The Problems With A Schedule

November is the start of the year breaking down, in the best ways possible. Sure, there are drawbacks to this time of year — think about how cold it is at all times seemingly, how sluggish it can feel to get up when everything is so dark first thing in the morning, or that nagging feeling in the back of your head that there’s only so much time left before the holidays and/or the end of the year and you’ve got shit you need to do — but at its best, November is when things start to slip and fall apart and the structure of the year begins to unravel just enough to let us breathe a little easier.

Occasionally, I admit, I get exhausted by the fact everything just keeps going: the work week is what it is, and then the weekend happens and that’s just enough time to catch up on everything and prepare for… the work week again. More than once, I’ve told people on Sunday night that I’m lowkey mad that I’ve finally got my head straight after the last week only to have to face up to doing it all over again the very next day; there’s a Sisyphian feel to the whole thing for 10 months out of the year… and then November arrives.

Part of it is because the holidays are around the corner, and that means that we get some time off for Thanksgiving here in the US, and then the Christmas and New Year breaks (or, if you’re me, one long extended break between the two) come along and it’s a glorious chance to step off the roundabout for a period. It’s a chance to decompress a little before the whole thing starts again in the New Year.

For the past couple years, however, I’ve had an additional boost to the system collapsing just a little bit: I’ve been so bad at taking PTO at work that, somewhere around the middle of October, someone has to take me to one side and politely remind me that I need to take a lot of time off in the next two months or else I’ll lose the hours I’ve accrued… and so, this year like last year, I get two solid months of three-day-weekends at the shortest. It feels decadent and indulgent and something I feel no small amount of guilt over, but I can’t deny that it also helps me relax and feel human in a way that I truly appreciate.

Sure, I could always use my PTO during the rest of the year so that I don’t feel so stressed and oppressed in the first place, but if I did that, I wouldn’t have any ability to take so much time off as the year ends and everything gently, wonderfully, unravels and gets slower and easier.

The Movies of October 2025

Here’s to watching movies on planes, which is where no less than five of my October watches come from — and Sorry, Baby, at least, was the kind of thing that makes me thrilled to have been trapped in a flying metal tube, given that I wouldn’t have likely watched it for any other reason but I utterly loved it. Elsewhere, let’s enjoy the abandonment of the traditional horror focus for the month and the return of two camp favorites to finish October off: Phantom of the Paradise and Beyond the Valley of the Dolls. Sometimes, you can’t beat the classics.

The Comics of October 2025

If you’d asked me at the start of October what this list would have looked like, I would have guessed it would have been short: New York Comic Con was looming, after all, and if there’s one thing I know about my time at comic conventions now, it’s that they leave little time to read comics — and that was a quarter of my entire month!

And then I started reading all of the Batman 1999 storyline No Man’s Land — a story so big it spans no less than six collected editions, and a full year’s worth of the Batman line with four to seven new installments per month. (Why did I start reading it? I have no idea; I don’t remember what made it seem like a good idea at the time.) I finished it on the last day of October, and it represented a chunk of my reading, and made this list a long one. Thanks, pre-millennial tension.

(Also heavily featured: early comics from Milestone Media, because I picked up the Milestone Compendium Vol. 1 brick of a book as a birthday gift to myself; I liked it so much, I just ordered the next three volumes, so don’t be surprised if Milestone books keep popping up for the next few months…)

