All posts by Robin

I'm a woman in my early thirties living in North Carolina, USA, and I have a lot of varied interests; I love creative writing, music composition, web design, surfing the Internet, thinking out loud, and gaming. And yes, my glasses are crooked. :)

What Do I Write About?

“It’s perfectly fine to try my hand at writing,” you might say, “but I have no idea what to write ABOUT.”

Subject matter is important when you’re writing, whether you’re writing creatively or informatively. But you cannot let yourself get hung up on subject matter and stop writing completely. If you stop writing because you feel you don’t know what to write next, you risk hindering your creativity permanently–first, you’re afraid you don’t know anything to write about and you stop, and next, you’re afraid to start up again because it’s been so long since you tried, and so on.

So, how can you decide what to write about? The following blog article delves into the various ways:

Write About Your Life

No one can tell all that there is to know about your life except you. You are the one who has had the first-person experiences you have. Whether they are funny anecdotes, sad memories, wild and crazy tales, or even just small, wistful moments, they are YOUR stories, and they ARE worth writing about.

Why are your personal stories worth writing about? Because when you share about your life, you are sharing a story that could inspire someone else to get through a similar situation he or she is going through. Humans are social creatures, after all, and we like to know that we’re not alone in whatever tough or strange situation we get into. That’s why social media is so big right now–it’s suddenly very easy to uplift each other by sharing about our own experiences. When you write about your life, whether you choose to make it a Facebook status, a Twitter message, a blog article, or an email to someone else, you are taking time to reach out to someone else and tell them “Hey, I went through this, too. I understand.”

Write About One of Your Passions

It’s darned near impossible to write about something if you could give a flying flip about the subject matter. If you want to write something to interest your audience, write about something that you love–your very passion for it will draw others in.

Take this blog as an example. I write about six subjects I love, all week, every week (giving myself time off on Sundays, of course), and I have passion for each one. Because I love each of the subjects I write about, I’ve taken time to become more knowledgeable about each one, and I can write about being thoroughly involved in each subject’s activities.

Writing about things I’m passionate about even entered my schoolwork once–I was giving a presentation in one of my graduate English classes, which was part of my huge final project. I was covering how girls fare in education, and at one point, I covered a sub-topic about girls and gaming, which is becoming much more popular as more girls feel “normal” playing video games. After the presentation was over, the professor and several students commented that most of my presentation was delivered in a rather flat way, but that they were really interested to hear about the “girls and gaming” segment because I looked so much more lively and so much more interested in what I was talking about. I ended up making the “gaming girls” segment into my major final project, and I had a whole lot more fun writing about that than I had had working on the other, larger-topic presentation.

Whatever your passion is, whatever you love doing, seeing, or being involved in, that can be a source for your writing. Don’t worry about it, thinking “But no one else will find this interesting”–remember, in this age of the Internet, there are bound to be people who will find your digital writing VERY interesting!

Write About A Subject that Gets No Attention and Needs It

This is how social activism and social projects get started. From well-established groups like MADD all the way down to growing projects like Freecycle, these projects all began with someone talking and writing about a subject that had gotten very little attention and needed it. Whatever subject or issue you firmly believe in, whatever has gotten your attention and keeps you awake at night, write about it. The very act of communicating about it can start the social ball rolling and fix the problem, raise awareness, or just help people come together and share their personal stories with each other.

This doesn’t have to be for just solving problems, either–this can be about happy events, such as a new group of local moms working together to help each other with kids, or a new chapter of a family-friendly social group starting up in your area. Whatever you need to advertise about, tell others about, your writing can be a powerful, personal voice for that topic.

Summary

Writing does not have to be frightening–in fact, writing can be incredibly freeing for your mental “voice,” your thoughts, feelings, and dreams. I know I can say a lot more through writing than I ever could by speaking–I’d stammer and chase too many topic rabbits, while my writing voice flows as smoothly as water. I hope these three tips about choosing a subject matter help you figure out where YOUR voice belongs…and I hope it inspires you to start or continue your written communication with the world.

What You’ll Wish You’d Known, Street Art of 2010, Sweet Book Nook, and How Many People Think Firefox Rules

What You’ll Wish You’d Known
An essay on staying motivated, not bending to just what other people tell you to, and constantly being curious. Originally written to high school students, but it’s really for everyone!

Street Art of 2010
Some of the coolest street art found anywhere in 2010.

Cozy Book Nook
This thing is a combo of “comfortable place to read” and bookcase! :O

Browser Market Shares
See a colorful circular visualization of how many people used different browser types going all the way back to 2002! You can see the expansion of Firefox across the web… 🙂

When Gaming Has Become Un-fun

It’s slowly been happening, over the course of the last year and a half. Gradually, my weekend trips to the gaming shop my boyfriend and I frequent have become more work and less play. At first, I thought I was just being annoyed by some of the people who go there, but it’s not that. Disturbingly, it seems I’ve lost interest in playing many of the games I used to enjoy.

When I had my laptop with me at the shop, I could use it as a “shield” from all the bothersome conversations; I didn’t have to sit there thinking, “Do we REALLY have to spend 5 hours doing nothing but discussing new Magic cards? Do we REALLY need a long and involved discussion over dinner about the new HeroClix set?” I could surf the Internet in relative peace, doing what I really wanted to do (blogging, Facebook, surfing sites I never get to see over dialup), instead of being immersed in this gaming culture that I increasingly felt outclassed in. Now that my laptop baby is in the shop (and has been for almost two months), the situation’s scabbed top layer has peeled back, revealing a deep resentment and no small amount of anger about it.

My frustration with gaming (and my apparent loss of interest in it) is frightening and strange to me. This is an activity I used to enjoy greatly with friends and my boyfriend–in fact, my boyfriend and I bonded over HeroClix and Magic. Now, I find it useless to even play anymore; I know what’s going to happen as soon as I choose one of my Magic decks and he chooses one of his. It seems pointless to play. Same with HeroClix…I feel like I don’t have enough mental energy for the strategy required anymore, and even if I did, everyone would be using all the new “hot” figures and I’d be swept off the board before 5 rounds had passed.

It’s like I’ve lost my gaming mojo. Pardon the Austin-Powers-ism, but there it is. This activity, which I used to take such pride in and such pleasure in, is now almost worthless to me. I’ve suffered depression enough times in my life to know that “loss of interest in favorite activities” is a hallmark, but I don’t feel depressed in any other aspect of my life. Just gaming.

