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Showing posts with label Encouragement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Encouragement. Show all posts

Thursday, August 31, 2017

Just Write

by Gabrielle Meyer, @MeyerGabrielle

Five years ago, I started to write my first novel. I’d been dreaming about this book for over ten years. I knew every scene, every detail, every plot twist, and every character—yet the book remained unwritten. I’d been telling people I was a writer for as long as I could remember—yet the book remained unwritten. I devoured Christian Fiction, and dreamed of the day I’d see my name on the cover of a book—yet the book remained unwritten.

Why?

Monday, August 28, 2017

How to be a Courageous Author

by Beth K. Vogt, @bethvogt

It appears that one of my favorite songs in The Sound of Music is the song actress Julie Andrews liked least of all.

The Sound of Music. What a story, with Julie Andrews as Maria, the spunky postulant – almost a nun – who falls in love with Captain von Trapp, the stern widower with seven children.

I love the scene where Maria sings “I Have Confidence,” as she strides down the street in those awful cast-off convent clothes, trying to convince herself that she’s not afraid of her future. If acting brave equals courage, Maria is one of the most daring woman you’ll ever meet, fictional or true to life.

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

Six of the Worst Things About Being a Writer

by James L. Rubart

This is far from a comprehensive list, but don't you think six is enough for one serving?

1. Comparing Yourself to Others/Doubt/Insecurity- I combined these three into one since they’re brothers, or at least close cousins. We compare because we doubt which comes out of our insecurity.

“Why did I think I should do this?”

“I’ll never make it.”

“How can I call myself a writer when everyone else is so much better?”

Monday, March 13, 2017

It's Normal to Feel Like a Loser

by Michelle Griep

So you're writing a novel, la-de-dah. Typing away like a rock star. Day after day after day.

After day.

And then, out of nowhere, whap! A horrific thought slaps you upside the head, yanking you out of the story and paralyzing you so that your daily word count takes a serious nosedive. Suddenly you wonder if you're an author, that maybe all the things you write are just slobbery bits of drivel bubbling out of you. Panic sets in. Perhaps you're not a for-real writer. Maybe you're an impostor. A poser. An orangutan mimicking kissy noises in front of a mirror. Or worse -- maybe the zombie apocalypse really did happen and you're nothing but a body operating on rote memory because shoot, if you read what you've written, those words certainly look like a person with no brain wrote them.

Saturday, February 18, 2017

Pitching Pointers

by Michelle Griep @MichelleGriep

It’s that time of year to start registering for writers conferences. That means there will be a whole lot of angst-filled author wannabes out there, biting their fingernails down to stubs . . . which makes it super hard to type anything.

Not that it’s scary to go to a conference, mind you. The real terror sets in when it’s story-pitching time. Sitting across from a god-like agent or editor who can crush you faster than the bat of an eyelash—or fast-track you to stardom. I'm not going to lie. It is a bit daunting. 


Saturday, January 21, 2017

Mid-Winter Kick in the Writerly Pants

by Michelle Griep

The days are grey. It's Siberia cold outside. And all I really want to do is sit around in my yoga pants and eat boxes of Girl Scout Cookies. Hey, don't judge me. You know you've been there.

What I really should be doing, though, is kicking butt on my manuscript if I'm hoping to get it finished by summer. Somewhere along the way, though, I lost my motivation. I think it might be outside, on the far corner of the porch, underneath the frozen pile of Christmas lights I haven't yet put away. What to do? Make a list, of course . . .

5 Ways to Gain Momentum When You're in a Writerly Slump

1. Read

Dive into a well-written book. Reading great writing inspires your own great writing. Then pull off a dud of a book from the shelf. A real wing-dinger of a gag-inducing I-can't-believe-this-ever-got-published kind of book. You can usually find these on the bottom of a rack at Goodwill. Read it. This will fan the flames of your sweet-mercy-I-can-write-better-than-that reflex, and you'll be off and running in no time.

2. Meditate

Don't worry. I'm not advocating some wackadoodle contortionist pose while mumbling gibberish. Just take a few moments to think about where you're story is headed and allow yourself to get excited about it. That helicopter crash you've got planned? Yeah! Ka-blooey, baby! Or the upcoming boy-wins-girl scene? Warmth and fuzziness. Spend some time with your characters in your mind, because if you're expecting your readers to hang out with them, then you should too.

