Upcoming Movies On My To-Watch List: Yes, they’re all dubious.

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Godzilla:

Jupiter Ascending:

Edge of Tomorrow:

This is, clearly, not a comprehensive list. ;) I figure that all the superhero movies coming out are givens.

Ring-a-ding-FOOD: Pavlov Never Expected This

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So the other day, I was listening to the humorous country song, “Double XL.” I don’t know if you’re familiar with it, but the chorus goes, “Don’t call me on the phone, just ring my dinner bell,” and it got me thinking. Did other families use a dinner bell too?

Now, I know for certain that not everyone is familiar with the concept of the dinner bell, so I’ll explain. When I was growing up, my family always ate dinner together. After work or school, we’d all come home and do our own things, usually in separate areas of the house. For example, my dad liked to “study the insides of his eyelids” for awhile before dinner, a solo activity which effectively removed him, not just from the room, but from the waking world.

So, ever one for efficiency, my mom found a way to bring us all together when the meal was ready, using a minimum of effort. She rang a bell.

To be honest, I’m not sure where we picked this tradition up. I have a vague recollection of it being something my aunt (my mom’s sister) started doing, and heavens only know where she picked it up, because I don’t think they learned it from their mom, my oma.
I’m not certain where the bell came from either. All I know is that it appeared around the same time as this tradition started, and the pretty little silver thing sat atop the stove for the vast majority of my childhood.

bell

Imagine this silver and much less deluxe. That was our dinner bell.

At any rate, when the bell was rung, the family would come running. Or rather, my sister and I would come running. My dad would typically require a wee bit more coaxing, as studying the inside of one’s eyelids typically puts one in a rather meditative (and unconscious) state.

Talk about a Pavlovian response.

Pavlov's family

Pavlov’s family.

Now, there is a reason why I know not all families summoned their collective to dinner with a tinny little ringing. One evening we had company over: friends of the family who had kids of their own. As such, all us kids were confined downstairs to the rec room, where we could be as noisy as we liked (and having all been kids at some point, we all know how noisy that is). Meanwhile, the parents enjoyed peace upstairs, with my mom making dinner while socializing with the female half of our company. Being the inquisitive sort, our family friend spied the shiny bell atop the stove and, before my mom could stop her, she picked it up.

Now, I don’t even believe that she fully rang the bell, but being hungry children, well-tuned to the sound of the dinner bell, one half-hearted little ding was all it took. My sister and I froze in the middle of the boardgame (I think it was Mousetrap), and a few words to the other two kids was all it took before all four of us were rushing up the stairs.

I’m quite sure that my mom’s friend didn’t expect that picking up a bell off the stove would elicit such a reaction. For before my mom had a chance to explain, a rumbling thunder of wildly uncoordinated children stampeded up the stairs and boiled into the kitchen. Someone less optimistic that my mom’s guest likely would have thought she had heralded an apocalypse (or at least an earthquake) by the sudden racket we enthusiastically made in our prompt arrival to… no food. I remember we kids were a little put out that dinner wasn’t actually ready yet, but my mom’s friend got over her surprise quickly and had a good laugh about it.

So help me out, folks. Is there anyone else out there whose family used a dinner bell? I’m dying to know – please comment with your answer!

Hobbit Sacrilege

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Now I enjoy fantasy quite a bit (thus why I write it), but Tolkien has never been a favorite of mine. I found his books more palatable as movies (I finished the first one. Barely. You can’t pay me to read the other two LOTR books.) I found them alright. Mildly enjoyable. But the The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey was extraordinarily boring. The following humorous Honest Trailer does a delicious job of illustrating it though:
Honest Trailer: better than the movie itself.

Fortunately, the second Hobbit movie, The Desolation of Smaug, was thoroughly enjoyable.

