Tag Archives: Writers

NaNoWriMo Challenge

What happens when your writing buddies find out you didn’t make time to plan a project for this November. Short stories that you have to publish. This is an unedited version, but here goes. Be kind with your feedback please!

Imaginary Friends

Where was my Daddy?  The last time he forgot to pick me up from school, I had to wait with a teacher.  He was so mad at me for getting the school involved.  I should just know that he would be there.  That time, I waited an hour before a teacher found me on her way home.  I was sitting on the school steps crying.  That was before, I’m almost a year older now, she thought.  “My tenth birthday is next month, and I hope I get to have a party with cake and everything.  Well, I’ll be happy with just a cake with one candle that I can make a wish on.”

Roanna waited on the steps until everyone was gone.  Every time a teacher opened the door to the building to leave, I ran around the wall and hid behind the big tree.  All the cars are gone from the parking lot now and the janitor locked the gate.  I’m locked in and it’s four o’clock. I think Daddy really did forget me this time.  It’s been two hours.  I’ve done all my homework and finished reading our book for this semester.  There is nothing left for me to do except imagine.  I don’t think playing the imagine game is a good thing right now.  I can imagine a storm, a real one.  Mom said I was silly, that no one can imagine a storm, but I think I really did.

So little Roanna’s thoughts went that day.  She became more frightened the longer she waited for a father that would never come.  He was currently speeding away on the interstate as fast as he could, checking the rear view mirror every so often to avoid getting caught.  His thoughts were on freedom and the sexy new girlfriend sitting next to him with her feet up on the dashboard of the former family car.  He never gave one thought to that little girl who had been crying on and off for the last hour.  The tears she had shed barely dried before new ones spilled from her eyes.

Roanna thought she would find a way off the property and stand by the front gate.  Earlier in the week, she overheard some boys talking about how to break into the school when everyone was gone.  “If the boys can break in, I can break out.” She thought.  She hefted her backpack on and thought better of it.  “This is heavy and I’ve done my homework. It’s a long walk home and I don’t want carry them all the way home”  Roanna made her way to the trashcan outside of the principals window.  “No one uses this can very much and maybe I can find a plastic bag to put my books in.”  Roanna peered into the can and found that the janitor had placed a brand-new bag in it.  Smiling, she pulled the bag out and placed her books inside, carefully folding the bag around her heavy books.  Next, she began searching for a place to stash them and went back to the front of the school to the wall she had used to hide.  She crawled under the brush and pushed the bag into the bush with all the thorns.  Hopefully, the extra wrapping would protect the books.

She made her way to the section of the fence the boys had mentioned.  Part of it was undone at the top, just as they said.  A voice in her head told her to jump up and use gravity to help her. She jumped and grabbed the chain link and swung her body to the side as hard as she could.  The fence barely moved. Again, she thought. Three tries later, she had enough space to squeeze through if she dropped her backpack over first and went sideways.  “You can do it,” she thought.  Roanna felt the pinch of metal against her skin and hoped she wouldn’t get stuck.  Finally, she made it with only scratches where her arm was bare and a drop of blood on the back of her hand.

Ignoring the gap in the fence, she left it and dusted herself off.  Picking up her backpack she looked around, hoping her Daddy would be pulling up to the curb. Her hopes crashed and she felt the tears welling up.  “Don’t you dare give up,” her inside voice said.  She stiffened her spine and began climbing through the landscaping to the street. “Okay, which way is home.  If I go the way Mom and Dad drive me, it will take longer, but I won’t get lost.”  Her inside thoughts told her to start walking the way she knew and look for a shortcut.  “Look confident with your head up, don’t look like a victim.” She did just that with her head held high she stepped out into the crosswalk, headed for home.  She knew that the thoughts were not her own and struggled with the concept.

