Interview with The Ceaseless Way Co-Author (and Originator) Katherine Traylor

The Ceaseless Way anthology launches today on Amazon, so it’s appropriate that this interview is with Katherine Traylor, who was the person who had the idea and gumption to start this project in the first place. I feel honored that I was one of the writers she invited to take part.

Ada:     The Ceaseless Way is about journeys.  Tell me about your journey as a writer.

Katherine:       I’ve been writing fiction almost since I could write, but I had a terrible time finishing projects until relatively recently. I have stacks and stacks of notebooks with stratified traces of stories that I don’t even remember thinking of. (Yes, I am heavily symptomatic for ADHD.) Every once in a while I’d open one, think ‘Oh, yeah, I remember that story!’ and think fondly for a moment of picking it back up again before putting it back in the box.

Until I was 26 or 27, writing was something I always did, and I always had dreams of being an author, but I always let it take a back seat to pretty much everything else. After my first four-year stint in South Korea (I taught English there for a total of ten years), I finally made the decision to make writing a priority in my life, and to make a sincere effort to improve my craft and seek publication. For a year and a half, back in North Carolina, I leaned heavily on the goodwill of my mother and stepfather, who were kind enough to let me live in their house rent-free while I tried to become a full-time writer. During that time, I completed several short stories and multiple drafts of a contemporary YA fantasy novel called THE WOODS AND THE CASTLE. I also regularly attended the Durham Writers’ Group (Fantasy and Science Fiction Branch), where I met Ada Milenkovic Brown, Fraser Sherman, and Allegra Gulino. (If you’re particularly interested in my work from that period, you can look up a short ebook called Five Stories For The Dark Months, which I put out as an early self-publishing experiment. I wouldn’t necessarily recommend it, though, as I’d like to think my writing has improved since then!)

Unfortunately, my money ran out, and before WOODS was quite finished I was heading back to Korea again, once more to work as an English teacher. Since then, I’ve been writing part time and teaching for a living, first in Seoul and then in Prague (where I had the fantastic good fortune to meet and later marry my wonderful Italian wife!). I enjoy my day job, especially now that I’m working as a private tutor, but there are never enough hours in the day and progress can be frustratingly slow.

Gradually, through trial and error, I’ve been developing a writing process that allows me to bring more work to completion. In the last few years I’ve been able to make quite a few short fiction sales, and I’m really excited about some of the longer projects I’ve been working on. I have a few fully drafted older novels that I’m hoping to revisit, as well as several others planned or in progress, and I really hope to have some of them audience-ready within the next few years.

Fairy tales and fantasy novels (and a strong dash of science fiction) made up the majority of my literary diet growing up, so those are the metaphoric languages that make up most of my writing now. I write horror, too, but I like spooky atmospheres more than I like being scared. I’d love to write science fiction (I have a few ideas), but I don’t have a lot of time for scientific research, so for now I’m sticking to fantasy. If you’d like to check out a few of my stories, you can find them on my website (katherinetraylor.com). 

Ada:     What was it that led you to write your stories in The Ceaseless Way?

Katherine:       “Jenny and the Fairy Queen” was the story specifically written for the anthology. I was working on a darker, more serious story (which I may someday return to), but at the time I wasn’t having much fun, so I decided to be self-indulgent. “Jenny” is thus a tribute to every quest novel I ever read where the plucky hero/ine/s head out on the road to save the road, stopping at taverns for stew on the way and fighting evil armies in cold fortresses to the north. There’s a lot of courtly romance in it, as well, and I’d really like to return to that universe someday to see what those characters are doing.

“We Go Hiking” was drafted in 2019, though it’s been reworked a bit since then. It was inspired by the mountains and pine forests of North Carolina, where I grew up, and by unfortunate stories of hikers being lost on the Appalachian Trail. I’m not sure if I’d call it fantasy, surrealism, or what, but I had a really nice time writing it. It’s definitely an odd piece, though!

Ada:     Plotter or Pantser? (For those unfamiliar with these writer terms, a plotter means a writer who outlines what’s going to happen in their story before they start writing it. A pantser is a writer who writes by the seat of their pants.  They just start writing and see what happens.)

