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Posts from the ‘Writing’ Category

Next Up: A Breakup Gone Bad

The pressure’s on from my agent to complete the second draft of my next release—a dark psychological thriller about a break up gone bad (I’m talking psycho bad). Although I don’t have a title yet, I plan to recruit help from my readers on selecting one (and there just might be an Amazon gift card in it for ya!). I’ll share more info about my next book soon, so stay tuned. But in case you’ve missed me and think that I’ve been hiding my head in the sand, here’s what I’ve been up to:

I’ve been doing a ton of this …

From Bruce Almighty

And some of that …

DSC_1043

Mothering two of these …

Silly mommy and luke

And resorting to a lot of this (when my husband’s traveling) …

From New Girl

So please bear with me while I take some time off from my blog to hunker down on completing my next novel—and keep my sanity in the process. See you again soon!

Thank you, Author Roni Loren, for inspiring the concept for this post. 

Epic Fail: Why I Was Destined To Flub My Husband’s Birthday Cake

A beautiful - and decadent - mistake.

A beautiful disaster.

Failure is a scary word to me.

For most of my life, I’ve carried around the belief that failure is not an option – in anything. I’ve also battled a heavy tendency toward perfectionism, which at times has left me creatively blocked and swimming in a sea of my own self-loathing.  Not surprisingly, many writers and creative types share these traits, which if not dealt with head on, can lead to depression and anxiety.

Although failure can propel us to strive harder in achieving our goals, it can also do considerable damage if taken too seriously, convincing us that mistakes are unacceptable, bad and simply not allowed.

Yet around every corner, failure is waiting to teach us something. Failure wants us to learn. Failure’s job is to break our conditioned perfectionist beliefs  - which are unnatural to our spiritual Souls – and help us grow. Failure, in and of itself, is necessary for fulfilling our purpose in life.

The Cake Test

With my newfound understanding of the role that failure plays in my life, God recently gave me the opportunity to test my resolve.

This year for my husband’s birthday I decided to bake him a cake from scratch. I’m talking homemade frosting and all.

Now, let me preface this by saying that Rick’s birthday falls on Jan. 3, which poses a few issues.

By the time the third day of the new year rolls around, I’m pretty much wiped out from the mad holiday rush. With the exception of the 40th birthday party I threw him a couple years ago, you can usually find me scrambling around town Jan. 2, with the kids in tow, trying to piece his birthday together. This includes ordering a cake from Stein’s in Dallas, our favorite bakery, even though round trip it’s 20 miles from our home.

Don’t get me wrong. Rick loves him a good Stein’s cake. And never once has he expected – or asked me – to make him one homemade.

But for some odd primal reason, this year I decided to go all out and bake a triple layer, chocolate fudge cake – from two different recipes – to mark his day.

I started planning out the cake days in advance. Even though I’d baked cakes before, they never really had turned out that great for some reason or another (like the one I bombed a couple Christmas’ ago that tasted like chalk). Determined to get this one right, I asked my friend Amy, who always makes delicious cakes, what I needed to do to ensure that this cake would come out of the oven as moist and decadent as hers.

“Always bake at a lower temperature and for a longer time than the recipe calls for,” she told me.

Keeping this in mind, I made sure my eggs were room temperature and my butter completely softened. I took time measuring the cocoa powder and melting the unsweetened chocolate baking bars until silky smooth. I carefully alternated the flour and melted chocolate while keeping the mixer on low. I greased and floured my cake pans, prepped the cooling area and gave my sons turns stirring the batter.

A few times Rick passed by the kitchen with a skeptical eye, while doing his best to ignore the mountain of dirty mixing bowls collecting in the sink and on the counter tops. I pressed on, setting my sights on producing the perfect birthday dessert.

Moment Of Learning

Then things got squirrely and I ended up rushing through the chocolate fudge frosting. The recipe didn’t call for many ingredients, only cocoa powder, butter, confectioners sugar and milk.

Sounds simple, right?

Not if you miscalculate the measurements.

So here we are back from dinner and I start to frost the cake. After spreading the first “crumb layer,” I knew I was in trouble when only about a cup of icing remained. The boys (including the birthday boy himself) are now circling me like vultures … “Is the cake ready yet?” … “When can we sing happy birthday?” …. “MOM-MEE, I want cake!”

At this point, I knew I had run out of time. If I stopped to make more icing, it would delay our family birthday celebration another hour and my kids would be eating cake right at their bedtime. And if you’re a parent, you know how that would turn out.

So the pressure was on. Presented with this problem a few years ago, the old Stephanie would have crumbled like an over-baked sugar cookie, made a scene and sulked to her bedroom. Not a good example to set for your kids, if you ask me.

Instead, the new post-therapy Stephanie did something surprisingly different.

I stayed calm.

And I also had me a good belly laugh.

I knew deep down that God was trying to teach me something, as He had tried so many times before. I know now that He was trying to teach me patience and self-control – and that it’s OK to mess up sometimes. Importantly, though, God was trying to teach me self-love.

