The offbeat blog is updated daily. You’ll find everything from pictures, features, links, tips, advice, and who knows what else. Come! Drink from the offbeat blogstream!

Writing: State of affairs

May 18th, 2006 · Posted by Ariel

Status of book:

Book status


I’ve been up at 5am every day this week to get in hours of revisions before going to work. Tomorrow I hand my first draft complete to my editor, lit agent, and adored Patrick, who’s on friend/editor patrol to personally ensure I don’t look like a dumb-ass (or at least any more than I usually do). Squeal! It’s really hard, as a blogger, to hand off writing. What, you mean I can’t revise and republish over and over again? I’m so spoiled by push-button publishing.

Status of kitchen:

Kitchen status


Best summed up in two words: total disaster.

Moral of the story? While I’m doing ok as a writer, I ain’t no housekeeper.

In the media: Offbeat Bride on KUOW

May 16th, 2006 · Posted by Ariel

I guess my pre-publication press push has officially begun: I’ll be on KUOW today around 1:30 (Seattle-time) talking about offbeat brides navigating their ways through the Wedding Industrial Complex. You can listen online via their website if you want.

In the media: Offbeat Bride in Bust!

May 15th, 2006 · Posted by Ariel

The amazing Michelle Goodman wrote an article for this month’s Bust that includes an interview with me and a mention of Offbeat Bride. It’s on newstands next week. (And thanks to Jill for sending me a scan of the article so I could read it — it’s great!)

Book: Portrait sitting is hard

May 5th, 2006 · Posted by Ariel

Today I did a portrait sitting with Heather Corinna. I need a good headshot to use for the back of my book, and headshots make me nervous. It really can’t be much more than just your face showing (this picture is going to be, like, 1″x1″ on the back of my book) and it shouldn’t be so goofy that no one can actually see you. So, I tried to put on my best “knowing smile” and Heather snapped away. These are some of the results:

Which one do you think is best? This is a weird question because I have found time and time again that the pictures that others like of me are never the ones *I* like. But hey: I’m not the one reading this book, so my opinion should probably matter the least. Anyone have any thoughts? I’m sort of stumped and not sure I like myself in any of them. Bah! Then again, after looking at this many pictures of my face, maybe I’m just sort of bored with myself. It’s also that this needs to be a sort of formal shot — but the end result is that I don’t really feel like I look like me. Because I’m such a goof.

Jeez, vanity is so exhausting sometimes!

Writing: The memoirist’s curse

March 21st, 2006 · Posted by Ariel

This weekend I attended a writing workshop in Portland. I stuck out like a pink-tipped, sore thumb, but not really in a bad way. I was a little bit younger than the other writers (the bulk were in the 35-45 range), and since of course I look and act even younger than I am, I think I confused everyone a bit. At one point, the workshop leader (best-selling memoirist Jennifer Lauck) grouped me into her 7-year-old son’s generation, despite the fact that I’m in my early 30s.

Despite my alieness, I got a lot from the workshop. Friday night we each were assigned a topic to write two pages about for the next morning. I’m not completely sure how topics were chosen — some of them were based on readings we’d already done, some of them seemed random, and some of them (like mine) were oddly prescient. My assignment was to write two pages about my mother.

Gulp. Keep in mind that with my grandmother’s death last week, mother-daughter dynamics are in full effect.

As those of you who read this site know, my writing is mostly light and entertaining. And the first half of the piece was exactly that. The second half got into a small conflict my mother and I had over my being present at my grandmother’s deathbed, and then in the closing paragraphs I went for the emotional sucker-punches, aiming straight for the jugular and letting loose with such well-worn literary conceits as repeating the saddest parts for full effect.

I got mildly choked up while writing the piece, but steeled myself and vowed to keep my shit together when presenting during the workshop. I am not a weeper!

But of course, when my turn rolled around, there I was not just crying — but SOBBING. I was in good company (there was actually a box of tissues passed from reader to reader), but I was still somewhat mortified with myself. Me! Sobbing! Other people are allowed to sob during their readings but I am a pillar of emotional fortitude, and I am not accustomed to blubbering over my own writing. I laugh at myself a lot; but cry over myself almost never.

The piece was well-received and I decided that I would pass it on to my mom. It was an homage of sorts to her and my relationship, our shared quirks and communications styles. More than anything, it was about how much I loved her, and come on: what mother doesn’t want to be the star of the I Love You! show?