She was confidently walking home when a dog ran out from between two houses.  She ran from the dog before some boys saw her running and screaming and chased the dog away with sticks and rocks.  Roanna kept on running until she realized that the dog and boys were nowhere to be seen.  She didn’t know where she was.  She was frightened and didn’t know what to do.  Her imaginary friend spoke to her.  His voice was in her head, but it was as real to her as if he was standing in front of her.  He spoke to her with soothing words and begged her not to cry.  That things would be o.k. to look around for a solution.  She should have realized that it was odd that her imaginary friend would use a word like solution, a word that just wasn’t in an eleven-year-old vocabulary.  The voice calmly spoke to her to look for road markers, street signs, businesses, something that she remembered or a place to safely get help.  She began to catalog the street signs out loud and came to a speedy mart on the corner.  It was a bit run down and the windows were all covered by advertisements.  They might let her use a phone to call her mom or dad.  She stepped inside and into the aisle just like her mom taught her when she took the gas money in.  She knew to get in line right away or the cashier wouldn’t help you.  There were three men at the counter.  They looked rough and she instinctively stepped back a little further. She couldn’t see what was taking so long when the cashier held up his hands and his eyes went wide.

Immediately, her inside voice became loud and told her to “Get Out, Get Out Now. Run.” Run she did, straight out the door. “Around the corner, quickly, hide!” She didn’t recognize her own thoughts, but she felt compelled, almost as if a hand was shoving her along. She saw a yard with a low fence and quickly hid behind it.  There was a loud pop, was it a gun? Then the sound of tires screeching.  She was wondering if she should go back and check on the cashier when her thoughts were interrupted by someone.  “No! Absolutely not, you’re a kid for crying out loud, one with a lousy father.” Roanna looked around expecting to see someone she knew.  Maybe it was her imagination and the words were out loud.

“I’m sorry, I didn’t know you could hear my thoughts.” She was frightened, but curious and asked, “Who are you?”

“I’m just a friend who is far away, you can call me Nic.”

“Are you an imaginary friend?” she asked.

“No, but it is easier to explain that way.  If you didn’t have a superior imagination, you wouldn’t be able to hear my thoughts.  I have to concentrate really hard.  If you hadn’t been scared, you probably wouldn’t have heard me.”

“Thank you for helping me.  I think something bad happened at the market.”

“I think so too, but let’s hope for the best that everything was ok and the men got scared and ran away,” Nic said. “You need to find a way home Roanna,” he gently urged.  “I’ll look up all the speedy marts near you, if you know the street names, I can find you on a map,” Nic spoke in a gentle tone that calmed her.

Roanna climbed from her hiding spot and looked around.  “I think I am on Farrell Street and the house number in front of me is 1324 if that helps.”

“That helps a lot, you did great. I’ll just look it up on my computer and see if I can map to you,” Nic said.  “Yep, I’ve got you, now where is home?” he asked.

It seemed so strange to think her own address, but she did it anyway.  “You’re almost two miles from home and it will be getting dark by the time you get there.  If you can walk fast, we can get you back to where you recognize your surroundings. I know you are probably tired, but do you think you can do it?  We can always find someone to call the police to take you home.” Nic said.

“No, no police.  My Dad would be very mad if I had the police called on him.  He drinks sometimes and isn’t reasonable. He doesn’t usually hit me, but he has a mean fast ball and throws things.”

Nicolas was seething and was doing his best to keep his emotions in check.  Roanna didn’t need to deal with his reactions on top of being lost. He hoped he never met her pos father. How could someone hurt a child? He never understood it before, and especially now. Instead, he decided he would walk her home from school. Man, that was old fashioned sounding. His phone was ringing, but he ignored it, afraid to break his concentration and not be able to connect with Roanna again.

He guided her down the streets and found a wide alleyway and encouraged her to walk/run down it. “Don’t slow down, keep your head up. If anyone notices you and looks at you the wrong way, just yell out loud, Hey guys wait for me.”

She laughed and thought it was a good idea.  The shortcut meant she could avoid the main road. They always waited at the red light for a long time to get across. With the shortcut, she didn’t need to cross it and would cut off at least six blocks. Her feet were starting to hurt and in another hour it would start to get dark out.