That night, we stuck candles in the half-frosted cake and sang our hearts out in celebration of my husband. The kids hardly noticed the lack of icing and even whined for another slice. What looked like a hack job turned out to taste heavenly and now ranks as one of our top birthday cakes ever.

Our baby sitter, who had a slice a couple days later, had her mom call me for the recipe. And just the other day, my oldest son asked me to make “daddy’s chocolate cake” again.

Nice shot, failure. But this time, you missed.

 

My Therapist Was Right: I’m Not Done Yet

The New York Subway.

The New York Subway.

I wrote the following post a couple days ago on the plane ride back from New York City. 

***

When my husband invited me to tag along with him for a business trip to New York, I jumped at the chance, knowing it would do me some good. Rick travels a lot for his job and I’m often left to manage the kids and household for days at a time. By the time he returns home, I usually hit a virtual wall of exhaustion, from which takes me a day or two to recover.

So this time, I welcomed the opportunity to escape with him to NYC,  a city I’ve visited several times and grown to appreciate and love.

The plan was this: he would go to his client meetings and I would, well, write. So for a day or so, I envisioned myself working on final edits for Simon & Schuster, the publisher who gave me one of the best rejection letters ever for Little 15:

‘This is a well-written, character-driven narrative that really sucked me in … Ms. Saye is a talented writer and she has done a wonderful job capturing the voice of her teenage protagonist … but I worry that I would be unable to make this stand out on the shelves …” ~December 28, 2008

Forget the last part; I like focusing on “well-written, character-driven narrative that really sucked me in” – and the fact that an executive editorial director from one of the largest publishers in the world, considers me “a talented writer.”

Simon Schuster

Recalling these words and reminding myself of the writer I am and the writer whom I’ve yet to become, I thumbed through edits on my next novel from my hotel room perched high above the beating heart of Time Square. From time to time, I would look out the window down into the circulatory system of cars, streets and people moving below me – a physical world reality that keeps many of us locked in our own minds and agendas, distracted from the path and learnings that each of our soul’s seek. I recently read in a spiritual psychology book that we are not humans with souls, but souls making our way through a human existence. This makes perfect sense to me, reflecting back on the lessons I’ve experienced in life and the ones I’ve yet to encounter. Each one of the those people walking briskly below me – the bankers, the executives, the police officers, the street vendors, the tourists – is a soul with a divine purpose in life.  What is my purpose? To write and encourage other people to write and/or follow their dreams. To inspire clarity and peace in myself and in others – and to remind my children and those around me that each one of us is a beautiful, wonderful child of God.

But.

Before I can serve as a beacon of light for others, I must first serve as one for myself, letting go of any traces of guilt or self-loathing, on this, my journey toward spiritual awareness and fullness of life.

I almost didn’t go on this trip. In fact, just last week, as I sat in my therapist’s office, I ticked off the reasons why I shouldn’t go, on this a mere two-and a half-day getaway with my husband. She cocked her head to the side and looked at me as if I had lost my marbles (ironic, isn’t it?), all the while listening to me trying to justify why now, two months after I committed myself to the trip, I should renege on our plans.

Me: Rick invited me to go with him to New York and now I feel like I shouldn’t go.

Therapist: And explain to me why you wouldn’t want to go with your husband to New York?

Me: Oh, believe me, I definitely want to go. I’m just overwhelmed with everything we have to do for us both to get there. We’ll have to jump through hoops – flaming ones.

Therapist: Ok, Like what?

Me: Well, like having to do three mountains of laundry, get all the kids’ stuff ready and organized for my in-laws, plan meals, pack …

Therapist: But don’t you and Rick always do that stuff together?

Me: Well, yes.

Therapist: OK, so that’s taken care of. Next?

Me: What if something happens to us … I’m worried for our boys. I mean, I know Rick and I’ve traveled alone together multiple times, but this time my fear and guilt are more pronounced for some reason.

Therapist: Guilt of what?

Me: Going off, leaving my kids and enjoying myself.

Therapist: Well, we both know that’s ridiculous. You need to focus on your husband. And it’ll be good for your kids to spend time with their grandparents.

Me: True.

Therapist: Nothing’s going to happen to you, Stephanie.

Me: How can you be so sure?

Therapist: Because God isn’t done with you yet. Why else would He be making you work so hard?

For several years now, my therapist, whom I refer to as my life coach, has helped me work through some pretty heavy emotional baggage from childhood that’s carried over into my adult life. With a family history of depression, alcoholism and codependency, I’ve had my work cut out trying to create healthier patterns for myself and my family – especially for my sons. What I used to consider as heavy crosses I must bear, I now see as opportunities and lessons to grow myself spiritually, for isn’t that why we are all here?

A large part of my therapy work has focused on letting go of guilt and fear – and relying instead on my faith in God’s love and His plans for my life. So let’s drop back in again on last week’s therapy session:

Me: You’re right. I’m not even close to being done. I still have so much to learn and share with others … Are you having that feeling in your gut?

Therapist: *places hand on belly* Oh yes, it’s strong. You ain’t going nowhere.

