Friday, July 21, 2023

Fork in the Road

Our plan has been to set out on Monday to drive across the country, as I've explained.  Our last commitment was to take place on Sunday, which has been cancelled; so we've moved our departure date up.  We leave tomorrow morning, about 14 hours from my writing this.

I have a laptop I'm taking along, and I hope to write every day ... but those who have travelled know that sometimes, a day just doesn't work out.  Still, I'm going to try.  I'm not going to pinpoint my location, but I'll give a description of my journey and possibly a map, if that doesn't prove impractical.   It's not so much that I think my readers have any interest in the journey, but for myself, so I can look back at some point when I'm 80, I'd like to keep a record.

While I'm gone, I'm setting down my book.  I'm working my way through cloth fabrics, which I've almost completed.  There's just three left to describe: jute, ramie and sisal.  I've worked my way through all the fibres, including those three, along with hemp, silk, angora, camelhair, karakul, mohair, wool, flax and cotton; the raw, cleaned fibres each have a price.   The fibres are then described as a yarn (each with a price) and then as cloths, including cotton cloth, calico, chambray, muslin, linen cloth, cambric, damask, lace, guipure, sailcloth, wool cloth, felt, karakul felt, saragoca, serge, worsted, mohair cloth, camelhair cloth, angora cloth, silk cloth, organza, satin, velvet and canvas.  Each with a price.

The book is 84 pages (8.5 x 11), and 75,000 words, a little less than 3/4 the size of How to Run and about 42% as long as I expect the book to be.  My next efforts will be to briefly discuss dyed cloth (leaving "dye" itself to later in the book where it will appear in the "alchemy" section), and then list the possible clothing types with descriptions.  This includes a small section on how to use the information given in the book to "design" your own clothes.  There's a bit on embroidery, and then it's into a section on hides, skins, leather and finally rope.  That'll be the end of the textiles I'm working on.  Naturally, there'll be more than one type of leather.

All in all, fun times.

Even at a good pace, the degree of research and the grittiness of the material make it impossible for me to move faster than I am.  It's been explained to me by friends that descriptions of the book like this are a form of cruelty, as you cannot have the book until I'm finished ... and until then, it's better for you not to think about the book at all.

This "cruelty" reminds me of hundreds of arguments I've had over the centuries of my life with non-writers or would-be-yet-not-productive-writers about perspective.  The argument on their side goes: "it isn't the writer's perspective that matters when interpreting a book, but the reader's."  I'm always on the other side of this one.

As cruel as it might be to wait for a book, it's nothing like the cruelty of having to write one, not knowing if it'll ever be finished, or if it'll be good, or if it'll turn out to be a terrible waste of time, and evidence of the author being a piece of shit.  The enormous weight of this book is upon me.  I'm the only one at present who can clearly see how BIG it has to be.  I'm the only one with comprehension enough to fully understand the enormity of the task.  I'm the one with the vision necessary, and the time taken, to patiently scrawl this thing out one paragraph at a time.  Some paragraphs are fun and easy and pour out like fine wine.  Others, however, really, really aren't, and don't.  Sometimes, my teeth are gritted as I write.  Sometimes, I have to efface half a page or more because it's not good enough, and go at it again.  And once in this damndable process now, I've lost 2500 words that were overwritten, so that the research had to be commenced as well.

I can accept that the book may not be as good as I'd hoped for, or has failed on the writing and editing, or is just a clumsy boondoggle that failed to make itself beloved.  I'm working not to have any of those things be true, but if they are, that's on me.  That's my fault.  It'll be my failure.  That's what I mean when I say, the weight of the book is on me.

But the idea that someone out there thinks that, despite their not having been part of its making, and despite having done nothing except read it, their opinion about what the book meant to do, or achieve, is more accurate than mine ... that's ... that's ...

I must turn to a quote from Teddy Roosevelt, quoted in Brene Brown's recent Netflix special,

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.”