Roanna grew up knowing she was different.  She had a very active imagination, complete with imaginary friends, or friend as it were.  But, Nic was in a new class. People already looked at her funny when she told one of her fantasy stories.  They would really give her a hard time if she tried to explain what happened today with Nat.

Nicolas was seventeen, six years older than Roanna. But this wasn’t the first time he had connected with her mind. It was the third. This time was different, he wasn’t just an observer trying to sort out her thoughts in a cloud bank. This time, her thoughts were clear and she could feel him. 

Leave a comment

Filed under Fantasy, NaNoWriMo, Writing

Anxious Much?

I was raised by a bitical woman (bitter + critical = bitical).  That explains where I learned to fail so well but it does not explain why, equipped with this knowledge, I can’t seem to shake it off.  I ended the relationships that were so toxic and damaging to me completely when my beloved died and they (plural) saw it as an opportunity to attack me personally when I was at my lowest.  I had all but ended relationships with them before but, without my beloved protector and personal encourager, it was no longer possible to have contact with them.  That is their problem, my problem remains but is different.

I set wonderful goals with appropriate steps to complete them; good time frames and even plan outside influences to create my success.  I have great technical plans and then I fail to follow through until completion.  My big girl pants just don’t seem to stay on as long as I need them to.  I shoot myself in the foot on a regular basis and when I get close to the goal line, I fail to finish.  I have volumes of stories that have never seen the light of day. This blog is the first time I have freely let my words leave without rushing to pull them back and protect them from harm.  It is a learning experience for me and, perhaps because I have so few followers, I’ve been able to let it go and be myself.

NaNoWriMo has been a great experience for me to “turn off my inner editor” which is really a technical writer and the child of bitterness.  Coaching others to complete the 50,000 word count has helped me grow and throw out my inner bitical critic. Seven years as a staff volunteer for the San Francisco Writers Conference has provided me with healing encouragement and hundreds of success stories and relationships with people who are happy to see me when I walk into the room.

To stretch those new confidence muscles even more, I have started my own critique group and am going to submit two short stories for publication in an anthology.  It is not so important that I get accepted for publication as it is I actually submit it.  I sent one of the stories to a beta reader.  Not just any beta reader but, one I consider to be a true American hero.  He served as an Army Ranger and later as an undercover police officer.  He gave much for his country, including the life of his mother when his cover was blown.  He is quiet, humble and extremely smart.  The story deals with PTSD, a subject he is an expert on.  I highly value his opinion.

I sent the story to my friend yesterday at 5:00 p.m. and was awake most of the night.  My anxiety level was sky high.  I expected one of two things; he would read it and politely say little or nothing or attack it with a full offensive.  Neither happened.  The time stamp was 10:27 p.m. the same day and he liked it!  His wife liked it! He gave me 12 suggestions (some I should have caught if I wasn’t so anxious).

It is time for me to succeed!  I have awesome friends and an awesome God!  Now Tessa, let it go and get it done.

Worry for nothing, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. Philippians 4:6

Leave a comment

Filed under All Things Crafty, Grief, Homeowner, Life Lessons, SFWC, Writing

Rain in California = Indoor Projects

Textured wall sm

Post Writers Conference To-Do List, Homeowners To-Do List, Work To-Do List, and then there is the offspring Mom “can you” To-Do List.  I need to retire to get some work done!

My Homeowners To-Do List is the one that weighs on me the most.  It is in my face and doesn’t go away unless I’m sleeping.  It is still there in the morning when I wake up.  We purchased the home in 2008 and a series of events quickly overtook us.  My beloved was able to complete 25 of the 100 projects on our punch list.  He tackled the biggest and most expensive ones first before he was pulled away by 60 hour work weeks and his eventual death by job in 2013.  The official cause was pneumonia; only because Americans don’t have the term the Japanese use, Karoshi (death by job). He worked himself to death and I’m trying my best to find balance in my life and not follow his example.

I’m grateful for the 25 items he did get done and the 40 that I have completed in the last four years.  Projects including removing hazardous trees, painting, trim work and laying a 1,100 sq. ft. hardwood floor.  That leaves me 35 to tackle.  I am frustrated with my inability to get things done quickly. I would really like to take a shower in the master bathroom but that project does not rise to the top of the priority level.