911 Memorial: The North Reflecting Pool

911 Memorial: The North Reflecting Pool

My therapist’s sixth sense turned out to be right, as it usually always does. Yet deep down I felt it, too. And now as our plane touches down on the tarmac, I feel silly that I ever doubted my return – or felt guilty for even going. If I would have backed out, then I wouldn’t have walked hand in hand with my husband through Central Park, wouldn’t have shared a moment of silence with him at the 911 memorial at Ground Zero, or navigated the subway system as we made our way back uptown to Chelsea, where we stumbled on a quaint Italian restaurant for a romantic dinner for two.

Importantly though, our sons wouldn’t have gotten to see their mommy and daddy taking time out for each other, which is one of the greatest gifts (besides the Lego sets we brought back) that we could give to them – and to ourselves.

Me, and my one and only, in Central Park.

Me, and my one and only, in Central Park.

Numb Butt Cheeks And Holding Steadfast To Peace

My sons thunder through the kitchen in a swirl of Saturday morning energy and excitement to tag along with my husband on an errand run. “Boys only” bellows my four-year-old. I smile. “OK, sweetie. You got it. Boys only.” A splitting image of my husband smiles back at me and then realizes his shoe is on the wrong foot. I always tell Rick that Luke’s his mini-me, except for the light skin. His skin is my skin – the only external physical evidence that the child came into this earth through my body, although plenty of me I know is on the inside.

In an uproar of chaos, the boys finish pulling on socks and shoes, then the jackets and gloves and hats. Daddy has already ducked out from the pandemonium of what is in fact, our life – this jumbled bunch of love and noise that always surprises us with something new and unexpected at every turn.  Waiting in the car, he leaves me with the task of readying the boys, these two wild spirits who feed off one another, forever connected as siblings, as brothers and hopefully, if we guide them right, as friends.

I shuffle them out the door into the warm car. The window rolls down and music pours out. My husband leans over with his signature smile – a smile so grand that you can even hear him smiling over the phone. “Enjoy your morning,” he says, as I hear the boys excitedly chatter behind him, “Let’s go daddy!”

‘I Feel Empty’

The cold air whips under my pajama bottoms and slaps me with an icy kiss. I close the garage and run inside, just in time to watch the black Tahoe back out of the driveway. They there go – the three men in my life. Every time they leave – even for an hour – I feel empty. Why is that? Fear, I reason. I fear that somehow they won’t return. I redirect myself off this dark path and move forward to deciding what I’ll do with this beautiful gift of time. I have at least an hour and a half – may be even two if he takes them to Chick Fil-A. What to do with myself in this sudden rush of silence. The transition is jarring, just as it will be when they come plowing back through the door, squealing and screeching about what toy they got or new shoes they found. They go through shoes like a cow goes through fresh grass. I pause for a moment, grateful that we can afford to buy them new shoes any time they need them – and grateful that my husband is taking on this combustible task of finding two new pairs while chasing two man-children around Academy or Dick’s or where ever he decides to go. If any one can do it, he can.

With the house empty of noise, a long list of chores pops into my mind, if almost to fill the void that just left. Dishes need washing, laundry needs folding – and what’s the smell? Oh yeh, the litter box. Yet this is my time and I must do at least one thing for myself – is that too much to ask? So I bat the guilt away. But it will return, as it always does.

If Tyra was human, she'd be a strong, black woman, exuding elegance and grace.

If Tyra was human, she’d be a strong, black woman, exuding elegance and grace.

Sidestepping the explosion of toys in the living room, I leave the dishes, the laundry and the smelly litter box and grab my journal and a pencil instead. Wrapping myself in a blanket, I head to the guest room and plop onto the bed, bouncing knees first and then finally onto my rump. Crisscross applesauce. As I nestle into the bed and lean back against the pillows, Tyra the tabby – whose coat is a mishmash of caramel, marshmallow and chocolate, with a touch of leopard on her belly – effortlessly leaps on the bed and quickly makes a nest in my lap. After circling once or twice, she finds the sweet spot and curls into me. A split second later, her motor whirs to life in a smooth, cascading rhythm. Tyra has a soft, crackling purr that always soothes and calms me, much in the same way that my sons’ breathing does just after they drift to sleep. The warmth of her tiny body radiates through me. Until this moment, I don’t realize how tense I am. Letting my muscles go limp, I sink farther back into the pillows. I rest my journal beside me; the pencil rolls to the floor. I scoop Tyra into my arms and cradle her like I did my sons when they were babies.

I never take time to hold Tyra any more – to really embrace her. Life has me moving in all directions. I know I should be cleaning or writing … oh I should be writing more … or taking a shower or exercising, but I just want so much to stop and rest here, with Tyra in my arms. She never gets the attention she deserves …

Holding her there in the empty silence brings me an arresting sense of peace. I give into the urge to close my eyes, momentarily letting my intentions of writing my morning pages slip through the fingers of my mind. The soft rumbling coming from the animal in my arms transfixes my concentration. I tune into my own breath – the rise and fall of my chest. A second or two passes and my senses pick up the heater chugging along as warm air whooshes through the vent above me. The calling of a song bird spills in from the creek, momentarily moving my mind’s eye to the outside.

