Tag Archives: blogging

Can A Lawyer Live in a World Where Reality Is Not Dictated By Facts?

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An age old question hit me on the head today and forced me down a path that I probably wouldn’t have wandered down if left to my own devices.  The question I’ve been pondering deals with the issue of facts verses reality or in today’s more scientific jargon – which side of the brain is going to dominate.  Now as a child, I remember my father railing on the subject of facts verses emotion, usually in the context that women were non-factual thinkers and men were.  There definitely was the inference, if not the outright insinuation, that men were somehow superior because their minds were fact-based.  That was then and this is now.  I realize that I have both capacities.  I can do fact and I can do emotion.

Today, the question of fact verses emotion is usually couched in a discussion of which side of the brain controls.  There are those who maintain that a successful propaganda program hits the emotional side of the brain while rational thought hits the other side. It could be true.  I don’t know. However, I do recognize that trial lawyers use this phenomenon, perhaps without conscious thought.  The prosecutor uses an approach which goes to more toward factual analysis while the defense counsel is more prone to emotive arguments.

The whole question of fact verses emotion snuck up on me today by way of a stupid Facebook cartoon.  It was one of those insipid lawyer jokes that makes its way around the internet, gets rediscovered and makes its way around again.  Picture this.  A trial is going full force.  The judge is looking very judgmental wrapped in his black robe of power.  A lawyer is at the podium making lawyerlike arguments.  The other lawyer is seated at counsel’s table taking copious notes.  The court reporter is feverishly getting it all down to preserve appeal rights.   The twist is that instead of writing down the actual testimony, the court reporter is writing it down as a novel.  She records the proceedings thusly:

“The defendant appeared belligerent under the prosecutor’s merciless hammering.   His hands shake uncontrollably under the intense probing.   Beads of sweat break on his brow.  He feels the perspiration drip off his nose.  He is uncomfortable in his suit and tie, something he never wore while free but something that his attorney insisted that he wear for his testimony.  He squirms in his chair and takes a gulp of water.  His rage swells from within.  He is losing it; a meltdown is erupting into a murderous rage.  He lunges at the prosecutor.  ‘I did it!  Yes, I did it and I’m glad,’ he screams as he dives onto the prosecutor and starts punching him with angry blows.”

Of course, this isn’t the exact wording used in the joke.  I had to adlib a bit here because I like a good story, and well the joke just didn’t cut for me, but, you get the idea.  The type of descriptive narrative that a storyteller must engage in is very different from the world that I have inhabited for over forty years.  My world is of the old Dragnet variety – you know, “just the facts, ma’am” type of reality that doesn’t like embellishment.  Like a mathematical formula, facts lead to a predictable and of course, right conclusion.  This has been hard for me to learn because I’ve always liked a good story and somehow, ‘just the facts’ doesn’t make very interesting reading.  As I slip from the world of careful lawyering to storytelling, I realize you can take twists and turns along the way.

Too, bad this has taken me so long to figure out.   You can have all the drama – all the intensity of court without the drudgery of facts.  Sorry dad.  You lose on this one.  Like I said, I can do either fact or emotion.  They both have their place.

Springtime in Arizona

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This blog a departure from my usual ones about what’s happening with my books as I undertake this exciting, painful and exhausting journey from lawyer to author.  Right now my life is filled with distractions, but all that is happening with my books can be summed up in a single word – “nothing”.  Well, that’s not entirely true, this week I will be an invited author at the AAUW Scottsdale Annual Author’s Luncheon.

Somehow, the books have taken a backseat position as I emerge almost as from a cocoon to the promise of renewal.  All of a sudden it’s spring in Arizona.   I find that it is impossible to focus.  I’m too busy relishing the joy of being alive and just sensing the wonders about me.  Springtime in Arizona is a wonderful restorative event that must be savored first hand to really understand what it is about.

