Author of Teen Paranormal Fiction

Category: Day to Day

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

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

Isolation Week 1 – Toe Nails & Tarot Cards

Last week, the inevitable happened. The schools shut down, much of my city shut down, and my company issued a work-from-home mandate. I can’t say I was surprised, however I took the news with mixed emotions. Sunday night, as we read email after email about closures, the whole pandemic hit home and live became surreal. But I went to bed that night thinking “It will be kinda nice to work from home.”

At least my workspace is inspiring!

Monday came and went. Working from home was, in fact, ‘kinda nice’. I got through a fair amount of what I term “busy work” . . . the little things that need to get done, but other priorities tend to push to back burner.

Why are you working and not petting me?

Tuesday came and went. Not only was our puppers, Mochi, a bit confused as to why all of us were home, The Boo also gave me an odd look every time I went downstairs to make coffee.

I can’t decide if your presence is annoying or irritating.

Wednesday came . . . and the anxiety hit. The walls were closing in, I couldn’t get comfortable, I couldn’t relax. If I sat here for one more minute, I’d go mad. So instead of Mochi begging me for walkies, I leashed her up and drug her out. She didn’t mind.

March comes in like a lion and out like a jerk.

Thursday came and went much better. No feelings of impending doom, no walls closing in. Just the stink eye from The Boo. “Why are you here, and why aren’t you giving me snacks?”

Get back to work!

Friday. Yay Friday! At least, I think it was Friday. As I logged into work that morning, it occurred to me that every day had felt like a Saturday. Although I set my alarm to wake me at 7AM during the week, the routine wasn’t there. Sure, I fed The Boo (lest she plot my demise later). Sure, I walked The Moche. But other than that, I didn’t leave the house.

Does this hat make me look fat? (or bald?)

I felt like I was reliving Groundhog Day with Bill Murray. The same thing, day in and day out. Although Mr. Nenshi hadn’t ordered the city to stay indoors, it was strongly encouraged. “Treat everyone you meet as if they have COVID-19,” the news tells us. Soon, the walks meant we crossed the street to avoid anyone and everyone.

I felt so isolated. I felt so alone.

I need a hobby.

My go-to has always been nail art. It’s the one thing that got me through my first diagnosis of Panic Disorder and Generalized Anxiety Disorder. But, let’s face it, we only have so many fingers and toes. I painted them all.

St. Patty’s Day – bars closed but nails sparkling.

I still need another hobby.

A bout of spring cleaning not too long ago turned up my old lock box. Inside it, my aged deck of the Russian Tarot of St. Petersburg.

Such a beautiful deck.

I had read tarot over a decade ago and it took a few test spreads for it to start coming back to me. As the days wore on, I kept at my tarot cards until I became comfortable enough to read again.

It used to freak me out when the Death card appeared in my readings, but in general the card means transformation, and a time of change and new beginnings, but usually in an unexpected and shocking way. Yeah, no kidding. Thanks, COVID-19.

Quite an accurate reading, especially The Emperor reversed. I know who you are!

So, with Week 1 down and a new hobby under my belt, I look forward to the challenges Week 2 will bring. This week we’ve seen all socially active places shut down, a total stop to international travel, the border between us and our Yankee neighbours to the south closed, and an alarming shortage of toilet paper.

No toilet paper, but there is a rawhide chew bone!

Things were getting sketchy at home in the T.P. department until a hot tip led us to one particular grocery store.

My preciousssssss

For next week, I’m wondering if the strongly encouraged advice to stay indoors will switch to mandatory isolation. I’m expecting this week to be the bare minimum of isolation time, since the virus takes 14 days to show its ugly face. In all honesty, I’m still expecting at least two more additional weeks of isolation.

You said it!

The bright spot it that this week we’ve learned the epicentre of the virus, Wuhan, is getting back on its feet and its industry slowly restarting. Makes me hopeful for us over here that June is our target date for surviving this.

Soak up that vitamin D!

Who would have ever thought that a modern day plague could hit?

