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Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Episode 5: Making Use of a Broken Gift

I figure it’s time to tell you a bit about myself since we’re a few episodes in and maybe not all of you know me in real life. Unfortunately, every attempt I make at writing this thing out turns into a list of labels. So, I’m just going to run with that and start with giving you some of my labels.

I’m a wife and mother. I’ve been married to my husband for eleven years, and we have two children. My seven year old son is very creative and imaginative, as well as energetic and a very sensitive soul. My daughter just turned four so she basically thinks she’s grown now and is ready to do everything. She’s super bossy, but also very nurturing and loves to take care of people. We also have a dog, can’t leave my furry boy out. We adopted Bode nine years ago as a rescue dog. He’s a total weirdo but he’s a good fit for our family that way.

I’m also a homeschooler. I never thought I would be. I always thought homeschoolers were weird so that was a big no for me. Then, when my son was preschool aged and we looked into programs, we found that we couldn’t afford it. So I started exploring the homeschool world. I was amazed by what I found. There are so many styles, curriculum choices, and research which shows how beneficial homeschooling can be. Now, clearly, I believe in it because we do it. That said, I don’t sit in judgment of anyone who makes a different education choice for their kids. Homeschooling can be really hard and there are days I question my own choices (insider info: all homeschoolers question their sanity at some point. We’re not filled with everlasting patience for our own children all the time). But I do really love having the extra time with my kids, the opportunity to be creative in our learning, and being able to pursue any interests and passions we uncover. Maybe someday I’ll do a whole episode about homeschooling to debunk some myths or offer encouragement for those who are interested, but today is not that day, so we’ll move on.

I’m also a Christian. Now when I say Christian, I realize that can be a loaded term. I do not mean someone who just goes to church or who follows a bunch of rules or hates people. I don’t hate people. I’m not very good at following rules (I have a big fat sin nature just like everyone else) and while I do go to church, I don’t think that makes me a better person that someone who does not. When I say Christian I mean that there came a point in my life where I realized things were pretty messed up and I needed Jesus. It also means that in my darkest moments and hardest seasons, I’ve not been alone. I seriously have to tell you guys about the fireflies of 2016 someday….but today is not that day, so we’re moving on again.

I am also an author. And being an author is what led me to this podcast. Let me give you the backstory.

When I was in third grade I had this wonderful teacher. Her name was Mrs. Morris. She has since passed away after a battle with cancer. But I was lucky enough to have her. She was like one of those teachers you find in story books. She was young and pretty and full of life. She had new ideas and ways of doing things. She wasn’t afraid to be a little outside the box and she encouraged us to be a little outside the box too. I still remember her reading Charlie and the Choclate Factory aloud to us. And I remember she had these stations set up in the classroom. One was a reading station with a big carpet and some big squishy teddy bears and bean bags where we could just curl up and read. Now, I’ve loved books and stories for longer than I can remember so anytime I’ve ever been encouraged to just sit and read, it’s been my favorite. But Mrs. Morris also had writing stations. We would write in our spiral notebooks about all kinds of things. They could be lilke journal entries or short stories or just telling her what our plans were for the weekend---cause you know, eight year olds have some great weekend plans. And she would write in the margins all manner of encouragement and feedback to nurture our writing. She also had each of us write our own book. She made cardboard covers and put blank pages inside so each of us could write and illustrate our own story. Mine was called The Old Horse in the Beat-Down Stable. It sounds so bleak, doesn’t it? I still have it somewhere. I was so proud of my story and it lit a tiny spark of passion for writing.

Fast forward to 11th grade, English Lit with Mrs. Clark. I knew by then that I really loved reading, especially old classics but it was in her class that I realized I was different. We were studying couplets and while most of my classmates needed a minute to figure them out, I seemed to be getting it instantly. This was the moment I realized not everyone was like me and I was good at something. And I don't care who you are or what your thing is--if it's couplets from English poetry or trigonometry or fixing cars or styling hair--when you have that moment when you discover a talent, skill, or strong interest, it's a good moment. And that was one of my moments. Also, in this class, Mrs. Clark had us each write an allegorical short story. We had just studied Jonathan Swift and learned how he used allegory to make political points through story. I wrote a short story for this assignment that I absolutely loved. In fact, I turned it into a full length novel by the end of my freshman year of college. Then it morphed into a full series. Actually, for the next ten years, I continued tinkering with the story until it became this huge, unwieldy thing that didn't make much sense any more. Characters kept changing, the idea of what it was really about kept evolving, there were fairies at one point. It was a lot. But it kept the passion for writing alive and active in me.

However, there have been times when the writing stops, when the part of me that is a writer seems to go to sleep. It's usually because of excessive busyness, or sometimes it's because it feels like it doesn't matter so I should just watch TV, but whenever I stop writing, it's like I'm missing something that is inherent and essential to being me.