3. Research

Sometimes all it takes is a new idea to spur your story into a full-out gallop. Where will you find that new idea? Google it. Search the ol' web for something related to your plot or era. You may come across something cool to include.

4. Exercise

I know. I see you, darting your eyes everywhere except at this paragraph. You were really hoping I'd skip over this, hmm? Trust me. I hate this one as much as you do, but doggone if hiking my body outside for a walk, even when it's cold, doesn't give me a whole new perspective.

5. Write

Get out of the chair and write!
Go to a library, a coffee shop, or the writerly nook where you know you're most likely to be able to crank out something. Turn off the internet. No emails. No tweets. No Trivia Crack or Candy Crush. Then write. Yep. That simple. Keep your heinie in the chair for at least two hours. I don't care if you have to stare at a blank screen for the first hour and fifty-five minutes **lifts two jedi-fingers in the air and swirls them around all Obi-wan style** you will accomplish some kind of word count.
So there you have it, Sparky. Step away from the Girl Scout Cookies and get cracking. Don't make me come over there.


TWEETABLES

Mid-Winter Kick in the Writerly Pants by Michelle Griep (Click to Tweet)

5 Ways to Gain Momentum When You're in a Writerly Slump~ Michelle Griep (Click to Tweet)

Somewhere along the way I lost my motivation~ Michelle Griep (Click to Tweet)



Author Michelle Griep
ABOUT THE AUTHOR ~ MICHELLE GRIEP


Michelle Griep’s been writing since she first discovered blank wall space and Crayolas. Follow her adventures and find out about upcoming new releases at her blog, Writer Off the Leash, or stop by her website. You can also find her at the usual haunts of FacebookTwitter, or Pinterest.

Like what you read? There’s more. WRITER OFF THE LEASH: GROWING IN THE WRITING CRAFT is a kick in the pants for anyone who wants to write but is stymied by fear, doubt, or simply doesn’t know how to take their writing to the next level.


Monday, January 09, 2017

The Half-Way Blues

by Michelle Griep

I like jazz when it has a tune to it. Something I can whistle along with. A melody I can listen to even when the music isn't playing because it's captured inside my head.

The jazz I don't like is the crazy zig-jiggidy sort. The kind that's unpredictable. Saxophones wailing like banshees getting an enema. Bass's that thump up, down, and sideways on a semi-scale. The kind of jazz where the notes don't mean anything, and they certainly don't stay within the boundaries of something I can hum along to. It's just noise.

But doggone if that same effect doesn't happen to my writing sometimes, usually around the half-way mark of a manuscript. The beginning was a big honeymoon love fest. Creating new characters. Setting the plot into action. The end is where all the flash-bang fireworks explode across the novelly sky. These things have a rhythm, a quick-paced rat-a-tat-tat.

Then there's the middle. That's where things get squiggy. Usually this is when panic sets in and you consider flipping burgers at McDonalds instead of finishing the manuscript. That's followed by self-loathing. 


And then it really gets ugly.

What to do? How to push past the roadblock of my-writing-sucks-with-a-side-of-sucky-sauce? Have I got a handy dandy list for you . . .

The 3 R's to Regain Your Writerly Self-Esteem

Respiration

Air is good. No, really. Take some deep breaths. See what you're doing? Your doing what every human being does, and that's exactly what you need to realize. Not the breathing part per se. You are doing something just like every other author out there on the planet: dealing with doubt. You are not alone in this. You are normal. And guess what? This, too, shall pass . . . kind of like a kidney stone.

Review

Take a moment to remember all of your accomplishments up to this point. Chances are there are quite a few. Clearly you are not a loser, so quit lying to yourself. Even if you're not an award-winning author-o-maniac, if you've simply written half a manuscript, hey, that's more than most people accomplish. Read what other writers or readers have said about your writing. Soak in the encouragement that's been offered to you in the past.

Refill

Drafting a story drains the ever-loving creative juices right out you. Sweet mercy! If only it burned calories half as fast. It's important to keep the inspirational embers glowing red-hot. Now is the time to buy that mp3 on Amazon you've been wanting, pick up one of your favorite author's books, or cough up the cash for tickets to that theater production that's in town. Sometimes to keep your creativity from going bankrupt you've got to borrow some from others.

Remember, the only way out of these doldrums is through, and the only way through is to write, even if--especially if--you think your words are steaming piles of literary manure. Sure, some of them might be, but odds are they're not all. 




