Monday, July 11, 2022

Temporary Failure

                                                       Bringing you a moment of cool.


"Temporary failure is all the rage. All the cool kids have done it"—Jen Sencero (Life coach)

 

"In Japan, broken objects are often repaired with gold. The flaw is seen as a unique piece of the object's history which adds to its beauty. Consider this when you feel broken."—unknown

 

Have you ever had someone say to you, "What did you do to create that?"

 

You were pulling your hair out over the booboo you just made, and then some smart-aleck comes up and asks, "What did you do to create that?"

 

When tremendous things happen, I have never heard anyone say, "Wow! What did you do to create that?"

 

I'm not saying people don't congratulate you on your successes. I'm talking about those holier-than-thou people who are hurting the hurt. And, you know what your response ought to be. "If I could create that easily I wouldn't create you in front of me asking that stupid question."

 

I have Good News for you.

 

Let's say you have decided on a project and are going full out. That old subconscious mind of yours who sees a change coming decided to throw roadblocks in your way. It's like when you stop smoking, taking drugs, or doing something that will massively change your life. All hell breaks loose. 

 

You are detoxing. Both physically and emotionally. 

 

That's when your computer crashes, the washing machine breaks, or you get the flu. And then some idiot says, "What did you do to create that?"

 

"Well, Dude, I was changing my life, that's what."

 

Long ago, I got the chance to travel with my husband on a business trip. (What a great company to send me along.) He was going to England and Germany to show an instrument. I was excited. And then, as I searched through the necessary papers to get my passport, I lost my Driver's License. 

 

This occurrence was before I was into metaphysics and any thought that maybe, just maybe, we have a say in creating our reality. 

 

Then I called it "Static."

 

I knew I wanted to go. I was sure of that. So, why would I lose the very thing I needed to get my Passport? I could go into that dark place and say I'm stupid and disorganized, and if anyone had said, "What did you do to create that?" I would have sat on my hand to avoid punching them. 

 

As I anticipated my trip aboard, my subconscious started to make it hard for me, but I beat it. I found my Driver's License, got my passport, and had a fabulous time in England, Germany, Amsterdam, Holland, and Denmark. 

 

So, if you decide to make a massive change in your life, go for it, and don't let anything hold you back, other people, or your fears, and especially that subconscious mind who had operated on a certain level for so long that any change produces a tantrum.

 

Remember, sometimes shit happens before it turns into Shinola.

 

 

Wednesday, July 6, 2022

Did Your Baby Arrive When Expected?




 
My Childbirth class teacher used to say: "When the apple is ripe, it will fall from the tree."


(I had two apples, one ten days late, the other two weeks early.)


Okay, writing is rather like having a baby. See, I do have a point.


Although I intend to keep my word--like publishing my blog on Tuesdays, I allowed myself to let yesterday's Tuesday slip past.


Besides, home took precedence, a sick husband, and a trip to the dentist for me. I had broken a tooth and had a gaping hole in my mouth. 


 The hole will be fixed, and I trust the husband will get well.

So, dear ones, here we are, with me saying that nothing happens in a straight line with entrepreneurship, artistry, and life. We have curves and backtracks, stops, and re-starts.
 
This brings me to ask for your help.

I created another blog. Yep, that's what I was doing last week.   I am experimenting with SEO, which I had ignored and didn't know anything about. Now I want to see what happens. 

I know writers out there might like a nudge now and again, and to know they are not alone. Therefore, I'm writing a blog for them. Besides, I will listen to my own advice.


I'm not teaching anyone to write—if they desire it, they can do it. The skill requires learning and practice. I can, however, offer tips and nudges.

As a favor, I am asking you to click on the blog address below. 

Of course, a signup or a follow would be fantastic, but a click tells old google I'm here.

If it's not your cup of tea, you can forget it in the future.

For me, I wonder what I'll come up with. And you know from past posts that my take on most things desired, is that first we need to clear away the debris so the good stuff has a clear path.

And I'm learning to ask for help when I need it.