  1. Uncanny X-Men Annual (2019) #1
  2. X-Men Forever (2009) #10
  3. Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #12
  4. Iron Man (1998) #4
  5. Superior Iron Man #1
  6. Birds of Prey (2023) #20
  7. Far Sector #1
  8. Absolute Evil #1
  9. New History of the DC Universe #4
  10. Justice League Unlimited (2024) #12
  11. The Flash (2023) #26
  12. Superman (2023) #31
  13. Birds of Prey (2023) #s 21-26
  14. Green Lantern (2023) #s 17-18
  15. The Worst (Molly Mendoza minicomic)
  16. Minötaar (Lissa Trissman minicomic)
  17. Green Lantern: Fractured Spectrum Special #1
  18. Green Lantern (2023) #s 19-22
  19. Green Lantern Corps (2025) #1
  20. X-Men: Age of Revelation Overture #1
  21. 2000 AD Prog 2454
  22. Judge Dredd Megazine #485
  23. Judge Death 2025 Mega-Special
  24. G.I. Joe (1982) #20
  25. Batman (1940) #672
  26. Green Lantern (2023) #s 23-24
  27. Green Lantern Corps (2025) #s 2-3
  28. Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #13
  29. Iron Man (1968) #39
  30. Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #14
  31. Absolute Superman #s 10-12
  32. Absolute Wonder Woman #s 6-8
  33. Green Lantern Corps (2025) #s 4-5
  34. Batman (1940) #673
  35. DC’s Zatannic Panic #1
  36. Die #s 8-9
  37. Blue Beetle (1967) #3
  38. X-Men Forever (2009) #11
  39. Young Avengers (2013) #2
  40. Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #15
  41. Iron Man (1968) #s 40-41
  42. Blue Devil #1
  43. Green Lantern Corps (2025) #6
  44. Gotham City Sirens: Unfit for Orbit #2
  45. Catwoman (2018) #73
  46. Catwoman (2001) #1
  47. Detective Comics (1937) #719
  48. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #73
  49. Nightwing (1996) #19
  50. Batman (1940) #553
  51. Azrael #40
  52. Detective Comics (1937) #720
  53. X-Men Forever (2009) #s 12-14
  54. Aquaman (2025) #s 3-10
  55. Green Lantern (2023) #25
  56. Green Lantern Corps (2025) #7
  57. Absolute Wonder Woman #9
  58. Blue Devil #2
  59. X-Men Gold (2017) #s 1-2
  60. Catwoman (1993) #56
  61. Robin (1993) #52
  62. Batman: Blackgate – Isle of Men #1
  63. Batman: Shadow of the Bat # 74
  64. The Batman Chronicles #12
  65. Die #10
  66. Green Lantern (2023) #s 26-28
  67. Green Lantern Corps (2025) #s 8-9
  68. Mr. Terrific: Year One #5
  69. Nightwing (1996) #20
  70. Batman (1940) #554
  71. Batman: Huntress/Spoiler – Blunt Trauma #1
  72. Detective Comics (1937) #721
  73. Catwoman (1993) #57
  74. Batman: Arkham Asylum – Tales of Madness #1
  75. Robin (1993) #53
  76. Batman: Shadow of the Bat # 75
  77. Absolute Wonder Woman #s 10-11
  78. Fire & Ice: When Hell Freezes Over #s 1-3
  79. DC vs. Vampires: World War V #s 8-12
  80. Let Them Live! Unpublished Tales from the DC Vault #5
  81. Batman (1940) #555
  82. Detective Comics (1937) #722
  83. Batman: Shadow of the Bat # 76
  84. Robin (1993) #54
  85. Fire & Ice: When Hell Freezes Over #4
  86. DC K.O. #1
  87. Fire & Ice: When Hell Freezes Over #s 5-6
  88. X-Men Gold (2017) #3
  89. X-Men Forever (2009) #s 15-17
  90. Batman (1940) #s 674-676
  91. 2000 AD Prog 2455
  92. X-Men Gold (2017) #s 4-6
  93. It’s Jeff! Halloween Infinity Comic #1
  94. X-Men Forever (2009) #s 18-21
  95. One World Under Doom #8
  96. X-Men: Hellfire Vigil #1
  97. The Amazing Spider-Man: Torn #1
  98. The Amazing Spider-Man (2025) #14
  99. Captain America (2025) #4
  100. The Power Fantasy #12
  101. World of Revelation #1
  102. Amazing X-Men (2025) #1
  103. Unbreakable X-Men #1
  104. Imperial War: Exiles #1
  105. Imperial War: Imperial Guardians #1
  106. Iron & Frost #1
  107. Marvel Knights: Punisher (2025) #1
  108. X-Men Forever (2009) #s 22-23
  109. X-Men Forever Annual #1
  110. X-Men Forever Digital Preview #1
  111. X-Men Forever (2009) #24
  112. Avengers (2023) #s 29-30
  113. Timeless (2021) #1
  114. Timeless (2022) #1