Author Michelle Griep
ABOUT THE AUTHOR ~ MICHELLE GRIEP


Michelle Griep’s been writing since she first discovered blank wall space and Crayolas. Follow her adventures and find out about upcoming new releases at her blog, Writer Off the Leash, or stop by her website. You can also find her at the usual haunts of FacebookTwitter, or Pinterest.

Like what you read? There’s more. WRITER OFF THE LEASH: GROWING IN THE WRITING CRAFT is a kick in the pants for anyone who wants to write but is stymied by fear, doubt, or simply doesn’t know how to take their writing to the next level.


Tuesday, November 22, 2016

5 Reasons to Keep Writing

by Lisa Jordan 

NaNoWriMo is winding down. Many of you may be writing strong closing in on that word count. Some of you may have stopped. Others may want to continue, but you’re discouraged.

So what’s holding you back?

Fear?

Procrastination?

Time?

Novelist E. L. Doctorow said, “Writing a novel is like driving a car at night. You can see only as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.”

Sometimes even seeing beyond the dashboard can be a challenge. So I’m giving you five reasons why you need to keep writing.

1. You have a dream. Cinderella sang, “A dream is a wish the heart makes.” If you’re like the majority of writers I know, you have a dream. A dream to be a writer. In order to fulfill that dream, you need to write.

2. You were created for this. God instilled the desire to write within you. He gave you the ability to create characters, come up with plots and put them together in a story to share with others. He did not say you have to go it alone. He didn’t give you this dream to take it away.

3. You have a voice. Like your handwriting or fingerprints, your writer’s voice is unique. You can learn the craft alongside your peers, but only you can write the same story in your voice. As literary agent Sandra Bishop says, “Voice is your personality on the page.” It’s how your characters are defined, how they speak, how you describe your storyworld, how you plot—that’s all about your voice. Keep writing to allow your Voice to be heard.

4. No one else will do it for you—unlike running the dishwasher, gassing up your car or folding your laundry, no one can write a book for you. Okay, yes, ghostwriters can, but those words aren’t yours. Your head is full of characters begging to be released onto the page. Give your head a rest and let your characters have their say. ;)

5. Personal satisfaction. Do it for yourself—if you stop writing, will it affect your family? Will your friends stop talking to you? Will time stand still? Most likely not. However, if you stop, how will you feel? Only you can answer that question. Believe in yourself and your abilities. You can do this.

Author Phyllis Whitney said, “You must want to enough. Enough to take all the rejections, enough to pay the price of disappointment and discouragement while you are learning. Like any other artist, you must learn your craft—then you can add all the genius you like.”

Once upon a time, a girl dreamed of writing novels. She tried and tried, but at times, wondered what was the point? Ten years ago, she challenged herself to attempt NaNoWriMo. In thirty days, she wrote a novel. A bad novel, but she still did it. She proved to herself she could do it. Two weeks later, her husband bought her a laptop since he realized this writing thing wasn’t going away.

She studied the craft, wrote, revised, screamed in frustration, deleted, quit for a day or two, joined My Book Therapy, revised, wrote and finally entered another contest, which became a turning point in her writing journey. She finaled and scored a top-notch agent who eventually sold her novel to the publisher of her choice. That NaNoWriMo manuscript released in August as her fifth published novel. She’s been where you are. She knows your pain. She believes you can do this.


TWEETABLES

5 Reasons to Keep Writing by Lisa Jordan (Click to Tweet)

Once upon a time, a girl dreamed of writing novels~ Lisa Jordan (Click to Tweet)


Heart, home and faith have always been important to Lisa Jordan, so writing stories with those elements come naturally. She is an award-winning author for Love Inspired, writing contemporary Christian romances that promise hope and happily ever after. Represented by Rachelle Gardner of Books & Such Literary Management, Lisa also serves on the My Book Therapy leadership team. Happily married to her own real-life hero for almost thirty years, Lisa and her husband have two grown sons. When she isn't writing, Lisa enjoys family time, kayaking, good books, crafting with friends and binging on Netflix. Learn more about her at lisajordanbooks.comlisajordanbooks.com.

Monday, November 14, 2016

Not All the Voices in a Writer's Head are Characters


by MICHELLE GRIEP

Writers are psychotic little mammals. All wired up and worried about contracts and sales numbers and does-this-book-make-my-butt-look-big? One of the biggest angst generators is guilt.