Katherine:       Both! I use outlines HEAVILY to keep myself on track and make sure I’m not leaving anything out. These days, I usually come up with an idea, write up some important sensory notes to set the scene of the story, make a detailed outline, and then set it aside until I’m ready to work with it. So far this is the best way I’ve found to capture the vibe of an idea without having to devote weeks or months to writing it up fully as a story or chapter. However, sometimes I’m in the mood to just start writing and see where it goes. In those cases, I get to the end of the story, transcribe it (I usually write by hand), make a detailed outline of everything that happened in the story, and study that outline to make sure that everything runs smoothly and nothing’s missing. It’s a laborious process, but it’s been really helpful for me!

Ada:     What are you currently working on?

Katherine:       My main ongoing project is an epic fantasy series called THE VOID AND THE RAVEN. It’s a secondary-world story, set in a region inspired by 16th-century Europe, and it focuses on the adventures of a teenage sorceress named Pearl Bourra. I’m also working on a lot of ghost stories at the moment (I’m eventually hoping to release a collection). And there are a few other things in the works, as well. 

Ada:     What’s your next writing project after what you’re working on?

Katherine:       Currently I’m drafting a contemporary ghost story called “Ace of Spades,” which will probably end up around eight or ten thousand words. When the first draft is finished, it will go on the to-be-edited list, and I’ll start drafting the next chapter of THE VOID AND THE RAVEN. I’ve been working on an epistolary fantasy collaboration with my friend Sonya Lano, and it’s my turn to continue it, so that will be next. Then I’ll draft the next chapter of VOID, and so on and so forth. Meanwhile, I’m editing a short story and have three more waiting, so there’s plenty to do! 

Ada:     Do you have anything else coming out soon?

Katherine:       Actually, yes! My story “Coven” will be published in the Ruadán Books anthology Winter in the City under the title “Prague.” It’s coming out December 10 and is available for preorder now. I’ve also placed two short stories that should be out sometime next year, so I’m looking forward to that!

Ada:     What story that you wrote are you proudest about and why?

Katherine:       Of course I’m really happy about the two stories in this anthology, so I should probably say one of those.  : )  Actually, though, I think it might be “In This Grove,” a very short piece I wrote several years ago. It’s a very strange story and deals heavily with death and loss, so I haven’t been able to place it, but it’s gotten some of the nicest feedback out of everything I’ve written. The most meaningful review was from a friend of mine, who had recently lost her father and said she found the piece very comforting. I don’t think you can ask for more than that. Please let everyone know about our book.  As it is Black Friday, we are having a Black Friday sale.  You can get print copies of The Ceaseless Way for $9.99, a savings of $3 a copy. https://www.amazon.com/Ceaseless-Way-Anthology-Wanderers-Tales/dp/B0DNSDQXTD/ref=sr_1_1?crid=15A1NWU5NI4BA&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.hzYUQlMGoYYbNoQzUzAlTjJjROkbJgSfW7lK27D8WDGyJI8P-soim5eE0ZUmoviAYyos1ey_vmpUh1dViRQqD9kURc4urm4qrDNlyXCKEofttqIj0NnP9MCiXoyWr7Dn-HenpKl9yAzyS1nbnjN5QMXj0B-Pduq_AmdULR9sFiMq49SwCo9a-ARIWd14rT0YM5uXl0rO0uKE96iiRH9hapLQ_PcxcjCdV0fOefZrgIA.EneDUHJl42qx92RblmApatvus2vdiwecTRzrFLaofEY&dib_tag=se&keywords=the+ceaseless+way&qid=1732892065&sprefix=the+ceaseless+way%2Caps%2C144&sr=8-1

The ebook is also available for $5.99:https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DP9317VZ/ref=sr_1_2?crid=15A1NWU5NI4BA&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.hzYUQlMGoYYbNoQzUzAlTjJjROkbJgSfW7lK27D8WDGyJI8P-soim5eE0ZUmoviAYyos1ey_vmpUh1dViRQqD9kURc4urm4qrDNlyXCKEofttqIj0NnP9MCiXoyWr7Dn-HenpKl9yAzyS1nbnjN5QMXj0B-Pduq_AmdULR9sFiMq49SwCo9a-ARIWd14rT0YM5uXl0rO0uKE96iiRH9hapLQ_PcxcjCdV0fOefZrgIA.EneDUHJl42qx92RblmApatvus2vdiwecTRzrFLaofEY&dib_tag=se&keywords=the+ceaseless+way&qid=1732892065&sprefix=the+ceaseless+way%2Caps%2C144&sr=8-2

Interview with The Ceaseless Way Co-Author Allegra Gulino

Our collaborative anthology, The Ceaseless Way, drops on Amazon this Fri, Black Friday Nov 29. Each of us of the seven co-authors, wrote two of the science fiction and fantasy stories.

