What do I know about immortality?

So here we are, a handful of days following the announcement that I will be part of the creative teams for DC Future State “Immortal Wonder Woman” as well as “Midnighter” and I wanted to share the story about how these things came to be and some reflections regarding them.

At the beginning of 2020, I, like many creators, felt like the future was mine to take. I was to attend several conventions, notably one of my favorites, ECCC in Seattle where I was to meet with a number of upstart publishers that are currently the source of many of your favorite books. I had my foot in the door to work on an IP that is super near and dear to my heart, and I was beginning to think I could wave my hand and make things happen. “Doom Patrol” and our “Tomb of Dracula” story in Marvel’s “Bizarre Adventures” seemed to have captured the imaginations of readers and “Tremor Dose” my OGN at ComiXology Originals was getting more than its share of attention. 2020 was mine to shape and define.

Covid fucked up those plans, as well as the plans of everyone I know. Everything shut down, doors swung closed, and the thing I had spent years of my life striving toward fell into a deep set relief on the wall I had battered myself against. I wasn’t back to square one, but this was a major wound that would take the better part of the year to heal from.

So, I tried to do the thing we all promised ourselves we would do. I made stuff. In the first two months of Covid I made two comics while working on a video game. I was really proud to have done those books but they made it very clear to me that while I had an audience, it wasn’t growing much at all. I spent too much time wondering how one develops and expands an audience. It remains a mystery to me, but I do know that it took a bit of a toll on me creatively. You see, I’m used to this kind of shit. I played music for many years and most of the bands I played with made it RIGHT THERE to the cusp of being something people were aware of. We worked with small labels, toured extensively, recorded out of our pocket, played with bands that would shape the face of music to come and yet… we were always too early or too late, or fate would pull our card and remove us from the equation.

Becky will tell you, I didn’t believe “Doom Patrol” was gonna happen, even after being paid. I’ve been so programmed for disappointment that I figured that surely something would kill the project before it ever made it to the stands. I feared Gerard would decide it didn’t work, or that the editors didn’t want to risk their name on someone like me. When word came that Young Animal and the rest of the imprints over at DC were gonna fold I was gutted. Months had passed and I was sure nothing would come of the work we had done. Thankfully it did happen and I was able to put one up in the win category. That issue of “Doom Patrol” will forever be something that I’m grateful for, it’s quite possibly the moment when I rediscovered my capacity to hope for the best.

I can’t say that hope is always a good thing. Conceptually it works, certainly for folks in dire situations hope is often a critical component to making it through. But sometimes hope will lead to expectation, and expectation is the keystone to entitlement. While I pride myself on being humble (like the most humble, wayyyyy more humble than you could even dream of… so humble it likely deserves an award or a yearly parade), like everyone else I feel like the work I do is often overlooked and marginalized. This leads to bitter feelings and an endless quest to feel seen. I had crossed over to a foul place of feeling like I was due greater attention and more opportunities. I say this in effort to be honest, knowing full well that this is a sickening way to be, but our secret truths are often repugnant and can only be discussed openly when we see how wrong we were.

Hope isn’t the bad guy, but it’s likely to bring along his good homie Ego to the party without asking if it’s cool. Ego will always bring his cousin Disappointment, who in turn will invite his brothers Bitterness and Grief. Before you know it they start bringing in more of their people and what was intended to be a small gathering of good folks turns into the kind of rager that requires the host to secretly call in the cops to break up. We never wanna see the cops, but we don’t want the responsibility of tempering our own feelings and expectations so we put it in the hands of someone else. Editors, publishers, people who should know who I am because I wrote a hell of an issue!

I felt like I was disappearing. I’ve repeated that a lot over the past few months, a kind of fucked up way of displacing the blame. I had gotten wrapped up in my own expectant glory and was gulping down my own cyanide laced Kool-Aid. I was dumb to do so, I had ignored finding balance and feeling gratitude and had lept into feeling due more.

