Red Dead IRL: Saint Denis/New Orleans, Part 2

After nearly a year of putting off doing, well, anything with the pictures from my RDR2 photoshoot in New Orleans, I finally sat down and made a few TikTok slideshows with them…and after THAT, I sucked it up and gathered all of those slideshows together for a YouTube video 🙂

I’m hoping to do some more with these – or at least with the information I gathered on my trip – but for now, I had a lot of fun throwing this together, at least!

Tara Lynne’s A Geek Saga Podcast Episode 37: Drinkin’ Con v4.0 Pre-[Virtual] Dragon Con 2020 Webcast

Episode 37 of The Geek Saga Podcast was originally aired as a live webcast, “Drinkin’ Con v4.0: A Pre-[Virtual] Dragon Con [2020] Webcast for Newbies & Oldtimers Alike”, on August 29, 2020.

GEEK SAGA PODCAST ON SPOTIFY

Join myself and some other Dragon Con-loving friends as we talk all things Dragon Con Goes Virtual, past favorite Dragon Con memories, and more! Oh, and this year we had a few special guests…and of course a lot of drinks.

 Click below to watch in webcast form!

CHEERS!

My Darling Rigby-Bum: Who Rescued Who?

I’ve known for a while now, due to Rigby’s age and deteriorating health, that it was only a matter of time before I had to write my third pet eulogy in under two years. What I didn’t expect was that I would have to question my decision to let him go.

Just a warning that while this eulogy certainly contains some of the sweet reminiscences of my years with Rigby, there is some deeply personal, sad word vomit as well – about the difficult decision to let him go, his health issues, and a brief mention of suicide.

rigby collage 7

You could say that I’ve been “lucky” in the past. I’ve taken four beloved pets to the vet for the last time, and with each one of them, there was no question or doubt – on my part or that of the vet – that it was their time to go. If I hadn’t made the decision to relieve their very acute suffering, I would have lost them naturally, and it would have happened soon, and it would have been very painful for them. I’ve never had to watch a pet slowly deteriorate and finally had to ask myself, “This animal could stick around for another six months, maybe even a year, but is there any quality to this life they’re living, anymore? Am I keeping them alive for them, or for myself?”

And maybe because I’ve never had that experience, and never had to ask myself that question…maybe that’s why I couldn’t make this decision sooner. That’s probably why I still don’t know for sure if it was the right one. Because Rigby couldn’t tell me, “Mom, I’m hurting, I’m tired, please let me go.”

I could hear it, sometimes, in the way he cried at night when he couldn’t get comfortable and fall asleep, or in the increasing number of periods when he would seeming to be gasping for breath for ten or twenty or thirty minutes.

I could see it, sometimes, when he pooped in his sleep, or when he was awake, and then struggled to get up and ended up with his own excrement smeared all over his butt and/or legs (or more). Or on bad days when he could barely keep his back legs under him (even while just standing) for more than 30 seconds at a time. And in the sad look in his eyes as he stared at me from the bottom of the porch steps, waiting for me to pick him up and bring him inside, which clearly bothered him in the physical sense (he growled at me basically every time, and even snapped at me a couple of times as well), but I believe made him feel shame, as well…which is somehow even worse than the discomfort it clearly caused.

So yes, even with all that…I will still always wonder if I actually made the right decision in letting him go. It doesn’t help that he still had good moments – never for more than a couple/few hours at a time, and almost always involving him wanting his dinner – but they did exist.

And also because while Wendy was the one who taught me what it was to love again, and Stitch was the one who took care of me…Rigby was the one who saved my life.

Rigby saved my life, so being a part of taking his is going to haunt me for the rest of mine.

rigby collage 1

I write all of this because it’s all a part of his story, but there was so much good in that story, as well – so much sweetness and strength and love.

Rigby was an owner surrender to Greenville County Animal Care Services in early 2010 – and at the time, being surrendered by your owner immediately landed you on the ‘put to sleep’ list. I had been doing some work with a local animal rescue at the time, so I was on Animal Care’s list of people to email about ‘last chance’ dogs. To be honest, I often didn’t read through their emails – I would just get upset about all the pups I couldn’t help, most days – but as fate would have it, the day Rigby was listed was one of the few times that I did skim the list that was sent to me.