But hey, they say Shakespeare wrote King Lear while in isolation from the Black Plague. I’m eyeing my fourth book with those very same aspirations.

Until next week!

– Rissa

You Know What I Did This Summer

Oh no, it’s nothing nefarious . . . unless you count not writing as nefarious. This summer was all about finding ways to lower my stress levels and keep my head on straight.

Chickadee-dee-dee

Many pictures of birds were taken during this time, like this chickadee (my favourite bird!). It was about the only thing us Canucks in this part of the country could do. The weather sure wasn’t helping.

An overflowed pond makes for soggy walkies.

This summer was not a summer. We ‘enjoyed’ too much rain, cold weather, and plain-old crappy weekends. The first snows of winter came a full month early, and we got a wallop.

Snow-tember!

This year we spent most of our days below seasonal and barely reached what I would consider “hot” weather. On those rare weekends the sun poked through endless clouds and warmed the air enough we didn’t need touques, we migrated to the mountains.

A Columbian ground squirrel in Banff, Alberta

There’s nothing like the smell of the Rockies in the summertime, and nothing more magical than a walk along the river. It’s like being in a whole ‘nother world.

The Three Sisters mountain formation in Canmore, Alberta

The only positives to all the weather upset this year were the beautiful clouds.

Oh, and the morning fog on the pond.

At least the colours welcoming autumn were lovely.

Although Boo was unimpressed.

We’ll see what the winter throws at us this year. Until then, it’s time to plan for NaNoWriMo and keep my head above water!

– Rissa

The Magic of an October Snow Storm

We’re lucky to witness some of the oddest and most head-scratching weather phenomena here on the leeward side of the Rocky Mountains. From hurricane-force winds and Chinooks, to noctilucent clouds and strawberry snow. The winter months grace us with one bizarre weather system after another. It’s one of the charms of living here.

A classic Chinook arch in summer

Some cities may claim their slogan is “If you don’t like the weather wait 10 minutes”, but they’re only trying to be as weather-wacky as the Bow River valley. In the same day we can experience summer sun, torrential rain, tornado-forming weather, and wrap up the evening with a freak snowstorm or ice rain. Mornings can be graced with hoar frost and ground-level clouds (not to be confused with fog), and afternoons can be dry and hot. The weather here simply cannot make up its mind.

Freezing rain on Aspen leaves

Take today for instance. It’s a balmy +5C with a slight breeze and plenty of sun as I leave for my morning walk to the convenience store where I plan to grab a cup of coffee and check if I’ve become a millionaire or not. (I’m not, by the way, but it’s always nice to dream). Before I leave, I check my phone for the weather and prepare appropriately.

Half an hour later, I arrive at the convenience store and notice the clouds moving in—the dark, ominous harbingers of stormy weather spilling over the Rockies. By the time I get my coffee, check my ticket, and chat with the clerk, the temperature outside has dropped to -3C. A full-on winter snow storm greets me upon my exit.

But I saw this coming. No app is more used around these parts than the Environment Canada weather app. It warned me of the inevitable dump of October white.

I don my fuzzy hat and gloves, and I start my walk home with my cup of coffee. The great thing about snow is its ability to block out the world. The big fluffy flakes absorb sound from the highway and somehow manage to still the slight breeze I felt on my walk down. The world on my walk back home has become peaceful where only I exist and reality has gone into hiding.

A snow selfie!

I can’t help the big goofy grin on my face as I take my time getting back home. Only my tracks are left in the skiff of snow on the sidewalks. Here, it’s me and only me. The socially anxious side of me rejoices.

My tracks left in the snow

Once back home, I take the puppers out for a walk. Mochi enjoys the snow. She’s built well and fuzzy for this kind of weather.

My first snow!

The Boo enjoys those flakes too, even as the big fluffy white stuff turns into ice pellets that dance off the gazebo roof. She’s also built for the snow with her abhorredly thick hair that clogs up my vacuum.

My ancestors are from Siberia. I got this!

And my winter suitors, the Chickadees, come to dart in and out of the gazebo to steal millet from the feeder.