We've all been there. Don't tell me you haven't got an internal mother inside your head pointing her finger at you. There's a plethora of things an author feels guilty about, everything from all the money you wasted getting a doctorate in osteopathic medicine and here you are writing Amish Zombie Romances, or that your family is destined to eat frozen pizza for dinner yet again. Okay, so maybe you don't feel guilty about those things, but there are common anxiety causing situations that most writers face.

Top 5 Guilt Inducing Scenarios

An overwhelming amount of regret for a sub-par word count.
Sometimes when you sit down to write, words clog into tangly globs. You feel bad because you know you're capable of more, but for whatever cosmic reason, the ol' creative juices just aren't flowing.

Shame weighs heavy on your shoulders when you think of the poor slobs out there in Nine-to-Five land.
Others eek out a living by the sweat of their brow, clocking 8-10 hours of back-breaking labor while you park your royal heinie on a cushioned office chair whenever you dang well feel like it.

Lack of a regular paycheck makes you feel a metric ton load of disgrace.

If you got paid by the word, this wouldn't be a problem. But it is. This kind of work doesn't bring immediate financial benefits, so there's not a whole lot to show for it up front . . . which creates tension.

You landed a contract and your critique partner didn't.
I hate it when this happens. There are so many fantastic writers out there who deserve to be published, so why did an editor scoop up my story and not theirs?

You should hate what you're doing like every self-respecting employee on the face of the earth.
But you don't. You love creating worlds and characters and super cool car chases that end in fiery explosions. But everyone else complains 24/7 about their drudgery at work, and though you try, you can't quite work up a single "drudgery" emotion to relate to them.

And that, my friends, is only the tip of the guilt iceberg. So, what's a writer to do with all this angst?

GUILT SOLUTIONS:
  • Ignore all the naysayers and joy-crushers who heap coals of you're-having-way-too-much-fun on your head.
  • Look at your writing as a  long-term investment, not a get-rich-quick money making scheme.
  • Incorporate a paradigm shift: writing involves a LOT of thinking, so just because your fingers aren't flying over the keyboard, that doesn't mean you're not working.
  • Keep in mind that creativity takes time. Michelangelo didn't paint the Sistine Chapel in a weekend.
  • Make a to-do list and cross items off as you finish them so that you can see what you're accomplishing.
And always remember: the act of pursuing a dream tends to make a lot of people cranky because they didn't have the guts or stamina to pursue theirs. Don't let them steal your joy.

TWEETABLE

Not All the Voices in a Writer's Head are Characters by MICHELLE GRIEP (Click to Tweet)




Author Michelle Griep
ABOUT THE AUTHOR ~ MICHELLE GRIEP


Michelle Griep’s been writing since she first discovered blank wall space and Crayolas. Follow her adventures and find out about upcoming new releases at her blog, Writer Off the Leash, or stop by her website. You can also find her at the usual haunts of FacebookTwitter, or Pinterest.

Like what you read? There’s more. WRITER OFF THE LEASH: GROWING IN THE WRITING CRAFT is a kick in the pants for anyone who wants to write but is stymied by fear, doubt, or simply doesn’t know how to take their writing to the next level.

Saturday, September 17, 2016

Embracing Fear


post by Michelle Griep

Fear is a negative word. A hateful word. And why am I such a hater?

Well, as much as I hate to break it to wannabe writers, the ugly truth is that fear is part of an author's life. It never goes away. Fears such as:
  • What if I what I'm writing is a steaming pile of literary manure?
  • What if I can't even think of anything to write today?
  • What if my sales numbers never pull out of the nosedive they're in?
  • Sweet mercy! Will I ever be able to lose the 10 pounds I just gained from sitting around writing my last manuscript?
  • What if my book simultaneously releases when Suzy Awesome Author's book comes out?
  • What if Ben & Jerry's discontinues Chunky Monkey?
And those are just a few. Here's the deal . . . writers are psychotic little rock badgers, all fidgety and tweaky. Why?

Because art is subjective.

Even to the artist. You may think that what you create on any given day is a masterpiece, then come back to it the next and have a little bit of throw-up in your mouth because you think it's just that awful.

But you know what? A small amount of fear is a good thing. It keeps you on your toes. It keeps your head from swelling. It gives you an edge, preventing complacency. Too much fear will keep you from producing anything, but just a smidge is the sweet spot, spurring you on to bigger and better projects.