I'm sorry I hadn't encountered that quote in High School, or University.  I'm sorry I never got to beat any of my literature professors over the head with it.  I'm sorry I didn't have a t-shirt made so I could wear it when I used to go to various writer associations and workshops, when I thought those were helping me be a better writer.

Sorry I had to get that off my chest.  Just now, getting ready to go, I'm feeling it's a good time to clean house.

For example, I'm considering there might be a necessity for shuttering this blog.  This isn't a threat, or even a plan, but something I feel I'm being forced into.  See, I'm not even sure there are more than a handful of people still reading me.  My analytics tell me there's between 2,000 and 2,500 page views a day, yet they also tell me that in the last three months, I've had 163 comments.  Half of which are mine.

I suspect a lot of my "views" are bots.  Most of my views.

Virtually every person I know — and nearly everyone I know is younger than me — tells me that blogs are dead.  My own observations seem to bear that out.  Nearly every other blog I see related to RPG are simply pathetic; their authors are churning on precisely the same content they were writing ten years ago, with many of them having chosen a single blog post that they churn out day after day, with the barest of nuance and the dullest of descriptions, word quantity and quality diminishing into dust.  Others churn on about role-playing games they used to play, that they don't now, but they think about playing, though they never go, while droning on about how good this or that version of the game they don't play was better than some other version of the same game.

Jeebus.  Just the notion that I'm vaguely associated with this dreck is disturbing.  One pleasantness of not being on RSS feeds is that my blog isn't found adjacent on multiple lists with these blogs.

I'm being encouraged to accept the inevitable, which would mean moving from script writing to script reading.  One of many possible streaming formats, that have a possibility of encouraging new people to hear what I have to say — who haven't, because the very idea of searching for a blog is anathema to them.  A new audience.  A younger audience, not emotionally locked to role-playing they did in 1992, but still in a frame of mind that they haven't made up yet.

I have my doubts.  Speech requires energy, dramatic authority, production value, greater preparation time and familiarity with technology.  Some of this I can conjure; most of it I understand; but it would mean the end of sitting down at random and shooting out a thousand words or so off the cuff.  But what good is that, if I'm sitting here in an empty room, with words falling off my cuffs onto the internet with all the noise a falling tree makes in an empty forest?

So, change seems in order.

I'd like to know, outside of analytics, who's really here.  I understand the resistance to this sort of request.  I've made them in the past and it's all crickets.  But with this one, I'm pretty serious.  I'm writing a book just now that's going to do far better at game cons than online.  I'm increasingly in a position to put much more effort to appearing at game cons in the next year.  I'm also beginning to feel that JUST writing books might be where I should put all my writing effort into ... as well as into venues, other than this one, where the views might mean something more concrete to me, and my future as a writer.

I've said in the past that I'd be writing this blog into my 90s, and maybe so.  But if the present reader wants to see me write more often than once in a fortnight, or once a month, because there's just less reason to give my effort here, when it would be better given somewhere else, this is the time to raise your hand and comment, "here."

When I go to youtube — and that seems inevitable — and spend my writing there, I promise to tell people.  So if you want me to quit writing this blog, then just leave your hand on your lap.  Don't write "here."  Don't do anything.

And if there's actually just six of you reading this, then I'll also know that from the number of "hears" I get.  Then I'll just write about my travels in the next three weeks as a diary, and pretend no one's reading it but me.

Most of all, I'll know where to put my effort, and what's a waste of my time.  I can stumble anywhere.  I can find dust and sweat and blood to cover my face anywhere.  I can strive with my deeds, spend myself in worthy cause, dare greatly ... anywhere.

This is your chance to convince me to go on doing that here.

31 comments:

  1. I'm still here and reading. Might take a break for a few days or a week and then marathon what you've put out, but I enjoy what you do put out here. Probably wouldn't keep up even that much with a youtube channel. Just prefer text for my media consumption.

    As for a reader telling an author what their book is meant to do, that's just silly. Audience can tell the author how well they achieved it, but not the core of it.