To all you fans who traveled to Arizona for the Super Bowl thinking that you would kill two birds with one stone and get a bonus of wonderful sunshine in the middle of your winter while watching the game only to find Arizona with three days of consecutive rain – the first time in ten years — I want you to know that I’m sorry you didn’t get to share our glorious weather, but understand, it really is part of a secret plan.   It is a scheme to lure here with promises of wonderful warm sunshine just to get you here.  If you saw Arizona as it really is, you might want to stay.  So to set the record straight, I just want you to know that as soon as you left Arizona to return to your snow and cold, our glorious weather came back with clear beautiful days, flowers in the deserts and sunsets to die for.  Of course, it is a conspiracy to keep you from deciding that Arizona is so beautiful that you had to go home and sell everything to move here.  Arizonans are never inhospitable.  We would never do anything to make you feel unwelcome.  So we roll out the welcome mat and pretend that three days of rainy and cold weather is normal and that we like it – just like we pretend that the summer isn’t hot because it’s a “dry heat”.   The truth is that there are so few cloudy days that a few days of cloudy weather is nice for a change — however drizzling rain – that’s another story.  We love to have you visit, but want to keep the best place to live in this country as a secret for ourselves.  With more and more people moving here, it is harder and harder to keep this paradise to ourselves.

Just so you know what you are missing, as I sit writing this, my windows are open.  It is bright and sunny outside with temperatures in the high sixties heading for the low eighties.  The wonderful fragrance of orange blossoms fills the air.  The streets are lined with plum trees displaying their annual formal dress of white blossoms.  There is a gentle breeze whispering though the trees and yes, it feels like spring.

So, to you who had to go home to winter, you have my complete sympathy.  Since I am originally from Buffalo, New York, I truly can feel your pain of enduring gray skies, snow at your feet, frost on your windshield and icy roads.   For me, the rest of your winter will be endless sunshine, wide open spaces, beautiful mountains, balmy temperatures and endless flowers.  I am sorry you missed it, but you can come back anytime and see the real Arizona without the Super Bowl or the golf tour or the car sales, but then it wouldn’t be as much fun.  So you see, we really do want you to come, we just don’t want you to stay.

Good Old Fashioned Villains

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Not many of us remember the early days of the movies with the “Perils of Pauline”.   The classic series came out about 1914, and was one of the first silent movies.  Because there was no dialogue to carry the story line, the acting was all.  Mind you, I am not old enough to actually remember going to the movies to see the weekly episodes of “Perils of Pauline”.   Although I am old – old enough to be referred to as a senior citizen—I  am not that old.   What I know about the “Perils of Pauline” is not much, but I do think the character Pauline was forever being rescued from a multitude of villains.  She carries the historic brand as the beautiful but trouble-prone female that always needed to be rescued.  (Not my kind of character at all.)  However, the series is notable because it started the trek down the screen path to villainous villains that will live forever in our collective memories as wicked characters.

And, this brings to mind another one of the early screen characters who was really the archetype of all villainous characters to follow in the next several decades.  You’ve probably heard the name Snidely Whiplash — the most evil of all creative characters.  Snidely Whiplash was the arch enemy of Dudley Doright, that stalwart Canadian Mountie who always got his man.  Somehow, Snidely always managed to escape capture though his evil plotting.  In the episodic  adventures, the audience was held spellbound by the conniving that marked Snidely a villain.  In fact, Snidely Whiplash probably set the standard for truly wicked characters for at least five decades.  In the world of over the top acting, Snidely Whiplash carried the day with his pure unadulterated nefarious behavior.  There was no one more cunning, devious, or just plain despicable than good old Snidely.  The audiences loved seeing a villain escape justice.

Make no mistake about it though, in those days, good was good and evil was evil.  The audience might cheer for Snidely, but it was always clear that he was the bad guy.  As Hollywood got more sophisticated, the bad guys wore black hats and the good guys wore white ones.  There was no possibility that the audience would get it wrong.  There was no “Fifty shades of gray” to cloud our perception with regard to the actions of the actors or judgments as to morality.

