Author of Teen Paranormal Fiction

Category: British Columbia

Mountain life agrees with me

In early June this year, we finally moved into our home. We’re situated near the base of one of the mountains here in the Lower Mainland with a nice view of the river valley and the occasional sighting of Mt. Baker in Washington State.

I didn’t realize how much my living arrangements impacted my mental health. Although I knew our small city apartment that sat along a busy racetrack–I mean roadway–was temporary, those early morning engine revving and the constant parade of emergency vehicles with sirens blaring really got to me.

Despite the traffic cones, this stretch is a magnet for jerkass drivers (photo: Rissa Renae)

My writing suffered more than I cared to imagine. Just opening a Word doc in order to spark some creative juices ended up sparking panic attacks instead. I joked at first thinking I was just having an adult temper tantrum. But as the months wore on and the word count kept dwindling, I got worried. Was I losing my creativity? Do I no longer enjoy writing? What’s going on?

I think Mochi also lost some of her mojo in the apartment (photo: Rissa Renae)

I developed problems with food. I developed problems with alcohol. The last straw came when I absolutely lost my sh*t over the shower drain not being clean. This was right around the time our developer told us our house would be delayed by about two months.

A Hobbit hole at Lafarge Lake, Coquitlam (photo: Rissa Renae)

Not to bore you with that. Really, the apartment wasn’t THAT bad. The location was close to amenities and great places to walk, but the constant noise and close quarters did me in.

My “home office” and writing space–a corner of the couch (photo: Rissa Renae)

Thankfully in June, our house was completed and we moved in. It took me 2-3 weeks to “calm down”. I also restarted my anxiety medication, so that helped as well. The ideas started coming back. The urge to write slowly bubbled to the surface. It was that one morning lying in bed, listening to the birds chirping instead of the teenagers and their screaming car engines that it all finally made sense. It was the location that was stealing my creativity, not some loss of desire to write.

(photo: Rissa Renae)

The nature in this area of the city is amazing. I drag my poor dog out multiple times a day for hour-long walks along the many trails and foliage-covered sidewalks.

The views are amazing.

The Pitt River valley (photo: Rissa Renae)

Sure, we have almost daily bear sightings, and I’ve stumbled to within metres of a juvenile black bear foraging for berries. They’re not the vicious murder machines Hollywood makes them out to be, as long as you steer clear of the mama with her cubs.

Bear prints on the sidewalk (photo: Rissa Renae)

But bears aside, mountain life agrees with me far more than city life did. I thought I’d miss my walks to the coffee shop, or the fact I could just walk to the grocery store to pick up milk should we run low. “Whatever am I going to do!” I thought to myself. “We’ll have to stock the fridge and freezer, I’ll have to make my own coffee, I can’t just walk to the mall during my lunch break.”

Downtown Coquitlam from Lafarge Lake (photo: Rissa Renae)

Psht! I don’t miss any of that!

Give me a gently babbling brook, or the scent of wild clover on the wind any day over the so-called convenience of the city.

As I finish writing this post, it’s almost time for Walkie #2 for Mochi. There are days I literally have to drag her out of the house. She’s the only dog who doesn’t like walkies, it seems. No amount of squirrels to chase and deer to bark at will get her off the couch some days. But too bad! This girl needs to get outside and be one with nature!

Cloud-making fog coming off a neighbouring mountain (photo: Rissa Renae)

So, now it’s time to go breathe some fresh air and soak up that sun. For tonight, we write.

Later!

– Rissa

Getting back into the (writing) swing of things

June was stressful.

The end.

There’s only so much upheaval, change, and spur-of-the-moment this Gold, chaotic-good, INTJ-Architect can handle before she blows her top. And said top t’was blown.

It took me about two weeks to settle in mentally to the new house. It wasn’t the constant beep-beep-beep of construction vehicles, nor the endless boxes, or the equally endless bear sightings that did me in. Nope. It was the fact that I couldn’t (and still can’t) find my UV nail polish.

Well #$%^! How am I supposed to get home now? (photo: author)

I know, right? Even I think it sounds silly to blame my mental health on nail polish. But here we are.

A sample of my nail polish collection. (photo: author)

A long time ago, in a province far, far away, I discovered that the key to wicking away my anxiety was to focus on doing my nails.

Again, I know, right? Anxiety is weird that way.

Not being able to sit down and focus on the one thing I knew could keep my anxiety at bay made me even more anxious. I won’t bore you with the details, but as mentioned earlier, it took me almost two weeks to settle in once we moved summer of 2021.