    Do hope you have a good trip out and about across the lands.

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  2. As a part of the younger audience, I'm ending a long absence from running DND and beginning prep for a game in the fall. [I wrote here sometimes as Calvino before said break]. Part of the reason for stepping away was the perception that running the game as you described it was a Herculean task that I could not meet. Returning now, though, that Roosevelt quote resonates, and I am reminded as long as one keeps striving to better their craft, it matters if the craft starts out shoddy. We do what we can as best as we can.

    This rambling is to say that while your writing may at times be tough to follow, at least one younger member of the community made the journey from 5th Edition to your blog. I've found the notes you've left here invaluable, but if you transition to another platform, I'll head over there. Thank you for your work so far. It is appreciated.

    Jack.

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  3. Very selfishly, I hope you keep this blog going, because quite frankly yours and maybe one or two others are the only blogs out there that make me think critically about how to improve for myself and my players. I check every day for a new post, usually more than once a day. I'm here.

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  4. Reporting in.

    If you're looking for a format change to spread the good word, I support you, even if I'll miss the blog even just in terms of ease of searching through the past. I'd like it to stay, but it ain't my call.

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  5. I'm here, definitely here, and I hear you.
    You still give content of stellar quality, and are the only blog I still follow (and I'm up to date on your posts, oh the terrible joy, not having a comfortable backlog waiting for me -_^ ).

    I hope you continue here, because I cannot watch videos with the same ease that I have reading, and I need the written form to be able to grasp things at the fullest.

    May you be well, good travels to you and yours.

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  6. I'm still here, and still read (and love!) your blog every time you post. I rarely comment anymore, in large part because my long time gaming group disbanded due to members moving and no longer being able to logistically meet in person (and I have no desire to run a game online). So, although I still tinker with my game world/rules occasionally and still very much enjoy reading your blog, I'm a bit despondent at the moment because I don't have any players and have virtually no prospects amongst my friends and coworkers from which to spin up a new group. The game store crowd really turns me off in a big way, so trying to find players in that setting isn't something I want to consider. If you have any advice on finding new local players and want to write a blog post about it, I'm all ears! :)

    As far as format, I GREATLY prefer the blog and your current written format. If you disbanded the blog and started doing videos or podcasts instead, I likely wouldn't watch/listen nearly as much as I read your blog today. Those other formats just aren't how I prefer to consume material, and particularly material as deep and thought-provoking as yours.

    Enjoy your trip!

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  7. I check this blog every day as part of my routine. If I have downtime at work I pick a point in the archives and just scroll.

    I'm just one voice. But I'd hate to see the blog or the wiki shuttered. You've changed my game more than I ever thought possible. I share it as widely as I can; to what effect, I don't know.

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  8. I'm here.

    I've been gone for a while (which you know, of course) and I think I'm starting to come around. Got some reading to catch up on. Probably won't return to my blog, though, because I don't think I've got much more to say about the topic . . . but maybe that'll change soon, too.

    Either way, this is about your work: if you make the change to video blogs or essays (or whatever you want to call 'em), I'll follow along. I've more opportunity to listen to content than to read it, in general, and I'm absolutely starved for stuff worth consuming.

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  9. I have been following your blog for quite some time now. Played AD&D (and more) back in the 80s and 90s. Would like to play again but feel too old and spent. Reading your pieces gives me joy and makes me remember the good times I had with friends. I would miss your thoughts on the game (even if, I guess, we differ somewhat politically) if you stopped blogging. Thanks and regards from Germany!

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  10. A scattered response.