Since I at least have a passing knowledge of psychology, I sought to delve into this problem, and I came up with a few possible explanations for this:

  • I am female and the rest of the gaming crew is male
  • The current gaming crew is more cutthroat and competitive than my old gaming crew
  • Every weekend, I have to “share” my boyfriend with these competitive guys and I get almost no quality time with him
  • The old gaming crew has splintered apart, with most of them becoming competitive jerks like the current crew
  • With all the new expansion sets coming out in both games, I feel beaten before I even begin a game
  • I don’t feel like I’m friends with anybody in the current gaming crew
  • I can’t be my whole self with any of the current gaming crew because no one there cares about my writing, my music, my church activities, etc.

Let’s delve into each of these reasons, just a bit.

I am female and the rest of the gaming crew is male

I am bewildered at how much this bugs me. It never used to–I always got along better with guys than girls when I was growing up, and I never was particularly “girly” in terms of fashion and gossip. But I am an adult woman now, an adult woman with very few female friends left in my home state, and I find myself suddenly more isolated from “girl talk” than I realized. Most of my female friends have already “grown up”; gotten married, had babies, gotten jobs, etc. And here I am, still playing in the sandbox with the boys. The boys might be okay with a girl in their midst, but I increasingly feel that it’s not “my place” anymore, as bad as I want it to be. What began as a great way to spend my Saturdays is now the worst day of the week because I don’t feel like I fit in.

The current gaming crew is more cutthroat and competitive than my old gaming crew

When our old gaming shop closed, it seems, the old casual gaming crew went with it–we all went our separate ways for a few years. In the interim, we began attending a shop in another county, another city, with all new players. All was well and good for my boyfriend, who has a great love for games and blends in well with the other players because he knows rules better than anyone else. I, however, did not feel as though I had a place, because my casual style of play was simply outclassed by the competitive styles preferred by the “new” crew. I don’t like 5-turn defeats and alpha strikes, but I’m forced to play against these types of strategies just to ward off the painful boredom of sitting and watching.

Every weekend, I have to “share” my boyfriend with the new competitive crew and I get almost no quality time with him

This is a pretty big beef I have. We’ve been going out 3 1/2 years, and some Saturdays I feel more like a glorified taxi driving him up to the shop rather than an active participant once I get there. He tries to engage me in games, but more often than not he’s called away from our game to answer a rules question in another game, or he ends up talking strategy or new expansion sets with some of the other guys and it leaves me completely out. I feel like I have to “share” my boyfriend with everyone else on Saturdays, when I barely get any real quality time with him during his crazy-busy work week or on Sundays, and it leaves me feeling cheated. It’s hard to even bring this up with him because I feel like if I complain, then I’m being a typical whiny girlfriend and yanking him away from time with his friends, which I know he needs. But if I don’t complain, then it looks like I’m perfectly happy with the arrangement, which is not the case at all.

The old gaming crew has splintered apart, with most of them becoming competitive jerks like the current crew

I used to love playing with the old crew because we just HAD FUN–we weren’t trying to one-up each other all the time, or win money, or gain any kind of prestige. Now, at least 2 of our former number are always talking “best strategies to win tournaments” and playing like they’re in competitions all the time instead of playing against friends. There’s only one of the old crew I still even talk to like a friend anymore, because the others have become strangers to me. We all grew apart, I guess, and I find myself more nostalgic and wistful for what has been lost rather than trying to build anything new, because it just won’t compare.

With all the new expansion sets coming out in both games, I feel beaten before I even begin a game

I don’t play Standard format in Magic, and I don’t play Modern Age in HeroClix. Most of my cards and figures come from Vintage format and Golden Age…which singles me out among the players at the new shop. My strategies, therefore, don’t match up to a lot of the “new hotness” that is being produced by both game companies. I’m not drooling over the latest 13-attack Clix figure, nor do I care about the latest monstrous Infect creature that’s starring in all the Poison Counter Magic decks. I just want to play MY strategies, the ones I made up MYSELF, not something I got off the internet. But my strategies are not good enough to beat Tier 1 strategies, and like I said, I feel beaten before I even begin a game these days.

I don’t feel like I’m friends with anybody in the current gaming crew

Because I have withdrawn from the current crew’s gaming scene, I feel like I can’t get close to anyone. I desperately would like to make friends with them, even just to chat about random stuff, but no one seems to bother with talking about anything that doesn’t have to do with competitive Magic or HeroClix, etc. I feel hamstrung; I don’t always WANT to talk about gaming stuff because it’s become a smaller and smaller portion of my life, but what do I have in common with these guys otherwise?

I can’t be my whole self with any of the current gaming crew because no one there cares about my writing, my music, my church activities, etc.

I am much more than the sum of my games. But you’d never know that if you saw me at the gaming shop. I feel unable to talk about anything but games (see previous subheading), even though I have tentatively tried to broach other topics a few times. I have tried to share my poetry, my music, my church activities, the fact that I’m writing a novel, and tons more stuff about me, but no one seems interested. My forum threads are stillborn; no one is interested in me, and thus, I find myself less and less interested in them. How can I enjoy myself if I’m limited to talking about (or more often, listening to) stuff I don’t find interesting anymore?

A Kind of Summary

One thing’s for sure, this loss of interest in gaming goes much deeper than just hatred of a particular shop, a particular player, or how the games have evolved. It seems as if my very identity is shaken by this. I used to identify myself as a “gamer girl.” Now, I find myself wondering if I even want that label anymore. According to this very blog article, many things have changed in this situation, including myself, and…I am now at a crossroads. I’m sure I’m not the only female to find herself in this situation, but I am powerless to do much about it except write.

Perhaps, by writing this and getting some of these poisonous feelings out, I can find a way to either renew my interest in gaming or withdraw from it completely. After all, gaming is not life…at least, not for me anymore.

God Knows that Sometimes We Just Got Stuff to Do

Mark 2:23-28
23 One Sabbath Jesus was going through the grainfields, and as his disciples walked along, they began to pick some heads of grain. 24 The Pharisees said to him, “Look, why are they doing what is unlawful on the Sabbath?” 25 He answered, “Have you never read what David did when he and his companions were hungry and in need? 26 In the days of Abiathar the high priest, he entered the house of God and ate the consecrated bread, which is lawful only for priests to eat. And he also gave some to his companions.” 27 Then he said to them, “The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. So the Son of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath.”

The disciples in this passage were very hungry and passing through foreign lands, and so they were picking some leftover heads of grain to eat, not having anything else to eat. In Deuteronomy 23:25, God allows for this kind of manual harvest, and in other parts of the Old Testament, God allows for people to harvest from others’ fields as an emergency food supply. So the disciples weren’t doing anything wrong by God’s standards.

However, the observing Pharisees, who have spent their whole lives mired in the letters of each and every Law, are scandalized. Their complaint is that the disciples are reaping grain (i.e., doing work) on the Sabbath, which is strictly not allowed according to the Law. (I read their complaint in verse 24 in the same voice as “Oohhhh! I’m TELLING!” They sound like a bunch of kids whining!)