With a heavy heart, I must add several projects to the list.  The last heavy rain shook me out of my denial and I must replace another window.  I have a heavy heart because I do not possess the ability to replace a window and will need to pay someone to do it. The leaking has been going on for so long behind the paint the sill is a void in the corner. When wiping up the water my finger went through the paint.  I have also decided to add a false wall to hide a butler’s pantry in the great room.  I can do the wall myself if my handyman places the floor plates for me.  I’ve decided this is the best way to stage everything for my kitchen replacement that way most of the mess will be hidden  The cabinets are either water damaged or were chewed on by the previous owner’s dogs.  I still have not replaced the ugly kitchen floor.  I really wanted to run the bamboo flooring into the kitchen but the grandchildren have made me rethink.  My 11 year old grandson has dropped a regular hammer and a small sledgehammer on the new hardwood in the den and left dents, major bummer.  I am having problems with him in understanding that grandpa’s tools are not his just because grandpa won’t be using them anymore.

This week, I need to finish several things so I can get outside when the rain stops!  The trim is now nailed up on the water damaged wall in the den after six trips to unhelpful big box hardware stores to find the right piece!  I’ve already painted the repaired area (photo shows texturing only).  So close, and then this item comes off the list!  I will also complete one more transition in the hallway floor and a second clear coat for the garage threshold. Three items this week, I think that will be enough.

When I’m not pretending to be Mrs. Winchester, I also have two literary deadlines before March 15 and an unlimited supply of overtime that I resist almost daily, almost.  The frustration level is very high this week and I have to constantly remind myself to trust God will bring me through it all.

Leave a comment

Filed under Grief, Homeowner, Prepare, Projects, Stress Reduction, Writing

Spring – Are You There?

I’ve always believed in goals but now that I am a fine and fancy widow, goals have become a critical part of my mental and emotional health.  I no longer am delighted with the love and approval reflected in my beloved’s eyes so I need to measure my own success.  This was a skill that I did not develop until I was 40.  I was not raised to believe in myself and my own success.  I was raised to always put myself last and to endure whatever was thrown at me, including fists.  Having someone believe in you can change your entire outlook on life.  I know it did for me.

I’m suffering from the early stages of spring fever.  My project list is down from 100 to 36 and I am itching to finish something.  The project list doesn’t include the new planter boxes I want or any gardening tasks! I don’t have the baseboard molding 100% done, I need a threshold and door sweep weather stripping installed and there is a 2′ x 3′ section of flooring still left to complete.  The problem is I need the big saw to complete these tasks.  It’s put up for the winter.  During the summer when the rains have passed, I leave the saw out under the awning and put it away for family get togethers.  I was going to drag it out for a few hours on Saturday but there was a light drizzle during the daylight that turned in to a rain at night.

We need the rain desperately!  One of the main NorCal water reservoirs is the Folsom Lake.  The marina has floating boat slip/docks.  They have been laying on dirt for over a year now.  We are far from being out of the water crisis but, I was so happy to see the live camera shot of floating docks!  Folsom Lake Marina Live Cam  Boats are permitted for launch starting this Saturday. Please pray for more snow in the Sierras.

FL Marina on dirt FL Marina Cam 2-5-16

Folsom Lake at capacity would mean plenty of water for the American River and all the towns between Sacramento to San Francisco.  It would mean no restricted watering.  One of the projects on the “list” is to change 1,800 sq. ft. of grass service into stamped concrete.  I removed another 400 sq. ft. from the front yard but never finished the project.  That will require some dirt excavation, a tree removal (it’s touching the roof), a walkway removal and another concrete pour.  Oh, and I’m not supposed to lift over 40 lbs. while doing it!

But the “list” is not getting any shorter, I need to accomplish something!  Arrrrgh!  My doctor said I was supposed to be kind and gentle with myself and stop beating myself up so much, to take it easy.  Raised in a performance for love environment, this is extremely hard for me even today.

