frame of mind to flip it around to something negative. My favorite response to “Well it could be worse” came from Mark, who instantly deadpanned, “Give it time, I’m sure it will be.”

If we look at my second example, by comparing their situation to others you’re basically invalidating the way that they’re feeling. Just because their situation isn’t as bad as X doesn’t mean they don’t have the right to feel the way that they do. Again, this may not be your intention, but to be honest, in this type of situation your intentions don’t mean anything, the suicidal/depressed person’s perception does. Remember, the road to Perdition is paved with good intentions… and so is the road to an emotional breakdown.

I’ve found the best thing to do when someone is depressed and verging on being suicidal is to just listen to what they have to say. Let them vent. Show support, speak when you feel like you need to and let them know that they’re loved. Don’t let them drag themselves down any further. Be the light in the darkness. However, in the end it comes down to choice, and the choice ultimately isn’t yours.

I’m lucky in that I have a lot of good friends and family that care and listen to me vent. Sometimes I feel bad, though, because you get tired of talking. You get tired of feeling like you’re complaining about the same things all the time. Ultimately, I think, its a control issue. I don’t feel like I have any control over how my life is going and like I don’t have the power to change my situation. Everything I’ve tried has failed to improve things. I feel like I’m left having to rely on others for everything and nothing I’ve done, nothing I’ve accomplished, has ultimately meant anything in the long run. I’ve always tried to do the right thing, treat people the right way, help as much as I can, be the kind of man that would make my family and the God that I served so diligently proud. I served faithfully as a youth pastor for almost a decade. I graduated top of my class with three degrees. Now I can’t find a job and any interview I sit in I’m told that my resume is impressive but they go with someone else. Often times I can’t help but feel it’s because of my physical/medical issues. I’m a health risk. I can’t physically do what other people can. There’s nothing I can do about it. I’ve seen the specialists. I’ve been on the medications (which I can’t really afford any more). I’m stuck this way for the rest of my life and there’s little to no room for improvement. In all honesty I’m only going to get worse from here as I get older. It’s just the reality of the situation and at the age of 31 it’s hard not to feel incredibly cheated.

I know there are a LOT of people out there who feel the same way, to some degree. There are a lot of people out there struggling. A lot of people hurting. I’m incredibly lucky that I have family and friends that are helping me. I have a roof over my head and food to eat because they provide it. So far I’ve managed to find a way to pay what few bills I have left each month. I’ve been able to buy the medications I need because of those same friends and family sacrificing themselves to help provide it. I am really very appreciative of that. Many people don’t have that sort of support system. I just hate that it has to be that way at all. I guess there’s really no other point to this rant than to just express how I feel and put it out there so that others that are struggling might find some comfort in the fact that they aren’t alone. Sometimes that’s all you need to help get through the day- just knowing that you aren’t alone, that others are going through stuff like you are too. i don’t have any quick fixes or answers. Nothing I can say will take away the pain. Just know you aren’t alone, and feel free to sound off in the comments section if, like me, you just need to vent a bit.

J.R. Broadwater is the author of the non-fiction book Down with the Thickness: Viewing the World From a Fat Guy’s Perspective,  the sci-fi detective novel You Only Die Twice, and the fantasy novel The Chosen: Rebirthing Part 1- all available now in digital and paperback formats. Sample chapters and more information about these books can be found here.

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The Day a Superman Died…

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(Awesome photo by Sharon Berger)

It’s hard to believe it’s been three years since we lost Mark. I feel better knowing that the book we worked so hard on for so long is finally available for others to enjoy. I know how much it meant to him, and I’m forever grateful to all the family and friends that helped to make that happen, especially Mark and my mutual best friend Shawn Skvarna, who did the covers, and my cousin Cathy Holder, who edited/is editing for us after three years of starts and stops. In honor of Mark, I’m reposting a chapter from Down With the Thickness, a book that he pretty much forced me to do. :-p

The Death of a Superman

On January 7th, 2010 I got a message from a mutual friend and the artist that did the amazing art you’ve seen in this book, Shawn, and Mark’s sister that Mark had passed away due to complications from his diabetes.  I don’t think we ever got a direct explanation, but the going theory was Mark’s blood sugar dropped fatally low during the night, he went into a diabetic coma, and then his heart stopped. He was 25.

