Jukebox

Tonight I will be dancing.

It’s been a while. For various schedule reasons, I haven’t been able to dance since May. I’m looking forward to it enormously, and today’s jukebox is all about that.

The first song, by the fabulous Keb’ Mo’, pretty much says it all. The rest of the songs do it.

Enjoy.

Edited to add: I’m sorry to say that I don’t have enough server space for all my audio, so most jukebox playlists become inactive after a few months. This is one. Very sorry. But the music is worth seeking out, it’s great!

To use the E-Phonic MP3 Player you will need Adobe Flash Player 9 or better and a Javascript enabled browser.


 
She Just Wants to Dance
Keb’ Mo’

Well
When the music starts to playing
She slides out on the floor
Dancing without a partner
Swaying on the two and four

There’s a rhythm in her footstep
And a flower in her hair
A smile on her face
Cause she’s in a place
Where she don’t have a care

She ain’t looking for no lover
She ain’t looking for romance
She just wants to dance

Well she’s moving kinda lazy
And it’s obvious to me
This little girl ain’t crazy
She’s as wild as she is free

She can feel it in her fingers
And it moves on down her spine
And when it hits her hips
She parts her lips
And you know she’s feeling fine

She ain’t looking for no lover
She ain’t looking for romance
She just wants to dance

Get out the way and let the girl dance…

My day on Author August

Today is Kelley Eskridge day on Author August at the Science Fiction Message Board, and I hope you’ll join me there.

Author August is designed to introduce readers to writers whose work they might not otherwise know. I appreciate that immensely and am delighted to be included. So please stop by and join the discussion, and take time to find out about the other writers who have been highlighted so far. You can drop in anytime — the discussion isn’t limited to a single day.

(And I’ll also be reminding you next week to head over again for Nicola‘s turn in the spotlight on August 20).

Legion

Can’t wait for this one — Paul Bettany is an archangel with a great big gun, and he’s here to save humankind. (Side note to screenwriters and directors — could we please get our heads around the idea that mankind is a lame word to use in this brave new world where not all of us are men? Awesome. Thanks.)

This trailer is Not Safe For Work, and by the looks of it, neither is Paul Bettany. I enjoy his work, and I’m looking forward to Legion.
 

 

I don’t get to talk about spoons

I don’t get to talk about spoons.

If you’re thinking Huh?, let me point you to The Spoon Theory by Christine Miserandino.

My partner has MS. She’s a member of the disability community. I’m not. She gets to talk about spoons. I don’t.

What this means in the simplest words I can find is: being a disabled-bodied person is a different experience from being an able-bodied person, regardless of other factors of race and class and so on. It’s different. Being a person of color in this culture is a different experience from being a white person, regardless of other factors of class and gender and so on. It’s different.

If you don’t share an experience of difference — the kind of difference that hampers your access to physical space, cultural privilege, opportunities, social respect, or being seen as fully human in the eyes of the people around you — please don’t turn around and make that experience about you so you can then participate in it.

I don’t want to hear about your personal “color-blindness” or your paean to how brave the crippled people are because they have so much more to deal with. Nor am I concerned today with whether someone else’s difference counts as much as yours. Difference is, people: can we just acknowledge it and deal with it? And part of dealing means that sometimes you just stand back and give people space to be, to speak about what’s different for them, and to understand that you don’t necessarily get to be different that way too. You can do this even if you don’t think their difference is important, or you don’t understand why it’s important to them, or you don’t see the problem, or whatever. You can, if you choose, simply acknowledge that it’s outside your experience, rather than going on at length about how hard your own stuff is. It does not diminish you if the occasional conversation is not all about you. There is a great vast amount of the world that is not about you, and sometimes people want to talk about it.

So stop making it about you and start listening to how it is for the people who are Not You. Take their word for their experience. And understand that sometimes they just don’t give a shit whether you have suffered too. And today neither do I. I don’t care whether you think it’s fair that the disabled community wants to own the idea of spoons, the same way I don’t care whether you think it’s fair that some people have spaces where white folks don’t get to speak their mind about the challenges of whiteness. I just don’t care right now.

And I’m not here to fight about it. It’s a big world and you can find your own space in another part of it, so if you believe differently, please go express it on your own blog. I will turn off comments in a New York second if things get even the slightest bit whiny or trollish. I’m just not in the mood. Is that unfair? Tough.

