• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Dragon Lake Books

The home of great stories

  • About
    • Sample Chapters
    • Events
    • Privacy policy
  • Where To Buy
  • My 100 Goals Blog
  • Contact Form
  • Mailing List Sign-up

frozbie

World building

June 13, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

My visit to a Nissan dealership today, looking to buy a second hand Leaf – Nissan’s electric car, sparked a whole stream of unasked questions.

How many people work at that dealership? How much profit do they have to make on each car? How many cars do they have to sell to pay the salaries of the people working there?

When I mentioned this to my wife she reminded me that you also have to factor in income through the extras they try and up-sell: Gap Insurance; Scotch-Guard; the regular service packages; the commissions from finance; and of course ongoing maintenance and repairs…

However they manage their business, the impression I get is that running a car dealership is a profitable enterprise. Which implies that for every car sold, new or second hand, for every up-sell, profit is being made.

I’m not against profit – I run my own business at a profit – yet as I compete with other contractors for roles and dealerships compete for our custom, I couldn’t help the thought that we humans have constructed a very inefficient model of economy. Surely there is a better way of organising ourselves…

Of course there have been attempts to organise the human economy, the two notable ones being socialism and fascism. Two philosophies that utterly failed in implementation during the last century, both of which tried to redesign our economy.

At the back of my mind as I wrote my first novel: The Great Scottish Land Grab, I was aware that my protagonist – Robert Castle – was rail-roading his way towards his vision for a utopian Scotland. Several readers commented that Castle was a “bit of a dictator…” I hope a benevolent one, but I agree, I ended up giving Robert Castle an enormous amount of power even as he sought to bring about a more democratic society.

At the time, as I was writing Land Grab, I struggled to imagine a different way for Castle to achieve his objective of reversing the Highland Clearances. It seemed to me that such an upheaval could only be achieved by someone willing to take tremendous risks, to go head to head with those in power and authority and accept the possibility that the threat of violence may be needed.

I enjoy my status as World Builder. So much easier to conceive and implement a new economy or society in fiction than in real life. Real life is much messier and frought with real risk.

I believe we have all been created by God to be creators ourselves. We have been given the tremendous capacity to turn the ordinary, everyday around us into something of greater value.

So why aren’t we all rich?

You probably have seen the “You have two cows” meme giving one possible answer to the question.

If you give two women each a million pounds, at the extreme, after a month, one woman will have turned that money into four million while the other will have squandered it all and have nothing to show for it.

Most of us fall somewhere inside those two extremes.

Think of all that humanity has achieved just in the last couple of centuries.

We have taken an industrial revolution to a technological revolution and seem on a trajectory to do more, better, faster and yet…

Hundreds of millions of people across the globe still live in extreme poverty – defined by The World Bank as living on less than $1.90 a day. On top of this, Water Aid estimates that 663 million people live without clean water and a massive 2.4 billion don’t have access to adequate sanitation!

We are all world builders. We’re building the world around us day in and day out. One day I believe we will all have to answer a very simple question: What kind of world did we build around us? One that shared and helped and lifted up or one that excluded and trapped and held down.

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, Economy, The Great Scottish Land Grab, Writing Tagged With: economy, Electric Vehicle, EV, Nissan Leaf, poverty, Two Cows, Water Aid, World Bank, world building

Avoiding Transaction

June 12, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

There are times in my job that I wished I had photographic memory. I primarily code in Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) and in MS Access SQL (or other flavours depending on the client.)

As with all programming langauges, there are a lot of words to memorize. I suspect that I only use a small fraction on a daily basis.

For comparison, did you know that according to Oxford Dictionary there are 171,476 English words in current use.

Robert Charles Lee writes on Quora that the average adult native speaker of English knows 20,000 to 35,000 words. Also, that “3,000 words will cover 95% of everyday writing.”

Of course, some of those words we use are ones that are not always appropriate in certain situations…

There I was, trying to run a Stored Procedure (a SQL command I’d saved in MS Access) from VBA and all I got was this error:

“The SELECT statement includes a reserved word or an argument name that is misspelled or missing, or the punctuation is incorrect.”

Okay, what does that mean, apart from the obvious? The SQL was working fine when I ran it directly within the Access database. I only received the error when running through VBA.