He was technically originally a foster due to the fact that he wasn’t neutered, and at that time couldn’t be due to the fact that he was having seizures…but Animal Care really needed to free up the kennel space. It took over two months to regulate his medication to the point where he went long enough without a seizure for the vet to feel comfortable putting him under anesthesia to get fixed, and by that time he was solidly a part of our little family…not to mention absolute BFF’s with Wendy.

From the beginning, it was clear that Rigby – who was ‘about 5 or 6 years old’ when I adopted him – was smart, eager to please, and insistent on being by my side 24/7 (seriously, I couldn’t get up and move more than 10 feet without him following me). While he loved most people (exceptions were few and far between and included a guy who stole from Steve and I, small children if they were too obnoxious, and an ex of mine who ‘wasn’t a dog person’), he was a momma’s boy through and through…which was just a little bit amusing, considering that when Steve and I adopted him, he was technically supposed to be Steve’s dog 😉

He was also very much a one-pup dog – Wendy was his beloved sister, and while he would generally put up with other dogs if they were well-behaved and didn’t bother him, he was still quite the grumbly old man around them (even when he was young), especially if Wendy was right there with him. He was insanely protective of her, and to be honest, probably a bit jealous of her paying attention to or playing with other dogs. Weirdly enough, though, after Wendy passed he never really acted like that again. He became far more friendly with my roommate Bekah’s dog Splendid than he had when Wendy was still around, and later was good with Ellie and even crazy young Sokka…but I guess he never really bonded with any of them enough to be bothered by the idea of other dogs coming around. (He was even surprisingly tolerant of the foster pups who came and went in 2019.)

rigby collage 3

There are quite a few lovely little tidbits about Rigby that I will share, but what better time to drop one last not-so-lovely – but very important – story than sandwiched in the middle of all the good stuff? I mentioned that Rigby saved my life, and to be honest, him doing so is also probably the reason I could never take a bath without him checking on me several times throughout.

Trigger warning for talk of suicide.

In September 2014 I had just returned from my absolute worst Dragon Con ever. I don’t see any point in getting into all of that other than saying that it was almost entirely thanks to the aforementioned ‘not a dog person’ ex. I’m sure it didn’t help that at the time I was also trying to wean myself off a particular medication, and while I’d been in some dark places before, those couple of days after Labor Day weekend 2014 truly were my darkest timeline. Needless to say, I ran myself a bath and had every intention of it being my last one. Only…I apparently didn’t take the time to make sure the bathroom door was shut all the way, and Rigby – who of course must have sensed my distress even long after I reached a point where I had no more tears left to cry – nosed his way in. He was so worried that he was acting like he wanted to get into the bathtub with me, and despite him never being a licky dog, he wouldn’t stop trying to kiss me. In the end, I did break down crying, and got out of the tub, and laid on the floor with him until someone showed up to take care of me for a while.

rigby collage 6

Yes, there’s a chance I wouldn’t have actually gone through with it even if Rigby hadn’t insisted upon himself…but from that day on, any time I’ve felt myself spiraling into a dark place like that, he was there, reminding me that he loved me and that I had him and my other babies to take care of, and (more times than I can count) letting me cuddle him and cry into his fur.

Rigby and Stitch and Wendy were my holy trinity of love and safety. Of course I’m not alone now – I still have Ducky, Marmalade, Ellie, and Sokka – but the idea of facing the most difficult parts of my future without the three who got me through the most difficult parts of my past is, well, more than a little bit scary.

But hey, for now, it’s past time to remember all the good things about Rigby, a.k.a. Rigaby Bumsley III, Esq., of the Hartford Bumsleys, a.k.a. Mr. Bum, a.k.a. Bum, a.k.a. probably a dozen other nicknames that came and went throughout the years.

rigby collage 8

Rigby didn’t care for car rides, but was happy to get to wherever we were going as long as I was there too.

He loved, loved, loved food and treats, even just blah ones, but was never big on bones or toys.

One time, a nasty little dog got loose when I was walking him and Wendy, and when the dog went after Wendy, Rigby jumped into the fray and literally clamped down on the dog’s tail and did everything he could to pull it off her.

He was very soft, and very cozy, and I often fell asleep spooning him.