Tyra’s purring, the whooshing of air, the song bird and my breathing capture me into stillness. I strain to keep my concentration on these four sounds, but thoughts leak uncontrollably from the crevices of my mind. I try pinching off the flow, but my weak meditation skills sputter and cough and collapse against the power of my untrained intellect. Then I notice it. A sound is missing.

‘A Surge Of Panic’

Tyra has stopped purring. She lays deathly still in my arms. I look for the rise and fall of her rib cage. It does not rise. It stays fallen. A surge of panic rips through my chest. My heart beat quickens, a lump forms in my throat. Could this be it? After 15 years, could this be her moment of death? Or as I’ve recently come to believe, the moment in which Tyra will make her transition to the other side?

Outside, a lawn mower roars nearby, interrupting the unexpected peace that this sweet animal has inadvertently created for me. Tyra’s head pops up, all sleepy and in disarray, much in the same way I’m jarred awake from deep sleep when one of the boys crys out in the night. Her sharp instincts attuned, she senses no threat and lowers her head back down. Her green eyes close and her motor rumbles on once again. I relax, breathing a sigh of relief.

Grasping For Peace

Forty-five minutes later, my butt cheeks are numb and my legs asleep. Yet the pencil remains on the floor, my journal unopened and the cat in her cradle. I am awake and enjoying the silence, while clutching the only peace I’ve known in a very long while. Tingly legs, butt cheeks and all, I won’t dare disturb this moment, not with Tyra sleeping so soundly and so securely in my arms. Eventually, my bladder forces me to upset the stillness, as I gently place Tyra onto the bed and scurry to the toilet. As I sit there releasing my urine, Tyra appears around the door. She stretches and yawns. I offer my hand. She moves forward and connects to it, rubbing her cheek across the top of my knuckles  She marks me as her human, as she has so many times before, reminding me of the importance I hold in her life.

About an hour or so later, my sons come rumbling through the door, filling the house once again with their organic energy, laughter and joy. Toting an armful of coats and bags, my husband drags in behind them, plops everything on the counter and sees that he’s come back to exactly what he left – his wife in her jammies, a sink full of dishes and a dining room table piled high with clothes.

“So what did you end up doing,” he said, more out of curiosity than of anything accusatory.

I sputter. I fumble.

“Well … uh.”

Think fast Stephanie. You’re still in your jammies – and glasses, for crying out loud! Tell him you were writing – tell him anything – just so he thinks you did something productive.

I try again, but I’ve never been good at lying to this man.

“All I really did was hold Tyra.”

And it felt good.

Before you go, check out this other post about Tyra: Back-Office Staff

Little 15′s 1st Birthday, A Giveaway & A New Novel For 2013

Thank you, purevehle.com, for the image.

Thank you, purevehle.com, for the image.

A year ago today I made good on a dream.

A dream I’d carried for nearly 10 years.

A dream that terrified me yet lit my heart’s center ablaze with passion, excitement and tremendous hope.

One year ago today I published my first novel. One year ago today I grew up. One year ago today, I learned to walk in faith.

Because that’s what it takes to build yourself as an author: faith. Faith in your abilities, faith in your stories and faith that the words your write, either in your journal or on your blog or in the bowels of social media, are given to you by God.

Faith that the words will keep on coming, even when you get tired and feel yourself start to burn out. Faith that you’re still doing what God called you to do even when a negative review finally crosses your screen. Faith that things happen for a reason when your book gets banned from a literary event. Faith that readers will continue to buy your book and recommend it to others by word of mouth, a post on Facebook, a tweet on Twitter, or a plug on Goodreads.

Books ready to signI am blessed that this little story of mine – a dark tale about a girl who has an affair with her coach – has touched readers in a such a big way. I’m blessed to receive invitations to speak at book clubs and that copies continue to sell. And I’m blessed for writer friends who have shown me unrelenting support and encouraged me to keep going, keep writing and never give up on that dream I finally made good one year ago.

It’s a dream that never stops, an opportunity that never ceases and a learning that never ends.

What have I learned this year?

For one thing, I’ve learned that criticism is part of the game, and if you want to make it in this business, then you better find a source for self-esteem elsewhere. Because it can’t reside in the pages of your book or blog. It has to reside in you.  I’ve learned that at the end of the day, it’s all up to you – to promote, promote, promote. Something I’m still trying to get better at – and used to. And I’ve learned that no matter what happens, no matter how many books I sell or don’t sell, or reviews I get or don’t get – I’ve got to KEEP. MOVING. MY. ART. FORWARD.

For an excerpt from Little 15, click on Lauren.

For an excerpt from Little 15, click on Lauren.