They may be tiny but they’re mighty! (and really loud)

It’s a blizzard outside my window as I sit down to write this blog post.

By the time I finish, the sky has cleared and the sun is out again.

I cherish the snow as much as I can, for tomorrow we’ll see a high of 15C and sun.

I love October.

No More Snow!

That’s it! I’m protesting! I’m sick of all this snow!

One of the annoying things about living on the leeward side of the Rocky Mountains is while friends and family on the windward side are posting pictures of the first signs of spring and warmer temperatures, we get the deep freeze and this:

At least someone likes the snow

Snow.

And more snow.

Did I mention we have snow?

I can’t even get to the garden to cut it back for spring. I literally need snowshoes and a dog sled to do so. (I’m suddenly living up to the stereotypes my American friends had of me when I told them I was moving to The Great White North. I just won’t tell them I wear my snow pants to work.)

I refuse to shovel our driveway. Why? Because the forecast calls for, you guessed it, MORE SNOW! 25-30cm (10-12 inches) of the stuff.

Tweet from local meteorologist Paul Dunphy

“Oh, but it’s spring snow.” My foot. (My foot, one foot deep in snow.)

My front hedge after 3 feet of snow

The Christmas decor is coming down with the speed of molasses. I’ll have it down by Chinese New Year. I hope. Oddly enough, I already miss the glimmer and the glint of all the gold and silver. Maybe that’s why I’m super un-motivated to pack it away for the year.

My faeries are keeping tabs on the progress, though. I’ll get them down from the shelf and find them a home on the counter once Christmas fades away from the rafters.

I’m also trying to time my indoor starter seeds. This year, I want to put planter boxes on the back porch where it will be nice and toasty before the snows melt. My plans are for herbs and a few crops, like garlic and chives. Hopefully the Boo won’t munch on them when she’s out there basking in the rays.

Our resident prognosticator, Balzac Billy, didn’t see his shadow; supposedly that means an early spring. But I don’t know. All that snow on the flowerbeds is going to take quite a few Chinook days to melt. I hope I won’t find a veritable highway of vole tunnels when the snows flee.

But I’ll take voles over gophers any day. That reminds me. I need to replant all my lilies the gophers ate.

Just another joy of living in the foothills.

Once More With Feeling

Holy cow; I haven’t made a blog post in a really long time. As with last periods of blog-less-ness, this time is no different. Living here in the Oil and Gas capital of Canada, we’re slowly succumbing to the failing price of oil. This means job losses, increases in the cost of living, and lots and lots of stress.

That's basically how it works

That’s basically how it works

I work in the corporate office of an environmental company, supporting our production accounting and energy marketing teams. It’s a big job on a normal day, but add to that a reduction by half of my workforce, increase workload from other teams who are also understaffed, and you have a recipe for a full-on creative disaster. My day starts at 5:30 am, ends at around 7:00 pm, and I’m in bed by 10:00 pm to start it all again the next day. That leaves three hours in the day to squeeze in the all-important family time and attempt to do any writing.

bathroombreak

I am still writing, thankfully. I try to do it daily, although much of my writing doesn’t make it outside of my computer. The Rose Cross Academy Book 2 is gearing up for launch and surviving the onslaught of one last beta reader before final editing happens. Whether or not I’ll be able to have my book professionally edited all comes down to whether or not the company I work for can make it’s next debt payment or not. There’s a fifty-fifty chance that by Halloween, I’ll be unemployed. It’s just a reality all us in Oil & Gas have to face.

Surviving adversity is becoming a mainstay around here. After my own recent diagnosis of anxiety disorder, family members succumbing to cancer, and a mystery ailment affecting me, every day is becoming a delicate balance between doing what I love and want to do (which is writing) and trying to stay afloat in this terrible world. But enough about that and the horrible run-on sentences, let’s get to the interesting stuff!