I could work overtime tomorrow but I don’t think that is going to happen.  Too much goes to taxes and then there is the “list”.  The sun is supposed to shine from 6 a.m. to noon and then cloudy for the rest of the day.  President’s weekend is booked solid for the SAN FRANCISCO WRITER’S CONFERENCE (woot!) so I won’t be working on my projects then.  What’s that old saying, make hay while the sun shines or, in my case, finish something!  I can at least say my writing goals are fairly up to date.  I’ve started a local writing critique group and surrounded myself with author support. How are you sticking to your goals?

Leave a comment

Filed under Garden, Grief, Inspiration, Projects, SFWC, Uncategorized, Urban Farming

NaNo Recovery

 

Last night I met up with a teacher friend who was writing a final for her high school students at Denney’s, a local diner.  This was my first public writing effort since November 30th.  I love the National Novel Writing Month each November.  I’m a technical writer and edit as I write. This is great for work but bogs down the novel writing efforts to a crawl.  NaNo has really helped me to “turn off my inner editor” and make real headway on my projects.

The Christmas season is upon us with a whirl of regulatory deadlines, school events and parties.  Last night may be my only effort squeezed into December as the overtime ramps up.  January will be here soon enough and my fellow NaNo’s (or WriMo’s) want to get together for a regular, more casual, event.

Today, I am adding new external links on my employer’s safety website and came across this from the America’s PreparAthon website.  (FEMA) It is my response to the statement I often get from people I fail to understand, “Why would you want to get involved?”

The answer:  https://youtu.be/qBrMU0sLoHQ

http://community.fema.gov/

Keep America strong!

Love those around you and Stay Safe out there!

Leave a comment

Filed under Prepare, Projects, Writing

Be Thankful – Be Positive

The National Novel Writing Month, affectionately called NaNoWriMo, is in full swing.  Do you NaNo?  I am honored to be the Liaison for my Region.  I take care of small details and set up events for my Region.  We meet together, for those interested, every week.  I’m a sometime coach and general encourager.

This year we have more under 18 writers than last year.  I’ve been surprised at how a small encouraging word makes a big impact.  One author was ready to quit and is now strongly powering on to the finish.  One young adult, barely over 18, made a comment to me in an email.

“I’m behind just a little in my word count but I really want to catch up, this is my last chance to be an author.”

Did you just hear the brakes of my virtual car slam on?  I could swear they did and a 20 car pileup ensued.  I wanted to ask, who has been filling your mind with rubbish but refrained.  My job is to encourage not to solve the issue of world peace or even home peace.

I hope I managed to convince this precious writer that it is not the last chance.  They are writing between 250-500 words in each 10 minute virtual word sprint.  I have reasoned with the writer that if you can write that many words in 10 minutes, why can’t you find a 15 minute chunk of time to write every day.  Hide in the bathroom; write in bed after lights go out.  Write over lunch (I do!).  It’s o.k. to write in public just as it is o.k. to hide your writing in secret.  It is not o.k. to quit on yourself.  Don’t give up your dreams no matter who tells you are not ______ enough.

Jesus only gave us two rules to live by:  Love God, Love Others.  During this Thanksgiving season, do your own personal reality checkup.  Ask yourself:

  1. Do I express my thanks and appreciation to God and others?
  2. Am I kind to myself?
  3. Am I kind to others?
  4. Am I paying too much attention to what others say?
  5. Am I paying attention to my goals and dreams?
  6. Am I thankful?

It is a rare honor to be able to convince someone to believe in themselves and to reach for their personal dreams.  Be so thankful and kind this Thanksgiving that someone will be encouraged because you are alive!  Go change someone’s world for the better; it might be your own.

Leave a comment

Filed under Inspiration, Writing

A Writer’s Listening Block

Every SFO Writer’s event I attend brings something new into my life. I spent years focused on making others successful: my husband’s business, my children’s success, my boss etc. I brought up spending more time writing with my beloved and he was all for it, he was my biggest fan. I almost stopped volunteering when he died. He used to be my beloved chauffer for the hour long drive to SFO.  It was a special “couple time” in our busy schedule and often included a special dinner. He passed away at 52 and even though he is gone, I still find strength in his belief in me as more than a Technical Writer but as a Fiction Writer as well.

