Sunday, June 3, 2012
Did you plan this?
The family you would have...
A degree, or maybe more than one degree...
In your chosen field... or did it take you to a whole new place?
Your life experiences... were they hard to accept? Do you have any regrets?
Is your house your "dream house" or maybe you live in an apartment.
Do you make the money you thought you would? What you deserve?
Or is life so unfair that that didn't happen... yet?
Are you part of the "in crowd" in your social circle?
Are you married? Ever divorced? Widowed? More than once?
Do you prefer being single or wish you were?
Have you met tragedy?
Did too many people die?
Do you believe in God? In Jesus?
Do you have a church? A pastor you love and trust?
Have you been betrayed?
Are you somebody's hero? Somebody's cheerleader?
Are you disappointed?
Surprised?
Impressed?
Amazed?
Thankful?
Apathetic?
Hopeful?
Sick and tired?
Hopeful?
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Family
Family of origin.
Extended family.
Nuclear family.
Friday, May 11, 2012
Sometimes....
Surgeries.
Pain.
Loss.
Foreclosure.
Being misunderstood.
No paycheck.
Sadness.
Missing loved ones.
Aborted plans.
Just go on.
Keep reaching.
Things happen for a reason.
One ending creates a new beginning.
Get ready.
Go.
Saturday, May 5, 2012
Don't complain, and don't explain.
If you complain about a lot of things a lot of the time, you will be considered negative, and rightly so. The only people who like negative people are other negative people. Especially if their negatives agree. But often, the topic doesn't matter as much as the general negative attitude. You've heard the old adage: "Misery loves company." Well, indeed it does.
So, complainers will often find themselves looking for company, as they watch the retreating backs of many of their acquaintances. They're lonely. Maybe eventually, they will get the idea that being positive is a better ingredient in the making of friendships. Don't complain to them about their complaining. They have to find this out on their own.
Don't explain. It is just about defensiveness. The young lady who dashes into her place of employ, crying in a whiney voice to no one in particular: "The traffic, ugh! It was so crowded this morning." No one asked her. No one even accused her of being late. She's just pleading her case.
She knows she's late.
And she knows it has nothing to do with the traffic.
Jesus could have completely reversed the tragic events in his own life. All he had to do was explain. He could have defended himself. But he needs no defense. And he never complained about it.
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
How to Remember the New England Colonies
I wore my new hamp shirt on the choo-choo that connected the road to the island.
New Hampshire Massachusetts Connecticut Rhode Island
Middle Colonies (4)
Della wore her new jersey that she bought for just pennies at the new store.
Delaware New Jersey Pennsylvania New York
Southern Colonies (5)
The southern belles, including the twins, were invited to the ball:
Georgia Maryland Virginia North and South Carolina
About Writing
My signature writing style is clearly identified as narration. Or maybe clearly identified as unclear. My quest for the perfectly descriptive adjective sometimes amounts to an obsession. Unfortunately, I typically use too many subordinating conjunctions, run-on sentences, and dangling modifiers that reduce clarity. I seek an explicit writing style.
From an early age, I have used writing as a substitute for speech. I envied my young contemporaries who demonstrated their thoughts with the use of voice. It seemed a natural, logical, and convenient way to communicate. However, my thoughts took a detour via my hand, attached to a pen, and the process usually involved a delayed time factor. As a result, I was thought to be uncommunicative, unresponsive, and “withdrawn.” It seemed so unfair to dismiss the wealth of words held captive in my mind as shyness. Oh, how I yearned to marshal the jumble of words that rattled in my head and allow them to exit in single file through my mouth to express myself!
The need to connect to other human beings necessitated communication, but I practiced safely within my own intimate circle of younger sisters by reciting family lore and creating memories. This collection of memories, sewn together with imagination and love, became a comforting quilt that kept out the cold of reality in our dysfunctional family.
When I told my younger siblings about the gown Mother designed especially for me for my first prom, they could feel the swish of silk against knobby knees; see the transformation of a plain little girl to a princess. They could taste the red, juicy flavor of the sun-ripened tomatoes we sampled from the field across the dirt road from our house. They could experience the thrill of fear of near discovery as we stole not-quite-ripe apples from the neighbor’s tree by the alley and the puckering tartness they left on our tongues. They rubbed their cheeks and laughed in remembrance at Gramma Viola’s famous big sticky kisses that left wet red imprints on tiny smooth faces. They groaned in collective agreement, as they visualized all of us placed in stair-stepped formation in the pew at Sunday Mass, when Mother stilled kicking legs with her disapproving glares and silent pinches. The quilt of narrative memories has served well as entertainment and a kind of protection.
I am writing a book; it is not yet finished. I only started it in 1975.
Written by a 4th-Grader
We just finished the last day of school for this year. I was blessed to have an amazing group of children, who, I am sure taught me at least as much as I taught them! They are prayer warriors and a loving family. They spent part of the last day of school honoring each other, declaring friendships, and proclaiming family.
Some students reveal their God-given gifts early in life. This young lady is a budding author. She is a writer, and with her heart for expression, someday I expect to see her name on the cover of a book!
Read what this young, sensitive, wise-beyond-her-years child wrote to me as a farewell gift:
They say friends are forever. They are sometimes, but I think teachers will last forever. Their legacy will go on. Lots of jobs make a difference: The president does, movie stars do, a missionary does, too, but teachers make the biggest difference.
Without teachers, presidents would not know how to be presidents. Movie stars wouldn't know how to act. Missionaries would not know how to preach. I think teachers are the best.
Thank you, Emily. And because of students like you, teachers love what they do. And I love you. Writers write, keep writing!