Find Time to Enjoy Life

I discovered several online communities for writers in which I’m actively participating. Facebook groups, Wattpad communities . . . I’m feeling like I belong again, after so many months of being a hermit trying to keep her job. I’ve come to the conclusion that whatever happens will happen whether or not I work myself to the bone or not. So therefore, I cannot single handedly prevent the economy from spiraling down the great Liberal toilet. So I need to enjoy myself lest I fall further into mental illness.

best-online-friend

It’s fun to participate in conversations about writing with other writers. I’ve tried meet-ups where no one socializes, I’ve tried writers groups full of older, stuffy men and women who frown upon paranormal fiction. Neither were for me. It’s ironic for my introverted nature, that all my best writing buddies are now solely online.

Risers and Dreamers on Wattpad

In order to drum up interest in Grimms & Garms, Book #2 in the Rose Cross Academy series (which has received zero marketing or publicity due to time constraints), I’m putting up Book #1, Risers & Dreamers, on Wattpad for free and announcing the chapters to my Instagram followers and slowly moving into Twitter as well.

rnd_wattpad

…and with a brand new cover!

NaNoWriMo 2016 Prep

It’s almost October; time for NaNoPlanMo. This year, I’m fleshing out my new series, The Gamemasters, as my project for this November. The Gamemasters follows three teens out of 120 other players chosen as beta testers for a virtual reality video game that ends up trapping them and picking them off one by one. If you watch enough anime, you’ve certainly heard of Sword Art Online, which was a major inspiration for this novel. This will be in the sci-fi genre of young adult with a second book. I’m not sure if I’ll write a third book or not; we’ll see how NaNo goes this year.

crazy-nano

Well, that felt good to get out. I haven’t blogged in a while. Let’s see where the universe takes us over the remainder of the year. Hopefully things will start to look up, hopefully the economy will begin to recover, and hopefully I’ll still have a job. If not, well, then I’ll just have to make a new plan.

Until next time!

-Rissa

 

Along Came a Spider . . .

Or: How not to react to a spider sighting

Truth be told, I’m not too fond of spiders.

Okay, I hate them.

Fine! I’m completely petrified of spiders!

I am an arachnophobic and not too proud about it, but there is nothing I can do about it. If I were given the choice to have a non-toxic spider the size of a fingernail crawl on my face, or endure a trial where I was guaranteed some form of non-lethal physical injury, I would choose the physical injury ten-out-of-ten times.

I know where it stems from. Growing up in Ohio, we a nasty spider which loved to make homes in your home – the Wolf Spider. It can grow to the size of a toonie (or a silver dollar) and can run like nobody’s business. They’re fearless little buggers too. We also have about half a dozen species of jumping spiders. So, that made for a childhood marred at an early age by a fear of spiders.

 

Yuck!

MeowMix as well shares my hatred of spiders and spider webs

Fast forward to this morning as I open the garage door, step out to survey the morning only to be greeted by the biggest frickin’ spider I’ve seen in a long time. I scream, of course, and flail madly to put enough distance between me and the spider. Luck would have it that my neighbour is conveniently loading his bicycle for the morning trek in to his office. I’m sure I made his morning, given his poor attempt to hide the fact that he’s crapping himself with laughter deep inside.

“Everything okay over there?” There’s more than a hint of amusement in his voice.

“No!” I screech. “There’s a big frickin’ spider on my garage!”

Now keep in mind, I am freaking the frack out in the middle of my driveway. I cannot physically get myself to cross the threshold from the driveway into the garage as the spider will freaking kill me if I make a move! No really! It will!

 

 

Take that, spider.

The Green Plastic Garden Rake of Justice! Ages 3 and up.

Thankfully, my eight-year old is only mildly creeped out and comes to my rescue with a kids garden rake. Using said implement of justice, he knocks the spider from its web and safely disposes of said nuisance somewhere I cannot see. However, it’s still several minutes before I can muster enough courage to run back to the garage and hide in the car.

Meanwhile, I’m sure my neighbour has filed that morning chuckle alongside the previous chuckle of me clubbing a gopher back into a hole with a running garden hose spraying water everywhere.

 

 

Well. I suppose if you’re gonna freak out, you might as well do it in style.

– Rissa

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