My plan is to just keep writing at this point. To learn more about the craft and to position myself for success with several manuscripts in good shape before “launching” which I plan to precede retirement in 3-5 years. The better my craft, the fewer years to retirement. This year I will have written at least 120,000 words towards my own success not including my blog (while working full time, mom to grown-up kids, and a being the best grandmother). I am also building my platform! Hah, I would have thought that involved 2 x 4’s and nails a few years ago!

This is where my changing mindset has been and where it is going.  I learn new things based on where my head is so I concentrate on being open to learning new things and not experiencing a mental “hardening of the arteries”.

This year at Writing for Change I had preconceived ideas about the line-up, Nina Amir is one of the speakers again and will Karma really show up? I schooled myself to keep an open mind and go to promote literacy in the craft as a volunteer, model hospitality to the attendees and to learn three new things.

I enjoyed Adam Hochschild as a keynote speaker (To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion 1914-1918), he opened my mind about writing history and how it can still touch us today. Michael Larsen always encourages writers to hold up their books and in doing so, to be their own promoter and to take themselves seriously as writers (I love his punny jokes). Jim Azevedo at Smashwords is always fun to talk to as well as some of the usual suspects like Nina Amir (The Author Training Manual). Elizabeth Pomada always brings a touch of class and kindness to any event as well as a wealth of knowledge and the editor/agent line-up was first class.

So what about the “usual suspects” specifically Nina Amir? I listen as I volunteer to keep track of the pulse of the attendees and anticipate their needs. While Nina was speaking, several of the attendees made comments about how valuable her information was. Attendees were taking notes on the handouts and making game plans. I have heard Nina speak several times on multiple topics that were value added for me but, my mind was not open to learning anything new from her, my mistake. The attendees comments helped me to listen with an ear towards learning something that will take me one step closer to success. Why had I discounted some solid advice?  I started taking notes after that and now have several pages of ideas and “next steps” towards my success. My apologies to Ms. Amir for my jaded listening skills.

This year I will miss the first few days of the annual San Francisco Writers Conference as I attend my baby’s wedding but I plan on catching the last day or two. I’m excited about my busy President’s Day Weekend 2015 and the new beginnings for those who will listen and have the courage to embrace new things!

Happy writing!

Leave a comment

Filed under SFWC, Writing

Words as a Comfort Food

Words as Comfort

I’m not sure where this photo came from but I snagged it from a PowerPoint that someone sent me.  It just said so much!

Leave a comment

Filed under Writing

Wisdom & Grace – Obtaining and Giving Both

It is my habit to go to a triage on Sundays. I get together with a bunch of other humans who have failed at being perfect and give it another go at getting better, getting closer to the creator. Some people call it church, a term that many people assign a lot of negative stereotypes. I find that after I question critics about it, they usually have never read the Bible or they have been hurt by someone who wasn’t perfect–and went to church. The people I meet at church are pretty similar to the ones that I meet at my writer’s clubs, folks that are trying to get better. (Funny how the struggling writers don’t get called hypocrites. Hmmm. Getting off the soap box now…)

I was delighted to have wonderful speakers at two venues this Sunday. Award winning Katy Pye* opened our minds and exposed us to contest opportunities for writers and how they can lend authority to your writing. Her topics covered prioritization and a marketing plan as well as helpful tips and checklists. She was very open about the mistakes she made, she prefers to call them missed opportunities. Ms. Pye read a passage from her book “Elizabeth’s Landing”. The role of the grandfather drew me in right away. He could have been my mother. Elizabeth is a precocious teenager trying to find her way with mostly absent parents as she discovers some threatened sea turtles. I left the Redwood Writer’s Club meeting with an autographed copy of her book that I can’t wait to finish. Elizabeth’s Landing captured a 2013 1st Place in all Fiction for the Writer’s Digest Self Published e-Book Awards, the 2013 Silver Nautilus Book Award for YA Fiction and the Category Winner for 2014 Children’s/Juvenile Fiction from the Indie Book Awards.

