I met Mary Harms in 1987 at a Bible study when we both attended Faith Covenant Church in Burnsville, Minnesota. In the years since, we’ve done many things together, smacked a golf ball around a course or two, gone horseback riding, gone for bike rides, taken vacations together, and always, have shared a good laugh while doing so. As far as friends go, one could not find a truer friend with whom to share life’s joys and sorrows. She and I along with our husbands are on vacation together in the Keys. Mile Marker 50, to be exact. Today we…
Read MoreCHECKLIST FOR CREATING A GREAT STORY
Stuck on your plot? Not sure how to shape your scenes and chapters? Here are a list of excellent resources to get your going again. I’m not sure how I came across this checklist that Ms. Whitney encouraged writers to use as they crafted their stories, but I’m using it as I create my next story and I’m finding the checklist so helpful. I also love knowing that my beloved author used this to help her write her memorable characters and her stories. Phyllis A. Whitney‘s Checklist for Creating a Great Story 1. Have you a plot, a story plan?…
Read MoreGIVE, A NEW LENTEN OUTLOOK
Yes, I know today, February 10, 2016 is Ash Wednesday, and on this day many Christians choose to give something up for the next 40 days until we celebrate Christ’s resurrection and new life on Easter. What I am thinking about today, and I hope no one takes this idea as sacrilegious as I mean nothing of the sort. But I wondered, what if we make, in addition to this tradition or to stand in as a substitute, the idea of giving something each day for the next 40 days, until Easter comes. If you choose to participate, please drop me a…
Read MoreWRITING BEYOND OUR MORTAL COIL
I read the other day that Prince Charles has painted thousands of watercolors. He’s a prince, first in line to the throne. Why should he do anything other than be princely? His Royal Highness responded, “We walk away and shuffle off our mortal coil, but these things live on.” Ah, a partial quote from a soliloquy spoken by a fictitious Shakespearian prince from Denmark who wrote, “To be or not to be, that is the question.” The Prince of Wales paints so that the beauty of that which he sees will extend beyond his time here. The British heir to the throne…
Read MoreLetters from a Wannabe-Brit Living in Wisconsin
Doesn’t everyone need a pick-me-up now and then? I have a friend who is as crazy about everything English as I am.Her name is Gail and she lives in Baldwin, Wisconsin. Like me, she is a writer. She’s currently at work on a novel that I cannot wait for her to finish because the premise is adorable and yes, has much to do with England. She blogs as much as possible about all things about the big island. Anyway, Gail is one of the most caring people I know and she loves to surprise people with her letters. Yesterday, a…
Read MoreSAUDADE
A woman stopped at my Pebbles of Peace display at my boutique table last week. The Pebbles of Peace is a collection of smoothed stones, shells, and sea glass, themed around the “Whatever” Scripture from Philippians. “I like these,” a woman said to me. “But do you ever make custom sets?” I told her for the same price I would put words of her choice on the stones. As she wrote her words, curiosity got the better of me. Laughter, love, peace, xoxoxo, forever, grace, child, memory, remember, hero and saudade. “Tell me about the last word,” I said. “Saudade.” “It’s a bit like the…
Read MoreHoliday Boutiques and the Spirit of the Season
I love being a part of holiday boutiques. On November 15, 2015, I had the good fortune to be a part of Holiday Market, put on by Amy Nylander and friends. This boutique benefits the American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life. What an awesome group to work with. Met some amazing people too. Thanks to all who stopped by my table. I loved meeting you and making a connection and hearing your stories. Congratulations to Cindy who won the Lavish Love canvas drawing! Saturday, November, 21, 2015, I’ll be at Christ Presbyterian Church’s Holiday Boutique located at 70th Street and…
Read MoreAn Ocean of Orange
Orange is the new ocean. At my Minnesota cabin in autumn, anyway. Wind swirls ripple and cause swishes in its sea. Nature splashes it spray before it rests in white. Sanskrit’s naranga: “orange tree.” I am awash in its fruitiness. Its scent, aged in musky sweetness, allures even the staunchest summer hold-outs and those reluctant to sea change. I admit I am one, as is Mickey, my golden retriever, who loves to fish. I’ll not be the one to tell him the docks will come out next week. I, for today, at least, while nature says I still can, am choosing to moor in my Orange Ocean.…
Read MoreGratitude by the Lake
A red and white sailboat, moored at its secured buoy, rocks bow to stern. The tour paddleboat leaving the Port of Excelsior just tooted its horn. A man in black sweater, khakis, trilby and white beard checks his dory. It is a beautiful 50–degree day at “my office” in my car at Excelsior Commons in Minnesota. I’ve come today to displace some anxiety. This beautiful setting, of boats and water, is once again working its magic and bringing me to a place where I can both let go of worries and concentrate on what is at hand for me this…
Read MorePoems for Life
Today is Day 2 in the June 2015 Challenge in Pictures or Words. Not sure how I stumbled upon my favorite book of poems, Poems for Life, but I love the concept of its compilation. When I bought the book, The Nightingale-Bamford School was not on my radar. A quick look online and I learned it’s an all-girls prep school in Manhattan. According to the Teacher’s Note in the book, the origination of the idea behind this collection of poems came from a 1992 Irish anthology of poems entitled Lifelines. Lifelines had its beginnings in 1985 with Dublin students at Wesley College…
Read More