Free your mind with FreeMind.
Hal on Mar 28th 2008
I’ve shared a number of tools that as a writer I’ve found helpful.
Here’s another one that I discovered recently. I wish I could tell you how, but I can’t remember. I think I stumbled upon it following a link from some site talking about alternative software for the pocketbook challenged.
Anywho, this particular software is called FreeMind.
It is FREE, good news for those of us who find more lint in our wallet than purchase powering paper.
Here’s how it’s described on it’s wiki page:
FreeMind is a premier free mind-mapping software written in Java. The recent development has hopefully turned it into high productivity tool. We are proud that the operation and navigation of FreeMind is faster than that of MindManager because of one-click “fold / unfold” and “follow link” operations.
So you want to write a completely new metaphysics? Why don’t you use FreeMind? You have a tool at hand that remarkably resembles the tray slips of Robert Pirsig, described in his sequel to Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance called Lila. Do you want to refactor your essays in a similar way you would refactor software? Or do you want to keep personal knowledge base, which is easy to manage? Why don’t you try FreeMind? Do you want to prioritize, know where you are, where you’ve been and where you are heading, as Stephen Covey would advise you? Have you tried FreeMind to keep track of all the things that are needed for that?
I used it to outline a writing project I’m working on and I’m using it to outline a presentation too. I like it because it allows me to visualize what I’m working on. But I’m a visual kind of guy
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“Wounds”: A Short Story by Me.
Hal on Mar 17th 2008
My short story, “Wounds,” is currently available for reading on the online magazine, Mindflights.
Here’s the tease for the story:
There’s an element that taints creation and exposes man’s wounds. Teenager Daniel Louis is the only one who can see it. Or so he thought. When an old man cursed like himself offers to show him the benefits of their ability, Daniel finds himself at a crossroads.
Click over and read it and the other poetry and short stories available for your entertainment and edification.
Let me know what you think of my short story. I hope you will enjoy it.
Filed in Other Works, Where is Hal? | No responses yet
F.I.R.S.T. – Only Uni
Hal on Mar 15th 2008
It is March 15th, but no need to worry about the Ides of March when we have a special blog tour for one of our FIRST members! (Join our alliance! Click the button!) Normally, on the FIRST day of every month we feature an author and his/her latest book’s FIRST chapter! As this is a special tour, we are featuring it on a special day!
and her book:
Zondervan (March 2008)
Camy Tang is a member of FIRST and is a loud Asian chick who writes loud Asian chick-lit. She grew up in Hawaii, but now lives in San Jose, California, with her engineer husband and rambunctious poi-dog. In a previous life she was a biologist researcher, but these days she is surgically attached to her computer, writing full-time. In her spare time, she is a staff worker for her church youth group, and she leads one of the worship teams for Sunday service.
Sushi for One? (Sushi Series, Book One) was her first novel. Her second, Only Uni (Sushi Series, Book Two) is now available. The next book in the series, Single Sashimi (Sushi Series, Book Three) will be coming out in September 2008!
Visit her at her website.
AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:
Trish Sakai walked through the door and the entire room hushed.
Well, not exactly pin-drop hushed. More like a handful of the several dozen people in her aunty’s enormous living room paused their conversations to glance her way. Maybe Trish had simply expected them to laugh and point.
She shouldn’t have worn white. She’d chosen the Bebe dress from her closet in a rebellious mood, which abandoned her at her aunt’s doorstep. Maybe because the explosion of red, orange, or gold outfits made her head swim.
At least the expert cut of her dress made her rather average figure curvier and more slender at the same time. She loved how well-tailored clothes ensured she didn’t have to work as hard to look good.
Trish kicked off her sandals, and they promptly disappeared in the sea of shoes filling the foyer. She swatted away a flimsy paper dragon drooping from the doorframe and smoothed down her skirt. She snatched her hand back and wrung her fingers behind her.
No, that’ll make your hips look huge.
She clenched her hands in front.
Sure, show all the relatives that you’re nervous.
She clasped them loosely at her waist and tried to adopt a regal expression.