There was a gap for a few years when I stopped. Life was breakneck busy after my son was born. I was transitioning from working full time to being a stay at home mom and I also ended up leading our church's youth group in our living room. I had a blog then I posted in sometimes, and I wrote my own youth lessons most of the time, but that was it. I wasn't really writing. For two years, I didn't work at all on my novels.

Then, when my son was two, I realized I needed something that was just mine. I loved being a mom, but it's so demanding. And my boy as a two year old was an absolute dynamo from the moment he woke up to when I finally convinced him to fall asleep at night. And not only was I exhausted, but I had lost a sense of self. It was like I was a mom who was supposed to do mom things and think mom thoughts and just have mom feelings. And wife feelings too. But there was nothing left for me. So my husband and I talked and agreed I should have a night every week to do whatever I wanted. We didn't have a lot of money then so I didn't want to just do shopping sprees and I didn't have a lot of friends then so I couldn't just go out with the girls (plus, my friends were all busy too). I did, however, have a laptop, and there was an amazing coffee shop nearby. We lived outside of Bowling Green, Ohio then and in Bowling Green there is a coffee shop called Grounds for Thought that has not only coffee and a really good chai latte, but used books. Tons and tons and tons of used books. So I would grab my laptop, order a big mug of chai, get a donut with strawberry icing, and settle in to write.

The novels I had been messing around with since high school were unusable. It was all nonsense at that point that no amount of editing could unravel. But there were a few fantastic characters worth air-lifting into a new book. I changed their names and decided to start anew. Yet, when I opened that new Word document and bright shiny white page was staring back at me, I had no idea how to start. It's very intimidating to sit down and try to just write a book. So I decided to just start with a single scene and whatever characters came to mind. In my mind's eye, I could see a grandfather and his adult granddaughter. They were outside in a plaza. My hometown, Cuyahoga Falls, has this riverfront area with stores and a cobbled streets. That's where I saw them. And the granddaughter was in a hot pink vintage party dress. And as I crafted the scene what bubbled to the surface was how much they adored each other. These characters were based on my own grandfather and me, although I don't own a fabulous pink party dress and my PapPap was a man of much fewer words. But this relationship gave shape to a brand new story. It was a launch point.

I took my laptop to Grounds for Thought every week for months. I pounded away at a rough draft morning, noon, and night in spare moments. I stayed up to two or three in the morning. I finished it on my thirtieth birthday. It would be three more years before the final draft was finished and ready for publication. It took four years in total.

I published that book in 2018. It was the first novel in the Sayen Falls series, and it's title is Once More. It's basically my third baby. But as I said, Sayen Falls is a series. There are four novels in total. Or there will be. When I published Once More, I assumed I'd start right away on the next one. I have the entire story arc in my head. I have the story arc for the whole series in my head. I can tell you who gets married, who has babies, what everyone argues about, what kind of tea they drink for breakfast. The trouble is, I can't seem to get it to come out of my head and onto the page.

Every time I try, what comes out isn't good. I suppose it's a form of writer's block and I've analyzed it six ways from Sunday. It feels like my words--the words I've had since third grade--have dried up and gone away. Every now and then there's a cloudburst and I can write something good and beautiful. It just never lasts for long.

And so I've tried to give this gift back to God. Here you go, it's broken and I can't use it anymore. The
trouble with that is that God doesn't accept returns and he doesn't make exchanges. He gently hands it back to me, in his own way, and tells me that he doesn't give gifts that are broken and he doesn't give gifts just so I can hand them back and say I don't want this. He gives gifts so we use them, even when it's hard, and when it doesn't flow, and even when you feel crazy doing it. If it's a gift, you're meant to use it.

So that's where I am. I'm simply trying to be obedient to use what I have. I don't want to be the guy who buried his talent in the ground because he didn't have any better ideas and fear stopped him from making better choices. I might not be the five talent guy who gets the biggest return on his investment--and that's okay. Maybe, just maybe, I can be the three talent guy who used what he had and didn't compare himself to the five talent guy and didn't give up like the one talent guy, and had something to offer the master when he returned. I'd rather have something, even if it's small, than nothing.

And that's what i'm doing now. When writing the novels started to feel so strained, I turned my attention to blogging. In fact, that's where you find all of my show notes, so you can look around at the blog posts as well. But even that has felt so hit or miss and hard to do. Then, one day, I decided to try podcasting. I'm going to be very honest--I have no idea why. If writing wasn't working, it doesn't really make sense to think that talking will work. If the words are gone, then what in the world am I saying? Still, I did it anyway. And here we are.

