CONTAGIOUS!

A wave a sickness has rolled through our house, and sadly, it all started with me. Where I got crud from I have no idea, but after a week of coughing with no sleep, I gave up trying to overcome the blasted thing alone and went to the doctor. It took a few days on the antibiotic to finely feel better, but sleep still hasn’t come, my husband decided he’d ride the wave of crud too. He took up coughing where I left off. Ugh! Another doctor visit, more drugs to buy, you’d think we’d finally get some sleep. Nope, our youngest just had to give the crud a try. I’m sure the doctor’s pleased with all the return business he’s getting this month, but I’ve had ENOUGH!

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RORY’S CHOICE in review

The praise for my novel Rory’s Choice has been exciting to receive. Here are just a few…

I just finished reading Rory’s Choice this morning. I had the flu over the weekend and my daughter had loaned me your book. When I first started reading I wasn’t quite hooked as I am not that much into horses, but as I got to know the characters, I couldn’t put it down. I loved how I could experience Rory’s inner feelings as she dealt with the people around her. How my heart ached when her sister tormented and hurt her instead of giving her the love and support that a big sister should give. As a former school librarian of 26 years, I highly recommend this book and can’t wait to read the next one in the series. Linda Burt Smith

I loved the story flow of Rory’s Choice. It took me from a city and showed me what life in the country might be like. Rory has many of the challenges facing the youth of today and trying to find her place in all the chaos tugged at my heart strings. Living with her worst enemy is a really hard thing to work through. Yet, finding a relationship with a cute boy can help make life a little easier. This book was a clean, good and fun read. I highly recommend it! Sugar and Spice

Great book! I don’t read very many books unless they catch my attention from the beginning. Rory’s Choice caught my attention and had me looking for more. I couldn’t put it down. Janan Lindroos 

I loved this book. Every young girl and boy will love this coming of age story. Finally, a clean young adult book to help inspire youth to never give up on their dreams. Sheree Atwood

Have you picked up your copy yet? Join the growing numbers who have discovered the fantastic story of Rory’s Choice. Ebook or print you’ll find it at Amazon.com. Book two coming this fall.

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Spending my weekends…

Ugh, wrestling. As a mother, I sometimes wonder why I ever let my boys do this sport. There are times when I feel it is the worst form of torture—and not just for them. I feel every cross face, tight waist, arm-wrenching moment they experience. This season has also been extremely frustrating because I have to experience the pain of watching one son lose, and lose, and lose, while at the same time my other son wins, and wins, and wins. I sometimes feel like I can’t enjoy the wins at all—like it’ll pour lemon juice on the pain of the other son who is already suffering. Then this last weekend happened…

It wasn’t that the losing son started winning, he won only one match, but he’s effort changed. He didn’t walk out on the mat looking like a whipped dog. He walked out with the stature of a young man ready to give it his best shot—and he did, coming close several times. I’m sure the other spectators wondered why I clapped and cheered so loudly when he lost, but the growth I witnessed in the last tournament was incredible.

I’m proud of both of my sons, but I’m especially pleased with the losing son. It’s hard to stick with any sport when you’re getting your butt handed to you all the time, but he has. He’s never once asked to quit, and he fully plans on coming back next season. That kind of determination will come in handy as he grows into a man.

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Turn outward

There’s nothing like the feeling you get when you serve. It not only brightens the life of the person you are helping, it will also lift yours.

When we focus on others the struggles in our lives don’t seem near as awful. So when life gets hard, turn outward. Look for someone to serve. You won’t have to look far. Everyone has needs, though lots of people like to pretend they don’t. Serve them anyway. When you make kind acts of service part of your everyday life, the world around you will change for the better. And you will have been the catalyst.

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BETWEEN THE LINES–stories behind the making of RORY’S CHOICE.

I totally “get” and love the Ginny character in my novel RORY’S CHOICE. Not because she perfect, she’s a lot like me. After some of the whopping mistakes she made in that novel it’s hard to admit, but an impulsive personality will do that sometimes.

We are fierce creatures who have the ability to mask our fears and flaws, always pretending like we know what we’re doing. And sometimes that makes Ginny appear cocky, but in reality, she is the most fragile character of all.

At the end of novel we left her broken, but I promise we’re not leaving her there. Ginny will rise again. No matter how angry Rory is right now, she will need her impulsive best friend for what’s coming next.

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Do you speak teenager?

Do you speak teenager? I thought I had a good grasp on the lingo. After this week I’ve decided it’s impossible to know for sure. The only constant seems to be me—I can’t do anything right. Cheering for them is an embarrassment. If my face does anything but smile, I’m being too hard. So, I try doing nothing at all. Nope, now they think I’m angry. Ugh, I think staying away might be the only solution.

