Creative NonFiction: The Dream

Intro: In 2015, I wrote down a dream, which I rarely do. Usually they fade minutes after waking up, but this one stayed with me. Dreams are as real as the reality we share, so I consider this creative nonfiction.

The Dream; March 2015

I detest the color orange. Long ago, Mom had painted the kitchen bright orange and pale yellow. We sat together at the breakfast table. Everything was “nice” until the electrical storm. The lights went out. Again. I looked out the window at the muddy grey landscape and wondered, “For how long?”

Mom started pulling empty jars out of the recycling bag and putting them into the lazy susan. She was making another mess, and we needed order. I wrestled her to the ground. Lightning struck and sparks flew past the window. We screamed too loud to hear the thunder. I hugged her like a child and cried because she had lost her mind.


I was in my old blue car driving up the hill when the lights went out again. The town went pitch black. The lights on the dashboard were all I could see. I pressed the gas pedal down, but the car was stuck. I lifted the door handle, but the door wouldn’t open. I couldn’t unlock the lock and I was trapped. The humidity inside began to force me down into my seat. The pressure was building as if invisible hands were pressing down on my chest. It was smothering me, and I couldn’t fight it.

I think I passed out, but I was uncertain. When I woke up, I was lying on the front lawn of our house, and the blue car was parked in the driveway. The sun was rising in the west as I wiped the drool off the side of my chin.


I went outside through the side door. It was minutes before dusk, and I looked up at the soft greyish blue sky. It’s my favorite time when the sky looks depressed. The planets were visible; translucent pastel orbs lined up in a neat row. I held my hand in front of my face and pretended that Jupiter was resting on my palm. It was strange. They were too close to Earth. My neighbors drifted out of their homes, and my sister joined us. In unison, they pointed and stared at the sky. But I sensed something wrong. All the planets were in alignment except Earth. I ran for the side door, grabbing the doorknob. The ground started to contract and expand. The movement increased as the Earth began to breathe on its own.

People lost their footing. Shouting, they were flung into the air, glided across the sky, then fell away from the Earth. Gravity had stopped working. I held tight to the doorknob as my sister grabbed for me. She caught my free hand by two fingers as the ground shook the bones in my body. I needed two hands to open the door. Her gaze was nervous as her eyes widened. She shouted, “Please don’t…”

I let go. Using both hands, I pulled myself into the house. In the kitchen, Mom was trying to open a window. I hurried to stop her, and our fingertips touched. Abruptly, our bodies were pinned flat to the ceiling, surrounded by broken glasses and dirty dishes, as the earth plummeted from its orbit. The freefall held my face firmly against the door of the orange cabinet. I wish I had stayed outside.

My thoughts on writing with AI

Vintage typewriter with text

To err is human, to write is AI.

There’s a divisive split in the writing world on using AI. On one side, writers are concerned that AI will replace them. On the other hand, novices are convinced AI will magically write their bestseller in an hour. Both groups are wrong.

As a ghostwriter, I have used many AI writing apps such as Sudowrite, Novel AI, and Novelcrafter at my clients’ requests. The same clients want complex characters, original stories, and plot points that will hook readers. They also want to write eBooks quickly and efficiently. Well, AI is not a magic wand; it’s a tool. A frustrating, verbose mess of a tool. It reminds me of the fairy knots I get in my hair. Impossible tangles that I can’t ease out with my fingers, and in the end, I have to cut them out. My experience is the same with AI. I try to ease out the bad prose with my keyboard, but in the end, I end up cutting it out.  

When I use AI, I write a detailed outline first to aim for the rough draft I want. The outline has to be detailed in every aspect and nothing is left to chance. And it often has to be repeated because AI has a limited memory. It will cheerfully offer to help, and then a paragraph later make something up because it doesn’t remember what it was asked. It is confidently incorrect. It would be a fun mad-lib experiment to work with the random content if I didn’t have a deadline. 

Using AI is like drawing in a coloring book. I draw the outline, and AI colors it in. If I don’t prompt it, it will scribble all over my drawing in a big black Sharpie. It’s like writing a story with a quill and having an editor review it with crayon. 

Is it all bad? No. But it has limits. I ghostwrite romance that will hit the bestseller chart for a few weeks, never to return. My personal goal is to write my own novel that will have a longer shelf life than a month. Would I use AI for my personal projects? Yes. Grammarly is AI, editing in MS Word is AI, Google Docs is AI. So many people have used it for decades. The difference is in assisting with content and generating it.  

AI won’t write a good book. Not the way a writer would want it. It hallucinates, repeats, loses threads, and has no real understanding of characters’ emotional arcs. How can it describe feelings when it’s never had one? 

But I would encourage commercial writers to experiment with AI even if you don’t plan to publish the results. A concern I have is not knowing AI will lead to more problems for writers, not fewer. Not knowing how to utilize it will make a working writer less competitive than those that do. Clients still want a writer’s creativity, but they also want AI’s speed. AI is useful for grunt work that can take hours to research. I’ve used it to describe landscapes of places I’ve never been but my characters have.

If one knows how to prompt, steer, and revise AI, there are some positives when getting it done matters more than perfection. Besides, AI isn’t going away. Think of it as an overeager intern that you have to patiently explain what to do. Can I do it myself faster? Maybe, but with AI, I’ll never have writer’s block again. 