Today I am interviewing another of my The Ceaseless Way co-authors, Allegra Gulino. I know Allegra from the Durham Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Group.  When you have a story critiqued in the group, you know that one of the valuable things you will take with you afterwards, will be a piece of paper Allegra has covered with very detailed feedback.

When I researched Nnn’s Children by visiting the Cryptobiology and Paranormal Museum in Littleton, NC, Allegra was my “partner in crime” for the adventure.  She also came with me to visit the former Land of Oz theme park in Beech Mountain, NC. (I hope to get a story out of that visit later.)

Ada:     The Ceaseless Way is about journeys. Tell me about your journey as a writer.

Allegra:           As a kid I channeled my creativity into drawing, dance, singing and playing piano. Sometimes my desire to express myself through art was overwhelming. In addition, I’ve always loved reading and writing. In college I majored in English Lit, with a Fine Arts minor. My writing focus at the time was literary criticism – the analysis of books through essay-writing. I steered my creativity toward my art classes, my dreams and wild ideas. After college, I hoped to write professionally. I didn’t consider creative writing, though I love story-telling and appreciate fine writing/movies/shows. Then we struggled with infertility for several years. In during that existential gloom, I became a Yoga teacher. I loved creating sequences, based on what the students requested – I even taught pre and post natal classes with pleasure. It wasn’t until 2009, when I took my first Shamanic workshop with the Four Winds Society, that my inner story-teller came to the fore. Suddenly Huascar, who is a Shamanic archetype and an Incan emperor spoke to me – through the guise of an animated Sci-Fi epic (of course). I started writing Huascar’s tale, making many character drawings, crafting a couple of solar systems, detailed histories of four races (no humans). I was driven to share the story of a progressive general in an oppressive, warring empire, trying to heal his people. Eight years later, I had completed the first book in the trilogy I named Convergence. It isn’t yet published. As I worked on that, it became clear that Sci-Fi/Fantasy writing provides me with endless fascination, development, learning and delight – it’s another calling, along with Shamanism.

Since then I’ve expanded my skill, not only at creating worlds, but researching Earth history and

fashioning fantasy scenes against realistic backdrops. My short story, The Monkey In the Cove,

is set in California 1967 – the Summer of Love. I’m still submitting that one. I really got cooking

with historical research for my novel Monsters Unbound, which was spurred by a dream I had

while I was working on the second Convergence book. I thought, ok, this will be a short story,

then I’ll get back to my epic. Well, in two years it’s blossomed into a novel – I’m about two thirds done. My trilogy characters are calling, so I need to finish this ‘brief’ interruption. One of the things I’ve learned is, write your newest inspirations otherwise you will lose the spark – in this case, it’s a raging fire that must be shared. I’m now learning Romanian and last summer we

travelled there, to visit historical sites. The characters, setting and concepts are very rich and

engaging for me – it’s really fun to work on. Stay tuned.

Ada:     What was it that led you to write your stories in The Ceaseless Way?

Allegra:           Both of my stories in Ceaseless Way are excerpts from my

novel-in-progress, Monsters Unbound, which is set in modern Romania, where Dracula,

Frankenstein’s Monster and a Latina werewolf band together with others, to fight an extremist

group that wants to eradicate all the country’s monsters.

My piece, Demon, He Called Me, carries on the story from the ending of Mary Shelley’s classic

novel, Frankenstein – it’s a flashback section for the being that eventually takes the name of

Theodore, and befriends Dracula. Shelly’s book ends with the Victor Frankenstein’s unnamed

monster having a final confrontation with his Creator aboard a whaling ship. The monster

promises his Creator, who was dying of grief and strife caused by his Creation, to kill himself.

Once Frankenstein dies, the monster oars away toward the North Pole, intent on keeping his

promise. However, in my tale, his unceasing verve for life and appreciation of nature oppose his

suicide. The monster encounters a wounded baby seal, and decides to save it from being

crushed by an unstable ice shelf. This act convinces him that killing himself would be wrong

because he is the only being who could have saved the seal.

