Author: David Schwarm

  • this game is the worst

    Recap

    Phandalin and Below: The Shattered Obelisk live from Alakazam Comics in Irvine, CA, continues this week with the return to Phandalin, only to discover that a new group of goblins has been terrorizing the town, kidnapping a large number of individuals and destroying local landmarks.

    Characters

    Brian – Calypso – Fairy Druid/Barbarian
    Cody – Zachtos the Wizard/Cleric
    David – Garner – Gnome Bard (lexicographer and logographer)
    Dylan – Ramen the Wizard
    Glenn – Tiefling Warlock
    Henry – Elf scum
    Taylor – Mushroom Fighter

    Not there

    Louis – Bugbear Assassin
    Mike – Half-Orc Paladin

    RIP

    Brian – Artemons Linktorious Lantimourous

  • compulsive

    compulsive /kəmˈpʌlsɪv /
    ▸ adjective 1 resulting from or relating to an irresistible urge: compulsive eating. ▫ (of a person) acting as a result of an irresistible urge: a compulsive liar.

    2 irresistibly interesting or exciting; compelling: this play is compulsive viewing.

    – DERIVATIVES compulsiveness noun.
    – ORIGIN late 16th century (in the sense ‘compulsory’): from medieval Latin compulsivus, from compuls- ‘driven, forced’, from the verb compellere (see compel). compulsive (sense 1 of the adjective) (originally a term in psychology) dates from the early 20th century.

  • master class billy child session three

    poem

    Balled glove on rock with yellow moss

    Mundane walk to the mailbox is its own reward.
    The gloves are blue the moss is yellow.
    Suburban winter evaporation in the shadows
    Before the mailbox opens, I decide to buy a yellow scarf to match the red socks of summer I do not own.
    Balled gloves on a moss covered rock.
    The mossy rock was placed there in the slicing shade by a landscape engineering firm founded the year I graduated high school.

    chapter 03

    billy collins
    DISCOVERING THE SUBJECT
    “There’s no chronology involved in poetry. You can go anywhere. You can be anywhere. You can fly.”

    Writing exercise

    Every literary age comes with its own understanding of what is the appropriate subject matter for poetry. In the Elizabethan period, the dominant subject was romantic or courtly love. In the age of the English Romantic poets, you were supposed to write about nature. Poetry advances when these rules of accept-ability are violated. Think about Walt Whitman: when he should have been writing about nature, he wrote about machinery. Thom Gunn wrote a poem about Elvis Presley when pop stars were not considered appropriate for poetry. Both poets violated the literary decorum of their time. In choosing what to write about, nothing is too trivial. Don’t censor yourself. Don’t feel that you have to be serious, or even sincere. You can be playful, even sarcastic in your poems. Think of a subject that may seem outside of today’s literary decorum and write a poem about it.

    Writing exercise

    Choose an object close by—whether you’re in an office or a kitchen, a park or a library—and describe it. Start with a description of this object and see what it opens up for you. Does it evoke personal memories, have cultural implications, or elicit an emotion? Write a
    poem that starts with this object, then leads the reader into the more personal memory.

    Writing exercise

    Make my hand-of-cards analogy concrete. Think of a topic. Take ten blank flash cards and on one side of each flash card, write a line about this topic. Use a mixture of emotional detail, concrete detail, and images when writing these lines. Now, put all these cards face down in front of you. Now turn five of these cards over, face-up. What kind of poem is this? What questions remain? Experiment with which five cards should be turned up in order to create a poem that is both mysterious and clear enough for the emotions to be anchored.

    WORKING WITH FORM

    “What you have to do in
    your poetry is tell a little
    white lie. Harmless, but it’s
    a lie. And the lie is that you
    love poetry more than you
    love yourself.”

    Writing Exercise

    Go on a walk and bring your notebook. Look around
    and take down some observations on the external
    stimuli around you—a tree, a person, a neighborhood,
    a pool. See if you can begin a poem by using some of
    these external elements. Once you’ve got the poem
    underway, have you made a decision about what your
    stanzas will look like? Will you use enjambment or will
    you use punctuation? Do you want the poem to go
    slowly or faster? Do you want to use long sentences or
    short?

    Reading Exercise

    There are two major things poets can learn from the
    short stories of Anton Chekhov. One is the use of
    very specific detail—the particulars of experience—to
    keep the story anchored to external reality. So too can
    poets use detail to anchor a poem. The other is the
    use of inconclusive or “soft” endings. Chekhov does
    not solve problems for the characters. Similarly, the
    endings of poems do not need to resolve things. A soft
    ending—when a poem just ends in an image—can work.
    Read a short story or two by Anton Chekhov,
    keeping an eye for those literary techniques that you
    can apply to your poems. “Misery” and “The Lady with
    the Lap Dog” are highly recommended.