In a way, I wish I fit into a nice little niche and could tell you that I'm always going to talk about motherhood or homeschooling or books, but I've never been good at pigeon holes. I'm also not sure that's what God has for me. He not only gifted me words, but a vivid imagination and a thirst for beauty and passion for an inspired life. It will all be used somehow, some way. As author Erma Bombeck said, "When I stand before God at the end of my life, I would hope that I would not have a single bit of talent left, and could say, 'I used everything you gave me.'"

In the first episode I talked about Plotting Possibility and plotting a course. God is plotting the course here, the course of my life, the course of my story, and the course of this podcast. We're all in this together to see where we're going. I promise to be obedient and to use my gifts, and I hope and I pray that it's a blessing to you as we go together on this journey.

Gather the Good

Since this post is all about me, I thought I'd just tell you about a few of my favorite things in the entire world. These are really just a few random things that I truly love and I don't know when else I'll be able to talk about them.

My favorite vacation spot is Ocean City, New Jersey. In fact, it was the inspiration for Summerstead Isle in my novels. It's the perfect family vacation destination with beautiful beaches, a long boardwalk with miniatrue golf, amusement parks, and delicious food. If you ever go, you have to do Golden Galleon mini golf, grab a slice of Manco and Manco's pizza, and bike all the way to the end of the boardwalk to get some hot fresh donuts from Browns. It's worth the exercise.

My kids enjoying the ocean on our last night in OCNJ this past summer. 

The kids and husband playing skee ball on our first night in OCNJ. Only $0.10 a game!

The Music Pier reaching into the sea. 
That said, my favorite trip I've ever taken was to London and Ireland when I graduated high school. My uncle is a world traveler himself, and took my brother and me each on trips when we graduated. I got to pick so we trotted off for a week in London and a week in Ireland. I still look at the pictures all the time and tell the kids all about it like I was just there last week (It's been 16 years). It's true that the Irish are the friendliest people ever. And London is an amazing city. Someday I must go back.

18 year old me on The London Eye
While I was there, I got to go to the Globe Theater where Shakespeare's plays were first performed. Now, I'm actually not a total geek for Shakespeare but I do have a soft spot for him. His writing comes up quite a bit in my own actually. The title Once More is from a quote in Henry V, "once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more!" The Hollow Crown series is excellent. It stars Jeremy Irons and Tom Hiddleston, but also Michelle Dockery (think: Lady Mary from Downton Abbey) has a supporting role. It's pretty amazing to watch Scar, Loki, and Lady Mary do Shakespeare. But my very favorite play of all time is Much Ado About Nothing. The title for the second novel, Mend, is from a quote in that play. "Serve God, love me, and mend." I absolutely insist you watch the Kenneth Branagh version from the 90s. It was my first real introduction to Shakespeare when I was about 14 or so, and I love it as much now as I did then.

My last bit of goodness for today, the Cuyahoga Valley National Parks. As I said, I grew up in Cuyahoga Falls and as a teenager, my friends and I regularly went to the valley to hike and talk about our cute boys and feelings and other things that were important to us. I sorta thought everyone had a valley nearby for doing such things, but when I went to college, in the flattest county in Ohio, I realized that's not so. I desperately missed my green, twisty, windy valley in the ten years I lived in very flat, very straight lined Wood County. If you're an outdoorsy type, or ever find yourself in the Cleveland-Akron area with a few hours and nothing to do, you must drive into the valley and explore. And if you can go in the fall, enjoy how golden everything becomes as the sun pours through golden leaves. It's good stuff.

Monday, January 6, 2020

Show Notes Ep4: The Book Episode!

I read close to 60 books in 2019.  This was a huge lifestyle change for me. For the last seven years, I usually read maybe 3-5 books the entire year. I read Book Girl by Sarah Clarkson and it absolutely reignited my desire to read AND gave me some good ideas on how to fit more reading time in. It's not a competition; I know people who have read twice or triple this amount this year, I know people who have read just a couple books. Who cares, as long as you're reading and enjoying it! 

If you want some tips, here's what I found that helped me. 
  • Only read what you want to. I have a stack of unfinished books; some I'll eventually complete and others I won't. Life's too short to read a book for pleasure that doesn't actually give you any pleasure.
  • I started reading a chapter in the morning and a chapter at night. The morning chapter eventually stopped because of the kids and life (and honestly, its easier to scroll my phone). But it helped me get a ton of reading in. 
  • Speaking of phones, let's talk screens. They're everywhere and we love them because it's easy and sometimes because it's mindless. But if you really want to boost your reading, reduce your screen time. I basically stopped watching TV at night for six months or so, and I read forty books or more as a result. And when I was reading instead of scrolling Facebook, I read even more. 
  • But phones can be helpful if you put books on them! I use the Libby app which I got through Overdrive. Now, I tend to go hot and cold with ebooks. I'll read three or four and then none for months. I like having something to read wherever I am, I like it as an alternative to social media, and I'm often able to borrow a book quicker than requesting the physical copy from my library. 
  • Audiobooks are also a great way to get in some extra reading. Studies show that listening to an audibook is just as good for your brain as reading it physically.
  • For a while I was using some bullet journal tracking pages that really motivated me to read. I used graph paper to chart every chapter read. I wrote the title and author of each book then numbered the squares for however many chapters the book has. If there was an introduction, prologue, epilogue and so on I used the first letter of the word instead of a number. Then, I'd color in the squares as I read. I also downloaded free from Pinterest a cute page with blank books to write in the titles of the books I finished. 
  • I think the biggest thing for me was simply the desire to have more books and words in my life. I had become an author who didn't really read. I also could feel my attention span shrinking and my need for constant entertainment increasing. Reading books help your brain absorb, engage, connect, and expand in ways that screens simply don't. I wanted a healthier brain and I missed being a real book nerd, so I changed some habits and made it happen. 
Book Lists