But Jesus is ready for this criticism with a calm response. He cites the example of David and his companions, who were hungry and in need of emergency supplies, so they ate the holy bread in the temple. This probably scandalizes the Pharisees even more, but Jesus is making an example: when desperate times come, drastic measures have to be taken, and God realizes that. Even if it is holy bread, even if it is the Sabbath, God understands that we gotta eat–He created us, after all. He does not see providing for yourself in the direst of circumstances as a sin, because He knows your individual situation. (He does, however, see senseless robbery and other forms of needless victimization as sins, because those who rob and kill without absolutely needing to are needlessly hurting others.)

Established Christians often worry about “holiness” and acting in “reverent ways,” often to a fault. We can sometimes get so hung up in TRYING to worship and TRYING to stay holy that we forget to worship, or we hold ourselves back from something we really need. God established the Sabbath as a day to recuperate and get back in touch with Him, knowing that we humans need at least some downtime–He didn’t mean for us to stop ourselves from doing things we absolutely have to do. Working on a Sunday morning, for instance, feels especially isolating for a practicing Christian; we feel we’re torn from our worship. But if we’re pulling in a paycheck that our family cannot live without, then God understands that, and we are no less Christian for doing what we have to do to save and preserve our lives and the lives of our family.

It’s not up to us to judge each other for what we choose to do on the Sabbath. God will ultimately deal with us for everything we have chosen to do in our lifetimes. What is important is using the Sabbath for what you need most: worship, rest, and whatever else your life demands of you. The rest of the week is enough of a pain without putting so many regulations on Sunday–which is what Jesus is saying in the last two verses of this passage.

How Can I (or Anybody) Forgive All the Time?

I talk about forgiveness a good bit, but it’s much more difficult than I make it out to be. Sometimes, I pretend to forgive, but I really don’t. When someone hurts me on purpose, I remember it, whether I want to or not, for a long time. Years later, when I meet people who have previously been mean to me, I remember what they did, and it still negatively colors my perception of them. I might be able to carry on a polite conversation, but the horrible memories of their hateful words and actions hang between us like dirty laundry, silent but still fluttering in the breeze.

And I have a feeling I’m not the only one who carries these kinds of feelings.

Silently Unforgiven

When people deliberately hurt me and don’t care that they hurt me, I find it almost impossible to let go of the hurt.

Take the gang of girls in 6th grade who routinely stood on each other’s shoulders in the bathroom to see down into my stall so that they could make fun of my privates and my pooched-out belly, and dumped bathroom trash down on my head while they were at it. And their teasing did not just confine itself to the bathroom–oh, no, they poked me in the back with the sharp ends of pencils in class, slapped my open locker door so that it would hit me in the head, and mocked me so hard about my partially-clad body in the girls’ locker room that I took to changing in the tiny bathroom stall. (Not to say that these girls DIDN’T try to wedge their heads underneath the door so they could see me doing that, too. Ended up having to stuff my gym bag under the door so they couldn’t get under it easily.)

Their daily humiliation tactics are still effective years later–I’m still hunching in shame writing this. And it seemed that most of my teachers were blissfully unaware of this, or they chose to ignore it because I was the “problem kid,” the one who always cried about everything. I never stopped bringing this to their attention, but it took my parents talking to my teachers to get them to see that I wasn’t making this stuff up just to get attention. And even then, the teachers’ solution was to “make me some friends,” allying me with one of my worst enemies in an attempt to keep me from being lonely. They made such halfhearted attempts to understand or rectify the situation that it was laughable, if I could have laughed by then.

If I was commanded to instantly forgive these girls (as God commands us all to forgive), I don’t know if I could, not even 14 years later. I still want to punch every one of them in the face and stomp on their necks for the senseless cruelty they dealt out to a naive 12-year-old who didn’t know how to fight back. I have had vivid, triumphant dreams in which I did just that, letting the weight of my body, which they mercilessly teased me about, crush their throats so that they strangled to death under my feet. That’s how much I still hate all of those girls…

…and I hate myself, for being so evil as to think such things about another human being.

Silently Strangling Myself with Memories

Those mean girls aren’t the only ones I have trouble forgiving, either. Especially in middle school, I had a profound hatred for most of the people I went to school with, because I was verbally and physically abused by many different kids (shoved against lockers, held against the wall and pinched/slapped, picked on for everything from my “high-water” pants to my developing chest and hips). And I got repeatedly told by school authorities to “be more mature” and stop disrupting class with my complaints about being treated this way. All I know is, if this had been done to me in the “real world” and the offenders had been 18 years old, they would have been put on trial and sent to jail. I have a hard time forgiving the students who did this to me, the other kids who just stood around and watched, and the school authorities who refused to believe me and took the word of my tormentors over mine.

I’m probably the only one who still remembers what these people said and did; it lives with me every day. But how can I forget what they did, when it harmed me so much, when it happened at a time that I was very vulnerable?

I forgive the new hurts in my life a little more easily, because any harm I receive these days is usually due to accident rather than malice–we’ve all grown up and become a little nicer to each other, at least most of the time. But the old, malicious hurts, the ones I received while still developing, are almost too scarred to ever return to normal. How can I let go of the bitterness and hurt, when that bitterness and hurt has been incorporated into me, has become part of my story and part of the way I react to certain people?

Speaking, Finally

Acknowledging this gap between false forgiveness (paying it lip service while still feeling bitter) and real forgiveness (truly accepting the other person’s error as just that, an error) is important. Forgiveness, eventually, comes through realizing that people are not just the sum of their errors. One reason I’m so guilt-ridden about the mistakes I’ve made in my own life is because I keep looking at my life as a whole and only seeing the places I messed up–I focus too hard on all my errors, and it makes me have a negative self-image overall. I am not just the sum of my errors, and neither is anybody else.

But just realizing that is not enough to be able to forgive. This hatred, this bitterness and resentment, is old and dried and caked on my spirit. I have lived with it so long that it has become part of me, and excising it will take time. Yes, that gang of 5 or 6 girls made a lot of mistakes when they treated me like that, but I doubt they would have cared if someone had told them it was a mistake. Malice against another person for no good reason is something I don’t understand. Vengeance, angry justice, is something I understand all too well, and it’s something I still hunger for. Forgiveness cannot come if you are still seeking vengeance…believe me, I’ve tried.

