I'm 61

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Oct 21, 2012
Messages
17
Reaction score
0
    1. Probably mostly kids here. But, there is a long-history that a true stoner needs to understand. Some of it you won't like. I saw the Amsterdam thread. Do you know who Rodger Belknap is? Wikipedia Do you know what it's like to work 16 or more hours a day with a hit every know an then to keep you going as you try to change governmental practices. Maybe all you think about stoner is Woodstock -- I heard Jimi's Star Spangled Banner. We all worked hard. Most of us were successful in our own ways -- we don't draw foodstamps.

      I'm a therapist in a children's mental health program. Many of the kids that I meet who want to be "stoners" are actually self-medicating for ADHD, Bipolar Disorder, depression, trauma victims, like sexually abused children .... While a temporary "fix" for some, that's not what weed is for. Just like Rodger, I live in West Virginia where a large part of our local economies depend on home grown.

      I started writing and created a project: lawydawnadventures. After 3 short stories, a novel is now available as an ebook, paperback, or hardback. If you want to learn the most important micronutrient for outdoor growing, you will have to read it. I'm afraid to tell you its name, but it you Google around you will find it. It starts tragic, addressess medicinal use, but is laugh-out-loud funny and helps survivals of trauma. Author proceeds are donated to prevent child abuse. Yes, I'm still working on causes, Stoners, and recommend that you do also. It is part of our history if you are real. If any of you have skills in promoting this cause, figure out who you are, take a hit, and get to work.
 
What a condensending A$$clown.

And your a therapist? Poor Kids.
 
Hey Hal,
Lets go draw some food stamps-I can draw real good ones-lol
jimi who????-lmao

:48:

ODF
 
Sad when someone assumes that anyone interested in herb must be a youngster. And I've never seen a teenager who wanted to "become a stoner". Met lots of them who liked to get high though. Like me 30-40 years ago...

Then again, maybe I got so stoned that I forgot that I aged? Holy milk cow - maybe I am still actually 17 and just have been REALLY high for a long time? Bet I need a metal health professional. Know where I can find a rational one?
 
What the helll was that? You make a lot of assumptions there pal. Still smells like SPAM. You can leave through the same door you came in.
 
He is spamming several sites with his drivel:rolleyes:
 
Can't imagine having nothing better to do than to go around spamming forums.
 
Way to make sales...insulting your potential market,
from a 61 year old.
 
I assumed that I couldn't name the title of my novel; on grass city it is mostly kids, sorry if I offended anybody.
 
Tomorrow will hit 78 and have never felt younger than a stoned teen-ager. My gal is a lot younger and she has a 4 years old daughter which I love to spoil So you young squirts that are still wet behind the ears enjoy every day because it could be your last. This is one hell of a good site and will have to get a picture on it to go along and fitting my age. Keep up the good work.
 
Hey, i'm 63 -- retired English teacher -- if you can't put three paragraphs together that make sense and are readable, how on Earth could you write a book? I wouldn't read it if you gave it to me. On another note: Kids get high for the same reason adults get high -- because it feels good. Kids do not have to have some kind of mental problem to want to self-medicate, all they have to do is look around and realize how people like you have screwed up this planet. Put your book where the sun don't shine and take your spam elsewhere -- we are really not interested.

Peace
 
HemperFi,
As a former English teacher, perhaps you aspire to write commercially. It's nothing like I expected when I started this project.

At 62 (wish I could retire now but Medicare doesn't kick in until 65, maybe 66, and I have skin cancer, so I need insurance), you have time. I followed "instructions" by the "Gods in Cyberspace" (reference to my first short story in "Wingspan Quarterly."

The writing experts usually want to suck novices into intensive and costly training programs. It's your choice, of course, but if you want to get published, I didn't find any reliable outcome data that these programs were helpful. They seemed more social -- members with a common interest shooting the sh...