I share this shame as if I was stomping about with big demands, which isn’t the case. These feelings were internalized and I conducted myself in a more idealized manner. I would share the truth about how blessed I felt, and withhold the parts about wanting more. Facing myself now I understand that this kind of thing is very human and very normal. We are all seekers, even with plenty we want more, an overabundance, and even then we will seek. This is a critical element of abuse and if you don’t have moments of reflection such as this you will never be charitable, understanding, and compassionate. You will become a hoarder of emotions and commodities. You will become a dragon nested on a mountain of ill gained wealth and feelings that have been so tamped down they have become crystalline vestiges of the qualities that you have sacrificed in pursuit of the unattainable.

Do I still strive toward something greater? Of course! It’s fun to chase this vaporous idea of success, even as it changes form and deceives you at every turn. My father is an avid fisherman and he would be the first to tell you that a bass on the line is only a small part of the allure of it. It’s the ritual, the escape, the mystery of what waits in the darkened waters. The good stuff swims deep as David Lynch says, and the good stuff is only good when it’s rare and elusive. This is true in love and life and most certainly with regard to big creative goals.

Months into the Quarantine I was no longer feeling like I could keep it up. I wanted to keep making things but it felt unimportant. In addition to the disease we were seeing all kinds of dramatic and painful things happening day after day. My little dreams didn’t matter. Comics didn’t matter. I didn’t matter. In many ways this still rings true, but I worked to redevelop my relationship with the process and that continues to this very moment.

Out of the blue an email came through from the most unlikely editor. This editor is someone who I thought hated me, or at least saw me as some kind of abscess. The email specifically asked about me and my interest in writing a Midnighter book with Becky.

This was a no brainer of course, YES I am interested in writing Midnighter! I’m no fool, I recognize that Becky is the target here, but goddammit my name was there too… I was asked for! I felt like a polaroid slowly revealing its subject. I had been seen, however vaguely, and I was again visited by Hope. This time I was prepared and demanded that we meet in a public space and I let my loved ones know where I’d be and if I didn’t return to send help.

Immediately I knew what I wanted to do with Midnighter and I think my enthusiasm was appreciated. After a video conference with some of the other Future State teams I felt validated knowing that these ideas had inspired them to connect with us further to tie the pieces together. Not long after this the Goddess herself presented.

When we got asked to do the “Immortal Wonder Woman” book I was more prepared for the good feelings. I was riding high on Midnighter, and I was ready to simply smile and nod and commit to telling the best damn Wonder Woman story I could. It all came together quickly and since completing it I feel confident in saying it is going to shake people to their core. Between the recent work on Midnighter and Wonder Woman I feel like I have made the most of this opportunity and I have been a valuable asset to the team. I cannot wait for y’all to see what we’ve done on both of those books.

After these things come out I don’t expect anything. I hope that people like it. I hope I have done my editors proud, and that we’ve given the readers something worthy of attention. I hope that I find other opportunities as a result, but these are the limits of Hope this time. I have a healthier relationship with it and I feel proud to have killed that greedy nag that it can become. 

I’m one of several newer voices in Future State and I’ve seen some strange things as a result that I would like to comment on in closing. Something that has kind of bothered me is the way people have responded to some of my peers on social media as if they stumbled onto a loose bit of cash tossed down the street by some zephyr beyond their control. This is strange because getting a job is never like winning the lottery, especially in cases such as this. The folks who have contributed to the strange tapestry of Future State have busted their asses off in ways that some cannot imagine. Indeed, maybe some can, because it is this kind of heartache and soul crushing rejection and radio silence and perseverance required that keeps some from pursuing this kind of work. Even in my case as a co-writer, if what I contributed wasn’t up to snuff I would be cut. Plain and simple, this isn’t luck, it’s the product of a lot of sleepless nights, self doubt, and a willingness to walk through fire; and that’s just to get to the dance. We will only know if the pain was worth it when we are done and our self assessment is balanced against the response of the readership and critics. In the meantime we wait and develop stomach issues. We question our own value, right to the core, bypassing the work entirely. If you don’t like what we’ve done it hurts, I don’t care what anyone else says.