My second story in the anthology, The Ortega Wolves Migrate North, involves a middle-class

Mexican family that I invented for my novel. They opposed drug cartel members gaining political

power in their home state. For that, the Ortegas were terrorized, until they fled for the US border. However, before that conflict, their long-term plan was to legally establish a new life in the US away from drought, corruption and poverty. With the drug lords on their heels, the family decides to meet with a Bruja, a witch, in order to become werewolves and cross the border with ease. While the parents decided on that plan out of desperation, their middle daughter, Sonia is excited to have more power and a reason to better unite the disparate family members, while starting a new life.

Ada:     Plotter or Pantser? (For those unfamiliar with these writer terms, a plotter means a writer who outlines what’s going to happen in their story before they start writing it. A pantser is a writer who writes by the seat of their pants.  They just start writing and see what happens.)

Allegra:           The way I write is as a plotter. When I receive the story inspiration in my dreams or as a reaction to situations, of course, I write that down. These are story seeds – without middles or sometimes, endings. Then, as I think about the story theme and the journey of those characters, I’ll plot the story, in order to reach a satisfying end. At this point, I may have to do a combination of research and creation, in order to flesh out the details of the players, setting and events. If I’m writing a short story, the plot text is just a document of bullet points. If it’s a longer piece, once the bullet point document gets overwhelming, I’ll make index cards of plot stages and play around with arranging them. Once I’m happy with the plot, I tack them on the cork wall in my office. Once I’ve settled on plot, I’ll begin writing the story – usually sequentially.

I’ve found that this method prevents me from getting stuck with unforeseen plot holes,

unresolved character development or vague endings. However, it’s no guarantee that I won’t

have to pause in writing to figure out logistics – the ‘how’ questions. Sometimes working on

logistics in complicated scenes can take months, if they’re complex battles, for example. To me,

it’s important to get the details and parameters right – that I stay as authentic as possible to

either the actual history or the universe that I’ve created. That way the Continuity Police won’t

come knocking on my door – ha! But, even if the logistics take a long time, I’m not too

depressed because I had already decided on so much before then, that the characters urge me

on and constantly tell me what they would do and feel about the action.

Ada:      What’s your next writing project after what you’re working on?

Allegra:           Currently, I’m working on Monsters Unbound, trying to finish it within three months. As I said, the story kept outgrowing my perceived length, but it’s been satisfying because as I add more, it gains dimensions. When I had almost finished the story, as a novella, sharing it in my Meet-Up group that it kept eliciting questions from readers. Questions, which I sometimes didn’t have the answers for – this meant I need to include more background, more setting, more history of the characters. So, I decided that, without changing the present day story, I’ll intersperse more back story for all the main characters. However, I also decided that Draculawill be the protagonist – that’s a change from my initial plan of giving equal time to all

characters. As most know, Dracula is beloved in general, but my version of him as a human

(Vlad the Impaler) whose war crimes caught up with him, were most compelling to my Meet-Up

group. In my tale, upon his death, he is rejected from heaven and thrown back to Earth to inhabit his dismembered body, scattered over a large geographical distance (the Impaler’s head

was sent to Constantinople). Through great travail, Dracula unites himself. From that point, he’s

a vampire – cursed by God, but craving forgiveness and a proper death. This ‘origin’ story now

has several scenes in my book.

Ada:     What’s your next writing project after what you’re working on?

Allegra:           I’m not good at multi-tasking, especially when focusing a project as rich as Monsters Unbound, but I am resolved to send out two of my best short stories while I’m finishing that. Once my novel is done and has had beta readers, and the subsequent revisions, I’ll be submitting it. If during that period, I didn’t have any more new story inspirations, I will rejoin the second book in my Convergence trilogy. My characters have been pining for me, and I, for them.

Ada:     Do you have anything else coming out soon? How can people find it to buy/read it?

Allegra:           Aside from Ceaseless Way, and my short story, Aquasphere, which came out about three weeks ago in issue 1065 of Bewildering Stories, I don’t have anything else now.

Ada:     What story that you wrote are you proudest about and why?