So, for all who are willing to click below,

Thank You.

www.breakoutsforwriters.com

 

 (I don't ask me why, but this blog requires a second click after you click on this one. Sorry.)


 

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

I Never Would Have Dreamed

 

"I'll be darned," I said this morning as I read a passage in a book. "I would never have dreamed that would happen." 

 

It was in the '60s at a bar in Waikiki. Everyone was in a festive mood, eating and drinking to the sounds of a finger-picked guitar. Suddenly a white man announced to the bartender--in a voice everyone could hear--that he shouldn't have to drink good liquor with a black man, only he didn't use the word black. 

 

The room fell silent, and everyone turned to the one black man present, expecting a fight.

 

The black man stood up, walked over to the man, smiled, and proceeded to lecture him on bigotry, the promise of the American Dream, and the universal rights of man. 

 

The fellow felt so bad that he gave the black man a hundred-dollar bill. 

 

That one hundred dollars paid for the drinks and pu-puus for the night, plus the black man's rent for the rest of the month. 

 

My shock was that I didn't think lecturing ever changed anyone's mind regarding bigotry or other hard-held beliefs. 

 

That must have been one persuasive man.

 

Have you ever had a book sitting unread on your shelf for years and finally picked it up and began to read? 

 

That was my experience this morning. From bed, my eyes fell on this book. So, I pulled it from the shelf, made coffee, and took a cup of it with me to our back porch, where I began to read. I remember specifically when I got the book. It was at Powell's—that square block of a bookstore in Portland, Oregon. The book once had another owner, for a few paragraphs were neatly highlighted. 

 

While waiting at the bookstore for my niece to join me, I began to read this book. She arrived shortly, and since I didn't want to leave the book, I bought it.

 

"When the student is ready, the teacher will arrive" is an oft-turned phrase, which has often been the case for me with books. Why this morning? Why, after all those years, did I suddenly want to read this book?

 

While sipping my coffee and feeling the breeze stir my night-tasseled hair, I both chuckled at what I was reading and felt a lump in my throat. And that was only the Preface. 

 

"I know that the hardening of lines, the embrace of fundamentalism and tribe, dooms us all." The author wrote.

 

That quote was pertinent for me, as I have been grieving the fractures that have happened in this country and in my family.

 

Hard lines have been drawn, and I need to come to some understanding. 

 

Perhaps Barack Obama's book Dreams from My Father can help me.

And, in Dreams, I read the story of the black man in the bar in Waikiki. It was his father.

 

Obama wrote his Preface 10 years after his book came out. When he wrote the book, he had not been the President of The United States. And not being famous, he went through what other first authors have experienced. He said he was filled with hope and despair upon the book's publication—hope that the book might succeed, despair that I had failed to say anything worth saying. 

 

Reality fell somewhere in the middle. 

 

His reviews were mildly favorable. People showed up at the readings his publishers had arranged. The sales were underwhelming. 

 

And so, in a few months, he went on with his life.

 

I feel some affinity with Obama's wonderings about his father, for it stirred up some feelings in me regarding mine. I lived with my father for three to four years. Obama's father left when he was an infant. 

 

He was of two worlds, black and white. I was not. 

 

However, I grew up believing I was German. That's how my mother identified herself. And, although my father was English, I had no connection with him. I knew what the Germans had done in the Second World War, and my heart hurt from it. So instead of being proud of my strong heritage, I felt embarrassed by it.

 

A couple of Christmases ago, my daughter researched our genealogy on my mother's side, and I found my grandmother was Swiss. Would that be like Obama learning that he was not of African heritage but just a dark-skinned white guy?

 

My connection with Germany has made me extremely sensitive to how fractions of people can be so opposed to each other. As a child, I heard about children turning in their parents, which scared me. 

 

While there were courageous Germans who fought against the Hitler regime or escaped it, others embraced it. 

 

I heard the bad stuff first. I didn’t hear about the family who escaped in a hot air balloon or the Von Trapp family (The Sound of Music) who escaped Germany by walking over the Alps to Switzerland. I hadn't heard about the man who carried his wife out of Germany in a suitcase and how the suitcase sat in the snow at the train station while his wife inside was dressed in a thin, loose garment so she could envelop herself into that small space. (All these people survived and escaped. And the man carrying the suitcase, being a professor, had carried books in that suitcase so many times that the guards had stopped checking it.)