Like many people who have trouble forgiving senseless, malicious acts, I don’t understand why I was treated the way I was by so many people, and I will likely have trouble forgiving until I understand. I have tried to reason out why so many of my classmates might have struck out at me this way–possibly jealousy because of my academic record? Possibly personal insecurity just like mine? Possibly trying to climb the social ladder by doing what everybody else was doing–picking on me? But nothing seems to match with the particular brand of outright gleeful cruelty that was dealt out to me by the gang of girls I spoke of. I fear I will never understand why they felt the need to hurt another person who was clearly no threat to them, physically, mentally, or spiritually. By the end of 6th grade I was so bent and broken inside that I often wished I would die in my sleep…and it was largely due to them. I was more of a threat to myself than they were, strictly because I knew hurting or killing someone else was wrong. (Didn’t stop me from thinking about it, a LOT, but I never did it.)

Forgiveness, the Christian Way

I know that to follow God’s will and Jesus’ teachings, I must be able to forgive, not just partially, not just saying the words, but actually doing it. And so, I am praying the following prayer, starting tonight and every night until I can finally forgive:

Lord, you know my feelings about these girls. You know how much I hate them, how much I resent them and regard them with bitterness. Help me lift these terrible feelings away from myself and trust them to You. Help me realize that these girls are humans too, that they might have been suffering too, even though right now I cannot believe that. Work in my heart and help me heal.

Forgiveness, the Christian way, is a daily process, full of backsliding and regaining balance; it’s not a one-time deal at all. If it was, I’d have been done years ago. This may seem silly to pray about something 14 years in the past, but if I’m ever going to feel free of bitterness, I have to do this. It may be the only way to stop feeling strangled with bad memories.

Writing Your “About Me” Page

It always feels a little narcissistic, putting together an “About Me” page. A whole page just about yourself? What do you put in for interest’s sake, and what do you leave out so as not to make it too long? What can you put in safely, and what would get you possibly into identity-theft trouble?

As a webmaster and designer since 2003, I’ve been doing “About Me” pages for my various websites for a number of years, but I’m certainly not the absolute authority on them. I have, however, had a lot of experience with writing, and that has stood me in good stead when creating personal descriptive pages. The following tips are all bits of advice that have helped me over the years.

A Few Do’s

  • Do include some basics.

    Your Internet nickname (possibly first name), your age, gender (if you wish), and the country, state or province you live in is always appropriate for an About Me page. Including your career field and a few hobbies is also interesting for users, since it gives them a small window into what kind of person you are. And a random, small list of a few things you like will further illuminate your personality without being too in-your-face personal.

  • Do format it beautifully.

    Whether you’ve got a long About Me page like I have (heck, mine’s almost an autobiography, LOL) or a short one, format it and section it off with headings, subheadings, and otherwise styled text. Nothing is more overwhelming than seeing a wall of same-styled text running down your screen. Break your content into paragraphs by subject (career, likes/dislikes, web design experience, etc.), or break it down by the time in your life that it happened (middle school, high school, college/first working years, etc.).

  • Do choose your images carefully.

    If you’re going to include images (more about that later), choose them carefully. Select colorful, sharp photos or images that directly supplement the text of your page, so that the images contrast well and provide visual interest for your readers. And don’t let the images overwhelm the text–the About Me page is all about the written content, unless you’ve done a complete pictorial About Me page (which is entirely possible!).

A Couple of Don’t’s

  • Don’t post anything you wouldn’t want your boss/religious leader/parents to see.

    Since the Internet is open to anybody, it can feel as though you’re free to air all kinds of dirty laundry to whomever may come by. But a few grounding guidelines can save you from unintended disasters. For instance, if you’re going to reference any family members, friends, or co-workers in your About Me page, best to keep their names out of it; if you’re going to talk about any personal hobbies that might raise a few eyebrows at your job, worship center, or home, you might think about making a password-protected page for that, or just not writing about it at all unless your site is directly associated with it.

  • Don’t post absolutely everything about your identity.

    For instance, never post your last name on an unprotected webpage, and it may be safer even not to use your real first name. Posting your exact location (city, street name, etc.) is also a safety no-no, due to Internet creeps. Lastly, posting your birth date (full date, I mean) is downright dangerous, sadly enough–keep that off your personal page. And I don’t think I need to say much about bank account numbers, Social Security numbers, phone numbers, etc.

  • Don’t post a picture of yourself that’s too detailed.

    As I was talking about images earlier, I mentioned that you should choose images carefully. Not only should they look great alongside your text, but they shouldn’t be complete facial portraits. Perhaps an artsy-style Photoshop avatar of your picture, or even a cartoon version of your face, but for safety reasons, leave the real profile picture to Facebook. I hate that we have to be this careful, but enough crimes have happened to prove that one cannot be too cautious when posting things about oneself on the Internet.

Writing Style

When you’re writing an About Me page, you need to consider the type of site you’re writing the page for.

Is This Site for Business/Work?

Doing a business- or work-related site means that your About Me page’s tone should be professional, cool, and collected, and your grammar, sentence structure, and spelling is exemplary. This is the place to state your career skills, job aspirations, and personal vision for yourself. This is not the place to describe any fetishes, quirks, or personal problems unless they directly relate to your work and/or career.

Is This Site for Community/Social Organizations?

A community-oriented or more social-oriented About Me page warrants a little more familiar tone than the all-business About Me page. Your tone can be more conversational and friendly. This is the place to show why you love this particular community or social group, why you’re a part of it, and what parts of your life mesh with it. This is not the place to brag about how much you do for the group, how much you hate certain people in the group, etc.

Is This Site for Personal/Leisure Use?

More personal and leisure-time sites allow you to be the most familiar in tone on your About Me page, since you’re likely letting them into your life with each page of content on the site. This is the place to tell a little more about your personality, your everyday life, and your life passions. This is not the place to list tons of accomplishments, awards, or other shameless plugs–it comes off as bragging.

Working with Content

Keep in mind that your readers are not necessarily your most trusted confidants or therapists. While you may feel comfortable, especially in a blog setting like mine, getting a large load of emotional baggage off your chest, try to keep your About Me page as positive in tone as possible.

If physical pain or a specific medical condition is part of your life (the way it is in my life), for instance, you may just want to write something like “I deal with [name of illness here], and I talk about it on this site because it has affected my life.” Writing about it in this non-confrontational way allows the user to know some of your struggles without feeling as though they’re walking away carrying the burden of your life with them.

Emotional and spiritual battles fall under the same heading. Whatever you’re carrying in your life, you can write a bit about it, but don’t get too deeply into it in your About Me page–let it be known, but maintain a more positive stance.

And of course, if you’re writing for a business site or a social organization site, you might want to keep out any personal struggles altogether unless your business or organization deals directly with the kinds of problems you’re facing. For instance, the leader of a local cancer organization could write about being a cancer survivor on that social organization’s page, but he or she might want to leave that off their LinkedIn profile.

Tailor Your Page to Your Particular Site’s Purpose

Each of my About Me pages on the Internet is slightly different, based on what the site is about and who I’m trying to reach.