Move forward nearly a hundred years, and much has happened.  The biggest change is that Hollywood no  longer has good guys and bad guys.  The supposed good guys have flaws which undermine their characters, and the bad guys are all warm and fuzzy endowed with the milk of human kindness as they engage in cold blooded murder.  This is supposed to be provocative and I agree, it is that, but it leaves the viewer disturbed.  It is discombobulating to find justice elusive and good blurred into evil and vice versa.

All of this leads me to look critically at characters in books.  Have the villains in books become more villainous?   And if so, what makes them so villainous?  What do readers expect of the anti-hero?  And then, I have to ask myself, “What do I lean toward—the nuanced villain, or the Snidely Whiplash variety?”   I suppose I like villains that are real life anti-heroes, but that being said, I want my villains to stay in character.  I would not expect someone capable of murder to be compassionate, or to empathize with the victim.  I look for a type of calculated coldness – a state of unfeeling.   Conversely, I would not expect my female protagonist  – remember, I like strong female characters – to succumb to the ravages of temptation and fall into the black despair of evil.

I understand that there’s a kind of rogue villain—the one you love to hate because he is likeable even though he is naughty.  That’s just it.  He’s naughty–not wicked. The rogue is in my mind more like a  little boy who manages to tell an adorable lie.  However, this type of character will never manage to achieve my standards as a true coldhearted died-in-the-wool villain.  The rogues will have to remain on the sidelines in my books.   I’m in for black and white – good guys and bad guys.

So where do you put Aaron Rose?  Don’t know who I’m talking about?  For shame!  You need to read Tender Offers –both books — to see about him and how you would classify him.  Let me know.

Does anyone make New Years’ Resolutions anymore?

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Well, here it is – a brand new year to make into whatever you want.  Isn’t it wonderful?  We all get a chance to wipe the slate clean and start all over again.  Just think of all the possibilities.  I remember when I was a child, the New Year started with a list – not quite like the list that I made for Santa.  No, this list was different.  Santa was usually all about what I wanted for me.  A list New Years’ resolutions was about what I wanted to do to me – how I needed to change.  Admittedly, the list of resolutions was not as long as the one I made for Santa, but then children have very little perception about improvement.  I certainly didn’t.  My list usually included things like picking up after me (something that really stuck), or not being disrespectful to my elders (something that I’m still working on, but it is getting easier as I’m getting to be the oldest one around.)  The point is though there wasn’t a lot of thought that went into my list.

As I got older, the list (if it was made at all) was more about losing five pounds or not spending as much money.  Yes, they were areas in which improvement could always be made, but they were still about me.  Now, if I think of New Years’ resolutions at all, it is about things I have to do.  In fact, I could probably call it my annual To Do List – you know, taxes, contracts, thank you notes.   This kind of list has very little relationship to self improvement.  It certainly is not about how to change the way I am or how I relate to the world around me.

As I write this I have to admit that I am in awe of the opportunity to really try something new and different.  What would happen if just once every day, I did something kind for someone else and that someone else did something kind for another person?  It could be contagious.  Instead of flipping off a bird, I could learn to smile and say “that’s okay;” or “I’m sorry;” (even if whatever happened wasn’t my fault).  What would happen if I actually listened to what someone is saying?   What would happen if I stopped and helped someone in need?  How about if I actually stopped and talked to the person who just asked me for money?  Would it hurt if I did one of these things every day?

Today, it seems like we’re totally estranged from each other.  We are more interested in being right than being caring.  What would it hurt if we were just kind to each other one time a day?

Okay.  Just for the record, this year I intend to dispense with my normal self improvement list and try something different.  I will have one resolution only. I resolve to be kind at least once a day.  I don’t mean artificially kind – I mean genuinely concerned about someone else, perhaps a co-worker, an acquaintance or even a stranger.   I will be concerned, companionate, respectful and to the best of my ability, helpful.  I will try a little love for a change, and spread it around.

So, how about it?  Does anyone out there want to try this too?

A Christmas Poem

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A Christmas Poem by

Crystal Russell

T’was the weekend before Christmas

And all through the mall

The shoppers are spending

In response to season’s call.