Allegra:           I’m proudest of Monsters Unbound. My first foray into alternate history and magical realism was my unpublished (so far) short-story, The Monkey In the Cove, about a mixed race couple who, with the help of a Hindu God, are able to halt the race riots that abounded in the US during summer of 1967. It was enlightening and enjoyable to combine historical research with my characters’ stories, and come up with a magical solution to an intractable American problem – racism. But, Monsters Unbound has gone deeper

into history, culture and my favorite thing – complex characters – than any of my writing to date.

I’ve always loved Dracula – Bram Stoker’s book, along with many depictions of him in movies and shows. For a variety of reasons, most of them shy away from linking the supernatural character to the actual person of Vlad the Impaler. Truthfully, I can see why. After reading several books about him, I had plenty of decisions to make about how he would rationalize his brilliant, yet extremely violent behavior. Since I write every character from a place of empathy, it was a bit scary at first, to consider finding that feeling for someone who butchered eighty thousand people – I’ve continually leaned into my Shamanic work to help that process.

To this day, some Romanians consider Vlad the Impaler a hero because his cause was just. With limited resources, but also insider knowledge (gained through childhood trauma) of how the Ottomans and their Sultan, Mehmet the Conqueror worked, Dracula resisted the Empire’s efforts to subjugate his lands and people. He was the only one who went to those extremes and got so close to success. Once he was killed, the Ottomans took over for many more years.

All along, I’ve been very careful to honor the history and culture of all my characters in the book, but especially Dracula. I’ve felt the importance of my task – to strive for an authentic depiction that also honors my vision. I’m striving to take the facts, the seeds of the Stoker tale, and the tropes and meld that potential into new story – that of healing and redemption. I feel now, that I am rising to those standards.

Our New Book Release, The Ceaseless Way, Plus Interview with Coauthor Fraser Sherman

Exciting news!  A collaborative anthology I’m part of, a book called The Ceaseless Way, is launching this Black Friday, November 29th

What’s a collaborative anthology, you say?  An anthology is usually something where an editor collects a bunch of short stories written by other writers and publishes then in a book.  In our collaborative anthology, seven writers each submitted two stories a piece, which we all edited and turned into a book.

It is currently available for preorder here: https://books2read.com/u/3kk6yn

To give you more information about it, I will be interviewing some of the other authors on this blog, and some of them will interview me on their blogs.  Today’s interview is with Fraser Sherman, who wrote Fiddler’s Black and Impossible Things before Breakfast in The Ceaseless Way.  I have known Fraser since I started attending the Durham Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Group in 2012. I have appreciated his cogent, cut-to-the-chase critiques of my stories. As you can see on his Behold the Book Press page on his website, he has a lot of books and stories out. He has a British accent, and is, like me, an avid actor.  Let’s learn more —–

Ada:     The Ceaseless Way is about journeys. Tell me about your journey as a writer.

Fraser:             I graduated college with a biology degree and no interest in a biology career. I’d started writing a novel senior year and figured, “Hey, why not try become a writer?” Turned out I liked it. My first story came out in the early 1980s. Since 2000, when I started work as a reporter at the Destin Log, I’ve been writing full-time.

Ada:     What was it that led you to write your stories in The Ceaseless Way?

Fraser:             Fiddler’s Black started out as a rom-com inspired by the Abba song “Dum Dum Diddle.” It got darker and dropped the romance though there’s still some funny lines (“That old pervert in 2-H, I swear to God he’ll go in and check out my panty drawer.”). Impossible Things Before Breakfast started with the vision of a time-traveler trapped in 1970, then I kept writing to see what would happen.

Ada:    Plotter or Pantser? (For those unfamiliar with these writer terms, a plotter means a writer who outlines what’s going to happen in their story before they start writing it. A pantser is a writer who writes by the seat of their pants.  They just start writing and see what happens.)

Fraser:            Pantser. I’ve tried plotting everything in advance, but I fail.

Ada:     What are you currently working on?

Fraser:             I’m currently finishing up my novel Southern Discomfort for publication before December (provided the cover artist comes through). [Interested readers] can check out the page for my film adaptations of Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, due at the publisher at the end of 2025.

Ada:     What’s your next writing project after what you’re working on?

Fraser:             I’m editing Savage Adventures, a book about the Doc Savage pulp series. I’ve also got two novels still in early draft stages.

Ada:     Do you have anything else coming out soon?