Getting published is not a means to an end – it’s the start of a very exciting journey that will have it’s fair share of twists, turns, hills, valleys and potholes. The trick is, when you find yourself rearing off course, or broken down on the side of the road, that’s when it’s crucial to get up and keep going, no matter how discouraged you might feel. It sometimes won’t feel good, but it will get better – and that’s when you know you’re gaining wisdom, strength and courage. That’s my learning year in a nutshell. And I’m ready to continue my education in this thing called writing and in this thing called my soul.

Snag an Autographed Copy of Little 15

So let’s all celebrate our God-given freedom and ability to create, shall we? To commemorate Little 15′s first birthday, I’m giving away 5 SIGNED first edition copies. Why do I emphasize first edition? Because there will be a second edition down the road sometime, although I’m still unsure of when. There’s a lot of things cooking in the pot, including a …

NEW NOVEL IN 2013.

Yes, that’s right. I have another novel – a THRILLER – waiting in the wings. I’m rounding up beta readers and then will dive head first into editing. I’ve sat on this book long enough and it took a dear writer friend of mine (Running From Hell, you know who you are) to open my eyes … to remind me of the stuff I’m made … to stir that fire in my soul for stitching words together in elaborate tapestries that tantalize, entertain, shock and move.

I’ll share more news on my next book in due time, but right now, I want to celebrate Little 15 – the book that started it all. So let’s get down to business and give away some books!

One reader's feedback on Little 15 that blew me away ...

This tweet from a fan completely blew me away – and reminded me why I do what I do.

Here’s the scoop:

All you have to do is COMMENT BELOW to get automatically entered in my drawing. If you wish, you can up your chances and get a bonus entry for:

  • tweeting about the book (hashtag #little15);
  • blogging about it;
  • adding it to your shelf on Goodreads;
  • posting it /talking about it on Facebook; and/or
  • subscribing to my blog

So, in other words, you can get up to 5 entries total. We’re going with the honor system here, so please, no fudging!

The Fine Print

Remember, make sure you tell me what you did in the comment box below so I can award you the correct number of points. Contest closes Jan. 31, 2013 at 11:59 PM PST.

I’ll announce the winners in early February. Good luck!

Another Special Birthday

Before I go, I wanted to share a fun fact about Little 15. Did I ever tell you why I decided to officially release Little 15 on January 3? Well, the 3rd day of the new year always has tremendous significance for me. It’s the day my dear husband, Rick, was born. And I figured releasing my first novel on his birthday would be wonderful way to honor him and bring me favor with Little 15. And it worked, because just look at all these great reviews. So a big happy birthday to my dear husband, my partner in life, love and all that’s good.

Gratitude & Accolades

Blog of the Year Award banner 600I’m relatively new to blogging, having only done it for a little over a year. In some ways it’s been a steep learning curve and in others, a liberating exercise in growing myself as a writer. I admit, I’m much more comfortable sitting behind my laptop writing my fiction – or speaking to a group of writers or readers. This is why some days I still struggle to find that comfort zone in knowing what and how much to share in a blogging community where everyone who’s anyone writes with freedom of constraint.

Psychs by A.H. Amin

Psychs by A.H. Amin

So that’s why I was pleasantly surprised and humbled when author A.H. Amin gave my little writing space here the Blog of the Year Award for 2012.  Amin, who is a dentist in Egypt, recently released his first novel - PSYCHS - which Kirkus Reviews calls an “action-packed tale of beyond-the-grave good vs. evil.”  He is currently working on the second book in the PSYCHS series, The REMNANT. Please stop by his blog and say hello. Thank you, Amin – I wish you much success in 2013!

My Picks For Blog of the Year

I’d now like to pass this award to three exceptional writers whom I admire for their character, artistry and style. Each of these women bring something unique and compelling to the blogging world and have inspired my own growth as a blogger. Importantly, they also have become my friends.

Christie O. Tate

Christie O. Tate

Outlaw Mama The first Blog of the Year award goes to Christie O. Tate over at Outlaw Mama. Christie and I have an interesting history – we both grew up in Dallas and attended the same all-girls Catholic High School. Twenty years after graduation, we reconnected in a big way out in the blogosphere. A former attorney, writing professor and mom to two adorable kids, Christie hands down is one of the best bloggers around. She can spin a story in a way that leaves you in stitches, and then come back around and have you in tears. Snarky, clever and exceptionally talented, I know in my heart of hearts that one day after she lands a huge publishing deal based on her blog, I’ll get to say “I knew her when.”

E. L. Farris

E. L. Farris

Running From Hell With El – The next Blog of the Year award goes to E.L. Farris at Running From Hell With El. Oh boy, where to start. “Powerhouse” comes to mind, along with abuse survivor, mental health advocate, loyal friend and fearless writer who I believe will be a best-selling thriller author. And I just so happen to be reading an advance copy of her debut novel – RIPPLE – which is scheduled for release in January. And let me tell you, it is something to behold.