That aside, it’s been really neat seeing people get excited for this event. There is so much good stuff going on and it’ll be really thrilling when January and February roll around and the most important ingredient of the creative process is added. You.

…told in 3 parts

This is the first time I have mustered the gumption to sit down and write in the past week, and my spirit has been really damaged by it. I am not typically comfortable writing at home, I have, and I will, but as it currently stands I have no real privacy when I do so. I don’t know why this is a struggle, as cafes and the library don’t offer much there either.

A big part of it is knowing that I’m scared. Most of the writing I do is for the comic book industry, which is very much wounded by the fact that we have to find a new way of getting our stories out there. I felt like I was getting somewhere, and now every publisher is pulling back to see what happens. When this happens the least necessary projects get shelved, and no one is looking for new projects. I feel like I am disappearing.

I know there is a lot that I can be doing right now, but it’s hard to get going, I was operating under the guise of things becoming easier and now it’s going to be awhile before… whatever sense of normalcy can return.

I feel sad venting about this because I know it sounds silly, given that lives hang in the balance, and people are at risk of illness, and the economic strain of lack of work- but this is my blog so allow me to indulge in sharing my piece.

I. The Virus of Self Doubt

The biggest fear I have is giving up, but I’m also a person who has chased really hard goals my whole life and I can’t help but imagine if my life would feel better if I would just submit. I have long seen this as among my greatest strengths, but I have quit before, so it wouldn’t be entirely out of character either. Sometimes giving in/up is the best play.

I’ve always said that if I was stricken with a horrible affliction that I would press on, knowing that something is better than nothing, and that happiness and wellbeing are on a sliding scale. Now that I am older and I have seen folks struggle with terminal illness, I know there is some real grace in allowing the end to be on your own terms and not to draw out painful inevitabilities. Quality of life is something we take for granted when we are well, and when you see someone stripped of that it puts it in a whole new light and makes it very clear that it’s easy to make such statements from a place of health.

I don’t think my dreams are terminal at this point, but they are certainly in intensive care. The fact that I’m writing this (or anything at all) is a testament to my will and desire to proceed. I’m trying not to feel like someone who gave it a good shot, and trying to focus on the fact that the game is still afoot, the ball is in the air, and that the distance from whatever I seek is not becoming any greater. I am still in charge of my creative life and how I use my time, I just have to adjust my expectations.

I suspect that I’m not alone in these fears, I suspect there are many just like me. I’m sure others are better adjusted, or struggling more, but the fact remains, this is how I see it. I don’t pity myself, it just makes me sad to see that the wall I have struggled so hard against can heal. This evil virus has crept into all of our lives in one way or another, in mine it comes as mortar. It mends the holes, it reinforces the cracks, and I can only stare on from a distance and hope I can rally enough insanity to continue to drive myself into it, heart first.

II. The Comedy of Existence

Our refrigerator shit the bed on day 1. We were supposed to stock up on supplies and cloister ourselves away, but without the magic box we had been living on rice and potatoes for too long. Our landlord kinda failed to do anything about it, so finally Becky and I decided that we needed to risk exposure and get some fucking vegetables. So, we grabbed bags and walked the 2 miles to the nearest grocery store (our cars both died, that’s another story). The walk there was fine as expected, but Austin decided to take a turn for the tropical, so conditions were less than comfortable. Becky and I spoke on the way about some of my fears and she did a fine job of not trying to console me. She knows sometimes it’s best just to let me blow it out without trying to offer any comforting talk, my powers of negativity are strong and I can always find the hole in such niceties when I’m blue. 

Once we reached the store we found that the line to enter was about a quarter mile long, a Black Friday line of folks mandated to stand 6 feet from each other. I was happy to comply, but some septuagenarian behind me saw fit to stand closely as he normally would while he scoffed at such things on the phone. 

“Can you believe it, they want us to stand 6 feet apart!” He said, loudly, I swear I could feel his breath on my neck.