    1. Spending part of my summer tinkering with my NTME links, formulas, recipes and stuff. Realizing that before the Street Vendor's Guide comes out I'm gonna wanna re-assemble EVERYTHING. And the little driblets we get via the blog/patreon? They keep me hungry. They reinvigorate me when I'm flagging.
    2. Not sure I would have used “enormity.”
    3. Have taken comfort in that Roosevelt quote dozens of times.
    4. Shuttering the blog? Heaven forefend. I'm with Shelby above. This blog is a welcome rabbit-hole that often helps me redirect my focus. I'm here daily. Depending on the most recent post I might revisit every few hours to check the comments.
    5. If you DO transition to a podcast or video I will follow. Wasn't much of a youtube guy until this summer so you won't LOSE me. Same for the podcast format. But I WILL miss the written format. And links. Definitely links.
    6. You do you.
    7. IMHO you and I would get along fine were we ever to meet. We'd be civil because that's who we are. But we wouldn't be buddies. That's not the point. I'm not here for you to like me and you're not here to “be liked.”
    8. I was thinking just the other day about all of the formats/projects/directions you seem to have. I for one enjoy MOST of them and appreciate that ALL of them are needed to keep YOU functioning “properly.” Remember the mapping project? We know it'll likely be back but we don't know WHEN. It'll be a little lagniappe. The formulas for “building” and mapping small settlements? Same. THE book? Definitely.

    So my hand is up. Waiting to see what happens next. Happy trails this trip!

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  11. I am here and I sincerely hope you keep the blog going, but I will follow wherever you go.

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  12. I'm still reading every post. I'll often share a post with 3 - 6 gaming friends at a time as well. And they know I'll be talking about it with them so they usually do read. I bring 10 - 12 occasional readers with me.

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  13. I'm still here reading on daily basis and, like others in the comments above, I find your posts help me examine my own game much better.

    Generally that's either by looking through different angles than I would consider alone, or by clearly articulating (and almost always advancing on) ideas that are similar to my own.

    Engagement online is difficult - it's clear that a certain amount of feedback from us as readers is necessary, but individually people tend to only speak up when we feel we have something substantial to contribute. Perhaps making the comments section 'busier' is something us readers need to work on to fulfil that feedback-loop.

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  14. HERE! I came back to DnD/TTRPGs after a long break (we are about the same age I suspect) in part thanks to your blog. I find it inspiring, and it directly influences my DMing style. I'd love to see you keep at it. Cheers!

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  15. I'm here and I'm reading. I'll follow you and your work wherever you take it.

    I understand that you want to channel your writing energy into the most productive thing you can do with it. That said, for what it's worth, blogs aren't dead for me. I strongly prefer reading to watching. I can read anywhere, as fast as my brain allows. And I can easily save written material for offline reuse, e.g. annotation/summarizing for my own private DM prep work (which I do offline to avoid distractions.)

    Video requires me to have my audio on, which means I can't watch it in as many places. Speeding up video makes me miss things, so I have to go back and re-watch. It takes up lots of space if I want to download it. And there's no easy way to select quotes or intersperse my own notes the way I can with writing.

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  16. This site has been part of my routine for years. From the civ 4 techs to the snippets of your ongoing campaign, you've informed a great deal of my rpg philosophy. You have always experimented in media. I remember your YouTube attempt with fondness. I'm sure you will use the format that works best for you to your audience.

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  17. Here and enjoying. I much prefer the written format to video, but the idea of you being able to pour more of your efforts into products such as the Streetvendor's guide holds a certain temptation. I would certainly miss the blog though. In any case, as others stated above, you should do what provides you with the most satisfaction.

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  18. I am also here.

    I refrain from commenting as I often feel I can't add much content to what you're writing. Also, for whatever reason, my phone won't let me log in, so when I do comment, it's from my desk top.

    I come here every day and enjoy reading what you write. The greatest benefit I have had from reading your blog is the feeling that I am smart enough to go and modify our system and make it work, instead of relying on third parties.

    I support two blogs via patreon and next month it will be only this blog. The other blog has descended into directionless waffle, and I don't get much from it. It doesn't engage me.

    My son, who is 12, also reads everything you post. That leads us to some good discussions. He/we also read(s) 'ACOUP'.