Spend to buy gifts for Ginny,

And something nice for Sue,

Something unique for Robert,

Then, there’s Uncle Charlie, too.

The list, my, how it’s grown.

From just family to friends,

To teachers, to acquaintances,

Even to strangers.  It never ends.

Something big and expensive

Buy without thought or desire

Buy a gift just to impress

Any gift is all that you require.

Gifts for everyone on your list

Expectations from all that you see

After all, what is Christmas,

But presents under the tree?

Spend, spend, and spend some more

Run out cash and use the card

Payment not due ‘til next year

So you can spend without regard.

Merchants happy with the frenzy

Anxiously rush the season.

With decorations in September

Does anyone care about the reason?

A tree and some lights will make it gay

But, not any old tree is alright

Just a $500 pre-lit designer tree,

Will make the holiday celebration bright.

Expensive?  You bet.

But Christmas comes but once a year.

What difference does it make,

If it brings holiday cheer?

It’s easy to get caught in the season,

And easy to get caught in the hype.

We believe that money will make it happy.

To deny makes you a Grinch type.

Salvation Army pots are prohibited.

Their bells are deemed offensive.

We are so drawn into spending

We forget what’s not expensive.

Is there any room on your Christmas list

For someone you need to forgive?

What of someone who is lonely?

Do you have anything to give?

What I am thinking of is all things free.

Your support, your talent, your time

Given in love and thoughtfulness

Is the best gift, and doesn’t cost a dime.

So in this season of endless spending

Stop a moment and contemplate

What can I give of me that the person needs?

Then, be prepared to hear that your gift was great.

Let your holidays be filled with love

Let it start with you

Be the one that breaks the cycle

It’s not too late to do.

So What Makes a Strong Female Protagonist?

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I’m sitting here wondering – what makes a strong woman?  I know that we all love to read about them.  Perhaps, we even know one or two women who fit into that category, but we would admit that they are few and far between.  They serve as role models.  They hold families together in the face of adversity. They give us encouragement when we’re down and they certainly are women that we want to emulate, but why?  I don’t think that I’ve ever given much real thought to what qualities makes a person strong.

In some ways, I think it is easier for a man.  We all know the qualities that we like in men although frequently what women say we like and what we really like may be two different things.  On one hand women want men to be courageous and brave, to assume a leadership role and give us a strong shoulder to cry on, but at the same time we want them to be unafraid to display emotional sensitivity, and of course, always communicate deep heart-felt feelings.  So much for the brave, silent type of man of years past – you know, the men that went out and fought wars and gave their lives so that we could live in freedom – they have faded from the popular culture.  Sometimes, I wonder if men have as much trouble forging their roles in today’s world as women have.  I’m not sure that I really understand all that goes into making a strong male protagonist in today’s literature, but I digress.  I’m really obsessing about the role of the female heroine, today, because I think it is so much more complex.

If, through the course of the ages, men have claimed not to understand women, how much more confusing it must be for them today.   Books are written on the subject of just what women want.  To know what women really want, you would have to really find a strong woman to tell you out straight – someone who would be unafraid to tell you what makes her tick.  So just what makes a woman strong?  What key qualities make her memorable?  Inspirational?  Compelling?  What are the qualities that are most admired?  There are a few I can think of.  Certainly courage comes to mind, but it is a different kind of courage than the kind of courage men have, at least from my observation.   Men are brave with the body; women are brave with the heart.  It’s usually not a type of courage that demands recognition, but it is more like doing what you have to do as dictated by circumstances and done out of self sacrifice.  Don’t get me wrong.  I am not saying that men are courageous for status or recognition.  Nor am I saying that our women soldiers are not as brave as the men in a combat situation.  I have the greatest admiration in the world for our men and women in the service of our country.  I’m just saying that whatever that quality is that drives men, it doesn’t seem to be as much of a motivation factor for women.