Rigby loved my friends, but he definitely had his favorites. If I had to name his top two people (other than me, of course) I would say Bekah, who he always went to for head scratches, and Arthur, who he took to the moment they met. Still, just about anyone who gave him attention was his forever friend, and in the 10 years and five and a half months he was with me, he met a lot of friends.

rigby collage 4

Until he started having disc problems (and then apparently arthritis as well) a couple years ago or so, he was a spry little boy who would pop up on the couch or bed at his leisure, sit pretty for a treat, play with Wendy, tease the cats, and go for long walk or even jogs. And even after he couldn’t (or wouldn’t) really do most of those things, he still had his own little spark – and he kept that spark right up until the end.

And yes, that little spark – though it showed up less and less in recent months – is, along with him being part of my holy trinity, why it was so difficult to let him go. Deep down, I know it was time. I know that it was never going to be easy. But I also know – no matter how much I might have questioned myself, might still question myself – that I did right by my boy.

rigby collage 5

Rigby saved me, and then he loved me extra hard after Wendy was gone, and helped care for me more than ever before after I lost Stitch. When I adopted him in February 2010, the vet told me that because of his epilepsy meds, I would be lucky if he lived to be 12 years old. When I lost Wendy in March 2019, he was about 14-15, and I asked him to give me a year. When I lost Stitch in November 2019, I asked Rigby to give me a little longer – six months, in fact, which would have been May of this year. He might have stuck around longer than even this, but at somewhere between 15 and a half and 16 and a half years old, it was time for him to rest.

And it was time for him to be with Wendy again.

rigby collage 2

Lilo is on the other side
She’s with Stitch on the other side
Wendy is watching from the other side
They taught me how to say goodbye.
My mom and I were both by his side when he died.

And I’ll take my time. Rigby saved me once, and I have things to do, more pups to care for. Someday I’ll see him on the other side, too.

Red Dead IRL: Saint Denis/New Orleans, Part 1

New Orleans has always been one of my favorite places to visit, so I’m sure you can imagine how excited I was to see so many familiar places copied over into RDR2’s Saint Denis. From the moment I first rode through those streets as Arthur Morgan, I knew I had to go back to NOLA and place as many of them as I could in real life.

And hey, this is me, so ya know, why not do it in cosplay?

Also me being me – that is, super type A – I did a TON of research prior to going on this trip. Not just a lot of googling and searching through every Red Dead subreddit that I could find; I also talked to people I know who live in (or are frequent visitors to) New Orleans, poured through an old NOLA guidebook that I own, and even went back through photos from my past trips there.

I definitely didn’t get to map every single spot that exists both in game and in real life, but I added the following locations – plus a few other fun photo spots – to a Google Map for sharing purposes.

Starting from the ‘top’ of the French Quarter and working your way down through it, here’s what I found:
– LaLaurie Mansion – Bastille Saloon
– 1041 Royal Street – Doyle’s Tavern
– Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop – Random building
– Jackson Square – Tailor, statue, etc.
– Napoleon House – La Riviere Cafe
– Latrobe’s – Lemoyne National Bank
– New Orleans Police Department – Lemoyne Supreme Court
– Ochsner Urgent Care French Quarter – Barbour & Crosby Real Estate

Next, a few quick stops in the Garden District can be sandwiched between visits to Lee Circle and St Stephen Church.

– Confederate Memorial Hall in Lee Circle – Quincy Harris Memorial Hall
– Seven Sisters – Random homes in game
– Women’s Opera Guild Home – Random home in game
– Morris Israel House – Random home in game
– Commander’s Palace Restaurant – Random building in game (on edge of Saint Denis)
– St. Stephen Church – Larger cathedral in St Denis

Despite spending the better part of a day wandering around New Orleans, we still didn’t even get to make stops at all of the places I marked on my map…but hey, that just means I have an excuse to go back to “Saint Denis” and finish my explorations, right?

I’m still in the process of gathering decent screenshots of the Saint Denis versions of these buildings, as well as marking them on a game map, so stay tuned for part 2 of my Saint Denis/New Orleans comparison!

An Ode to My Sticky Bear

ode to sticky bear

Just before 9 AM yesterday – Monday November 18, 2019 – I had to say goodbye to my sweet old kitty, Stitch.

ode to sticky bear

I can’t really describe how it feels to have to write what is essentially another pet eulogy in 2019, despite the fact that he was with me for 17 years, 5 months, and [about?] 4 days.