Finally someone tending the line advised that the man provide 6 feet, to which the man responded laughingly and counted out 6 feet from me exactly, his starting point coming in the form of him pushing his backside directly into me like an NBA player. Even after his comedic act he continued to encroach on me until the tender reminded him to provide space. The man laughed, a snicker really, and started to protest when I lost my cool.

“This is for people’s safety dude, give us some fuckin’ space!” 

At this point I was ready for war. The man said no more and provided the space suggested without protest. While all of this was going on another older person rolled by in a powerchair loudly saying something about how ridiculous this whole thing was. He apparently would like a packed store, rather than staggering admittance, potentially exposing us all to a more dangerous situation than we were already in.

As I type this a friend just texted to tell me about a church group down from her house ignoring the “shelter in place” order. They are gathered in the parking lot of a local hospital holding hands, praying for the disease to go away.

III. Life Uh- Finds A Way

Who do we blame? A virus is an incomplete thing, very strange really, it needs to complete its biology. We surely can’t blame the virus for that, it is its way. One day, if we insist on holding hands and singing Kumbaya they may inherit the Earth.

We could blame the Chinese right? Our leader, a leader elected by your fucking neighbors, those same people who don’t get what all the hubbub is, they certainly would love to blame the Chinese. They’ve never been to China, and they don’t wanna go, they don’t wanna see the humanity in the Chinese because to do so might mean some real tough thoughts. Like the thoughts about how we as Americans exploit them routinely. Like how (for many of them) their children’s dreams are limited. Like how we are wildly privileged and for some of us our concerns are about not being able to get money for writing comic books… boo fucking hoo… these are tough things to think about. I’m tempted to do some research and share some statistics here, but honestly I’ve got all the sadness I need right now. It isn’t a Chinese Virus, it’s something that humans can get, full stop.

I have no science to back this up, but I have a sneaking suspicion that it is a combination of factors.

Overpopulation

The Meat Industry

Overpopulation is a no brainer… more humans travelling all over, we carry shit home, home is in cities, it goes quick. The meat industry thing goes to my belief that all the gallons and gallons of antibiotics we pump into livestock has created a virus with the capacity to live, against the odds. Like I say, I have no real science here, just a random but insanely accurate stab in the dark.

For years we have heard about antibiotics being over prescribed etc. but the real monster is out there in “fields” with the cattle, chicken, pigs, etc that are being raised for slaughter. This may be where the virus found its power, its strength to live on, like I say this is a guess.

Doomsday killed Superman on November 18, 1992. Here is just a touch of Doomsdays origin~ maybe it’ll sound a bit familiar…

Originally known as “The Ultimate”, Doomsday was born in prehistoric times on Krypton, long before the humanoid Kryptonian race gained dominance over the planet about 250,000 years ago. It was at that time a violent, hellish world, where only the absolute strongest of creatures could survive.[4][5] In a cruel experiment involving evolution, intended to create the perfect living being, the alien scientist Bertron released a humanoid infant (born in vitro in a lab) onto the surface of the planet, where he was promptly killed by the harsh environment. The baby’s remains were collected and used to clone a stronger version. This process was repeated over and over for decades as a form of accelerated natural evolution. The agony of these repeated deaths was recorded in his genes, driving the creature to hate all life.

Thank you Wikipedia. 

You tell me, does this sound familiar? If my guess is at all accurate we created this thing, through our own consumption, and now we have to make it right. 

We have to be more thoughtful in the future. We can’t scoff at people TRYING… the people in line trying to be safe… those might be the tree huggers (still ok), the do gooders, the save the environment types, the gender equality folks, the free healthcare folks, the people who want to be better. We need more Supermen (and absolutely more Superwomen and Superpeople) if we’re gonna beat this. We have to adjust for a time, get this thing locked away, and most importantly we have to understand that it’s still down there, locked away in the lab. It’ll break out if we are careless. We MUST make better choices or you may as well pack it in. This is not the quality of life we deserve, we need to look at the ugly truth and do the little we can every day to be able to not have to hide our eyes anymore.

Stay safe, consider those who are more at risk, and don’t play too many video games. (Been playing Witcher like crazy… See what you did to me!)