Perhaps my timing was off, what with my grandmother’s funeral and all, but my homage had exactly the opposite effect that I’d intended. My mother called me last night reporting that she’d read the piece and didn’t like the person it described (her!) and was sort of mortified and felt very hurt and cried a bunch. Gulp.

I guess it’s a little bit hard being turned into a character in someone else’s story, isn’t it?

I explained my intentions with the piece and she understood and it was all ok, but as I closed the conversation I reminded her, “You know, mom, that was just a two-page story. I’m writing a whole book right now …”

“But the book’s not about me,” she said. Erm, have you heard many wedding stories that don’t include the mother of the bride?

This brings up some interesting issues for me … not just with my mother, but with untold numbers of people. Andreas refuses to read any of my book drafts, arguing that he doesn’t want to impede my creative process — even when I beg him for feedback, he declines. He may regret this decision.

I use friends and family members to comedic effect through-out my book. Are these people going to hate me? Am I going to simultaneously celebrate the release of my first book while grieving over the fact that my friends have disowned me and that my in-laws won’t invite me home for Christmas? For godsake, what will Uncle Howie say? (That will make more sense after you read the book.)

I’m caught between refusal to change my writing out of fear and, well, wanting to avoid making my mother cry.

Also, for those who are curious, you can read the piece I wrote for my mother by clicking below.

Read the rest of this entry »

Writing: Guess & Go Award

March 4th, 2006 · Posted by Ariel

I went to a private elementary school for a few years called “The Island School.” It was a small non-religious school started by some poets and hippies and teachers and other progressives. The curriculum emphasized storytelling above all else, and my classmates and I were writing rambling 10 page epic fantasy stories by the time we were in third grade. Math maybe not so good, but we were all hyper-active writers.

Part of this was because the Island School had a writing policy called “Guess & Go.” The teachers’ felt that the goal with teaching children to write should be expression and creativity — not meticulous spelling. With a 7-year-old’s attention span, by the time they stop and try to figure out how to spell “journey,” they’ve forgotten what the hell the journey was going to be. At the Island School we just scribbled “jurne” and kept writing.

It was an early-’80s education gamble that paid off, thanks to the miracle that is spell check. No one needs to know how to spell, now! But we do need to know how to think on our toes and keep the copy coming. [Side note: I'm reaching a pace with my writing these days where I almost wish I had a finger pedometer. How many words do I write each week? With work, book, blog, freelance ... maybe 6,000? With emails and IMs and texts? God only knows! 10,000? 15,000? I have no idea. Honestly. When am I ever not writing?]

All this is at least in part thanks to the Island School telling me to just Guess & Go at age 7. Legend had it that the teachers used to keep a collection of their favorite misspelled words by students. I have a keen memory of trying to sound out how to spell “drawer.” What I ultimately came up with was “jwuarre.” Because was how I said it, so that was how I spelled it. It was very wrong, but I got the idea out.

I’m still a Guess & Go writer. My vocabulary is huge, but I can’t always spell those big words. My new employer is learning very quickly that they may have hired a copywriter who’s also an editor, but they didn’t hire a copy editor. I can’t chart a sentence. Half the time I can’t spell at all. But I can write!

Tonight, as I stumble through another chapter of the book, I present to you the Guess & Go word of the evening: pharmeutucal. Good job, fingers!

Writing: Finale

February 28th, 2006 · Posted by Ariel

My favorite chapter closer in my book (so far:)
If you enjoy it, I would encourage you to eat penis cake all the time. Why reserve it for special occasions?

Announcements: Offbeatbride.com Unveiled!

February 26th, 2006 · Posted by Ariel

(… Oh! That pun! It kills!)

Even as I try to focus on finishing my book, I’m also in the early stages of pre-dev on my plans for the partner website. I am, after all, a web geek first and foremost … “author” is a new title compared to “blogger” and “total nerd.” I’ve got big plans, but for now here it is: OffbeatBride.com. Your future home of all things wedded, weird, and wonderful.


Recent blog posts

Recent forum posts

Popular posts

Recent comments

  • Katy: D. I am sure the well respected Philly cops have more important things to do than break up a wedding. We did...
  • Karen: And there you have it - the wedding that has finally made me leave a comment. Beautiful Simple Love Love Love...
  • Luis: Yes Jennifer that is Doogie Howser, and I hope I am not bursting anyone’s bubble, but he is gay....
  • Amy: I adore the henna! I spent a summer in India and it’s a must for me to have henna on my wedding day. I...
  • Jen J: This is awesome! I love it. And anything with Jack Black in it makes it even more amazing. To Ariel and...