I suppose I could start by saying that at least this time, I was much more prepared for this loss than I was with Wendy. Stitch has been sickly more often than not for several years now, to the point where I long ago lost count of the number of times I took him to the vet thinking, “This time, it might really be time”.

But somehow he just kept hanging on.

I know it might be silly, but part of me can’t help but wonder if he stuck around so darn long because he was just set on staying by my side. Because while Wendy might have been the pet who showed me what it was to love again, Stitch was the one who took care of me – from on or around (hey, it’s been a long ass time) June 14, 2003, until yesterday morning.

After all, this is the cat who could sense that I was about to cry before I even knew I was going to do so.

I actually adopted Stitch and his sister Lilo at the same time, but he outlived her by five and a half years. They were, of course, named for the Disney movie, and I was always surprised at how perfectly the two of them embodied the characters they were named after: Lilo being a pudgy, adorable, attention- and affection-seeking little girl, and Stitch being, well, a loyal, brave little hellion.

ode to sticky bear

Lilo and Stitch saw me through college, where they both whined about being apartment cats and often curled up on the small of my back when I would lay on my bed studying. They moved from Farmville, Virginia, to Lynchburg, Virginia, to Ellington, Connecticut…then on to Orlando, back to Lynchburg, eventually Greenville, and then to Connecticut again (though Enfield, this time). We returned to Greenville eventually, which is where Lilo was laid to rest, but Stitch continued on with me, ending up in Lake Mary, Florida, then Altamonte Springs, Florida, for a couple years before finally returning to our true home in Greenville in the summer of 2018.

ode to sticky bear

Throughout those many many years – more than half of my life, in fact – Stitch was my stalwart companion. He was the sweetest boy, always friendly with people and other cats and dogs. He was king of the house – he was definitely head of my cat pack, and he would literally break up…let’s say ‘arguments’ between the other cats. As for the dogs, while he and Wendy got into it over food from time to time, for the most part she – and any other pups – knew better than to mess with him. One withering stare and any dog thinking about bothering him would back down, generally…and often soon after that he would be curling up right next to said dog.

He was warm and cozy and soft and handsome, and very, very smart.

ode to sticky bear

But he was also the type of cat that would trip you up in the kitchen (yes, I’m fairly certain it was at least partially on purpose), and also constantly try to get into your food. Some of my funniest Stitch stories involve just that…like the time he jumped up onto the stove, pulled the tinfoil off a pan that had a ham in it (and trust me, the tinfoil had been FITTED around the sides), tore a whole hock off said ham, dropped onto the kitchen floor with this huge chunk of ham, and proceeded to fight Wendy for it.

Then there was the time we were having a Lord of the Rings marathon and I made a taters-and-onions casserole. After we ate, I covered it in foil and left it in the oven, but I cracked the door so that it could cool down. SOMEHOW, Stitch squirmed his way through the barely-open oven door, clawed the foil off the casserole dish, and we found him INSIDE THE STILL VERY WARM OVEN, spooning onions and taters into his mouth with his paw.

ode to sticky bear

He also loved chips and similar snacks. He would literally crawl into a bag of any of the above, but the funniest was his obsession with Cheetos, which he would literally try to smack out of your hand.

Oh, and he EXPECTED you to give him the leftover milk from your cereal bowl. Sometimes (okay, a lot of the time) he wouldn’t even wait until you were done to try to get into it.

So yeah, he had his quirks, and many of them weren’t the endearing kind. But I wouldn’t trade any of those for all of the good things about him, and there were a lot. It wasn’t just me who he knew to comfort; any friend who came to my house who was sad would end up with a Sticky Bear on their chest. Also, even people who were allergic to cats were somehow not allergic to him.

ode to sticky bear

Speaking of people, Stitch was with me so long that he has met a higher percentage of my friends than any other pet I’ve ever had. College friends, Disney friends, Virginia friends, Greenville friends, hometown friends, Orlando friends, convention friends. Shoot, he literally met people from around the world – mainly Europe, but two from Australia, as well 😉

For those who met him…well, I know that at times his extreme drive for food was frustrating, but he was also still the friendliest cat, always up for a head scratch or a gentle cuddle, and I know so many of my friends loved him, too.

