Bohemian Rhapsody and the Tears of Memory

Yesterday, the wife and I finally got our chance to see “Bohemian Rhapsody” on the big screen and the experience was overwhelming.

In the back of my mind, I thought of the words of my soon-to-be 20-year-old, saying this movie was the closest she ever would come to seeing Live Aid.

And yes, given the choice, I’d happily watch a YouTube of the performance with the full theater Dolby effects in play as Freddie Mercury owned the stage and, likely, large portions of the world that day.

I remember watching Live Aid, staying up past midnight (not a hard chore at 16) to watch the Australian performances – Midnight Oil, of course, but also something called the Electric Pandas. Funny what we remember.

Then a little bit of sleep before Wembley. There were multiple other performances but the one that stuck, the only one that stuck, was Queen. How could it not? Imagine what the emotion would have been had I, in those Internet-less days, had known Freddie Mercury was dying?

No matter. The point is, watching that recreation on the big screen, with the added energy provided by brilliant cinematography … I was moved to tears. The tears of memory. It was all I could do to not raise my own arms for Radio Gaga and sing every word every song …

If I’m honest, I can’t tell you the last time I cried at the movies. For that matter, there’s a decent chance it never has happened.

But it did yesterday. So thank you, Rami Malek. Thank you to everyone who was involved in the project. Thank you Brian May, John Deacon and Roger Taylor.

And thank you, Freddie. Someone still loves you.

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The Mind’s All A-Jumbled

Social media was such a simple concept way back when I sold real estate for a living full time. There only were a few dozen of us real estate blogging nerds and all we needed to know was how to write and how to add Technorati tags.

Now I’m trying to find the time to balance this website along with the virtually mandatory Facebook page and Instagram account, keeping content moving along on all of them. And, at the same time, trying to write additional novels.

It’s enough to leave one mind bottled, as Chaz Michael would put it.

Today’s dilemma – continue writing the paranormal thriller I’ve begun or heed my readers’ call for a sequel to Where the Campaign Ends. Further the stories of characters that already have captured people’s hearts or develop new characters.

I’ve got some rough ideas of where a sequel could go, but nothing beyond the “scribbling notes on a yellow pad” phase.

All of this makes me wonders how those authors who churn out a new novel every two months pull it off with such ease.

Back to Scrivener for some more writing …

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