On my novel blog, my About Me is a little blurb with my name, age, state of residence, and how long I’ve been writing the novel, plus a link to my domain. On this blog, my About Me page references all the things I do in my everyday life and how it feeds into my blog articles; it also links users to my much more in-depth About Me page on my domain, which is wayyyy detailed about me without giving too much about my identity away.

When you create a site, remember that the people who find your site are typically just interested in that subject matter, and as such, they want to hear why you’re qualified to write about it. Keeping your About Me page steered towards that topic while still making it about you is a tightrope walk, but it can be done.

Let Creativity Reign

If you have a more media-driven idea for your About Me page (like I suggested before, a page full of meaningful images, a poem that you feel describes you completely, or even a video or music clip that you love and has personal meaning for you), try it out! Even if it doesn’t end up working for you, at least you gave it a shot. A memorable About Me page is much better than one that plays it very safe. Just make sure that your target audience will not be offended and will be able to access your content.

Don’t Limit These Ideas to Self-Created Pages

Wherever you go on the Internet, you can keep these ideas to reference for all your social media pages. Profiles on sites like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Last.fm, and tons of other sites can all be sculpted using these same tips. It’s not about lying to your visitors, but making sure that your profiles are honest without being too gritty.

Summary

In a way, when you write an About Me page, you’re performing a delicate dance for your visitors. The most attractive dance is one in which just enough but not too much is revealed, because it leaves viewers wanting to know more. Likewise, when you write about yourself, you want the visitors to know a little about you, but not so much that they never come back after one visit, because they feel they “got the whole picture” already. Walk that tightrope!

Little Fixes and Big Fixes

I finally added the “Welcome” and “Home” links to the top-right navigation…I’d had the Welcome page ready for months, but just forgot to link to it, and the “Home” link was an oversight. At least it’s fixed now!

For the future of my blog, I’m considering just making one post visible on the opening page, and then allowing visitors to scroll somehow through the past week of posts. Also, I’d like a little About Me blurb on the side. But, until I figure out how to do all that, I’m going to let the sidebar alone. No need in poking the sleeping dragon just yet.

Also, in life news, I’m facing having my wisdom teeth removed…not looking forward to that. But it’s a “big fix” that needs to happen, otherwise I’ll be having trouble eating and talking without pain for the rest of my life. :/

When Writing Feels Like Punishment

Sometimes, even for the best writers, writing feels more difficult than it should be. For people who don’t enjoy writing, just the very thought of writing is punishment enough at times. You hit what feels like an impossible hurdle (criticism from someone else, self-criticism or self-censorship, etc.) in the process of writing, and you go airborne for a few seconds, struggling to get yourself back into the writing groove. But instead, you end up landing hard, with all the mental wind knocked out of you. After something like that, it’s hard to feel like ever writing again.

I’ve hit walls in my own writing plenty of times. Sometimes, it was while struggling to complete/excrete a term paper in college (“excrete” is what it feels like to try to compose a 10-page paper from scratch 2 nights before it’s due). Other times, it’s been in my own creative writing or personal writings–some days, it just doesn’t pay to open Microsoft Word, because all I do is sit there, type a bit, Backspace it all, type some more, highlight and hit Backspace again, etc. It’s not fun to feel like you just flat can’t write.

But, as with all obstacles, there are ways around this feeling. Here are the ways I’ve developed over the years to getting back on the writing horse and trying again:

If You’ve Produced Something Terrible, Don’t Erase It

The worst thing you can do, when you start thinking how much your writing resembles something in a communal toilet, is to flush it away. Cut and paste it into another file and save it for later, maybe, but don’t just Backspace a whole page (or delete a whole file) of your hard work.

Even if you don’t feel like dealing with it right then, saving it as a separate file for later will help you remember to go back to it when you have more mental energy, when you have more time, etc. If you delete it completely, you’re likely to completely forget about it, possibly losing a great diamond in the rough sands of your life.

This is what I do when I’ve come up with a blog post that I suddenly REALLY don’t want to post anymore. I don’t completely delete it, but I save it in a new file and start writing on a different post. (I’ve got one file saved as “rant rant rant,” where I went kinda batpoo crazy on a topic and decided it wasn’t right for that particular article. I don’t know what I’m going to use “rant rant rant” for, but at least it’s there, lying like a fabric remnant in a dressmaker’s closet, ready to be used whenever I’m ready to go back to it.

If Your Writing Is Just “Off” Today, Stop for Today

Some days, even if you love writing like I do, you just aren’t feeling the “writing bug.” When you start to type the same sentence 5 times and end up Backspacing it, or you just stare at a blank page or screen and feel like SOMETHING wants to come out, but you’re not sure what, you need to stop for the day. I’m not saying stop for a lifetime–no, no, never stop trying to write permanently–but just take a break from it for the rest of the day, whether that’s a few hours or almost a full day.

This would happen a lot to me during college, when I would struggle to write papers–I just wasn’t feeling up to being the super-critical English major that day and the subject matter just felt too difficult to tackle. So I’d save what I had been working on and would go read instead, or get out of my dorm room and walk around some, or call a good friend and talk about it. Taking time away from the heavy task I was working with helped me get more relaxed and feel like I could write anything again, instead of feeling like there was some gremlin sitting on my shoulder who was critiquing everything I wrote as I wrote it.

Talking to others, reading, doing a little Internet searching or surfing, etc., can also give you new ideas on how to put together your written thoughts. It may be that the random comment your friend made about the book you’re giving a report on jogs your thinking: “Yeah, that IS a weird detail that the author put in…wonder what it means?” Then, suddenly, you may have a totally new direction for your paper.

If You Don’t Know Much about Your Topic, Learn About It

Yes, I know, seems kind of elementary. But you wouldn’t believe the number of times I had to coax my middle school students into writing about something they didn’t know about. They kept whining, “But I don’t KNOW anything about this!” My answer was always, “Then find something out about it. We’re in the library for a purpose, after all.” 😛

No matter what you’re writing about, whether it be search engine optimization or the Post-Colonial period, fractal geometry or painters in Florence during the Renaissance, if you know little or nothing about the topic, then research is your best friend in the world. I’ve written about research as a great tool for bloggers who want to write new and interesting content, but it also works for college papers, creative writing, letters to the editor, workplace presentations–everything. There’s nothing worse for your career, for instance, than looking plain ignorant in front of your boss and coworkers because you didn’t do your research.

Now, your research does not have to be done on those irritating formatted index cards. (God, I HATED handwriting all my research on index cards in school! So annoying and time-consuming–it made research feel like a special place in hell reserved just for me.) Remember, your research is likely going to be more internet-based, so just doing a thorough search of Google (i.e., not just the first page) could help you. Check out every link that seems like it relates to your topic, make sure the site is reputable (not just a blog-ish site created by a content robot), and then copy-paste the URL into a file to refer back to later as you write. Scanning through the content can also provide you a bit of preliminary information as well.