  115. Avengers (2023) #31
  116. Godzilla Destroys the Marvel Universe #s 1-4
  117. Batman (1940) #s 556-558
  118. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #s 77-79
  119. Detective Comics (1935) #724
  120. X-Men Forever Giant-Size #1
  121. X-Men Forever 2 #s 1-2
  122. Tony Stark: Iron Man #1
  123. X-Men: Gold (2017) #s 7-8
  124. Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix #1
  125. X-Men Legends #3
  126. X-Men: Gold (2017) #s 8-9
  127. Astonishing X-Men (2017) #s 1-3
  128. Batman (1940) #559
  129. Detective Comics (1935) #s 725-726
  130. Azrael: Agent of the Bat #s 47-48
  131. The Batman Chronicles #15
  132. Batman (1940) #s 560-561
  133. X-Factor (1986) #97
  134. Marvel Comics Presents #48
  135. The Mighty Thor (1966) #402
  136. Astonishing X-Men (2017) #s 4-6
  137. Detective Comics (1935) #s 727-729
  138. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #s 80-82
  139. Batman (1940) #562
  140. Azrael: Agent of the Bat #s 49-50
  141. X-Men: Gold (2017) #s 10-11
  142. X-Men Forever 2 #3
  143. Tony Stark: Iron Man #2
  144. Phoenix Resurrection: The Return of Jean Grey #1
  145. Cable (2017) #1
  146. DC WIP: Absolute Batman #1
  147. Absolute Flash #1
  148. Batman: No Man’s Land #1
  149. DC Universe Online Legends #s 1-3
  150. X-Men: Gold (2017) #s 12-13
  151. Absolute Flash #s 2-4
  152. Batman & Robin: Year One #12
  153. DC K.O. Knightfight #1
  154. Cheetah and Cheshire Rob the Justice League #4
  155. Batman (2025) #3
  156. Absolute Green Lantern #8
  157. Harley and Ivy: Life and Crimes #1
  158. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #83
  159. Batman (1940) #563
  160. Detective Comics (1935) #730
  161. Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow #1
  162. 2000 AD Prog 2456
  163. Azrael: Agent of the Bat #51
  164. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #116
  165. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #84
  166. Batman (1940) #564
  167. Detective Comics (1935) #731
  168. X-Men: Gold (2017) #s 14-16
  169. It’s Jeff! Halloween Infinity Comic #2
  170. X-Men Forever 2 #4
  171. New History of the DC Universe #4
  172. Azrael: Agent of the Bat #52
  173. Milestone 30th Anniversary Special #1
  174. Static Shock Special (2011) #1
  175. Absolute Batman Annual #1
  176. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #117
  177. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #85
  178. Batman (1940) #565
  179. Detective Comics (1935) #732
  180. The Batman Chronicles #16
  181. X-Men: Gold (2017) #s 17-20
  182. Absolute Flash #5
  183. X-Men: Gold (2017) #s 21-22
  184. X-Men: Gold Annual #1
  185. Blue Beetle (1967) #4
  186. Hardware (1993) #1
  187. Howard the Duck (2015) #1
  188. Die #11
  189. The Incredible Hulk (2023) #s 28-30
  190. Storm (2024) #10
  191. Azrael: Agent of the Bat #53
  192. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #118
  193. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #86
  194. Batman (1940) #566
  195. Detective Comics (1935) #733
  196. Azrael: Agent of the Bat #s 54-55
  197. Blue Beetle (1967) #5
  198. X-Men: Gold (2017) #s 23-25
  199. Hardware (1993) #2
  200. Ultimate Spider-Man: Incursion #5
  201. Miles Morales: Spider-Man (2022) #39
  202. Hardware (1993) #s 3-4
  203. Ultimate Spider-Man (2024) #22
  204. The Ultimates (2024) #17
  205. Fantastic Four (2025) #4
  206. Marvel Zombies Red Band #2
  207. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #119
  208. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #87
  209. Batman (1940) #567
  210. Detective Comics (1935) #734
  211. Young Justice: No Man’s Land #1
  212. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #120
  213. Robin (1993) #67
  214. Azrael: Agent of the Bat #s 56-57
  215. Blood Syndicate (1993) #1
