All posts by thislittlered

Check Your Science: The “Endangered” Redhead

There’s no way to avoid the name-calling when you have red hair. Ginger. Fiery. Carrot top. Strawberry. Cinnamon Bun. Ginger Snap. (Let’s keep thinking of more food names, shall we?)

How about this one– RED. Really creative, huh?. Or, even better, “endangered species”? My dear little Grus japonensis (that’s the Latin name for red-crowned crane), I will treasure you forever, because your kind may no longer exist in the near future.

Indeed, the rumors of disappearing redheads have spread across cyberspace at an alarming rate. Family and friends especially like to support my phenotypical oddity by sharing articles about redheads being “endangered.” Some of these articles cite Oxford Hair Foundation (P&G Beauty), an “independent” research foundation, funded by Proctor and Gamble, which sells beauty and hair products.

But let’s check the science!

I am here to tell you these rumors are a load of nonsense. Thanks for the appreciation though friends and family! I really do love the support. It’s always nice to believe I am special in the most melodramatic, future- of-the-world way possible.

Because if we check the science, there is no actual evidence that redheads are in danger of disappearing. Red hair comes from a mutated MC1R gene. The gene is recessive, so it only expresses itself in a human when both parents are carriers. Just because you don’t have red hair doesn’t mean you are not a carrier of the MC1R gene. In fact, a whopping 80% of the global population are MC1R carriers (source: TIME Magazine).

The only way for redheads to die out entirely is for all carriers to die off and never reproduce with another carrier. While it’s true the visual expression of the redhead gene is statistically rare, the gene itself is in no danger of disappearing from human DNA.

Good news everyone!

Especially for redheads! Now you can throw off that awful pressure to find a red-headed mate and procreate as much as possible for the sake of your species.

For the rest of you blondes and brunettes and raven haired, don’t be sad. All your ginger friends are here to stay. Go hug them extra tight and appreciate them for being such a rare, beautiful, exquisite expression of the human genome.

Don’t Go It Alone

Some unedited thoughts:

I’ve realized how easy it is as a writer to draw into yourself completely, to shut out the world and retreat into your little lonely space. Sometimes this is necessary to get crap done. Actually, a lot of times it is necessary.

But it is also a danger to stay there. I’m starting to learn how important community is. Like, really, really important. How support from like-minded people can help you reach your full potential.

No one tells you how to become a writer. You just are. You are a writer if you write. There is talent. There is hard work. Then there’s that secret, elusive element of “the path.” But this path can never be navigated alone.

I’m pretty sure I keep trying though. And then I keep running into walls, and falling down cliffs, into really dark uncomfortable spaces, where I don’t know how to move forward.

The writer’s life is a lonely life. You are inside your own mind a lot of the time. Because that’s your job. You use your brain and you pump out creativity and ideas into sentences. Words are your translation. But words are finicky and frustrating and it’s so easy to get lost on the page.

So here’s my advice: find a coach, a mentor, a writing group. People of the same career path, but of a different experience. These people will become essential to the path. They will be your antennae, your GPS. You don’t even need a lot of them. Maybe two or three, as long as they are constant.

**beep** **beep** **bloop** **just checking in…** **turn here** **have a beer** **don’t cry** **pull yourself together** **I’m here**

Tunage Tuesdays: Shakey Graves Album Review

Shakey Graves, Released Oct. 07, 2014
And The War Came, Released Oct. 07, 2014

Alejandro Rose-Garcia, or Shakey Graves as the nation now knows him, was a one-man rambling band (complete with a kick drum made from an old suitcase) who made his way from live shows in New York City to the underground freak folk world of LA. Now that he’s considered by NPR Music as “one of the top ten musicians you missed listening to in 2012” he’s finally settled in Austin and has created his own “music house” from which his most recently released and highly-praised album And The War Came was created.

This newest album, released by Dualtone Records (Shovels & Rope, The Lumineers, Noah Gunderson), seems to reflect the geographies of Shakey’s developing music career. You’ll find twangy Cash-like country songs, mixed with bluesy rock singles in the vein of The Black Keys, added to baroque pop, alt-folk, and dreamy acoustics. It’s as if Shakey is not quite sure what kind of music he wants to make just yet.

Although the album as a whole seems jumbled and disconnected, the individual songs reflect Shakey Graves’ musicality and technical ability. Layered on top of talented guitar picking or rhythmic electric riffs, Alejandro’s voice takes us through emotional jumps and rivers. One minute he’s so smooth and the next he’s yelping and crooning. Added to Esme Patterson’s harmonies on songs like “Dearly Departed” and “Big-Time Nashville Star,” we’re reminded of a Johnny and June duet, but with a modern beat-driven twist.

His potential and his talent to create are immense. But And the War Came feels more like a portfolio– this is where I’ve been and this is all that I can do– rather than a work of art. I believe in Shakey as a musician and I’m a fan. But next time I want a story; I want something that flows. I can’t wait for Shakey Graves to come into his own, to surprise us in a better way with an even better, cohesive curation.

(Let me know what you all think! Did you like And the War Came? Thoughts? Comments?….)

Tunage Tuesdays! Huzzah!

Hello fellow music lovers!

Here’s a head’s up– every Tuesday I am committing to writing a review of a song, album, or artist that I am currently listening to. This is cool because:

  1. YOU get to discover or rediscover cool new music.
  2. You get to learn more about me, by my style and tastes. (If that’s a thing you’re interested in… but I mean, I think I’m pretty interesting so… )
  3. I don’t have to keep my excitement bottled up any more. It’s like sharing mixtapes with your favorite people, except much less teen 90s, and more… adult and wordy.
  4. The artist gets more exposure.
  5. I get to write and practice my music critiquing style.

Are you excited or are you excited?? Cause I sure am.

If you’re anything like me, you’ll know that good music breeds productivity. It’s like a switch.

I need to write? I need to do laundry? I need to clean the house? I gotta turn on the tunage. And nothing makes me more excited than finding some great new artists and songs to add to my library. I have to keep the inspiration coming and I really just want to share it with the world, because what good is art if you keep it to yourself?

But more than productivity and practicality, music breeds other forms of creativity. If you don’t believe me, go ahead and read these studies. It helps the brain enter the relaxed “mind wandering” mode that’s best for creativity. Whenever I’m stuck, if I have writer’s block or can’t find the word I need, I just put on my headphones and let it flow.

This has been a long time coming. If you follow me on Instagram (link to my IG over on the left), you’ll notice I started Tunage Tuesdays there. We’re moving it over here now so I can give you the real, extended version.

So come back next Tuesday for my first real review! Huzzah! See you Tuesday.

Advice to the Young Writer