“Trish, you okay? You look constipated.â€
Her cousin Bobby snickered while she sneered at him. “Oh, you’re so funny I could puke.â€
“May as well do it now before Grandma gets here.â€
“She’s not here yet?†Oops, that came out sounding a little too relieved. She cleared her throat and modulated her voice to less-than-ecstatic levels. “When’s she coming?â€
“Uncle picked her up, but he called Aunty and said Grandma forgot something, so he had to go back.â€
Thank goodness for little favors. “Is Lex here?â€
“By the food.â€
Where else would she be? Last week, her cousin Lex had mentioned that her knee surgeon let her go back to playing volleyball three nights a week and coaching the other two nights, so her metabolism had revved up again. She would be eating like a horse.
Sometimes Trish could just kill her.
She tugged at her skirt—a little tight tonight. She should’ve had more self-control than to eat that birthday cake at work. She’d have to run an extra day this week … maybe.
She bounced like a pinball between relatives. The sharp scent of ginger grew more pungent as she headed toward the large airy kitchen. Aunty Sue must have made cold ginger chicken again. Mmmm. The smell mixed with the tang of black bean sauce (Aunty Rachel’s shrimp?), stir-fried garlic (any dish Uncle Barry made contained at least two bulbs), and fishy scallions (probably her cousin Linda’s Chinese-style sea bass).
A three-foot-tall red streak slammed into her and squashed her big toe.
“Ow!†Good thing the kid hadn’t been wearing shoes or she might have broken her foot. Trish hopped backward and her hand fumbled with a low side table. Waxed paper and cornstarch slid under her fingers before the little table fell, dropping the kagami mochi decoration. The sheet of printed paper, the tangerine, and rubbery-hard mochi dumplings dropped to the cream-colored carpet. Well, at least the cornstarch covering the mochi blended in.
The other relatives continued milling around her, oblivious to the minor desecration to the New Year’s decoration. Thank goodness for small—
A childish gasp made her turn. The human bullet who caused the whole mess, her little cousin Allison, stood with a hand up to her round lips that were stained cherry-red, probably from the sherbet punch. Allison lifted wide brown eyes up to Trish—hanaokolele-you’re-in-trouble—while the other hand pointed to the mochi on the floor.
Trish didn’t buy it for a second. “Want to help?†She tried to infuse some leftover Christmas cheer into her voice.
Allison’s disdainful look could have come from a teenager rather than a seven-year-old. “You made the mess.â€
Trish sighed as she bent to pick up the mochi rice dumplings—one large like a hockey puck, the other slightly smaller—and the shihobeni paper they’d been sitting on. She wondered if the shihobeni wouldn’t protect the house from fires this next year since she’d dropped it.
“Aunty spent so long putting those together.â€
Yeah, right. “Is that so?†She laid the paper on the table so it draped off the edge, then stuck the waxed paper on top. She anchored them with the larger mochi.
“Since you busted it, does it mean that Aunty won’t have any good luck this year?â€
“It’s just a tradition. The mochi doesn’t really bring prosperity, and the tangerine only symbolizes the family generations.†Trish tried to artfully stack the smaller mochi on top of the bottom one, but it wouldn’t balance and kept dropping back onto the table.
“That’s not what Aunty said.â€
“She’s trying to pass on a New Year’s tradition.†The smaller mochi dropped to the floor again. “One day you’ll have one of these in your own house.†Trish picked up the mochi. Stupid Japanese New Year tradition. Last year, she’d glued hers together until Mom found out and brought a new set to her apartment, sans-glue. Trish wasn’t even Shinto. Neither was anyone else in her family—most of them were Buddhists—but it was something they did because their family had always done it.
“No, I’m going to live at home and take care of Mommy.â€
Filed in F.I.R.S.T. | 2 responses so far
This Year’s Florida Christian Writers Conference is Finished.
Hal on Mar 2nd 2008
I’ll post more about this year’s conference and the things the Lord did for me while here in future posts.
But I will say that this has been a fabulous conference. Billie Wilson assembled and continues to assemble an excellent cast of writers, experts, and editors.
I had fun here and met some wonderful people.
Authors I met, and this is by no means a complete list and I don’t want to miss anyone but I’m sure I will: Mark Myneir, Bryan Davis, Davis Bunn, Clella Camp, Eva Marie Everson… And a handful more. Once I get home and the cloud dissipates from my mind I’ll try to list more.
All these people love the Lord and have a passion for serving fellow Christians to improve and use the talent to write for the Lord at these conferences. I think a theme in this conference, if I had to pick one, is that we are to use our words to spread the Gospel of Jesus to all the world. Craig von Buseck summed that up best with his dynamic message this morning.
Filed in Where is Hal?, Writing/Tools/Resources | 2 responses so far
