Friday, May 20, 2011

I feel fine!

It's a beautiful day, I'm taking the dog and youngest child to the park and I'm singing. 
Enjoy today as if it were your last, just in case, but I'll plan to check back in with you tomorrow!

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

In which I confess my Sin

It's not a new rule.  It isn't my rule.  It is simple.  If you want to write, you are going to have to write stuff down.
(And if you're a mom, you have to write stuff down; if you're over 30, it's likely you have to write some things down; if you don't sleep enough or if you were scatterbrained to start with, you have to write stuff down.)

If you write, you know your ideas--the good ones, anyway--do not come when you ask for them.  The ideas come while you're walking, driving, showering, cooking and sleeping.  Which is why there are pieces of scrap paper on my nightstand, in the laundry room and in my pocket when I go for a walk or a run.  The laptop is always on in the kitchen, so if I think of something while I'm frying eggplant, I can type a quick note.  I have a few apps on my iPhone so if I'm driving or running, I can at least jot a few words when I have a chance to stop.  I haven't found a way to keep a notepad in the shower yet but I don't always get in there, every day, anyway! ;)

This isn't new.  Life is busy.  We are trying to get other things done so we might have time to write or, if we make the time, we are trying to call up the inspiration on cue.  So the good ideas wait until you have a quiet moment to sit and breathe.

I had a great one last night!  I remember that it was great enough that I included an extra-loud prayer (in my head, anyway) along with the others, that God help me remember today as I was just too tired to write it down.
Apparently, my faith is not as strong as it should be.  As a writer, I know that is the biggest writing sin!  If you don't write it down before you go to sleep, it will be lost by the time you wake.  I prayed for it to stick in my head--and I can remember the two characters involved and where they were--but that's all I've got.  There is a stack of paper, pens AND pencils on my nightstand but I was too tired to pick up a pen. 

You have been hearing me talk about The Great American Novel for decades but you've been wondering why I don't just finish it already.  You had your suspicions but now, I admit it.  Writers who are too tired and lazy to pick up a pen aren't going to get very far.

(If one of you was suddenly gifted with a GREAT SCENE involving characters who aren't yours, in a story you don't know, sometime around 12:30am this morning, please email me.  I know God heard my prayer so I'm thinking when I didn't write the idea down, He went ahead and gave it to someone else.)

Monday, May 02, 2011

Muslims and schools in Pakistan, Jewish prayer books and Heaven

If you want to get along with people, you don't discuss politics or religion.  But I'm hoping if they're part of book reviews, with education and parenting mixed in, you'll still come back and visit my blog from time to time.

I might be the last person who finally got around to reading Three Cups of Tea.  But if I'm not, and you haven't checked it out yet, go out and pick it up now.  I'll wait.  You can finish the rest of this blog post when you get back.  It is an inspiring, true story that proves how much difference one person really can make in our world.  In addition to being inspired, I learned quite a bit about Islam, India and Pakistan.

Last night, I finally finished reading People of the Book.  I recommend it highly.  This one is not a true story but a fictional account of the journey of a real book, The Sarajevo Haggadah.  It's an intriguing take on how the book got to be where it was and the lives of people who came into contact with it.

Heaven is for Real was a quick read.  As I'd seen an interview with the author, his wife and their son, I knew that the little boy survived, in the end.  However, reading another parent's anguish over their child who was near-death, kept me turning the pages long after I should have been in bed.  It is certainly a book of hope.  The message is simple: Heaven is real. 
My only fault with the book is that Mr. Burpo claims that "almost-four-year-olds" aren't capable of guile or lying.  To some extent, I believe that is true.  A young child making up stories that completely agree with accounts in scripture would be difficult, indeed.

I have just been chuckling as my three-year-old has been telling me some very detailed stories lately, about a non-existent school that he attends, where no adults are allowed.  But that's his story.