I’m glad that his last day was spent almost entirely in mine or Steve’s lap, and that his last night was spent sleeping right next to my shoulder on the bed. I understand that it was time for him to go, but there will never be another cat quite like him, and I’m going to go on missing him terribly for a very long time.

ode to sticky bear

The Geek Saga Podcast Episode 36: Nailed It or Failed It? Game of Thrones Character Arcs at Dragon Con 2019

tara lynne's geek saga podcast

Episode 36 of The Geek Saga Podcast includes live audio from the Dragon Con High Fantasy track’s “Nailed It or Failed It: Game of Thrones Character Arcs” panel at Dragon Con 2019.

GEEK SAGA PODCAST ON SPOTIFY

I was super excited about this panel and only regret that it was scheduled for Monday morning of Dragon Con (of all times) because it being the last day of the convention, many of us (namely me, ha!) weren’t at the top of our game. Still, it was fun to get some audience involvement on whether the show nailed it or failed it when portraying the ASOIAF characters we love, hate, or love to hate. Stay tuned for the Ice & Fire Con 2020 version of this one, that’s for sure!

Panelists: Myself, Andrew, Brian E, Van Allen Plexico

GEEK SAGA PODCAST EPISODE 36: NAILED IT OR FAILED IT – GAME OF THRONES CHARACTER ARCS DRAGON CON 2019

The Geek Saga Podcast Episode 35: Fire & Blood (Targaryen History) at Dragon Con 2019

tara lynne's geek saga podcast

Episode 35 of The Geek Saga Podcast includes live audio from the Dragon Con High Fantasy track’s “Fire & Blood: Targaryen History” panel at Dragon Con 2019.

GEEK SAGA PODCAST ON SPOTIFY

Last year’s release of the first Fire & Blood tome gave us a lot of information, and we spent this panel breaking it down!

Panelists: Myself, Ashley M, Brian E, Chloe K, Elena K, Van Allen Plexico

Geek Saga Podcast Episode 35 – Fire & Blood: Targaryen History

The Geek Saga Podcast Episode 34: Apocalyptic Psych 101 at Dragon Con 2019

tara lynne's geek saga podcast

Episode 34 of The Geek Saga Podcast includes live audio from the Dragon Con Apocalypse Rising track’s “Apocalyptic Psych 101: Coping with PTSD and Other Mental Illness in Literature” panel at Dragon Con 2019.

GEEK SAGA PODCAST ON SPOTIFY

While the idea for this panel was to discuss types of trauma-related illnesses that a post-apocalyptic protagonist might deal with and how to handle these characters honestly, thanks to an AMAZING audience and some great questions, it evolved into much more.

Panelists: Myself, F T Lukens, Bekah Starshine

Geek Saga Podcast Episode 34 – Apocalyptic Psych 101: Coping with Mental Illness in Post-Apocalyptic Literature

The Geek Saga Podcast Episode 33: Game of Thrones Final Season at Dragon Con 2019

tara lynne's geek saga podcast

Episode 33 of The Geek Saga Podcast includes live audio from the Dragon Con High Fantasy track’s “Game of Thrones: The Final Season” panel from Dragon Con 2019.

GEEK SAGA PODCAST ON SPOTIFY

Ten years. Eight seasons. Several weddings. Near countless deaths. And hey, that ending was…something. Here are our thoughts – the good and the bad.

Panelists: Myself, Andrew d’Adesky, Chloe K, Van Allen Plexico

Geek Saga Podcast Episode 33 – Game of Thrones: The Final Season
geek saga podcast episode 33

The Geek Saga Podcast Episode 32: Heroic Journeys in Game of Thrones at Dragon Con 2019

tara lynne's geek saga podcast

Episode 32 of The Geek Saga Podcast includes live audio from the Dragon Con High Fantasy track’s “Heroic Journeys in Game of Thrones” panel at Dragon Con 2019.

GEEK SAGA PODCAST ON SPOTIFY

Each year the High Fantasy track chooses an overall theme, and this year was “The Hero’s Journey”. This panel focused on how GRRM uses the traditional Heroes Journey to subvert reader expectations.

Panelists: Myself, Andrew d’Adesky, Chloe K, Trae Cooper

Geek Saga Podcast Episode 32 – Heroic Journeys in Game of Thrones