August McLaughlin – Speaking of thriller authors, after I finish reading RIPPLE, I plan to sink my teeth into

August McLaughlin

August McLaughlin

IN HER SHADOW, the debut novel by the lovely August McLaughlin that released earlier this month. August is an LA-based health writer and journalist whose posts never fail to inform, entertain and move. An ardent optimist, August tackles edgy issues with enthusiasm and zeal. Her recent series on “Girl Boners” is helping to usher the topic of women’s sexuality into the modern era, offering refreshing insight and perspective on an issue that’s still considered taboo.

Rules for the Blog of the Year Award: (recipients only)

1.  Select the blog(s) you think deserve the Blog of the Year 2012 Award

2.  Write a blog post and tell us about the blog(s) you have chosen – there’s no minimum or maximum number of blogs required – and ‘present’ them with their award.

3.  Please include a link back to this page ‘Blog of the Year 2012’ Award – http://thethoughtpalette.co.uk/our-awards/blog-of-the-year-2012-award/   and include these ‘rules’ in your post (please don’t alter the rules or the badges!)

4.  Let the blog(s) you have chosen know that you have given them this award and share the ‘rules’ with them

5. You can now also join our Facebook group – click ‘like’ on this page ‘Blog of the Year 2012’ Award Facebook group and then you can share your blog with an even wider audience

6. As a winner of the award – please add a link back to the blog that presented you with the award – and then proudly display the award on your blog and sidebar … and start collecting stars…

LITTLE 15 Banned from Literary Event

Image courtesy of the American Library Association.

*Crawls out from under rock*

Hi friends. I’m taking a break from my insane writing frenzy for NaNoWriMo to bring you some juicy news on my novel, Little 15. As you can see from the title of this post, my book recently got the heave-ho from a high profile, adult literary event because of the nature of its content.

Instead of letting this get me down, I’m using this as an excuse to get fired up – and my friend, El Farris, a writer herself, is right along with me. In fact, she felt so passionate about my book getting banned that she invited me to write about what happened in a guest post for her blog, which you can read here.

When it comes to writing, and many other issues in life, El and I are kindred spirits of sorts. Like me, she’s a fearless writer and doesn’t back down from hard-hitting topics that might make some people cringe. In her upcoming debut novel, Ripple, she tackles the arresting issues of rape and incest, and a mother’s desperate attempt to protect her child. I will share more about Ripple as the release date for the book nears. Until then, please hop over to her blog and read what went down on my book getting banned. My guest post not only has prompted a firestorm of comments on El’s site, but it has also sparked a healthy debate on Facebook, where El’s page (please go “like” it!) often serves as a sounding board for these types of issues. Here’s a flavor of the rumblings going around:

“In this day and age, with the information available, there should be no reason for any censorship by outside sources. Subject matter is not a relevant objection so I fail to see where some petty bureaucrat(s) is/are permitted to dictate social mores. I cringe with the thought of adults and grown children being deprived of the ability to make their own decisions. As soon as I am able, I will acquire this book. Not because I was told to, rather, because I am being directed away from it.”

“No subject should be too unpleasant to be discussed. Otherwise, nobody wants to tell when it happens to them or someone they know.”

“[This] infuriates me to no end, we continue to shove our heads in the sand. We refuse to see what is before us. Child endangerment, abuse, rape and acts of violence blanketed as love happen every single day in our homes and schools; we turn a blind eye. Some days we even wink and say well there must be something wrong with her, or boys will be boys.”

So what do you think about my book getting banned? Should I wear it as a badge of honor or bury my head in the sand?

The Secret to Making a Compelling Book Trailer

I’ll admit, when my debut novel, Little 15, published earlier this year,  I didn’t see the need – or the importance – of having a book trailer video.

But then I ran across a blog post by best-selling author Jonathan Gunson that completely changed my mind.

In that post, Jonathan featured the book trailer for the #1 New York Times Bestseller The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot, analyzing in detail what made it the best book trailer he had seen in years.

Unlike most book trailers, this one featured the author describing the book in her own words, which as Jonathan pointed out in his post, makes for a compelling and emotionally driven presentation. And he should know, having worked in publishing, in advertising agencies, and in television drama programming for more than two decades.

“Writers wanting the secret of an effective book trailer need look no further than [Skloot's] example,” says Jonathan. “Forget bland text quotes drifting in and out over cheap still shots, that go on and on over a cheesy sound track. Book buyers simply won’t watch those any more. Instead, it needs a human communication.”

This is exactly the concept I used in making my own video. Shortly after reading Jonathan’s post, I recruited the help of a tech-savvy member of my family to help me with filming and production, wrote a script and got to work on story boarding. Although I didn’t have any actual video production experience, I’d written numerous speeches and scripts for executives during my years working in corporate communications. Writing the screenplay for Little 15 also came in handy for planning out the scenes in the video. So tapping those skills – and drawing on my passion for my story –  I decided to take the plunge and  go all in.

The rest, as they say, was complete baptism by fire, spread over the last three months while promoting my book, visiting book clubs, speaking at a writer’s conference, blogging, being a mom and gearing up for NanoWrimo. For me, producing a book trailer has been an exhilarating creative experience – and one that I hope to repeat again and again. Here are some highlights of what I learned:

Keep filming simple.