    There are clearly different benefits to each format with the 'blogs vs video' question.

    My current job is to write voice over texts for for a teleprompter. My wife, who studied journalism, tells me that video is a very forgiving medium, compared with written text. I prefer reading to watching videos, personally, but I'm also 53.

    Cheers and enjoy your vacation.

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  19. Hey! I usually lurk, but I check this blog very often for updates - almost daily. Prefer written to video, since it's faster than listening. Enjoying this blog a lot, might be taking a longish pause from my usual group shortly.

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  20. I used to visit OSR blogs in their heyday like so many candy stores, picking some advice here, a whiff a nostalgia there, a joke on this forum and a random piece of trivia on that one. Now all their shelves are empty and I only come here, the same way I would go to the gym : not expecting something new or merely distracting any more, but ready for old-fashioned intellectual sweat-breaking.

    To put it shortly, I often need to go back and reread your posts, and I suspect I am not the only one. I I had to rewind a video, I would probably give up after a few times. Unless your voice is like James Earl Jones', I petition against your transfering your trade to the Tube.

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  21. Almost been here 12 months now. Visit 1-2 times a week. I've never been a DM much less played D&D, but I wish I did.

    Therefore although I enjoy reading your stories and lessons, it's difficult for me to participate much outside of general gratitude.

    God I'd hate it if you had to move to youtube or twitch or whatever, but I do understand the way the internet is moving and how to a certain degree we all have to move with the times. Half the time when I'm lurking reddit and things, people will ask "hey, what podcasts or youtube vids can I watch/listen for lore on X" more than "hey, where can I read some lore on X".

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  22. Here! I check your blog daily, even though I don't have much to say. If you want to augment the blog content with videos, more power to you. I very rarely watch video content of any kind, but I understand it seems to be the new norm for society in general. Me, I'd rather read a blog post or an article.

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  23. I’m sometimes absent for months, but when I do visit your blog, I’m absolutely catching up on every single post I’ve missed. You are able to frame and tackle problems of DMing with brilliant clarity. I’m often either nodding along or squirming uncomfortably at some critique that hits home. I’m mostly happy to just read what you put out, but you deserve to at least know I’m not a bot. Maybe you will have better reach in a new format, but I’ll be sad to see this workshop shuttered.

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  24. I'm at a strange umbral point with you, Alexis.

    I'm not a die-hard for your efforts, which I find admirable and very much worthy of respect but for which I've not any direct use, having suspended and reserved my interest in RPG play to none but the most fancyful of flights.

    I do check in at a goodly pace, though, to hear your writing voice recount struggles, setbacks, victories, viewpoints. A most interesting window into the anglo-american worldview to which we can also admix your age. In an internet dominated by screechy topics du jour bellowed by people I can not stand, your stoic jadedness makes for a rather comforting read.

    In other words, you keep excellent company. A kindred spirit that gets the room warm, like a damn good talk radio host.

    You'll go wherever you need to go but I do urge you not to let go of the pen, as I most value the written word and have come to despise all else.

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  25. I am here, I just prefer to lurk.

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  26. I definitely prefer the blog to any other medium, just saves time on my part. Also I really don't watch YouTube much anymore, though I would probably be more consistent with a podcast. I don't don't even know how twitch works hah! I would be fine if you posted less on the blog if that meant more book writing from you. Frequent posts are nice, but I'll take what I can get.

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  27. I have your blog in my feed, and thpugh our approaches to running D&D differ, I appreciate your perspective.

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  28. Hello. I'm not a robot (certified, I've just passed the test) and I like your blog. I prefer reading blogs to watching Youtube videos because I`'m not an English native-speaker and reading is easier than listening for me.

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  29. I'm here, and for a while.

    Blog or video, I greatly appreciate your perspective and approach to rules and content.

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  30. I may miss for a few weeks, but I always go back and read what I missed.
    ; )


    Regarding the Teddy quote: agreed that it's a great one that I wish *I* had had when younger, also.

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