  216. The Batman Chronicles #17
  217. Nightwing (1996) #s 35-37
  218. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #88
  219. Batman (1940) #568
  220. Detective Comics (1935) #735
  221. Catwoman (1993) #s 72-74
  222. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #121
  223. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #89
  224. Batman (1940) #569
  225. X-Men: Gold (2017) #26
  226. Marvel Knights: The World to Come #s 1-3
  227. Ultimate Spider-Man: Incursion #1
  228. Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #16
  229. SWORD (2021) #7
  230. Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #17
  231. Cable: Reloaded #1
  232. The Last Annihilation: Wiccan and Hulkling #1
  233. Blood Syndicate (1993) #2
  234. The Last Annihilation: Wakanda #1
  235. Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #18
  236. SWORD (2021) #s 8-9
  237. DC Comics Presents (1978) #s 77-78
  238. Detective Comics (1935) #736
  239. Robin (1993) #s 68-70
  240. Azrael: Agent of the Bat #58
  241. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #122
  242. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #90
  243. Blood Syndicate (1993) #3
  244. 2000 AD Prog 2457
  245. Absolute Wonder Woman #12
  246. SWORD (2021) #s 10-11
  247. Phoenix Resurrection: The Return of Jean Grey #s 2-3
  248. Supergirl Special (2023) #1
  249. Action Comics (1938) #s 1070-1081 (Supergirl stories only)
  250. Absolute Flash #6
  251. Batman (1940) #570
  252. Detective Comics (1935) #737
  253. Phoenix Resurrection: The Return of Jean Grey #s 4-5
  254. X-Men Red Annual #1
  255. X-Men Red (2018) #1
  256. Blood Syndicate (1993) #4
  257. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #123
  258. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #91
  259. Batman (1940) #571
  260. Detective Comics (1935) #738
  261. Legion of Super-Heroes (1989) #s 1-2
  262. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #124
  263. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #92
  264. Batman: No Man’s Land Secret Files and Origins #1
  265. Robin (1993) #s 71-72
  266. The Batman Chronicles #18
  267. Batman (1940) #572
  268. Legion of Super-Heroes (1989) #s 3-4
  269. Adventures of Superman (1987) #s 476-478
  270. 2000 AD Annual 2026
  271. Icon (1993) #1
  272. Judge Dredd: Tunnels
  273. Icon (1993) #s 2-3
  274. Static (1993) #1
  275. Legion of Super-Heroes (1989) #s 5-6
  276. Battleworld (2025) #2
  277. Death of the Silver Surfer #5
  278. Imperial (2025) #4
  279. The Mortal Thor #3
  280. Static (1993) #2
  281. Legion of Super-Heroes (1989) #7
  282. Imperial (2025) #s 1-3
  283. Static (1993) #3
  284. Detective Comics (1935) #739
  285. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #125
  286. Azrael: Agent of the Bat #59
  287. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #93
  288. Nightwing (1996) #s 38-39
  289. Batman: No Man’s Land #0
  290. It’s Jeff! Halloween Special #3
  291. X-Men: Red (2018) #2
  292. Static (1993) #4
  293. Xombi (1994) #1
  294. Batman (1940) #573
  295. Detective Comics (1935) #740
  296. Azrael: Agent of the Bat #s 60-61
  297. Catwoman (1993) #s 76-77
  298. Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (1989) #126
  299. Batman/Deadpool #1
  300. Batman/Superman: World’s Finest #45
  301. Mr. Terrific: Year One #6
  302. Legion of Super-Heroes (1989) #8
  303. Static Shock (2011) #1
  304. Justice League of America (2006) #s 28-31 
  305. Xombi (2011) #1
  306. The Brave and the Bold (2007) #s 24-25
  307. Batman (1940) #574
  308. Detective Comics (1935) #741
  309. Robin (1993) #73
  310. Batman: Shadow of the Bat #94
  311. The Brave and the Bold (2007) #26
  312. Batman: Gotham Knights (2000) #1
  313. Catwoman (1993) #78
  314. It’s Jeff! Halloween Special #4
  315. Xombi (1994) #2