Pastor Bill** (PB) spoke about Making Wise Choices and Living in Grace. If you listen to PB enough, one thing will become very clear. He will speak on your favorite sin and it will most likely feel like he has videotaping services on you. He doesn’t and we shine the lights on him on Sunday so he can’t see you squirm in the seats so stay with me here. PB talks about real things, not abstracts; things that we need to be at peace. It fits right into my concept of church as triage. I don’t really need to hear about something that is lofty and filled with so many churchy words that I can’t see how they work in my everyday life. PB started off with my favorite sin so he had my attention right away, I was careful not to fidget too much so people wouldn’t identify me with my favorite bad choice. He moved on to other topics like credit cards and gambling. Just a sentence or two but enough to let you know what God says about those “acceptable sins”. I am free to drink but not get drunk but if I drink in front of an alcoholic, that is a sin. It might cause them to sin. You are smart, you get the idea and can apply that to other things. I couldn’t help but look sideways at my good friend who has a big gambling problem. My friend was sitting stone still like a statue, looking straight ahead. Hmmm, I’ll have to remember that freezing is as bad as squirming too much. Heaven forbid that someone know I might need help! I’m not outing my friend and I know they won’t out me so the public humiliation will be limited to the times I put my foot into my mouth and try to function!

For now, I will be confessing my problem to my accountability partner, who I trust. I plan on investing some prayer time and good old effort and hard work in getting better at both writing and my “favorite” sin. Romans 6 deserves another read this week since I am far from being perfect. But, I sure like that grace method for flawed folks like me! Grace is getting what I don’t deserve and Mercy is not getting what I deserve. Wow, free gifts and free payments, thank you Jesus!

*Download sample chapters and read her blog at katypye.com.

**1108 Washington Street, Fairfield, CA or online at http://www.fbc-fairfield.org to download PB’s podcasts. PB’s lineup for August: 17th Loving Unconditionally, 24th Living in Personal Freedom, 31st Letting Others Be Themselves

Leave a comment

Filed under Inspiration, Stress Reduction, Writing

Let the Writing Begin!

Mark HopkinsI am still pushing through the extreme lack of energy after being ill. But, there is one event I would not want to miss. It’s time for the annual San Francisco Writer’s Conference, I understand there are only about 50 slots left.
This year NoViolet Bulawayo (We Need New Names), Julie Kagawa (The Iron Fey series), Rhys Bowen, (Molly Murphy Mysteries), Barry Eisler (Rain/Treven series), Chitra Divakaruni (Mistress of Spices) and Dan Millman (Peaceful Warrior) will be Featured Speakers. The director’s are all wonderful but Michael Larsen always has the most energy and punniest jokes.  In addition, over 100 other authors, agents, editors and publishers will be there. Many favorites will be back as well. The conference asks attendees to review the event and the contributors that earn great reviews are often asked back.

The InterContinental Mark Hopkins is a grand dame that sits on top of San Francisco’s Nob Hill. It was built on the site of the original Mark Hopkins mansion which survived the 1906 earthquake, but not the three day fire that ravaged the city afterwards. Lovers from around the world travel to the Top of the Mark lounge to view the city through its glass walls, my parents included!

I will be at the SFO Writer’s Conference as part of the volunteer staff. SFO is the city of my birth and a short drive in for me. I can’t decide if I want to check-in to the hotel or drive in each day. I’ve posted for either a roommate or a car pooler, we will see what happens.

This event always gets my writing flowing and energizes me. I’m especially excited this year because I have asked to staff Grant Faulkner‘s session. Grant is the executive director of the National Novel Writing Month and the founding editor of 100 Word Story. I attended the “Night of Writing Dangerously” this year at the beautiful Julia Morgan Ballroom. Can you say, “I NaNoWriMo?”

Check it out! SFWriters.org This year the conference is bigger than ever.  Please check back for a post after the President’s Weekend event.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under SFWC, Stress Reduction, Travel, Writing