About Me

My photo
Hello my fellow Politiores Troglodytes. This Blog is a collection of Posts, Poems, & Short Stories that I write on a daily basis. If you find it entertaining, informative, and controversial, then I have done my job properly. Thank goodness too, because Karma has been on my case of late. I'm supposed to bring fifty people into the fold or I'll have to give back the part of Einstein's brain I inherited. No, I'm not one of the Scientists who got a piece of his brain when he died. Karma said, "Eat this knowledge. It'll make you smarter!" The bargain I made with Karma was, if I could change fifty people into Politiores Populos, I would be rewarded with my very own Lamborghini. So, that's my story and I'm sticking to it! Like what you're reading, then read on. P.S. Populo is Latin for people. Politiores is Latin for educated. Troglodytes is English for troglodytes. And Einstein's brain was stolen by Thomas Stoltz Harvey after his death in 1955 and eventually divvied up into 240 pieces. If you just read that last sentence, then you have just learned something and I'm just that much closer to fulfilling my commitment to Karma!

Friday, January 31, 2020

More Fiction Stories Soon

See the source image
That I haven't kept up with my
Blog.
It's because my computer is in the shop.
I know,
I should have fixed it myself but I am so tired of working on other people's computer that now I hate doing it.
The only time I get to work on the
Blog
is when I go to the library.
But it seems,
the more time I have,
the more things I have to do during the day.
I still can't figure out why that happens!
Oh well.
I will be more consistent once I get it back.
Please be patient.
Read some of my
Flash Fiction,
Poems,
or watch 1 of my
Music Videos
I already have here on my
Blog.
I'm sure that I will come up with new exciting ideas for more
Fiction Stories
soon!


This is,
Brainstorming As I Write,
Jim Hauenstein,


And,

“There's an old saying that great writing is simple but not easy, and so it is. The search for that one plain but in-obvious word that will do the work of five, the agony of untangling a complex idea that has become a mess of phrases in the writer's mind, the willingness to keep doing it over and over again until it is right--all of that plus some luck yields prose so clear that it seems a child could have written it.”  







No comments:

Post a Comment