I didn't pay any money to be trained in the literary marketplace. Nevertheless, as the sites recommended by the experts, three short stories were published in print magazines before I submitted queries to Houses that published books. I first established a small "name." "Traditional" experts seemed to have a bias against e-magazines and discounted publication in these. Therefore, I stayed away from submitting to e-magazines, although one of my stories was reprinted with permission in one.

Next, I learned that one earns no respect by self-publishing. Amazon and other companies have started self-publishing companies. Since it takes at least several months to get a reply from a traditional House, self-publishing can be tempting -- they can charge you a lot of money depending on the "option" that you choose. If you have, or develop, an interest in writing, my recommendation is to stay away from self-publishing. It is the kiss of death if you ever want anything that you write to receive future serious consideration outside self-publishing. However, after you are established (and I've got a long way to go before getting there) on-line articles, commentary, etc., can be profitable and meaningful.

The next step recommended by the "experts" was independent professional editing. My first and only novel so far (a sequel is almost finished if I can get this novel to fruition) was edited twice. The first edit was by the Director of Acquisitions for the University of Michigan. She sent me back a ton of paper with symbols in the margins and between lines that I had to learn how to read by looking them up on the internet. I didn't pay a cent. For personal reasons, she closed down her aspired publication company and I thought that I was almost at the beginning of queries again.

Fortunately, in case you are interested in writing and have not exited to a more exciting post, as also recommended by the "experts" I had joined a group of aspiring writers. These are dangerous groups. First, most members are there to promote their own interests, but this particular group seemed different for reasons that I can't explain. Do not publish your work in draft for critique through one of these groups. Once published, nobody else that counts will touch it, even if the publication was for the purpose of soliciting input from colleagues. Only send in stuff for fun, not something that you have serious hopes for. Anyway, this particular group had a contact with a publisher that was, as it turned out, a perfect fit for me and my interests in fiction. This company, in Leeds, England, had another editor, but the job was easier this time since it was the second professional edit -- less work for me, and I had only a few anxiety attacks.

Next was professional reviews. These seem to mean less now than before cyberspace. Ebooks use a lot of reader reviews after the novel is written, bought and read. But, still following instructions, I instead requested several professional reviews. Since I don't have much money, I only copied and sent out one paper manscript ($40) and was limited to submission requests to publishers by email attachment (some won't accept manuscripts by email, but this is changing). Nevertheless, my novel received lots of glowing reviews, some from once famous science fiction authors. The most authoritative review was by The Missouri Review -- this was a big deal for an author. It also got two great reviews by award winning authors and the first printing was named one of the top ten releases of 2002 by a very reputable outfit. I posted the reviews as I got them and got banned here and there. But I had no money to advertise (another new and growing self publishing industry).

Another thing -- don't sell your story to a strictly ebook company. My novel is available as an ebook, but also as a paperback and hardback (expensive). If the company won't commit to paper, at this time, your work will lose a lot of respect and future reprint potential by the big Houses that put money into promotion (advertising) -- N.Y. Times, etc. Plus, remember, you are competing against the "tried and true" same ol' sh** that has made them money for decades -- Batman, Spiderman, Frankenstein, etc. There is almost no new and original literature or films introduced to the public in this generation's marketplace, in part, because of costs of production. Creativity is a definite devalue for most Houses and rewrites of past successes have a better chance if you can avoid copyright issues.

Anyway, that's my story about writing and putting two sentences together. It was written since you are a former English teacher and may have time to join the group of aspiring authors. Half of my proceeds have been donated to a nonprofit agency to prevent child abuse. The other half is in an account to advertise the sequel if I ever get that far. Of course, all of you guys smelled me out. What I would have rather posted here would have been the name of my novel and why folks that smoke marijuana would find it particularly enjoyable. Since spam is so frowned upon, I hope that I avoided that straight forward approach this post also.

I do disagree with some of the comments made here about why people smoke marijuana (or drink, or do pills, etc.), based on my own positive and negative experiences and will reply if I don't get banned after this post.
 
Your preaching to the wrong group of people here, to be frank no one here is going to give a damn about your writing career and how long you can ramble on about something so irrelevant in one post
 

Latest posts

Back
Top