So what else goes into a strong woman? Willfulness?  Maybe somewhat, but I’m not sure that it is willfulness alone.  Willfulness can easily be misconstrued as stubbornness, and I can hardly call that a desirable trait.  However, willfulness has a certain kind of ‘stick-to-it-ness’ that allows recovery from mistakes and gives a drive to go onward.  More importantly, willfulness can be beneficial when it creates determination that allows one to learn from mistakes and pick up the pieces and keep going.

But certainly there must be more to strong women than just courage and willfulness, and indeed there is.  I think the truly strong female has learned early on to love completely.  I’m not talking about a soppy kind of romantic love or a hot romp under the sheets kind either.  No, I am talking more about a love of life, a love for new adventure, a love of people and a zest for life that is contagious.  She is the type of protagonist that sticks in our heads long after the book is complete.   And really, that is the most difficult kind of protagonist to create, possibly because she is so rare in real life.

I’ve been blogging almost a year now.  Wow.  Still have more questions than answers.

My Video Revisited

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Lately, I’ve been working with a company to promote my book, Tender Offers.   They are guiding my efforts in building up my presence on YouTube.  This is a good thing since I know nothing about YouTube.  Sure, like the rest of the world I pop onto that site once in a while to watch a funny video, or to see something interesting, but I’ve never used YouTube to promote my books.  I am ashamed to admit that I really don’t know how to upload a video or anything else.  It truly is times like these that I regret not have a 10 year old at my disposal.  Of course, the younger set knows all about this new computer stuff and probably understands how to upload a video more than they know how to balance a checkbook. YouTube is their playground.

My video has been uploaded now and I’m trying to have as many people look at it as is possible. Sound familiar?  Again, I am a novice in this area.  After months of not liking my video at all, my voice, my appearance or my mannerisms, I think I like it now.  As a vote of confidence, my husband’s only comment was that the music sounded “spooky”. That’s okay.   After all it is nearly Halloween and the season for spooky everything.  I get to ride my broom again and engage in some Halloween fun.

Remember now, when I started down this path of being an author, I had absolutely no idea of this thing called social media. I was not on Facebook, and I never twittered. I had no idea what a blog was.  Here I am, almost a year later, and I am still learning.  Now I feel ready to tackle YouTube, with help, of course.

This is a big step for me. I am constantly fighting with myself trying to balance my need for privacy verses my need to promote my books.  The two desires are constantly in conflict. I’ve built a successful law practice with a low profile existence.  Naturally, I thought in my delusionary thinking that I could have a successful marketing campaign for my books with an equally low profile.  That has to be one of the mistakes I’ve made.  I totally misjudged social media and the force it has in connecting with people.  I really haven’t addressed the impact of YouTube in our daily lives.   So here I am, learning new tricks, meeting new people and reconnecting with old friends.  Every day is exciting and a brand new adventure filled with challenges for this septuagenarian.

I haven’t retired from the practice of law yet, but more and more I am recognizing that, yes Crystal, there is a life out there beyond being a lawyer. It is invigorating, stimulating and exciting.  I am constantly learning new tricks.  So for everyone who says you can’t teach an old dog new tricks – I say “Nonsense.”   This is one old dog who is not intimidated by learning new things.

Author Blogs

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Is anyone really aware of how many authors are writing blogs on the internet? I mean, the number must be astronomical.  A year ago, I didn’t even know what blog was.  Because I didn’t know about blogging, I missed reading all these wonderful blogs that introduced me to the minds of some very interesting people. You might say that I was a social media virgin.  (I like that.  It’s the only time I’ve referred to myself as a virgin in any context in over fifty years.  It makes me feel young, almost innocent.  But, I digress.)  In the past year, I’ve opened the Pandora’s Box of marketing.  I learned about Facebook, Google, LinkedIn and a whole lot of other social media outlets.  I’ve learned YouTube, and I’ve actually done a few videos.  I watched videos that other authors have done.  But, most important of all, I’ve learned to blog.  While, I am by no means an expert at this, I think I have climbed some major hurdles and have learned to navigate around the edges.