Needless to say, this came as a complete shock. I’d just talked to Mark minutes before he went to bed the night before, and had I known that it was the last time I’d get to talk to him, there are so many things I would have liked to have said. They’re all things he knew. He knew I loved him. He knew what an inspiration he’d been to me. He knew that if it hadn’t been for him I’d have given up on life a long time ago. He was my brother. He knew that. It was all things we’d said before, but it’s still things I would have liked to have said again, just once, before he was taken from us all, especially given how hard life had been treating him pretty much all his life, but particularly in those last few months.

My cousin Jennifer and I drove up to PA for his memorial service. It was a pretty surreal experience all around, not just because of the suddenness of it all, but because I found myself surrounded by a lot of people I’d been hearing about for over a decade, but had never met before in my life and they all knew me too. I wish to God that Mark could have been there for his service and heard the things that everyone said about him. Mark was such a humble person that he never really knew, nor accepted, that he impacted everyone round him. He never realized just how profound an affect he’d had on so many people. Mark was a shining example of the man I strive to be each day. He was far from perfect, as we all are, but even with his faults, Mark was the very personification of compassion and love. I’m saddened that he never really realized just how special a person he was regardless of how often he may have heard it from me and others that were close to him. He was our Superman, and he made me believe.

Denial- Not Just a River in Egypt

Like Superman, Mark had his own never-ending battle, only his was with diabetes. While he’d experienced some close calls, even Superman “died” once, he always bounced back and fought on. While there are several “world without a Superman” comics floating around out there, I’d never imagined I would be forced to live in one.

Mark’s blood sugar had dropped a few days before his death, and he’d had an episode where he zonked out at work and didn’t remember what had happened. It took his co-workers almost an hour to find him when they realized he wasn’t at his post, but by then, he’d subconsciously eaten a candy bar and drank a soda and he was coming back to himself. He told me he found himself crouched in a corner of the break room with a half-eaten candy bar in one hand and a soda in the other. He couldn’t remember buying them. The experience shook him, but like always, he seemed to have bounced back. He had been low on insulin. Had I known I would have made sure he got what he needed. I was led to believe that he had, but that was Mark. He never wanted people to worry about him.

As I said before, I’m pretty sure I was the last person to speak to him before he died. He’d called me around midnight, just before he went to bed like he always did. He’d had a really crappy day. He hated his job. His truck, which he had just gotten back from the shop earlier that day, died on him again on his way home. He was just generally not in a good mood. I tried to cheer him up a bit, but after our usual banter back and forth he told me he was tired and wanted to turn in a bit early and get some sleep. The next morning when I got up I shot him a text. It was a simple, two-word phrase that we sent each other daily; our own little mantra to help get us through the day – Carry On.

He never got to see it.

I was working on something for work when I got two messages on Facebook. The first was from his sister with a simple one word subject – Mark. In it she asked that I give her a call because it was important. I’d recently changed phones so she didn’t have my new number and the investigators, I found out later, had taken Mark’s cell. The next message was from Shawn, also titled Mark. He told me how sorry he was and how shocked, and if I needed to talk to feel free to call him.

Understandably at this point I started to freak a bit. I called Mark’s sister but got voicemail. I called Shawn and asked what was going on and he broke the news to me. I don’t think I’m a good enough writer to be able to really describe just how I felt at the moment. It’s like my body was being electrocuted. My mind just stopped and all I could say was, “Holy s#*t! It’s not true.”

I’d just talked to him. There was no way he died. It just didn’t happen. Someone made a mistake. Maybe he was in the hospital. Maybe it was all just a sick joke. He wasn’t dead. He couldn’t die… he was Superman.

Anger- Bulk Smash

I lived in the “anger” stage of grief for a long time. In fact, I still visit it from time to time just to see how it’s doing. I was angry at everything and everyone. I was angry at Mark’s family for the Hell they’d put him through all his life. I was angry at God for letting such a good man suffer. I was angry at Mark for leaving me. After all, I was supposed to go first. I was angry at myself for not being able to save him. Ultimately, you realize that all the anger in the world won’t change what’s happened and that you have to let it go or it’ll just consume you.