Another fearless story

There’s been a fair amount of conversation recently on this blog about hope, and why people keep going in the face of hopelessness. Sometimes the universe demonstrates lovely timing: along comes a beautiful new ebook from Fear.less, written by Mawi Asgedom, that is all about hope and perseverance. Asgedom packs a lot into a small (six page) package, and what speaks to me most right now is his talk of courage, resilience and advice on how to persevere.

The moment of courage in a human being’s life is when all the indicators around you tell you that nothing’s going to work out, when you don’t have any evidence whatsoever that makes you feel like you’re going to be happy again. At that specific moment, when you can still step up and do your best, just because you believe that outside your own logic and reason it’s possible in the world, and you’re going to fight for it, that to me is what courage is all about.
 
— Mawi Asgedom

So many stories revolve around a hero faced with the choice to give up or keep going. Those are powerful stories, and they form the core of some of our most hardline cultural beliefs: that perseverance is all we need to win (if you work hard enough, you can do anything), and that stopping equals failure (a winner never quits and a quitter never wins). We put the emphasis on the results. But Asgedom also puts emphasis on the process: on knowing that when faced with the choice, we did our best.

I’m not here to say that persevering is always the right thing; sometimes stopping is the best choice. Billions of human lives have been lived as a string of such choices. I think Asgedom’s deeper point is that we have a choice, and we get to make it over and over again. It’s a lifetime’s journey. If you make a choice you don’t like, then make a different choice next time. Life doesn’t stop when we choose: it only stops when we don’t.

Download the ebook and share it as you like. Sign up at Fear.less to get more as they are released. And let me know what you think.

Wishing you more joy, more love, more hope, less fear.

Nicola says

I told Nicola earlier that I was doing a post about the Hugos.

She said, Oh, another award we’ll never get.

Later I told her that I had annoyed someone today.

She said, Oh, another person who wants to throw you in a cupboard and then hit the cupboard with a hammer.

And then later she said, Oh, let’s have another beer.

Is it any wonder that I love her?

Taking our act to Olympia SciFiFest

Nicola and I will be in Olympia (WA) on October 24 for SciFiFest at the Olympia Timberland Library. It sounds like a great deal of fun and we’re delighted to be part of it.

Check it out:

October 24, 5:30-9:00 PM

5:30 — Readings by Nicola and Kelley

6:30 — Seattle SciFi Museum curator Jacob MacMurray (who also designed Nicola’s utterly gorgeous memoir) will present a video of interview clips from famous SF authors.

7:30 — BlöödHag takes the stage and plays our ears off. And then they emcee an SF fashion show! Prizes will include Most Steampunk, Best Star Trek impersonator, Most Robotic, and more. Come dressed to win, kids. How often in your life can you get both a concert and a fashion prize from the world’s most science-fictionally literate heavy-metal rock band?

Please mark your calendars and join us!

City music

I haven’t done a Jukebox post recently because right now I’m not listening to my own collection — I’m listening to the music from cities around the world.

CitySounds is a brilliant cool (simple, elegant) music site featuring music uploaded by people in selected cities to SoundCloud, or new music produced by people in those cities using the SoundCloud API.
 

citysounds
 
Much of the world seems to be into electronica/house, but I just heard a lovely acoustic guitar/vocal track from Paris and, from Amsterdam, Isaac Hayes (happy!) — so I certainly haven’t heard it all. And I want to.

Come join me at CitySounds. I might be in Tokyo or London or LA…

Enjoy your day.

Apocalypse, in summary

Here are the results of the Choose Your Own Apocalypse game that was part of Josh Levin’s American Apocalypse series over at Slate.com this week. Along with the overall results, you find demographic breakdowns and popular scenario groupings. What we chose (and who “we” are) make fascinating reading.

All 144 scenarios are ranked here in order of popularity, and the Slate crew has also created a “social network” of scenario relationships which is incredibly interesting to me — for example, if you chose Gay Marriage as one of your top 5 US Killers, you may also believe that Obama as God, Cloning, Voluntary Human Extinction, Decadence (natch!) and, weirdly, Bottled Water will also be the downfalls of our society.

I loved this series, and I’d love to see more online journalism take this interactive, multimedia approach to reporting on issues in ways that help readers build a three-dimensional understanding of them. Hyperlinks are great — yay for the internets — but without a focused and professional mind behind the curtain to frame the context, organize the linked information, and create opportunities for interactive access that are both interesting and revelatory, links are just more ways to become lost or overloaded. Thanks, Josh Levin. Great stuff.