I have a Claude subscription and use it to do a lot of smaller tasks, especially write email. It helps build my confidence even if it’s only proofreading an email to building management for a pool pass. According to Claude, I am a genius at everything I do. It’s the stage mother I never had in life. It gives me a blue ribbon when I finish last, and in return, I’m teaching it sarcasm. 

Working in commercial fiction, I will continue to learn how to wrangle AI. I like fiddling around with tech, and it’s a new toy. But for my own work, I am setting up an old laptop that will never go online. On the plus side, AI has made me proud of my mistakes because every typo is proof that a human wrote it.

Writing Prompt # 1

A teenager wants to be a witch and practices solitary spells in the woods. Nothing happens in her world, but in another dimension, she is making a mess – plague, famine, floods, and pestilence. A skilled warrior is dispatched to kill her. In order to escape him, she casts a vanishing spell. To her amazement, the spell works. But before she can disappear into thin air, the warrior grabs her by the ankle. They both wake up in a wheat field on planet Earth.

Now what?

  Woman in wheat field. Photo by dezphoto/Depositphotos

Billingsgate Lane

your inner child awaits

You answer the front door of your suburban home. Your inner child is on the doorstep screaming for your attention. The neighbors are watching, so you yank the hysterical child by the arm into the house. You offer it anything and everything to stop its howling.

You raise your voice over the racket. “What do you want?”

“You know what I want!” your inner child screams. Then it kicks you in the shin, runs into the bathroom and locks the door. What to do?

Settle for Effort

The lure of instant gratification


I’m a fan of the artwork of Jenny Holzer and the subreddit fake album cover art. So be patient with me as I post 960 x 960 graphics on my site. Thanks for reading.

What’s Hidden in an Empty Box?

Last spring, Marni discovered a hidden panel above the kitchen door while cleaning her house. Decades of paint had sealed it shut but with effort, she pried it open. Inside, she found a parcel with a plain tag which read, ‘Don’t open until I’m dead.’ Marni tore the lid off the box, and soon after, the hauntings began.

home gothic home (1)

It was unnerved her to hear footsteps clomping around the house in the middle of the night. Doors banged shut when there was no wind. In their bed behind a locked door, Marni tightened her grip around her husband’s upper arm and slipped into a fitful sleep.

Early one morning, Marni came downstairs to a pleasant surprise. Last night’s dirty plates were washed, the laundry from the dryer folded, and her shoes piled neatly by the back door. While she sipped her morning tea, Marni talked happily to the air and detailed that day’s to-do list.

Marni was pleased but her husband was not. He had bags under his eyes and bruises on his arm. He was tired of retrieving his work boots from the basement sink and searching for his car key in the bushes.

They fought over ‘Ghostie.’ He wanted an exorcism; she wanted to declutter. Marni scowled. Without Ghostie, she and she alone would be the only one who picking up his dirty work clothes off the bathroom floor and scrubbing his oily handprints off her cream-colored walls.

The following Saturday, her husband invited the priest to tea. Marni was not pleased with the invitation but she couldn’t be rude. She served refreshments and later, the trio watched in silence as a dirty saucer floated from the table to the sink. The priest leapt off his chair, flung holy water on the walls, and shouted sacred words in Latin.

Marni wept bitterly as Ghostie drifted away through a tunnel of white light. Her satisfied husband patted her on the shoulder and said, “Sometimes, my dear, you’ve got to let people go and live their own afterlife.”


Autumn is my favorite season. Best regards, Madeline.

The Immortals*

THE IMMORTAL (2)

“If you could live forever, would you love forever?”

I put the cup to my lips and took a sip filling my mouth with hot coffee so I wouldn’t have to answer him. I hated the necessity of lying.

“Do you mean would I love you forever?” I asked. The tried and true way to avoid answering a question is to ask another.

“Forever is a very long time but I’d like you to try,” he teased.

I smiled and looked into blue eyes that would fade. Dark hair that would gray then perhaps, fall out. Maybe senility would set in, but physically and emotionally, I would remain the same.

“Then I will try with all my heart,” I reassured him. He held onto my hand as if I would bolt from the cafe.

Sometimes, a small lie is quicker and kinder than the truth. Besides by the time I tire of him, he’ll be dead. Over the centuries, I’ve sat in the same spot by the window trying to explain my condition to other partners who could only comprehend that life leads to death.

I wish for death but to obtain it I would have to fall in love.


*Concept for an upcoming novella.

Moving Day

You move into a newly constructed home, and an elderly gentleman is living upstairs in one of the bedrooms. The bedroom is full of a lifetime of belongings, and it is obvious by the cobwebs and dust that he’s been there a long time.

You don’t recall seeing him or the room during the walk-through. He’s not a ghost; he’s flesh and blood. And he doesn’t intend on leaving because this is his house, not yours. You want to call your lawyer. The kids want to call him ‘Grandpa.’

What to do?

A Moment on the Lips

moon
THINK CHOCOLATE PERSONIFIED*

Every Christmas at my old job, the vendors would send gifts of expensive candy to the staff. Bound with red bows, the ornate gold boxes were visually tempting. The office manager would open a box, and we would admire the abundance of chocolate artfully arranged inside.

I have a dirty little secret. I hate chocolate, especially dark chocolate. But unable to resist, I’d pop a piece into my mouth and hoped that it would be the one to convert me into a lover. Once more, I was disappointed as I tasted the processed cocoa.

“I hate chocolate,” I said to my co-worker as I chewed.

“So stop wasting it,” she replied.


*Image of Ava Gardner from HollywoodTarot.com

 

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