I went and poured myself a coffee. Decaf…

Reserved word, misspelt or missing argument name, incorrect punctuation… One of those must be true, but why was the SQL query running on the database?

I took a closer look and finally realised what I’d done wrong. The query was returning a list of Transactions and so I’d called the name of the Transactions: Transaction. I searched online and found this handy list of Reserved Words.

Transaction, of course, is reserved. If you know more than basic SQL that is probably pretty obvious. A feature of SQL is that it allows you to combine commands within a “Transaction” which can then be rolled back if something goes wrong.

So, using Transaction as a column name is not allowed. What I’m left wondering is why MS Access allowed it… Maybe one for another day.

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, SQL, VBA Tagged With: language, programming, Reserved Words, SQL, Transaction, VBA, vocabulary

What days are we living in?

June 11, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

I watch the news and fear for our future.

I stop watching the news and life actually seems mostly okay.

At least where I am… For now. For others life is hard and sometimes brutally short.

We are living in days when Christians are persecuted on a massive scale from North Korea to Africa to the Middle East. I remember as a child hearing frequently about the persecution of Christians behind the Iron Curtain. For now, in Russia, life has improved somewhat. I wonder what direction we are heading in within the UK.

I had no idea of the origin of this song. One of my favourites and perhaps a suitable one for the times we are living through…

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, Jesus Tagged With: Christians, persecution, Robin Mark, These are the days of Elijah, worship

Who runs your life?

June 10, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

I’m writing this on Thursday as an exit poll has just predicted a Conservative win which may lead to a hung parliament. By the time this post is published on Saturday, we’ll know who is supposed to be running the country… Or if no-one is…

Earlier today – Thursday – for the first time in my life, I took advantage of my right to spoil my ballot paper. Of the five political parties on our local ballot, I rejected all of them.

The government doesn’t run my life and I hope you realise it doesn’t run yours either. Scottish Independence, BREXIT, the economy, they might impact our lives, but they do not determine our future.

In Scotland, I understand the desire to declare independence and control our future as a nation – I wrote the story of how Scotland became independent after all – but regardless of whether Scotland was independent or not, each of us would still be solely responsible for what that future is like. Independence would not be a miracle cure.

Much was made of the magic money tree during the campaigning in this 2017 election. It seems likely that fears over what would happen to Scotland’s economy lost the first Independence Referendum. Yet, while banks may threaten to jump ship and industry bluster about pulling out, the fact remains that in an independent Scotland, each adult would still be an economic force, both earning and spending. We would still need jobs, would still pay taxes and even if some business did abandon us, we would still be able to attract other banks and other industry and whatever we needed to manage our economy.

Yet so many were afraid and put their trust in the UK government.

In Scotland, twice now, a majority has voted to turn away from independence, first from the UK and then from Europe. Yet a sizable minority of my fellow countrymen took a contrary position, rejecting union with the UK while they sought to remain governed in large part by Europe. (Ironically, all the arguments both for and against Scottish Independence could be applied to BREXIT…)

Most of us, it seems, desperately want a government in some location, to run our lives for us. To make decisions that we don’t understand or are overwhelmed by.

I’ve been reading the book of First Samuel recently. Israel was originally intended to be a theocracy, governed ultimately by God and managed on a daily basis by prophets and judges. But the people grew jealous of the neighbouring tribes who had kings to lead them. They didn’t trust the judges (and to give them their due, some of those judges were utterly corrupt.) Eventually they rejected both the judges and God in favour of a king.

I believe we were meant for more than being governed by other people. That God created us with the capacity to rule. Yet to rule, even in our small sphere of influence, takes great courage. It’s much easier to hand off to someone else that we can then blame when they get it wrong.

This week Heather Tomlinson wrote an article on Why Christians need to stop blaming the government for everything. Of course people of every faith and none blame their government. The real challenge though is to stop blaming government and start taking responsibility for our own lives. To seek to stop living off of someone else’s charity, to be the provider for others, to be the carer, the defender in our communities.

While I believe God wants us to seek his help and protection, I also believe he made us to govern ourselves. Will you live as God intended you to, or will you let others run your life?