    Writing Exercise

    Write a few lines setting a scene that is easy to accept.
    Think about the example of snow on pine trees or a
    dog lying under a hammock. Establish a scene of your
    own. Then have your poem take a twist. Take your
    reader and yourself somewhere very different—spatially
    or thematically—from your original scene.

    Writing Exercise

    Think about the stanzas as various “rooms” in the
    house of the poem. Imagine that the poet is taking
    readers through various rooms in a tour of a house.
    Now, read one of your own poems and look at the
    stanzas: in the margins of your poem, write down what
    each stanza or “room” is revealing.

  • Frogs

    Frogs

    3/9 or 2/24 for next film festival
    abandonment issues
    Addressed move forward
    After Yang #Movie
    Ambidextrous
    Attendee – Henry
    Attendee – James
    Attendee – Jeff
    Attendee – Kevin
    Attendee – Lydia
    Attendee – Madox
    Attendee – Mike
    Attendee – Scott
    Attendee – Tina
    Back in parking
    Be more direct
    Competition


    DevOps vs DevSecOps
    Direct result of helping others
    Dive deeper into helping others
    Dump salsa on top
    Friends don’t lie
    Hawaii that is popular
    How are you doing
    Jealously
    Jeff @ Amazon
    Jeffery @ Hawaii
    June Birthday Call
    Just do solar
    Just shit on the clock
    Lydia is sexier
    Never get laid again service to other people
    Package may have been lost
    Pause and look back
    Rewind time
    Scott asked the question much like alcohol what solution do you use that is killing you
    Solstice vs Equinox
    Space trash intern
    Stalking may be helpful
    Techno Sapiens
    The view seat the topic for the drawing
    Tornado vs Hurricane
    Where as
    Where is my baby
    White Witch
    Witch
    Wizard of Oz #Movie
    Write a letter
    You would be more pissed off it i said it that way
    Y U

  • Snake in a Lake

    Recap

    Phandalin and Below: The Shattered Obelisk live from Alakazam Comics in Irvine, CA, continues this week with the show down with Nezznar the Black Spider in Wave Echo Cave. After an apparent success Brian runs head first into four bug bears who kill him dead! Artemons Linktorious Lantimourous is our first kill.

    Characters

    Cody – Zachtos the Wizard/Cleric
    David – Garner – Gnome Bard (lexicographer and logographer)
    Dylan – Ramen the Wizard
    Glenn – Elf scum
    Henry – Elf scum
    Louis – Bugbear Assassin
    Mike – Half-Orc Paladin

    Not there

    Taylor – Mushroom Fighter

    RIP

    Brian – Artemons Linktorious Lantimourous

    Treasury

    https://go.retable.io/viewkMaldpkXCKMTEpQp
    482.55 gold
    plus the Dragon encounter
    minus Cody’s Fantasy Costco burn

    Magic

    Unclaimed items are in the bag of holding.

    Access bag Shattered on extradimension.al

    https://extradimension.al/bag/WDDT-4CET?ref=1 pass: O6Lisk

    Cody

    +1 Ring of Protection
    Staff of Defense

    David

    Bag of Holding
    Books
    Octopus Beak
    Boots of Striding and Springing

    Dylan

    +1 Breast Plate
    +1 Cloak of Protection
    Staff of the Spider
    Wand of Fireballs

    Mike

    +1 Mace
    Battle Axe
    Gauntlets of Ogre Power
    Wand of Magic Missile

    Taylor

    +1 Longsword

    Unclaimed

    Child
    Dwarven Brandy
    Key to Hideout Doors
    Octopus Ink
    Potion – Climbing
    Potion – Growth
    Potion – Healing
    Potion – Invisibility
    Scroll – Darkness
    Scroll – Fireball
    Scroll – Hold Person
    Scroll – Lightening Bolt
    Scroll – Misty Step
    Scroll – Revify
    Scroll – Silence
    Vial of Dragon Bile
    Vial of Mercury
    Vile of Nightshade
    Women – Widow

    Summary

    Phandalin and Below: The Shattered Obelisk is a D&D adventure that expands on the Lost Mine of Phandelver campaign. In the Lost Mine of Phandelver adventure, characters plunge into Wave Echo Cave to fight against a mastermind.  In the past, human spellcasters, dwarves, and gnomes fought to defend the cave from a battle of magic. The battle destroyed much of the cave, and few survived.  After the attack in 951 DR, the caverns are home to monstrous creatures such as skeletons, zombies, and gricks. 

    The cave contains an ancient magical structure called the Spell Forge, which can infuse mundane items with magic.

    There is a massive overview of the encounter on cros.land’s DM’s Guide to Wave Echo Cave (https://cros.land/2021/07/a-dms-guide-to-wave-echo-cave/) with great advice on how to run the adventure