You don’t have to spend loads of money shooting your video in some remote location. Your own living room will do, which is where I shot mine. Throw in a black curtain, a sitting stool and some natural light and voila, you’ve got yourself a studio.

But if you do decide to shoot your video in the comfort of your own home, make sure to …

Lock up your cat.

Especially if she likes meowing at the top of her lungs for no reason at any given moment. I can’t even begin to tell you how many takes we went through with my cat Tyra wailing in the background, until I finally closed her up in my closet at the far end of the house.

But noisy pets aren’t the only things that will disrupt your filming. So if you’re a parent like me …

Lock up your kids.

Or at least send them away for the afternoon. I don’t care, ship ‘em to the park, grandma’s, wherever. Just get them out of the house or else you will never finish your video.

And if your husband (or wife or girlfriend or boyfriend or mom or whoever) is hanging around wanting to watch, then you’ll have no choice but to …

Lock them up, too.

I mean it. Pack ‘em an extra snack and ship ‘em off with the kids. Whatever you do, just Get. Everyone. The. Heck. Out.

Now, on to the fun stuff.

Recruit technical help.

Don’t want to throw down $5K-$10K for a book trailer video? I didn’t either. Fortunately for me, though, my step dad is quite the technical guru – and a good photographer to boot. So between the two of us (and the help of his HD video camera on his Nikon), we put our heads together and made it work. Don’t have access to a technical wizard of your own? Then check local colleges for film students looking to build their resume and experience. Worst case, you can ask you neighbor or friend to hold your flip-top video recorder while you do your thang. Then download a relatively inexpensive video editing software program that can give you the basics you need. Done, done and done.

Make use of Creative Commons.

If you’re a blogger who likes to  include stock images in your posts (and who doesn’t these days), then you most likely know what I’m talking about here.  Creative Commons licenses provide a standard way for content creators to grant someone else permission to use their work, without having to purchase the image (as long as you abide by their attribution guidelines). There are numerous sources that offer creative commons content for stock footage, such as WANA Commons and Vimeo. Most of the images and video clips in my video are being used under creative common licensing, which I made sure to appropriately attribute in the closing credits. The benefit to using creative commons? It costs nothing. But if you still can’t find what you’re looking for, you can always purchase relatively inexpensive video footage and images from online stock libraries, which is also what I ended up doing for a few choice images I couldn’t live without.

Talk from the heart.

I wrote a script, went through a couple takes and then threw it out, ad-libbing the rest of the way. And that’s when I started speaking from the heart. That’s when I broke through and really let my passion for my story channel through me. Just like writing a story, filming a video is as much about instinct as it is preparation. The more you stay true to yourself, the better.

Petrified of getting in front of the camera? You’re not alone. A lot of people would rather cut off an arm than speak in front of a camera or group. A good option in this case is voice over. Your video can still have the same personal and emotional effect through the sound of your voice, while trailing through eye-catching images and video clips. I utilized this technique in several places in my video, as well.

And finally …

A little insane courage goes a long way.

You’ve heard me say this before and it’s so true. If it wasn’t for blind ambition, if it wasn’t for that 20 seconds of insane courage nudging me along, I would have never even considered doing this video in the first place. But I stretched beyond my comfort zone, expanded my creativity and took a leap of faith. And then landed on my feet. Just like my psycho cat.

So without further adieu, here’s the official trailer for LITTLE 15:

So, what do you think? Have any other ideas on how book trailers should be done? Have you ever based a purchasing decision solely on watching a book trailer?

Boss from Hell

It took her only three days to tear into me, exposing my insecurities and delicate skin.

I had just started what I thought was my dream job at one of the world’s largest corporate entities, pitting me smack dab in the middle of a high-stress crisis communications unit. I had heard that the last guy in my position—a middle-aged husband and father—had broken under the pressure in only nine months. I found this out after taking the job, with no clue in hell as to what I was in for.

So my third day on the job, the senior vice president over the department, whom for this writing I’ll call Deborah, summoned me into her office and proceeded to rip me a new one for something the contractor before me had left undone.

In her $1,000 suit and pointy snakeskin pumps, she stared me down from behind her desk, with furrowed brow and a look that reeked of disapproval. Her disgust spread into me like poison, reopening my childhood wounds left by a toxic history of enabling. Somewhere deep in my conscience, I carried all this with me each time I stepped into this woman’s office, hoping and praying that she’d find favor with me, the little girl cowering on the floor.

But the redlining and harsh criticism kept coming, no matter how many drafts I went through. Every missed comma became a monumental failure. Every rewrite, a personal attack. I simply could not please this woman, no matter how hard I tried. I spent countless hours analyzing over and over the damage she was doing to me and even joined my coworkers in closed-door conversations on how she could be overthrown.

Image courtesy of Lynn Kelley, WANA Commons.

Yet, I continued to feel awful inside, guilty and unworthy. Until one day, during a particularly brutal tongue lashing about copy for a news release, I put my hand up and told her enough was enough. I was tired of coming to work every day and feeling stupid. I told her that I was a competent writer, a hard worker and that I would no longer allow her to make me feel otherwise.