You can always go to the library or talk to a knowledgeable friend or family member about your topic, as well. Taking time to learn more about your topic is not just for school projects, but for anything you encounter while trying to write about a particular subject that you don’t fully understand.

For instance, I don’t know very much about the Tea Party political movement in modern America, except to know that if I saw a Tea Party parade coming down the street, I would likely soil myself and run in the other direction. However, I can learn more about the movement by research, and thus be much more informed when I hear about “Tea Party candidates” in the news, etc. Then, I can write more informed blog posts, and the Internet always benefits from more informed writers rather than more passionate writers.

If You Hate Writing, Write How You Talk

Maybe just a sentence or two, about something you have a strong opinion of. Maybe a paragraph on your Facebook status, indicating exactly what you’re going through physically and emotionally while waiting for a medical test result to come back. If you hate written communication, start by writing how you talk–write out what you would normally talk about, and focus on subject matter that you really care about.

At this point, if you’re very uncomfortable with the writing process, don’t let fears of bad grammar, spelling, or sentence structure weigh you down. Just WRITE what is in your head, in your heart. And if there’s nothing more in your head or heart after a few sentences, you’re finished, and you can move on to the next topic you want to talk–pardon me, write–about. Write for the feel of the pen moving across paper, communicating your thoughts, or the feel of the keys yielding under your striking fingers. Write for the sheer pleasure of telling your world what you think about something you really care about.

Now, if you’re still just horribly stuck and feel like you just CAN’T write, I have a story for you:

I had a young student in one of my classes who was what we would call a “screw-off,” a class-clown type who was more interested in disrupting the class and ticking off other people. But by the way he spoke in class (when he wasn’t smarting off to me, and even when he was sometimes), I knew he was a smart kid. He just didn’t respect school, didn’t care about it, and writing for class was about #90003 on his list of things to achieve in life.

One day, we read a short story in class, and I asked the kids to write at least five sentences (a full paragraph) about what they had read. I told them to answer five questions, one in each sentence:

  1. Who is the character you like the most?
  2. Why do you like this character?
  3. Does the character act in an understandable way throughout the story?
  4. How does the story show this character’s motivation?
  5. Do you think the author likes this character?

With each question, I was asking the kids to dive below the surface story and come up with some deeper answers about the story’s construction, the author’s possible purpose, etc. I wanted them to connect with the story as critical readers rather than passive readers. But the young man in question was more interested in tearing up blank notebook paper into itty-bitty pieces to craft into spitballs.

“Why are you not doing your work?” I asked–I glanced at his paper and saw that he had written “I Don’t Know” as the answer to each of the questions.

“‘Cause I’m done,” he replied, with an attitude.

“Nope, you’re not done,” I said. “‘I don’t know’ is not an answer, because you read the story–you DO know something. You’re a smart kid, you know?” He huffed and brushed his half-made spitball aside.

“You heard the story,” I said, trying a different tack. “Which character did you like?”

“Didn’t like any of ’em,” he said, laying his head down on his arms and muffling his voice.

“You sure? There wasn’t one that you understood the most–you could relate to what they were going through?”

“Pssh,” he replied. “Not any of the good guys, anyway.”

That left one character. “You liked the bad guy?” I asked, keeping any judgmental emotion out of my voice so he would feel free to express his opinion.

“Yeah, he was all right,” the young boy said. “The good guys treated him like crap and he was just gettin’ back at ’em.”

Gently, I pushed the paper of questions under his elbow. “Sounds like you have answers to questions 1, 2, and 3,” I suggested.

“Huh?” He raised his head slightly, looking at me for the first time. “Naw, that’s just opinions. I ain’t got answers.”

“In literature class, opinions are answers, if you can show me how you formed your opinion,” I nudged. “Write down what you just told me, in complete sentences. You remember how we do complete sentences?”

“Yeah, yeah, yeah,” he replied, waving away the rest of my advice. I watched the pencil tip and then the eraser dance in mid-air as he erased furiously and then wrote down actual sentences. “There, is them answers?” he asked, showing me the paper.

“Yes,” I said, nodding–indeed, questions 1, 2, and 3 had answers. “Remember, question 1’s answer needs to be a complete sentence, though. Rephrase the question as a statement: ‘I liked [villain’s name]’ instead of just the character’s name by itself.”

“Oh, okay.” For being such a reluctant student, he knew enough about what to do–he took the paper back from me, erased, and wrote again.

“Good,” I said. For question 3, I was impressed by the depth and empathy of his response: “[villain’s name] was just trying to live his life, and the good guys busted in and acted like he was living wrong. They made him feel bad, so he got back at ’em. I woulda done the same thing if I was poor like him.”

“Now, how did you know that [villain’s name] was poor?” I asked him. Now that he had answered 3 of 5 questions, he seemed to have perked up a little, though he was still toying with a tiny ball of paper in his left hand.

“Well, it had all that stuff in it about his raggedy clothes and stuff,” he replied, as if it was obvious. It was obvious, but I wanted him to see that he had more answers than he thought.

“And who told you about the raggedy clothes?” I asked.

He thought, and then looked embarrassed. “Oh, yeah, the author put it in there.”

“You’re right, the author describes how torn and dirty his clothes are,” I affirmed. “Doesn’t that sound like an answer to question 4?”

He glanced back at the paper. “Motivation? I don’t even know what that means.”

I reminded myself to break down definitions of words more carefully in the future. “Motivation means ‘why you do something.’ If you do something like steal, like this boy did in the story, you have to have a reason why you did it–a motivation to do it. Why did he steal?”

“Because he was poor.”

“You’re right,” I said, nodding. “Being poor was his motivation to steal, because…why?”

“Because he ain’t had nothin’.”

“Good, you got right to it; he didn’t have anything and needed things to live on,” I said, subtly correcting his sentence as I went. “And the author shows us that through describing his clothes, not just coming right out and saying ‘this bad guy is poor.’ Write down what you just told me,” I said again, giving him back the paper.

This time, he did this with a bit more energy and a complete sentence just like the first three answers; it seemed he was getting the hang of it. “Want to try question 5 by yourself?” I asked–it, like question 3, required depth and empathy to respond. He nodded, and the pencil eraser danced again, a merry fox-trot pattern in pink rubber.

I looked at his response: “No, I don’t think he likes him much. Maybe he feels sorry for him, but he don’t like him. He’s still the bad guy in the story.”

The young boy had struck right to the heart of the issue: the author tells a story about good guys and bad guys, but the good guys have the flaw of being too prideful and scornful, and the bad guy is worthy of pity and compassion. I disagreed with the young boy–I thought the author actually liked the bad guy best of all–but I understood where he had gotten his answer. After all, the author still classified the villain as a villain, even if he meant him to be a pitiable character rather than a character worthy of hate.