Listen to the Band

One of the things my therapist talked about early on in our sessions — and something that I didn’t quite get for awhile — was how things felt. I thought she was talking about emotions, because this was therapy and surely that’s what you talk about in therapy, but no; she was talking about how things felt physically. She’d ask me how my body felt after particularly stressful or emotional moments, and I’d offer some variation on, I don’t know, I wasn’t really paying attention, and she’d come back with her own variation on, well, can you start because that would really be helpful, thank you.

All of this is prelude to telling you that I can tell when I’m stressed these days because my lower back aches.

I think this is one of those things that I’ve actually known before I knew it, if that makes sense; I’d noticed over the past couple years that the first day of any given convention will end with me in the hotel room feeling a sudden pain in my lower back that temporarily makes me think, oh fuck, it’s finally happened, I’ve thrown my back out until it subsides and I blame it on walking around all day with my laptop in a bag. (This, for some reason, always seems to happen when I’m standing up after writing for awhile, hunched over the computer, and suddenly realize I’m hungry and should do something about that.) The laptop isn’t to blame; my age isn’t, really, either. It’s that I’m inevitably more stressed than I’d admit at the time.

I’ve come to notice the warning signs, and realize the lower back is one of two places I hold all my stress. (My left shoulder is the other; why the left and not the right? Would that I had an answer.) It’s like realizing that when I feel sad, I can feel it in the back of my neck and as a headache before the emotion makes its way to the bit of my brain that can name things. Or noticing that I feel happiness in the back of my head first. (Nope, I can’t explain that; don’t ask me to.)

Other people’s bodies, according to pop songs, are wonderlands. Much to the doubtless satisfaction of my therapist, I’ve finally realized that mine is just early warning signs.

Saving Some in The Fuck Pocket

I think everyone is at least familiar with the concept of having run out of fucks to give, right? It’s internet shorthand for all bets being off, for nothing holding anyone back, and the idea of someone being freed from whatever constraints they’re normally under, whether societal or otherwise. We’ve all thought, at one point or another, that it would be wonderful to have no fucks left to give, or complained whenever we’re feeling pushed to some imaginary limit that we’re getting close to that point.

Or, at least, that’s what I used to think it meant.

For a multitude of reasons — none of which were inherently bad, I hasten to point out — I found myself utterly exhausted by the time Friday rolled around last week. I was feeling a little bit sick, but also run down by a work week that was particularly heavy (and also my first full five-days-of-regular-work since the start of the month, thanks to New York Comic Con); there were also visiting family members, which was at once a welcome thing and another reason why I just felt “on” continually from waking up until going to bed all week… and then I got to Friday, and I realized that I genuinely had no fucks left to give.

But I don’t mean that in any angry or even energized manner. I mean it very literally; I was so tired that I struggled to care about anything I was doing, whether it was for work or for myself. Everything felt particularly flat and rote, as if I was going through the motions before I could make it into bed and collapse to re-energize myself a little bit. It’s not that good things didn’t happen on that day, because they did, it’s that I looked at them as if through a microscope: that’s good, I thought to myself very calmly and dispassionately. I should remember to be excited about that later. I was simply too run down to do anything else.

If there was one upside to this unfortunately thin day, it was that my head started making plans for what to do when whatever could be described as my mojo was suitably regained, thinking of ways to be indulgent and comforting in the face of the cold, wet weather and the lack of sun in the sky for the next few days. It was entirely unintentional, but instinctive, as if my subconscious was declaring, this behavior cannot stand. We’ll come up with a way to safeguard against it in future, if we can.

All things considered, I’d rather have had a few fucks left in my back pocket, though. Just to see me through.