For nearly a year, I have written a weekly blog that has described my adventures and misadventures of entry into the society of authors. I find that I am one of millions authors, each with an interesting tale to tell.  There are many blogs by authors describing their successes and frustrations writing and marketing their books.   Some bloggers have even told of adventures they experienced which are similar to my own. They offer helpful advice on technical things like correct grammar, manuscript formatting, and plot development.  They share their secrets on how they have successfully marketed and promoted their own books.  For me it is the sharing of their struggles, their accomplishments, and even their complaining, that keeps me reading their blogs.  Through their blogs, they give an insight of who they are as people.  I feel privileged to know these complete strangers because of their blogging.

Reading authors’ blogs has been entertaining, but most of all it has been a lifeline to creative thinking. There’s been an unexpected bonus as I have read many of their books – books I never would have even looked at without the blogs.  For that, I am grateful.  The books have been on subjects that I never would have read if left to my devices of choosing a book by a title or cover. These authors who have taken the time to blog regularly have kept me going, forced me to think, made me laugh or cry with them as our joint experiences open into the reality of being an author.  Not since the horrid days of law school and the intimidation of the bar examination, have I felt more connected in an untold alliance with these authors who, like me, are taking to the airways to promote their baby – the books created by their efforts.  So in recognition of the enjoyment I have received from other authors who blog, here are some of the books I’ve read:

JC Gatlin- Prey of Desire

James Rose – Pabby’s Score

KL Docter – Killing Secrets

Bobby Blaze Smedley – Pin Me, Pay Me

MP Zarrella – A Tangles Web

All of these have been entertaining and all worth the read. Thank you.  But for your blogs, we never would have met.

Is Anyone Really Out There?

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I have to wonder, is there really anyone out there? Are we all so disconnected from each other that we have become nothing more than Avatars living our lives in our own subjective reality. I do remember a time when our connections were made in person or on telephone. There was always something special about a warm handshake or a cherry, “How ya doing?” You worked harder on being a friend, then. Relationships were important. We were politer then—more concerned about how we dealt with other people.  When did that all change? When did we stop speaking in complete sentences?  When did it become acceptable behavior to be rude?  When did this new form of social interaction take over to condemn us to isolation?

About a year ago, I ventured into the world of social media. My publisher said, “It’s how you promote your book. Get with the program!”  “Really?” I said, absolutely innocent of the ways of modern social interaction. “Well, how hard can that be?” I asked naively. “Try it, you’ll love it,”  was the texted reply.

So off I went to the world of Facebook, and LinkedIn, Google and all the rest. Now, I even Tweet for fun and profit. I learned to blog and to capture my thoughts in essays that no one ever reads. But, then that’s not entirely true, every once and a while someone will comment on something I wrote, so I know that people actually do read my simple words. (Very few admittedly, but enough to keep me writing.)

However, this whole social media thing got me thinking. Sure it’s fun, but it does not and cannot come close to the connectivity that comes from real person to person contact. Don’t get me wrong. I love hearing from people that I haven’t heard from in ages even if it is the Facebook “poke” thing. (Does anyone but me ever wonder how a poke could be a kind and caring act?) No matter. Yes, it is grand to hear from long lost acquaintances, but that feeling cannot compare with the sound of a live human voice in an an unexpected phone call or the loving touch of a person right there next to you—a person that you can see, hear, smell and feel.

Everywhere I go I see youngsters sitting at a table in total silence while he or she engages in a texted conversation with a person across the table.  In meetings, in school, in church—everywhere people are texting out into the great cyber world of uncaring eyes. I have to view that as the epitome of a Greek tragedy.  It is much ado about nothing as the Bard would say. All the while the real world spills forth opportunities for life, love, and adventure—all missed because we are so absorbed in our alternative reality.

The saddest part is that our virtual world brings an anonymity which some people use to spill their venom and write things for release to the internet that they would never say in person. Our disconnection breeds a loneliness that isolates completely.

Does this mean I intend to stop the social media? Of course not.  I truly love it.  But, I can’t help looking back and remembering a simpler time–a time when people were more connected.  I am writing about it because I am afraid that it will be forgotten as we enter our brave new world of technology.