And for your (again, humorous) listening pleasure:
Misty Mountains Rap

Top 10 List of Books That Have Stayed With Me

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The “Ten books that have stayed with you” meme found its way into my Facebook. Most people wouldn’t consider my picks great works of literature (although I obviously think they’re awesome), but they’re books that have influenced me and my writing, and they’ve made particular impressions in my mind. Not necessarily in order, but easy decisions came first.

1. Arrows of the Queen –Mercedes Lackey
2. Mossflower -Brian Jacques
3. Exile’s Honor -Mercedes Lackey
4. Birth of the Firebringer –Meredith Ann Pierce
5. Song in the Silence -Elizabeth Kerner
6. Harry Potter -J.K. Rowling
7. Wizard’s First Rule -Terry Goodkind
8. Nicomachean Ethics -Aristotle
9. The Bible
10. The Bourne Identity -Robert Ludlum

So yeah… 70% of my list is pure fantasy. Is it any wonder that I write it?

Now I long to go into detail about some of these authors, right here, right now, but I know I’ve talked about Mercedes Lackey already, and I’m actually planning a series on authors who have inspired me. So expect posts on most of these people in the future!

The People In Our Lives

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I was having a conversation with my boyfriend the other day that made me think about how much impact people have on our lives – and how different our lives might be if we had never met them.  Sure, with some people, the change would be small – but even with a small change, how massive could the influence be in the end, how could it domino?  And what about those people who have made such a huge impact on us – when you think about it, with many of them, it would have been a simple thing for us never to have met.

How many people do we meet at work?  Well, what if you’d never seen that ad, never applied, never been interviewed, never decided to work there?  And people we meet through other people or at social events – what if you just decided not to go?  Think of any one person you interacted with this week, especially someone close to you: can you think of a situation where you never met?  Or how that person could have left your life?

Especially when it comes to death.  Death not only removes someone from our lives, it also has a massive psychological impact.  What if someone who died, never did?  What if that person was still here?  How much different could a life turn out?  Especially if that death had occurred during your childhood?  How many lives, and to what degree, would be changed, and how would those changes in turn proliferate changes of their own?

It’s really quite remarkable, in my mind – some say that when everyone is special, no one is, but I think this very thought disproves that.  People are incredibly powerful in their impact on the people around them.  It doesn’t matter who you are – you have the ability to affect massive change on countless people in countless ways.  And it’s humbling too, because you’d better use that incredible power for good.

Apologies for this meandering mess of philosophical thought, but this thinking occupied me for quite some time, and I find that it inspired a greater appreciation for the people in my life.  And since I believe that gratitude is one of the most beautiful and powerful positive emotions that we are capable of, I thought I’d share and see if it inspired anyone else.

The Adored And The Denied

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So I watched the Doctor Who Christmas special a little late this year, and I was pretty excited for it. Matt Smith is not my favorite Doctor by any stretch, but he’s had a few golden moments and much was promised to audiences for this episode, especially with the build up from the 50th special.
Caution: spoilers after picture

Doctor Who Christmas Special

However, the Christmas Special sucked.

In fact, I’m tempted to call it the worst episode of Doctor Who ever. Yes, there were a lot of questions from previous episodes that were finally answered, but that’s the only good thing I have to say about it. And it’s not Matt Smith’s fault either – I blame the writer. Now, I admired Moffat greatly for his work in series 5 and 6, but after that, it’s like he got too sucked into his own ego and couldn’t write a good episode to save his life. Plotholes and loose ends abound.

For example, why were the Weeping Angels in that episode? And why didn’t we see a trace of them again after their initial scene? Did they just decide to go away? I was under the impression that they were almost impossible to kill, yet we don’t see a trace of them for the rest of the special. They shouldn’t have been there at all.

And why does the Doctor age over 300 years when he’s never shown any aging despite long spans of time before?