The City That Never Speaks

Traditionally, in the aftermath of a New York Comic Con, I find myself wandering the streets of the city without purpose, enjoying the anonymity — no-one is going to ask for my help! — and the New York-ness of it all; in 2024, I wandered the streets for hours, listening to music and feeling at one with everything in an indefinable, utterly necessary manner. (It helped that I’d had such a bad few days prior that just not speaking and exercising alone felt really good, to be honest.) This year, that wasn’t really an option — while I had the time, I didn’t have either the raincoat or the umbrella.

Instead, I ran between awnings and storefronts and tried not to get too wet on my way to, and then returning from, brunch with a friend. And in the process, I has this strange, my-mind-is-clearly-overworked-and-going-places, thought that appeared unbidden in the forefront of my head: I think the city is trying to talk to me.

What had actually happened was that I’d noticed just how ubiquitous language is in Manhattan. There are signs everywhere: storefronts, ads, building names, fliers, graffiti. Everywhere you look in the city, there’s writing and it’s all colorful and eyecatching and ever-present, this cacophony of words that’s at war with each other: buy these bananas and STOP and this mobile plan is better than yours and by the way have you seen how cheap these burgers are. As I was ducking in and out of small places of shelter, the idea of, “what if there’s actually a hidden connective thread in all of this that I’m not seeing?” popped into my mind.

There isn’t, of course; it’s a strange science fiction idea that I’m sure has appeared in something I’ve watched or read — Danny the Street in Grant Morrison’s Doom Patrol but wihout the letters re-arranging to make coherent sentences — but for a brief second, an eyeblink, the possibility was in my head like the briefest of glimpses into another world where things are just that little bit more interesting.

Have To Be

I’m very bad at letting go of things, once I’ve set my mind to them. For all that I can be indecisive in the moment (read: “for all that I am indecisive,” but I’m being kind to myself and downplaying it), once I actually manage to make up my mind on a course of action, there’s a fair chance that I’m going to become more attached to that decision than I mean to, and find myself holding onto that choice no matter what lies ahead. I don’t mean to be like this, and in fact, I try not to be — change is good, I tell myself, and I mostly believe it — but, nonetheless, there it is: this is who I am, or at least can be, more often than not.

I say thing as someone who had a moment of realization the other week coming from a reality TV show. If I was a more intelligent man, or at least a more egotistical one, I’d feel embarrassed about the source of this epiphany, but fuck it. I was watching Netflix’s Next Gen Chef, which is essentially What If Top Chef, But They Were A Little Younger And With Less Impressive Resumes? It’s a fun enough show, and I’m a sucker for this kind of thing, but it wasn’t something I went into hoping for any kind of particular self-reflection, or a moment that I’d still be thinking about weeks later.

The gimmick for the show is, it’s a cooking competition that takes place inside the Culinary Institute of America, and the CIA teachers act as mentors for the contestants throughout the show. A slight change from the traditional format, but a useful one; the mentors get to help out, act as sounding boards in moments of uncertainty and, for the viewer, explain things and offer sarcasm when it’s called for.

So, the show hits that traditional cooking show moment that every season gets to at least once a season: a chef is trying to make a particular meal and it all goes to shit. An ingredient fails, and the chef starts spiraling because everything is ruined and they don’t know what to do. Except, in this case, the mentor shows up and asks what’s happened and, after being filled in, asks the most obvious question: Does it have to be that dish?I

It really is such a straightforward question, and such an unsurprising thought — you’re trying this thing and it’s not working out, so try something else — but what stuck with me was the question itself, more than the idea of “start over.” Does it have to be the thing that you’ve been focusing on? Why don’t you look at what you’ve got that works and think about what else can be done with it? What might even be better, all things considered?

That’s what I’ve started asking myself when I can feel myself getting fixated on a particular idea or a particular feeling about how something is “supposed” to happen. Does it have to be that way? Sometimes the answer is yes; sometimes, it’s “it doesn’t have to, but I’d still like it to be,” and that’s fine too. What matters more is the asking, and the forgiveness and grace implied in being willing to say no and change everything without giving myself a hard time.

It’s a small step, and one that I suspect other people make without any kind of self-reflection at all; but it’s a nice change for me.