Bargaining- Throw in a Side of Guilt and You’ve Got Yourself a Deal!

I think Shawn and I have approached this stage of grief in a rather unique way. This is a stage that is usually experienced the most by people who are the ones that are about to die. They want to bargain for more time. For those doing the grieving for a lost one, it tends to be glossed over. After all, there’s nothing to really bargain for. The person you love is already gone. Well, when you’re a couple of creative types, we get creative with our grief. Our way of bargaining for more time was to do what we do (arguably) best – make him live through our work.

I made a promise to myself and to all the rest of his family that I would see every project that Mark helped to create, even the ones that were just in the idea stage, finished. Shawn and a few of his other friends all agreed to help. We figured we may not be able to buy our friend more time in life, but we could help him to live on through his creations. Mark was a special person in more ways than one. He really was a genius, creatively and intellectually. He never gave himself enough credit. He deserves to survive more than just in the hearts of his friends and family. Others should be given the chance to know the man we all loved, even if it’s just through his ideas. He deserved a legacy, so we’re going to give him one.

I finished Mark’s edit of our first novel The Chosen: Rebirthing and our friend Sharon and my cousin are currently working on editing it for us. Eventually, I’ll start working on the next two, but I’m just not ready to even attempt that yet. Shawn and I have started working together on several comic projects that Mark helped to map out and always loved, one of which has morphed into a tribute to Mark himself. Shawn is also providing the cover and interior art for all of my novels, including this one. While we could never take the place of Mark creatively, I know that Mark would be happy to know that two of his closest friends have found that they can work well together.

Depression- “Oh Dear, Bird.”

I’d become something like Eeyore for the first few months after his death. It was hard to not just mope around, feeling crappy about the world in general and my life in particular. I talked to Mark several times a day, by text, and we talked for at least an hour a night on the phone. More often our conversations were several hours or more. He was the one I could vent with and talk about problems or things that were bothering me. He’d do the same. It was Superman and Batman – the World’s Finest in ranting. I’ve always struggled with depression anyway, but not having my hetero-lifemate (bonus points if you catch the reference) there to help share the burden, made it even more difficult.

It’s funny what can set things off for you when you’re dealing with loss. There isn’t a single TV show I watch, movie I love, or book and comic I read that Mark didn’t love or introduce me to. We shared everything, geeked out about everything. Even so, there are certain things that just tended to trigger depression for me out of nowhere, and still do at times. I’d be fine one minute and then I’d see or read something that reminded me of Mark.

BAM!

The loss would be fresh all over again.

It was like playing emotional roulette. Sometimes the stuff that reminded me of him just made me smile and laugh about good times we had or funny things we said about that particular thing and it was okay; but every once in a while the bullet would go through my brainpan and I’d be an emotional mess for the rest of the night.

Acceptance – Time to Shuffle Up and Deal

I don’t think anyone ever just goes through these five stages in an orderly succession. I know for me personally, I’ll be here at the final stage some days and others I’m back to Anger or Depression. I know that over time it’ll get easier. I’ll never stop missing him, but in the times that I’m chilling in the Acceptance stage, I’m content in knowing that he really is in a better place. Cliché or not, if anyone deserved a rest it was Mark. He earned his pension.

I also firmly believe that he’s still alive in more ways than just in our hearts or in the things he helped to create, but in a very real, very spiritual sense. I can almost sense him with me sometimes. I can almost hear him laugh at things I find funny. I know that I’ll see my brother again, and that we’ll spend the first few decades of eternity geeking out about all the nerdy stuff that we always did. I’m looking forward to that. Until then I’m going to honor my brother by living by our mantra.

I’m going to carry on.

I love you Mark.

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Interview

An interview I did with author Richard Stephenson has just been put up on his official site. Check it out!

 

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Filed under Clay Colt, Down With The Thickness, Novels, Rant Alert

This is just amazing…

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