Truer words have never been spoken. . . or written in chalk. (photo: author)

Once the ‘settle in’ took hold, the writing bug came back. You see, I typically thrive off my daydreaming and imagination to figure out plot points, character development, and world-building. However, mundane tasks such as cleaning or organizing produced nothing during those two weeks. Like, a literal black hole. Even at night when I’d try to dream, I’d be able to focus for a minute or two, then… nothing. It was so frustrating. I wanted to write but I couldn’t.

I knew what was getting in the way, so out of desperation, I went online and bought some nail polish. It took two days to arrive, but once I did, I sat down, did my thing, and came back with a fresh manicure. It mani-cured what blocked my writing.

You don’t actually want to see a picture of my nails, do you? (photo: author)

Here I sit, shaking my head. My mental health is all in my head, and I know what, but what’s even worse, is that my brain is more stubborn than I am. Who knew. Paint nails equals creative block lifted.

Camp NaNoWriMo is just around the corner, and what better way to firm up that writing need with a goal to meet. I tend to work best when there’s a goal to hit, rather than just sitting at my computer and pounding away at the keys like some deranged woodpecker until a story comes out. Although I don’t plan to work on a single novel, I do plan to crank out another 50,000 words to make up for writing almost nothing for June.

The urge to write is once again coming out of hiding. The ideas are flowing. Between the boxes and the mess, I’m carving out my writing time and creating a few new habits and routines. Being in my own place and having my own space definitely put a cramp in my writing style. I look forward to pounding away at the keyboard again!

Until next time,

  • Rissa

The Final House Move

This past weekend marked the last step in a long chain of events in our move from the province of Alberta to British Columbia. We finally moved into our house!

Our journey started in the summer of 2021 when we packed (and I mean literally packed) the SUV and drove up, over, and around the Rocky Mountains to get to the Lower Mainland of British Columbia.

The urban assault vehicle, packed to overflowing in Alberta. (photo: author)

We moved during COVID lockdowns . . .

Yup. (photo: author)

. . . and during the height of wildfire season . . .

Wildfire smoke turns the sun red in Kamloops, BC. (photo: author)

. . . and during a “heat dome” event . . .

(photo: Global News British Columbia)

Oh, and then there was the “atmospheric river” event that caused massive flooding.

Flooded beach along the river. (photo: author)

It seemed the universe was trying to keep us from our dream of living in the Lower Mainland. But we did it anyway.

For close to a year, we cuddled together in a tiny apartment in the suburbs. 900 square feet next to a busy road after living in an estate home on a nature reserve. It was tough, it was stressful, but it was a roof over our heads and a place to sleep. Between loud cars reenacting The Fast and the Furious franchise outside our window to the faulty fire alarm that went off multiple times a day when it was on the fritz, moving day couldn’t come soon enough.

Be it ever so humble . . . (photo: author)

When finally it came time to pack what we could and make a run for it, the days couldn’t go by fast enough. We counted the sleeps, we jammed the boxes, we hauled the goods. It took 2 days to move–once from our multiple storage lockers, then from the apartment to the house. After a gruelling 48-hour moving marathon, we spent our first night in our actual house in the mountains. Granted, it was a mattress on the floor amidst a sea of boxes, but we were finally home!

The kitchen is the heart of the home and ground zero for junk! (photo: author)

The dream of leaving prairie life, with its monstrous hail storms and tornadoes, to the calm serenity of mountain life came with some adjustments. For one, taking Mochi for a walk is now a hike since we live on a mountain. With that walk, we carry bells as almost once a day one of the members of our household spots a bear. From juveniles to the big mama, bears are more common than deer. Instead of looking both ways for cars, we look left, right, up, and down for bears.

A juvenile black bear wandering by my retaining wall. (photo: author)

According to Google, we’re about 50m (165 -ish feet) above sea level here. We look out over a river valley and the sloughs that feed into it. Mornings are filled with bird song, although punctuated by the occasional piece of machinery since the area is still under construction.

The view from our neighbourhood. That’s Mt. Baker in WA in the distance. (photo: author)

It’s been almost a year in the making, but I can finally call someplace “home”. Be it ever so humble (and cluttered with boxes), there’s no place like home.

Even Mochi thinks so.

Mochi’s first nap in the new house. (photo: author)

Now, somewhere in all these boxes are my writing journals. I guess it’s time to start unpacking!

Until next time

– Rissa

Cramming my creativity into a corner of the couch

To add a bit of background, we made a snap decision in April 2021 that we were going to pull up roots from Calgary, Alberta and drop them in Vancouver, British Columbia. With the world pivoting to a mainly online society in order to avoid COVID, the pandemic allowed us to not only move to a place we’ve always wanted, but to keep our jobs at the same time.