“But Mom!” says the teenager. “I want you to be there.”

Okay…it must be the joy in torturing me they find so enthralling. But guess what teenager? I’m not going anywhere no matter how crazy you make me. One day I’ll have my revenge. You’ll have children of your own.

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Pain for me, a lesson for you.

My writing this week proves that creating novels sometimes mirrors real life. We make choices every of our lives. And those choices sometimes put us down paths we didn’t intend. I’m sure the choice looked promising at first, so did the choice I made for my characters. However, when I got down the path, and pretty far down the path might I add, I realized my characters were going in the wrong direction. Was it moving the plot forward, yes, but I could see a better way, a stronger path for the story.

Just as in real life, I’d done a hard thing, I admitted I’d made a mistake—but what to do now? The chapter was almost finished, nobody would ever know I’d thought of a better way if I just left it alone, except I would always know.

Yes, it’s hard to admit our mistakes, but it takes courage to do something about it. For me that meant deleting a week’s worth of work and starting over. We can do the same in our lives. Okay, maybe there’s a not a delete button, but we can still change if we don’t like where we are headed. That’s the great thing about life, we get to choose what we’ll make of it.

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The author/ audience relationship…I love it!

The world of a writer is often a lonely place. We live in our heads, working out the latest schemes and characters for our current novel itching to be set free.

Most writers tend to be introverts so this isn’t much of a problem, unless you’re me. I’m one of those weird writers that like people and conversation. I don’t find large groups foreboding, and when someone tells me they’ve read my book, you better believe I’m going to ask more than, “Did you like it?” So go ahead, approach me. I love to talk.

The positive feedback for my first novel has been tremendous. It has made the doubts on my career choice ease quite a bit. I’m not repeating the, “I’m not crazy, I’m not crazy” mantra everyday like before. We’re down to weekly reminders instead 🙂

For those who have asked about book two, I promise, just as my first novel, the sequel will contain the very best writing I have in me. Every day I grow a bit more in my craft, so I have high hopes my growing fan base won’t be disappointed with book two when it releases in the fall.

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BETWEEN THE LINES–stories behind the making of RORY’S CHOICE.

First, I want to thank all those who have left feedback on Amazon for Rory’s Choice. Your support is so appreciated. My dreams are coming true because of you. Now—back to this week’s blog. I wanted to tell you why I choose to have Rory dance with her father.

One of my favorite childhood memories is dancing with my father. I’d stand on his toes and he’d waltz me around. As I grew older, I had to learn to stand on my own two feet. It was then I discovered my dancing skills needed a lot of work, but I never lost my love of dancing.

I always knew I wanted Rory to dance with her father just like I did with mine. There’s something powerful about being twirled around in a father’s arms. Every step conveys just how important you are to them without a single word being said. Thanks Dad!

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Make sure…you just might be wrong

I sat in the stands of a sporting event with my heart breaking for a mother I hadn’t met or seen. Near me a group of women were gossiping about this mother and her child. From their loud conversation, I gathered that the child had been seen leaving the locker room after a practice with a large bruise on her arm and crying. The women were sure that the mother had caused this, because she followed after daughter out of the locker room that day, and had been shouting at her, “to wait.”

These women were positive this mother was a monster, yet none of them had seen how the child received the bruise. Having experienced something like this in my youth, I know how very hurtful an assumption can be.

My family played a lot of baseball through the years. My father coached many of my brothers little league teams. During one of those games, one of my brothers struck out. In a fit of rage, he stomped back into the dugout and chucked his bat. The thing ricocheted off the cinder blocks of the dugout and smacked him in the face, causing his nose to bleed profusely. My brother’s strike out had been the third for the team, so my father left his place as the first-base coach and went back into the dugout. When my brother emerged from the dugout to play catcher, someone in the stands saw the tissue in his nose and the blood on his uniform and decided my father must have done it because he struck out.

The wisest course of action would have been to ask my brother what happened. Instead this person wrote an anonymous letter to the police, giving their assumption filled account of the event.

My poor father was investigated, and all of us were interrogated. I can’t tell you how awesome it was to be called out of class to be questioned by a couple of police officers about my father. No matter how many times I said, “My father doesn’t beat us.” They just kept on pressing, as if I was covering up the truth.

It took months, but eventually the investigation ended. The police could never find proof, because there was none to be found, but it still hurt my family deeply, especially my father and mother.

I’m not saying we should turn a blind eye to abuse. Just make sure what you’re looking at was really abuse before you go spreading rumors. And no, an outspoken mother is not proof enough. The only way to know for sure, ask the child, “How did you get the bruise?”

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