 

We have all heard how people wanted to come to America, the land of the free, and how thrilled they were sailing into New York Harbor and seeing Statue of Liberty.

 

I visited the Statue of Liberty once, and I'm sorry to say I did not climb it for the day was extremely hot. So, I lay on the cool grass and stared up at the Lady, while my kids went inside.

 

However, I did not see the broken shackles at her feet. 

 

 


 

 

"The original statue was chained. It’s sculptor, Frederic Auguste Bartholdi, however, felt that broken chains at the feet of Lady Liberty would remind us of freedom from oppression and servitude. These chains are unseen by visitors as they sit atop the pedestal. However, they can be seen from an aerial view."

 

I also read that the first statue was of a black Lady Liberty, but the U.S. rejected it and Bartholdi created the present version. 

 

The well know poem, “Give us your tired, your poor.” would be one of several factors that turned the meaning of the statue from “Liberty Enlightening the World” into a symbol of freedom and opportunity for immigrants. Alexandre Gustave Eiffel, just prior to creating his famed Tower, was engaged to design the massive iron pylon and secondary skeletal framework that allows the Statue’s copper skin to move independently, and thus face the many storms that have pelted it since its installation.

 

Now, excuse me, I have a book to read.

Wednesday, June 22, 2022

Calling All Entrepreneurs, or Maybe I’m Whistling Dixie


 

For you Entrepreneurs, I am passing on information I got from one of my favorite writing gurus Steven Pressfield. He borrowed it from Dan Sullivan, a Strategic coach.

 

(So, this is he said, he said, she said.) 

 

Sullivan says that every entrepreneur must make this statement: 

 

“I will expect no remuneration until I have created value for someone else.”

 

(That just says you shouldn’t expect to be paid unless you give your precipitant something of value. It’s doesn’t say you shouldn’t create to give value to yourself.)

 

To further quote: “Create value” is a hard-boiled business term. There’s no art to it. No romance. But you and I, as writers and dancers and actors and photographers, live exactly by that dynamic—whether we realize it or not.

 

“We write a book. It’s got to find readers. It’s got to sell. It has to ‘create value’ for the person who lays out hard American greenbacks for the privilege of scanning through its pages. Otherwise, we’re not artists; we’re artistes. (A person with artistic pretensions.) We’re living in a dream world.”

 

 

For a long time, I have written because I liked being in a “Zone.” That is going with the flow, entering into a no-time space. But if being in the zone doesn’t produce anything of value, then I might as well be meditating. At least not expect to be paid for spewing my thoughts onto paper.

 

This is a hard look at the facts.

 

“Nobody Wants to Read Your Sh*t” (The title of one of Pressfield’s books.) Not that you shouldn’t write; you should keep doing it until your work isn’t sh*t. That’s his point.

 

 

 

I’ve followed blogs, only to have them drift away, or I got tired of them and just stopped reading. 

 

I know those writers have put time and effort into writing their posts. They are sharing their lives, but readers, of which I am one, have so much time, and where we use it becomes of primary importance. 

 

I’m sure that applies to you as well.

 

I wonder, as a blogger, if I have added value. 

 

Yes, at times.

 

Some say blogs are passe’. I don’t know. Seth Godin, a primer blogger, blogs every day and says that everyone ought to. It’s a process. It teaches us to observe, to think of something every day that we haven’t thought of a million times before. But that’s for our own edification.

 

I do believe that expressing oneself creatively has value to oneself whether anyone sees it or not. Most creatives who are are expressing themselves in some manner, are not out in the streets raising a ruckus. They just love doing whatever they are doing—writing video games, making videos, painting, sewing, knitting, painting, you know, whatever.

 

As a blogger, I’ve been learning, and I am grateful to all the readers who have traveled with me. 

 

I’m at a crossroads. Should I keep blogging, or is it time to move on?