In the span of Spring Break 2021, we scouted locations in the greater Vancouver area, chose our desired location, and put our first deposit on what would eventually be our new home. Housing in this area of Canada is nuts–not only is it twice the price of Calgary, but there is a negative supply of housing. Anything available often goes through bidding wars, wait lists, and lotteries just to get the chance to make an offer. We lucked out in that literally hours before we were to hop on our flight back to Calgary we managed to secure a new build and lay down a deposit.

Our new abode would be ready early summer 2022.

Someplace amongst all that construction is where we will live. Eventually.

As circumstances would have it, we needed to move before then. So in July, we secured a rental, packed a moving truck, crammed into the hybrid, and hauled bum to the west coast. We knew things would be tight, space-wise, for about 9 months, but I didn’t expect this.

We went from a modest estate home in Calgary at just under 3,000 sq ft . . .

A hike above the coulée in the old ‘hood. One of those is our old home.

… to a 900 sq ft apartment.

Be it ever so humble, there’s no place like home.

Three storage units later, we were still swimming in boxes, and this was after we sold a good majority of our furniture and Goodwill-ed much of our belongings.

Somewhere in our apartment, I had to find room for my creativity–my writing and my crafts.

When we were packing, I allowed myself one craft for the apartment. That would be my diamond painting. Supplies could live in a box, the painting could take up an IKEA table, and a cutting mat would allow me to cover the painting and use the table for other purposes.

Is the addition of a candle to a table full of chaos considered zen?

The couch (one of the only pieces of furniture we kept) became my home office/writing space. A plastic container from Daiso became my desk/office supply/coffee caddy.

As I edit my 4th book, portions of the novel live in various corners of the apartment. I have repurposed a wine box as a hard copy storage/bedside table. The TV stand holds my current editing binder. The copier lives in a corner, hidden under boxes, grocery bags, and the occasional snack bag.

Mochi has claimed one corner of the couch as her own, even though her enormous dog bed and favourite stuffy are literally steps away.

Does the clutter drive me nuts? A little.

Does the lack of space make me crazy? Surprisingly not so much.

Yes, I miss having a quiet space alone where I could be with my thoughts. And it did take me several months to get back into the groove of writing on a regular basis.

Even though the apartment is our in-between for the moment, the surroundings are starting to feel like home. Daily walkies to the river are something to look forward to. The colours remind me of my childhood home in Ohio.

We’re counting down the months until summer. Then we can move into your permanent home on the mountain.

Maybe I’ll see a bear, too (hopefully from the safety of my balcony as I enjoy my morning coffee).

The new view, under construction.

For now, I will watch the squirrels bury their acorns (and drive Mochi crazy), and dream of an office table or even a kitchen island where I may write.

– Rissa

Autumn on the West Coast

As you may know from a previous post, we packed up the family in July and moved from the foothills of the Canadian Rocky Mountains to settle in the foothills of the North Shore Mountain range–aka the greater Vancouver area.

We expected many things to be different after moving from prairie country, and I personally have been most excited to welcome fall. The Alberta prairies are dry, and whether that contributes to the limited diversity of the boreal forest, I’m not sure. All I know is that autumn in Alberta is yellow due to the trembling aspen and poplar trees.

Trembling aspen in the fall.

However here in Vancouver, we have a wider variety of trees and a wider colour palette for fall. The variety of maple trees lend bright reds and oranges, and there are even sherbet coloured trees of which I have yet to learn the names.

No idea what these trees are but they look like orange sherbet.

To break it down, the colours on this side of the mountains are gorgeous!

Daily walkies with Mochi take us through a rainbow of foliage.

Adventures to go grocery shopping or to visit stores offer up bright colours.

A burst of red on a residential street.

It’s just so “not Alberta” over here, from getting more daylight in the fall months to weeks of endless rain and mist. The sun is definitely a rarity on the west coast.

Our existing family here warned us that fall and winter were wet and rainy, and we are experiencing that. The river is running high and swift in time for salmon spawning season. That’s our next “local” attraction to check out.

A sign posted by a river where salmon spawn.

And, I dunno… I still haven’t seen a bear, but I’m not too disappointed aboutthat.

As always, fall means Halloween in Canada (our Thanksgiving is also in October, but is quickly trumped by all the ghosts and ghoulies). With Halloween right around the corner, that means a few things for me.

First off, next month is NaNoWriMo. This will be my 11th year in a row participating… 11 years! In those years, I’ve published 3 novels and have another 3 in the waiting room . This year I hope to add a book #4 to the waiting room by completing the first book in a fantasy series I’ve been actually planning and not pantsing.

This aptly named bigleaf maple leaf is bigger than my head!

And secondly, while I’m pounding away at that 50,000 word goal, I’d like the 4th book in my Rose Cross Academy series to be visiting with my editor to get polished up for self publishing early next year.