So here's the deal, I created four categories for the books I read this year. And in those categories, I selected my favorite seven books. Why seven? Because that's what looked good in the Instagram layout. I'm actually going to slip in a few extras in these lists, but here are my top faves from 2019. Here is a link to the full book list on Goodreads if you'd like to find out more about each book. 

Fiction
  1. The Scent of Water by Elizabeth Goudge
  2. The Dean's Watch by Elizabeth Goudge 
  3. A City of Bells by Elizabeth Goudge (yes, there's a real theme here.)
  4. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by MaryAnn Shaffer and Annie Barrows
  5. Belgravia by Julian Fellowes (being made into a series or movie or some such now). 
  6. The Lost Book of the Grail by Charlie Lovett (I also read his books First Impressions and The Bookman's Tale. All quite good!) 
  7. How to Find Love in a Bookshop by Veronica Henry
  8. The Poet's Dog by Patricia MacLachlan (this is actually a chapter book for kids or tweens, but I really really enjoyed it. Sometimes it's nice to pick up a simple book with a beautiful story to tell.) 
  9. Becoming Mrs. Lewis by Patti Callahan (This is one of the best books I read last year. And Lewis's stepson Douglas says that it's a pretty accurate portrayal of what happened.)
  10. Green Ember by SD Smith 
Christian Non-fiction
  1. Liturgy of the Ordinary by Tish Harrison Warren 
  2. The Celtic Way of Prayer by Esther De Waal
  3. A Shepherd Looks at Psalm 23 by Phillip Keller 
  4. The Inner Voice of Love by Henri Nouwen 
  5. The Freedom of Self Forgetfulness by Tim Keller
  6. Jesus Among Other Gods by Ravi Zacharias 
  7. Looking for Lovely by Annie F. Downs 
General Non-fiction
*This is maybe an inaccurate category title because several of the authors here are professing Christians who write with that worldview. But the topics of these books are not strictly theological or about "Christian living" so to speak. 
  1. Different by Nathan Clarkson and Sally Clarkson
  2. Own Your Life by Sally Clarkson
  3. Caught Up in a Story by Sarah Clarkson (yes, they're all related). 
  4. Book Girl by Sarah Clarkson (Read this book if you want more tips and inspiration for your reading life. It totally reinvigorated my own reading life!)
  5. Brave Learner by Julie Bogart
  6. Teaching from Rest by Sarah Mackenzie
  7. Gift From the Sea by Anne Morrow Lindbergh 
  8. The Man Who Invented Christmas by Les Stanford
Books I Re-read This Year
  1. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by CS Lewis 
  2. Anne of Green Gables by LM Montgomery
  3. "...And Ladies of the Club" by Helen Hooven Santmeyer
  4. The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett (truthfully this was the first time I ever finished it and I totally loved it)
  5. The Jesus I Never Knew by Philip Yancey
  6. Misty of Chincoteague by Marguerite Henry 
  7. The Birth by Gene Edwards 
Gather the Good

Two things that pair very well with books....tea and music! I'm a huge fan of loose leaf tea. My favorite company is Plum Deluxe. They have a blend that is perfect for reading....it's called Reading Nook! If you're new to loose leaf tea, don't be intimidated. All you need is some tea, an infuser, boiling water, and a mug.

And the perfect musical accompaniment is an album called Story Book Soundscapes by Joel Clarkson. Joel composed this album specifically to go with stories. It is an amazing soundtrack for reading. Pop in some earbuds, grab a good book, and a mug of hot tea and enjoy!!

Bonus mention: PBS Masterpiece's show Victoria. If you enjoy period dramas, you must try this show. It's a beautiful story telling of Queen Victoria's life. It's more or less accurate, from what I've read of that giant biography I'm planning to finish this year, but of course, it is television so there are some poetic liberties. I've binged watched each season several times. Definitely check it out!

Holding Space

 I don't have to tell you that this has been a hard year. It's a collective experience. A brotherhood worldwide. All of us on planet...