Just as the words left my mouth, I wanted to suck them back in and retreat to that familiar place of self-doubt where I didn’t have to use my own strength to stand. Instead, we both just sat there in shock, completely plowed over by what I had done. At a loss for words, she cocked her head and looked at me sideways like I was a three-headed monster and then stormed out the door.

Shaking from head to toe, I picked up the phone and called my husband. I calmly asked him how much money we had in savings and then told him that I had just managed to get myself fired.

The afternoon came and went without security coming to escort me out. The next morning, my badge still worked, so I let myself into the building and discreetly made my way into my office. I logged into my computer with no problem and poured a cup of coffee without incident. People greeted me in the halls as they always did. An hour or so later, I heard the familiar voice of Deborah echo from our common area. She sounded upbeat and on task. I looked down at the news release that needed her approval—the one that had injected in me an insane sense of courage the day before—and grabbed it from my desk in quick-step to her office. I was either completely mental or a gluten for punishment. Either way, I had nothing to lose.

So with a pounding of my heart and a shot of adrenaline pumping through my veins, I walked into Deborah’s lair and politely asked for her approval on the release. I sat down and held my breath, ready to receive what I had coming. Without a word or even a glance in my direction, she looked it over and then handed it back with her blessing.

From that point on, the atmosphere between us changed. Although she continued to scrutinize my work with the same eye for detail, she noticeably softened her delivery. I, in turn, no longer took her critiques and edits as a defamation of my character, making a conscious effort to separate my job performance from my self-worth (which I still struggle with to this day).

Ironically 10 years later, I now call this woman my friend. We touch base every now and then over lunch and share the happenings in our lives. I no longer see Deborah as a fire-breathing dragon. I now see her as a warm and giving person, who demands the best out of herself and others, a quality that I couldn’t recognize through my own veil of insecurity all those years ago.

As a fiction author, people often ask me how I survive the harsh rejection and criticism that writers sometimes face in the publishing industry. Trust me, it’s not easy. Even a negative blog comment can send me hurling into the corner to nurse my wounds. More often than not though, criticism is becoming an easier pill to swallow. It’s got to if I want to make it in this biz. But during those times when I get shaky, when I feel myself sinking into self-defeating thoughts and behavior, I think back to my experience with Deborah. Because if I can survive her, then I can survive just about any disapproval that comes my way, knowing now that I’ve got the strength to hold my own.

Where in your life have you struggled with criticism? How has it made you stronger?

Pushing Past Rejection, Harsh Criticism & the Opinions of Others

Fear of rejection, criticism and what people will think of them were some of the chief reasons shared by writers over the weekend at the Collin College Writer’s Conference for why they shelve their writing projects or don’t even bother starting them at all.

These are all real fears that every writer deals with at one point of her career or another. I should know – I’ve been scared stiff by them more times than I can count. But in my workshop – The Career Author: Strategies for Living Your Dream - which I largely based on this blog post, I told a packed room of writer hopefuls to take these fears out back, along any others lurking around, and shoot ‘em dead. Because they have no place – and no right – to interfere with our dreams. Period.

A couple years ago I told my agent that I hoped to one day inspire other writers to pursue their dreams. I got that chance this past weekend.

The thing is, most of the fears we have in our lives are often  self-imposed, baseless figments of our over-excitable imaginations, that when confronted head on, will simply dissolve back into the same nothingness from which we created them.

Trust me. I’ve been down that road and still struggle to stay off it at times.

There was a point in my life when I was so paralyzed by fear and beat down by literary rejection that if my agent took a couple of days to return my call, I’d immediately jump to the conclusion that he’d changed his mind about my work and what he had thought was brilliance was nothing more than a momentary lapse in his literary judgment.

In fact, I’ll never forget how many times he made me revise the first 50 pages of my manuscript before he officially signed me with his agency. We went back and forth for a few months until finally he told me that I had “nailed” it. But even then, I still didn’t believe that my work measured up and that this whole thing of me having an agent was just too good to be true.

Looking back, I wasted a lot of energy over baseless fears that never came to pass. It wasn’t until I made a conscious effort to let go of my negative beliefs and trust my abilities that I really started to make my mark in the publishing world.

But you don’t have to be a writer to understand how this feels. One of my favorite films of all times is Jerry McGuire, starring Tom Cruise. The main character is a high-roller sports agent who secretly longs to do business his own way. So one night, he has an epiphany and writes manifesto of sorts on how the big agency that he works for should refocus their efforts on more quality of clients, rather than quantity. This of course gets him fired. But in the end, staying true to his passion ends up paying off when he finds success on his own through this new model.

Now I’m not telling you to go quit your job or anything. But there’s certainly something to be said for trusting your gut and staying true to your inner voice. And if you keep that as your guide, no critic or naysayer will have the power to knock you off your game or scare you away from pursuing all that God intended for your life.

So what’s holding you back from your dreams?

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