And while I agree that letting the TimeLords through might NOT be a good idea, I was under the impression that the Doctor didn’t release them to prevent war… yet when war starts anyways, why not let them through? (And in my opinion, the Doctor blasting everything with regeneration energy was both lame and contrived). And why (or how) did the TimeLords send regeneration energy through the crack? Apparently they can hear through the crack, so you’d think that, by now, they’d have figured out that they have the right place and come on through despite the Doctor not having spoken his name. Apparently they were confident enough to send through regeneration energy. This sits ill with me…

And why can’t a bring myself to care at all what happens to him or anyone? I remember the end of the Tenth Doctor’s reign – it was amazing and I was heartbroken to see him go. That was even true for the Ninth’s departure. But this time? I was glad to see the new Doctor. I just hope the writing gets better, or I might stop watching altogether (and this is coming from someone with everything from a sonic screwdriver prop to TARDIS and Dalek salt and pepper shakers). Not liking Matt Smith terribly much is just a personal preference, one that influences the degree to which I like a show. But when episodes are poorly written… it’s time to say goodbye.

Please don’t make me say good-bye, Doctor Who.

So what did you think of the Christmas Special and Matt Smith’s departure? Do you totally disagree with me and think it was awesome (like, apparently, a lot of people), or did something not sit well with you either? Let me know in the comments!

A Face For The New Year!

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First of all, Happy New Year!

Over Christmas I finally did something I’d been meaning to do for awhile: I got a photo of me! Now it’s not a pro photo or anything, but it’s something I can use. Previous photos were all either awful or really outdated. But I recruited my family and we finally took a photo that will work.

You may actually have noticed the new image popping up about a week ago, but I’m slowly working through everything to add it to all my sites. I’m no longer hiding behind my happy flower image! (As awesome as the happy flower was.)

Old image:

happy flower

Real picture, no photoshop. No seriously.

New image:

Author Stephanie Beavers

*gasp* A real person! It’s me!

Huzzah!

The Eve Before New Year’s Eve

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Well, this is it. Christmas is over, and the new year is almost upon us. I know a lot of people do the whole New Year’s Resolutions thing, but I’ve never been big on it. I know this year I will publish my first book, but other than that… meh. To me, self-improvement and setting goals is an ongoing thing. It is isn’t something I do once a year and not the rest (although I realize that for some people it’s simply a reminder). I’ve also never been big on set deadlines, so I simply work hard at something until it’s done. I want it done right more than I want it done on time.

That being said, there is something exciting about the concept of a new year. So here’s to the coming new year!

Fireworks

As for my general goals, there are some things I want to work towards. First and foremost, I want to publish my two novels. I want to write more, too. I’ve been neglecting my writing lately in favor of publishing and other life stuff. I also want to stabilize my work position (it’s been… interesting, to say the least), and I want to eat better and exercise more.

But how about you, my fine readers? Any resolutions?

Boxes, Boxes, BOXES!

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Happy Boxing Day! I hope everyone had an amazing Christmas and is lazing off a food coma (or burning it off with shopping). I know I’m getting a couple days to unwind before it’s back to work.
But what did everyone get for Christmas? I hope it was what you wanted – or even better, something you didn’t know you wanted. I did! I got some Doctor Who themed salt and pepper shakers. :)

But does anyone want to look back to Christmases past? The 90s were a good decade…
Maybe you had kids in the 90s. Or maybe you WERE a kid in the 90s (like me). I know that I thought this was incredibly nostalgic and amusing:
The Top 30 Most Awesome Toys You Could Get for Christmas in the ’90s
I personally had 11 of the 30 listed at some point. However, I was familiar with most of the list – even if I didn’t have one, one of my friends or relatives did. Oh Furbies…
Lisa Frank, anyone?

Lisa Frank polar bear and penguins

ALL THE COLORS

A Musical Bit of Christmas Fun

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The magic of music plus the magic of engineering:

I just wanted to say to everyone: thank you so much for stopping by my blog this Christmas season.  Merry Christmas! – It’s not just a generic seasonal utterance, it’s a heartfelt wish.  I hope everyone has a wonderful Christmas.