Aaaaand third-ly, if you’re a big epic fantasy nerd like me, you’ll know November 19th is when the first three episodes of Robert Jordan’s The Wheel of Time series comes out on Amazon Prime. I’ve got my popcorn, my angreal, and my Black Ajah shawl all ready for the occasion!

November will be busy, but it’s a good kind of busy. I’m also curious to see how the seasons play out on this side of the Rockies. By Halloween, Calgary would already have had snow falling for a couple weeks. Halloween costumes are typically worn over snow suits or multiple layers. This year in Vancouver, we’re expecting a balmy +13 (about 55F), just warm enough to keep the snow suits and thermals at bay.

New Westminster Quay in autumn.

And thus the countdown begins. Four more days to go until November!

Is anyone else participating in NaNoWriMo this year? What are your plans for that month-long session of keyboard pounding? Good luck on all your endeavours and I hope to see you soon!

– Rissa.

A Change of Scenery – Moving

I think we can mostly agree that COVID-19 has changed the landscape of the modern workplace. Whether that be office work, service work, or health and safety, where we work has changed. For me, the biggest change was going from working eight-to-five in an office to working eightish-to-sometime-in-the-evening hours from home.

For about thirteen months starting in 2020, Real Life Rissa (that’s me!) worked from home at an I.T. job in the Alberta environmental services sector. During these thirteen months, I went through various hardships, from dealing with a bloom in my anxiety, to struggling with immigration to the U.S. for my family, and the death of a family pet.

At least my home office had a great backdrop!

Then my husband’s company was acquired, and his job situation went into flux.

Then my company was acquired, and my job situation went into flux.

Then the capitol riots happened in Washington, D.C.

Over the span of a few months, our emotions went from “What are we going to do?” to “Okay, we better do something fast!”

The only good thing about lockdown was the daily walks.

Low-and-behold, the hubs settled into a new job with a real estate company that wanted him to work out of their Vancouver office in the lower mainland of British Columbia. Now, if you know me, you’ll know my family and Vancouver go way back. Naturally we jumped at the opportunity to relocate from the prairies to the west coast.

We sold all but one property in Alberta to afford the move to the Vancouver area. It’s frickin’ expensive to live on the west coast, but we squeaked into a new development in Coquitlam, one of the tri-cities of metro Vancouver. We secured a deposit on a temporary rental until construction on our townhouse complex could be completed.

We had the best view from the breakfast nook year-round.

Now, we knew well beforehand that we’d be moving from an estate home just under 3,000 sq-ft to a cozy little 900 sq-ft apartment for the next nine months of our lives. A sacrifice we were all willing to make to live in one of our dream destinations. And sacrifice we did.

About a month into moving plans, we lost our Boo. She had been battling untreatable kidney problems for years, and they all came to the inevitable end in June. I got to hold my Boo for one last time before the vet sent her off to that big scratching post in the sky one sunny afternoon.

She will forever be my favourite co-author.

So it seemed losing my country view and awesome writing space was suddenly no big deal. I had to believe we would make new memories in Coquitlam, we’d inherit a new view, and we’d adopt another cat.

At the end of July once all the frustrations of selling multiple properties finally worked out, we packed up the SUV (and boy did we pack the SUV) and hit the road.

Just enough room for 3 yahoo’s and a Shiba.

After battling through the height of fire season in BC and Alberta, three days later, we rolled in to our rental in Coquitlam and got a serious dose of reality.

A travelapse of our move to BC

We thought we had donated or sold enough of our belongings to downsize into our apartment, but three storage units and one crowded living space later, we came to realize just how much stuff we really owned. Fifteen years of accumulation . . .

It’s like one of those hidden objects game. Can you find the Shiba?

We’ve been here for about 2 months now and have settled in (not to mention organized a bit). Now that the relocation is complete, I’m hoping to dive back into my writing.

Although my main concern should be publishing The Rose Cross Academy book #4, I’ve had a sudden creative streak that’s put my time towards yet another WIP. That’s three I have going, now. And each one demands a different corner of my already crowded brain. I prefer to write whatever’s in my head so I don’t loose any ideas, but I’m also a year behind on my 4th Book. COVID certainly didn’t help with that.

With NaNoWriMo fast approaching, I’m counting on that being the kick in the pants I need. I want to get my 4th book off to my editor before November so I can focus on NaNo. 2020 was the first year I didn’t complete the month-long writing challenge, so this will be a redemption year for me!

Alrighty. So now that I’ve dusted off the ol’ blog, it’s time to get back to some writing!

I hope the last year has treated you well. Stay healthy everyone!

  • Rissa

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