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, Jesus Tagged With: BREXIT, General Election, Government, Hung parliament, jundges, prophet, Samuel, Scottish Independence

Flash Fiction: The Day After

June 9, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

Someone kicked him awake. Barely. He opened one bleary eye and saw the TV displaying static.
‘Who did you vote for? Yesterday. Who?’
He looked over at his wife who was peering out through the curtains, knocking over a beer bottle as he turned.
‘What’s wrong with the TV?’ He asked.
‘It’s dead. Radio, Internet, nothing’s working. Who did you vote for?’
‘What’s that gotta do… What are you doing?’
She didn’t answer, just kept staring out the window.
Finally, he got up and walked over, pulled at the curtain.
‘No!’ She grabbed the material out of his grip and pulled the curtain back.
‘What’s got into you?’ He was starting to get annoyed now. He took a firm hold of the curtain and pulled it wide open, glaring at his wife.
She stepped back, into the shadows.
He shook his head and turned to look out, then stumbled back, nausea threatening to overwhelm him. A buzzing filled his senses and from a distance he heard his wife ask one more time: ‘Yesterday, who did you vote for?’

Copyright Mark Anderson Smith 2017 http://www.dragonlake.co.uk/ You may link to this post from http://www.dragonlake.co.uk/2017/06/flash-fiction-the-day-after/ or share on a non-commercial website so long as the full copyright notice and this statement is included.

If you liked this story, or if you didn’t, let me know…

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, Short Story, Writing Tagged With: 100X100, election, Flash Fiction, voting

Small Steps

June 8, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

When you’ve no time, how do you change your life?

One small step at a time.

In 2007 I set out to write a novel. I committed to writing 100 words daily and knew if I persevered, I would finish Fallen Warriors in four years. It took ten, but eventually, Fallen Warriors was published.

Small steps, taken daily, lead to long journeys.

Five minutes tidying a room, daily, will gradually clear the clutter.

Ten minutes pulling weeds, daily, tames your garden.

We can all find a few minutes each day to work towards our goals.

What you will achieve will be amazing!

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days Tagged With: 100X100, goals, perseverance

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 12
  • Go to page 13
  • Go to page 14
  • Go to page 15
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Follow

Follow me on:

Recent Posts

  • Goal 31
  • Q2 Halfway point
  • The 12 Week Year – a first quarter review
  • Double Your Salary …Without losing your soul!
  • 40K

Recent Blog Posts

  • Goal 31

    Goal 31

    February 22, 2025
    I keep returning in my thoughts to Goal 31: To be and do all that God wants of me. Not every minute or every day, yet this phrase follows me around. I used to have a website: www.goal31.co.uk which I used for my contracting/consulting business. I made a poor decision to take it down and […]Read More »
  • Q2 Halfway point

    Q2 Halfway point

    May 12, 2021
    Back in December 2020/January 2021 I wondered if the contracting and job markets in the UK would continue to be dead through till the summer. It seemed possible that I might have to go six months without working and so to put a plan in place to make constructive use of the time seemed sensible. […]Read More »
  • The 12 Week Year – a first quarter review

    The 12 Week Year – a first quarter review

    April 21, 2021
    I recently finished my first 12 Week Year and wanted to review how it went to see if I could learn some lessons from the experience. If you’ve not read it, The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington proposes by working to a 12 week plan, you can get more done […]Read More »
  • Double Your Salary …Without losing your soul!

    Double Your Salary …Without losing your soul!

    June 25, 2019
    I’m excited to share that the hardback of my next book: Double Your Salary …Without losing your soul! will be released for sale on 1st August 2019. I believe that doubling your salary is possible when you understand who you are and what you are capable of. Sharing my story of how I doubled my […]Read More »
  • 40K

    40K

    June 15, 2019
    It might be that weekly posts are all I can manage until the first draft of Fallen Warriors Season Two is complete. I met my target of 10,000 words today and did manage to hit 2,000 words each day this week. That feels good. An accomplishment. I haven’t managed much else, publishing wise. I kept […]Read More »

Footer

My 100 Goals Blog

  • Goal 31

    Goal 31

    February 22, 2025
  • Q2 Halfway point

    Q2 Halfway point

    May 12, 2021
  • The 12 Week Year – a first quarter review

    The 12 Week Year – a first quarter review

    April 21, 2021
  • Double Your Salary …Without losing your soul!

    Double Your Salary …Without losing your soul!

    June 25, 2019
  • 40K

    40K

    June 15, 2019

Copyright © 2026 · Author Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in