Fraser:             Southern Discomfort.

Ada:      And where can readers find these?

Fraser:            They can check out the page for my  Behold the Book Press for most of my stuff. My book Southern Discomfort will be out early next year 

Ada:     What story that you wrote are you proudest about and why?

Fraser:             Possibly my book Undead Sexist Cliches, which is nonfiction dissecting the stupidity of misogynist beliefs. For fiction, probably my first novel, Questionable Minds, out from Behold the Book.

Well, there you have it.  And I’ll be interviewing more of my coauthors soon.

Not-Mean Girls

I was watching Stranger Things  — well, before it got too teen angsty for me — and noticed the popular girl had a geeky friend. I suddenly realized popular-girl’s-geeky-friend was a trope.

See, I had a rough adolescence. But one of the saving graces of it was that from ninth to twelfth grade, there were various popular girls for whom I was the Velma to their Daphne. One was even a cheerleader, which is really not how it’s supposed to be if you believe the stereotypes. Someone like me was supposed to be bullied by cheerleaders. But that wasn’t my experience.

It especially wasn’t my experience at New Trier High School, which I transferred to as a junior, like Cady Heron in Mean Girls.  Especially ironic because New Trier was the school North Shore High, the setting for that story, was based on.

I did actually experience some Mean Girls. But only in eighth grade. What happened was I attended the seventh grade assembly on the first day of school and waited for one of the seventh grade teachers to read out my name on their class roll. But no one did. I asked one of the teachers what I should do, and he said he’d ask in the office.  He came back and said, “You’re in eighth grade, and told me whose class I was in.”

They skipped me a grade, and nobody told me. So I showed up at my eighth grade class an hour late. If the school had told me ahead of time, I could have slipped in under the radar, but no.  I had to make a grand entrance, the short girl who wasn’t wearing a bra yet. Who was good at math and science. It was the middle schooler version of leprosy. Nothing physically harmful happened, just teasing and the thrill of being the only girl none of the other girls wanted to sit with on the eighth-grade field trip,

The next year I moved to another state and two years later back to Chicago. I went to four schools in four years, and by the time I got to New Trier, I was this introverted mouse. I felt like a number instead of a person, and I didn’t really come out of my shell (okay mixed metaphor, that’s a turtle not a mouse) until I got to college.

But a lot of that was me being an angsty teen (like in Stranger Things) and only noticing the bad parts.

I discovered something better when I participated in my 50th high school reunion. People were actually excited to see me, remembered me from orchestra or a social club. I also reconnected with several women I’d been in homeroom with (or Advisory as New Trier calls it.)  One was, like me, the daughter of Eastern European immigrants.  Our names back then even sounded so much alike, that my mother once got mistaken for hers when gettng me out of class for a doctor’s appointment. And there was another girl in our homeroom who emigrated to Chicago from Poland. 

One woman from my homeroom was especially special to see again. We ended up attending the same university. And my senior year at New Trier, she made me a collage for my birthday.  It’s the graphic at the top of the homepage of this website. It’s a perfect picture of my fantasy and science fiction cluttered mind.  She and I learned something new about each other at the reunion: we had both skipped a grade. We decided maybe that’s why we’ve gradually come to feel like birds of a feather.

I also took a tour led by the assistant principal. New Trier is still what I used to call a vocational training school for Yuppies.  Like, it has two coffee shops inside, so you can take a latte to class.

But I also learned that the assistant principal used to be a member of the Advisory Council. Learning there was an Advisory Council made me realize something important. Because I’m not an angsty teen anymore.  I’ve taught at a medical school and raised two kids and served as PTA and Orchestra Booster Presidents.  I know the drill when it comes to educational institutions. An Advisory Council meant that there was discussion and decisions about how New Trier’s homerooms were run. It was clearly no accident that three daughters of Eastern European WWII immigrants ended up in the same homeroom. New Trier back then had tried to make me feel like I wasn’t alone. That I was part of a community.

They tried, they really tried. They really cared.  And it took me just 50 years to realize it.

And I’m thankful.  

And rough adolescence?  For many years I carried that as a wound in my psyche.  But life didn’t let me get away with that either. Covid happened, and I discovered high schoolers all over the country were having a way worse adolescence than I ever did or imagined.

I’ve let it go.

Good riddance.