“You’ve done very well,” I praised quietly. “Look at this–you wrote even more than 5 sentences! Good job!” I grinned at him. “And you said ‘you didn’t know.'”

“Well, I didn’t think I knew,” the boy replied, finally laughing, and I got up from my position at his desk and returned to managing the classroom as a whole, with his completed assignment finally in tow.

Now, while that story was pretty long, it shows how you have to sometimes draw the answers and the subject matter out of yourself, especially if you hate writing or feel uncomfortable with it. Sometimes, you have to play the teacher as well as the student, asking yourself the questions and generating your own responses.

Some good questions to ask yourself when you’re beginning to write:

  • Who else is an important part of this story?
  • What are the facts that someone else would need to know?
  • Where can I put in details about my experience (sensory details, emotional details)?
  • Why should I write about this?

Knowing your characters, facts, details, and purpose for writing is key to communicating through writing, as well as speaking. These four parts are the heart of writing. Remembering this can keep you from feeling like you have nothing to write, because you most certainly do!

If You Keep Failing, Keep Trying

I do my best to write something, ANYTHING, creative every day. These blog posts count, because I’m having to create the content usually from scratch. My novel counts, because it’s definitely fiction. Random bits of poetry I come up with while driving counts (but I don’t write it while driving, for obvious reasons). Even the stories I write just for my own enjoyment, my own LOLs, count. Anything I can do to keep the writing juices going, I do. Generating writing, whatever it is, no matter what quality it is, is key.

If you don’t write a lot, it can feel like everything you produce is junk for a while. And sometimes you may have a “junk day” or a “junk week.” Heck, last month was “junk month” for my novel–couldn’t seem to write anything for weeks that didn’t just bore me to death. But I did not give up on it completely; I did put the novel aside, once I realized that I was hitting a brick wall, and then I engaged in some research, some question-and-answer scenarios, as well as putting aside some scraps of writing that I came up with while having fits and starts.

Once I was over the period of time where it seemed nothing was forthcoming, I went back and revamped one of the scraps with some new details, and suddenly, I could write again! Now it was interesting again, and the story began to move once more. But I had to keep trying.

And all the while I was struggling to write my novel, I was cranking out blog posts six days a week–that likely helped keep everything oiled up and running, instead of locking all the machinery down just because one machine was broken temporarily. Even if one of your writing projects doesn’t take off, if the subject matter just doesn’t work for you or it’s too hard, don’t abandon your other projects. If you juggle several, like I do and have done all my life, then you’ve always got something to take your mind off the failure of one project, and if you succeed at another one, you might be just inspired enough to come back and kick your older, failed project into a better gear.

Summary

Whether you love or hate writing, whether it’s natural or totally alien to you, these tips should help you, as they have helped me through countless bumps in the process of my own writing. The big ideas here are to keep everything you write, knock off for the day if it’s just too much, do research if you find yourself in unfamiliar territory, ask yourself questions and generate answers if the going gets really tough, and never, EVER give up on writing completely. Once you focus on the act of writing as being a pleasant thing, you’ll find that it comes more easily.

Theories of Learning, ShinyBinary, They Will Never Have a Girlfriend, and Vark

Theories of Teaching and Learning
There are many different ways of teaching and many different theories of learning. This handy chart separates them out into understandable points!

ShinyBinary
Crazy digital art! Wild colors! Surreal details! Ahh!

They Will Never Have a Girlfriend
The internet meme first seen on Reddit, now repeated worldwide. My favorite is the Mario one!

Vark.com
Ask a question, and Vark finds the ideal person to ask your question on the network. Then you get the response!

A New Take on “Green Lantern Tank”

Green Lantern what?!

Actually, “Green Lantern Tank” refers to a once-popular HeroClix strategy, best explained in this HCRealms forum thread.

The idea behind the original GLT (lol, quite unlike a BLT) is to surround a strong, flying Green Lantern figure with lots of supportive characters, such as figures with Enhancement (for ranged damage), Probability Control (for rerolls), and perhaps some Perplex and Outwit thrown in there as well for extra pwnage. The Green Lantern figure was most often equipped with the feat card called Trick Shot, which enabled a ranged character to attack from range without worrying about characters, hindering terrain, or Stealth.

Most famously, this was done, as one of the forum members says, with the Veteran Hal Jordan Green Lantern figure. But other GL pieces could do this as well. The two prerequisites for this: The GL figure had to be able to fly, and it had to have the Green Lantern Corps team symbol on its base, seen below:

The reason the team symbol was so important? The GL team symbol means that the character can carry up to 8 adjacent, friendly, grounded figures with it when it moves. Basically, the GL piece could “hide” behind its grounded buddies, keeping it safe from both ranged and close attack, while being able to fire off attacks using the Trick Shot feat, and it could move around the board carrying its 8 buddies with it–a very mobile, highly-efficient, and dangerous team.

And Then, They Nerfed It

Nerf: Verb. Meaning “to dull down the effectiveness of, to soften the damaging effect of.” And yes, it’s related to the Nerf ball.

The GLT strategy was effectively nerfed when game developers took Trick Shot and other feats out of the modern Clix environment–suddenly, Hal Jordan was trapped in the middle of his 8 buddies with no way to fire out from behind them. Also, they introduced a movement penalty for carrying characters. A flying figure who can move 10 squares on his/her own could no longer carry a friendly grounded character for 10 squares–he/she can only go 8. This really reduced the “run-and-gun” strategy for the GLT, and it seemed as if the strategy was dead.

It’s Not Dead, Just Sleeping

Trust me to find a way to revive an old, decrepit strategy. Well, maybe not totally revive it, but repurpose it. One gamer’s trash is another gamer’s treasure!

I discovered the wondrous power of the Green Lantern team ability one day while talking Clix strategy with my boyfriend. Being a Mystics player, I had a ton of wildcard pieces, many of them Legion of Superheroes figures (i.e., flying wildcards); I’m also a hardcore swarm strategist, liking to play many smaller figures instead of just a few large figures.

That day, I’d been trying out a new strategy, using the 37-point Rookie Invisible Woman piece as a central figure. R Invisible Woman’s 18 defense with Defend meant that she could share her 18 defense with up to 8 people around her. I had a lot of little ranged and close-combat pieces that were strong attack characters, but had very low defenses (Veteran Shi from Indy, anyone? That 15 defense made me SAD, even if it did come with Super Senses!).

Thus, I sought to protect my strong attackers by letting them borrow Invisible Woman’s 18 defense; I surrounded Invisible Woman on all sides with friendly figures. Invisible Woman enabled Shi and other small stealthy attackers to survive for the whole game, and Shi and her pals protected Invisible Woman, whose 6 attack and 6 move would be harmless to just about everyone.

I loved the strategy–it was defensive and stealthy and unexpected and it was chock-full of characters. But there was one problem with it.

“Wish there was a way to move my teams quickly and carefully into position,” I said to my boyfriend as we ate a quick dinner. “I mean, Sue (Invisible Woman) has to be protected on all sides as soon as possible, otherwise the strategy folds. But aside from having a few flying characters, I can’t figure out how to transport a whole team at once.”

“Ever heard of the Green Lantern team ability?” my boyfriend said, ever a fountain of Clix knowledge.

I had heard of it, but since most of the figures who carry that team symbol are way expensive for my tastes (over 100 points), I had largely dismissed it from memory. “Oh, yeah, that…I remember the symbol, but what does it do?”

“It allows a flying character to carry up to 8 friendly, adjacent, grounded characters,” my boyfriend replied.

And my memory leaped into my mental wildcard stash, coming up with all the Legion of Superheroes pieces I favored. No, they weren’t particularly strong by themselves, but if you could Wildcard to Mystics, surely you could Wildcard to Green Lantern team. The seed of the idea sprouted and grew vigorously, and I grinned. That was the key to moving my high-defense, stealthy, unexpected team. Nobody would expect a Legionnaire, of all things, to come flying in with 8 of her friends!

Refining the Strategy

Once I had the main idea, I sought out pieces that had similarities to Invisible Woman–I already knew that just using a wildcarded-Green Lantern piece in the center could be possibly more effective than just having that piece fly in Invisible Woman and 7 other friends. If I could find a wildcard who had Stealth and Defend like Invisible Woman, I would likely be set.

The best match I found came from my own Clix box–Experienced Umbra, 56 points, a flying Legionnaire. With 9 move, 9 attack, 17 defense, and 3 damage first click, she was enough to ward off attacks, and with Stealth, Force Blast, and Defend, she was exactly what I needed for wildcard fodder.

Now to find a cheap-enough Green Lantern piece. Since I don’t like playing figures over 100 points (unless they’re REALLY amazing and worth every point), I struggled finding a Green Lantern piece I could live with. But finally, due to some good searching, my boyfriend and I found two figures that fit the bill. Experienced Jade, 92 points from the Legacy set, and Rookie Green Lantern, 81 points from the Cosmic Justice set, worked very well for what I needed them for (mainly wildcard-fodder), and they were both good fits for my collection. I could improve their defenses if I needed to by incorporating Invisible Woman, and their attacks could be fixed with Perplex. (Of course, with the recent Green Lantern pieces that have been released in the Fast Forces and Gravity Feed packs, I could also get my hands on some more (and cheaper) pieces if I needed to. These just happened to be the first I got.)

Trying It Out

I have played this strategy several times and really enjoy how it works. It’s great for getting a large team into position (try using 2 Green Lantern team pieces for those really large-point-value games!), and it’s ideal for getting hurt pieces up, up, and away from the danger. I used Rookie Green Lantern in tandem with Exp. Umbra in one 500-point game, and ended up surviving the game with 11 of my 22 pieces intact, sitting atop Elevated terrain that was 3 squares by 4 squares–perfect for my team to hide out on and heal, and hard for my enemies to approach.

Defensive GLT is also good for moving more than one supportive piece at a time (like repositioning your Perplex, Prob, and Outwit so they can see better). Using E Umbra to move Destiny, Harley Quinn, and Abbey Chase around, while still providing them with a 17 base defense, is very, very efficient when you’re working with large teams and limited actions.

I don’t find that the -2 to movement is all that encumbering with GLT. You can always Perplex up the movement value if you absolutely need those 2 extra squares and you have the spare Perplexes to do it. Alternatively, you can use the feat Contingency Plan to heighten the movement by a maximum of 3 if you have a Leadership/Mastermind character on your team. Or, you could just use a wildcard flier that has a larger movement value to begin with: many of the Legionnaires have 10 move, such as Dawnstar, Triplicate Girl, and Karate Kid.

The best figures that work with this build are small-point-value figures with good defensive abilities and solid attacks. Having Stealth and/or Energy Shield/Deflection is great; so is having Combat Reflexes, Impervious, or Invulnerability. If you have more luck with Super Senses rolls than I have, Super Senses is also a good choice, but that 33% chance to dodge doesn’t always cover one’s posterior as well as one might hope.

Choosing a good Defend piece is also important–you want to protect that source of good defense with great offense, but you don’t want your Defend piece to be absolutely useless if your opponent breaks through the offensive wall. And don’t forget Support, Prob, Outwit, Perplex, and Telekinesis! Having at least one representative of those powers is always a good thing with swarm.

Weaknesses

Like the more offensively-based GLT, defensive GLT is weak to Pulse Wave attacks (the Defend won’t matter). Energy Explosion is a little more difficult to pull off against this team, because of how much Stealth I incorporate (especially on the side of the 3×3 GLT “box” that faces the enemy. Stealth plus high Defense values = I scoff at Energy Explosion. If you don’t have Stealth on your side, at least put in some Energy Shield/Deflection to jack up your Defense value 2 more points higher at range. (Oh yeah, Jason Blood is sitting on a 20 defense at range. YEEHA.)

A good close-combat rush is a winning tactic against a defensive GLT that has overbalanced on range pieces. That’s why I always include a Mockingbird, Vet Psylocke from Armor Wars (Stealth and Combat Reflexes–SURPRISE!!), or even a good Cheetah for a little 11 attack Blades. Shi from Indy functions as both a range and close-combat piece, too, which makes her a good choice for defensive GLT. Make sure not to use too many range or too many close-combat pieces–try to intersperse a few close-combatties in with your pew-pew-pew squad.

Hey, Wait a Minute, Why Don’t You Have a Team List?

Because I don’t build off keywords. I use a more “toolbox” approach to playing Clix–a piece has the ability I need at the point value I can afford, so I play it. That said, I have literally dozens of Clix pieces that could suit this strategy. GLT, in my opinion, is a min/max-friendly format, but it also encourages innovation and creativity, using pieces that lots of people call “bad” to win big. (Ever seen a 30-point Checkmate Black Knight deal 5 damage at range and emerge from the game unscathed? Yep, I did it–with 2 Enhancers, 1 Probber, and Invisible Woman in the background!)

Summary

Unlike the Green Lantern Tank of gamer legend, my “defensive” Green Lantern Tank strategy is not necessarily a game-winner. However, it will stretch your boundaries of what makes a “good” team, and might just make you rethink how you play. One thing’s for sure, the Green Lantern team ability is not just for running-and-gunning anymore!