Recently I co-authored a book (Out of the Frying Pan) with a writerly buddy. You'd think working side-by-side with someone who understands the process would alleviate all those fears. Nope. Even teaming up, writelry angst still had a way of crawling in my ear and whispering, "You're not good enough to write this."

You know what? I did it anyway.

And you can too. Go forth, little writers, and embrace fear. Know that it's part of the writerly game and that you're not the only one a little shivery at the knees.

Unless, of course, it has to do with Ben & Jerry's going out of business. Then all bets are off.

___________________________________________________________


ABOUT THE AUTHOR ~ MICHELLE GRIEP

Michelle Griep’s been writing since she first discovered blank wall space and Crayolas. Follow her adventures and find out about upcoming new releases at her blog, Writer Off the Leash, or stop by her website. You can also find her at the usual haunts of FacebookTwitter, or Pinterest.

Like what you read? There’s more. WRITER OFF THE LEASH: GROWING IN THE WRITING CRAFT is a kick in the pants for anyone who wants to write but is stymied by fear, doubt, or simply doesn’t know how to take their writing to the next level.

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Creative Rituals

post by Michelle Griep

When I hear the word ritual, I think gutted animals tied up in tree limbs, usually involving goats and pentagrams. Don't worry. I'm not going all Ouija board on you today. I simply came across an interesting article about Creative Rituals You Should Steal and . . . well . . . I am stealing them and sharing them with you.

#1. Create an interesting people fund.
Save up some moolah and some time, then spend it to meet and/or hang out with interesting people. By pre-committing, you'll be more likely to do it. You can't make quirky characters if you don't actually spend time with some.

#2. Get out of the building.
Take a nature hike. Go eavesdrop on the beach. Change up your scenery.

#3. Brainstorm at the coffee shop.
Okay, so I love java, but if you don't, then choose a different atmosphere that engages your mind. This is somewhat like #2, but the difference is that here you're refining a specific project or have a certain goal in mind.

#4. Partake of Morphological Synthesis.
I know. Sounds like a disease. Nope, it's just a way of segmenting your thinking process into parts by basically asking questions. It's like playing the What-If game with your plot or characters. To generate ideas, simply ask what happens if fill-in-the-blank. Once you have an answer for that, repeat the process with that answer. Keep it up and you'll have all kinds of new ideas.

#5. Envision what you'll be remembered for.
Think legacy. Refresh your mind of what your mission statement is to keep you on track.

#6. Take a quarterly vacation.
Yeah, it'd be nice to cruise the Mediterranean 4 times a year, but shoot. I haven't even been there once. A vacation doesn't have to cost big bucks, though. Just unplug and get away from your routine for a long weekend. Get off the grid.

#7. Hold a "Retrospective" after a project.
Basically this is a de-briefing with yourself. What things did you do right on whatever your most recent creative project was? What things went wrong?

#8. Write every day.
It'd be nice to pound out 10 pages each morning before noon, but realistically, that's not going to happen. Don't sweat the word count. Just write, even if it's a simple little blog post.

#9. Keep "Tear Sheets" to get inspired.
For me, this is my Pinterest boards. For others, it might be magazines. Movies. Beautiful artwork or even greeting cards or invitations that are particularly interesting.

#10. Take a nap.
Grab your satin-edged blankie and curl up for 10 minutes or so. You don't have to actually sleep. Just close your eyes and relax.

What are some of your creative rituals? Share in the comment section so we can all steal expand our ideas.




Like what you read? There’s more. WRITER OFF THE LEASH: GROWING IN THE WRITING CRAFT is a kick in the pants for anyone who wants to write but is stymied by fear, doubt, or simply doesn’t know how to take their writing to the next level.


Michelle Griep’s been writing since she first discovered blank wall space and Crayolas. Follow her adventures and find out about upcoming new releases at her blog, Writer Off the Leash, or stop by her website. You can also find her at the usual haunts of FacebookTwitter, or Pinterest.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

When You're a Christian But Your Characters Are Not

Is there such a thing as a Christian novel?
posted by Michelle Griep for Rachel Allord

Once upon a time there was no such thing as Christian fiction. There were only novels. Some referred to God, some even mentioned Jesus, and some did not. Then one day a line was drawn. Christian fiction was demoted to an itty-bitty shelf in a mainstream bookstore, or ended up in its very own Christian bookstore.

When did this segregation occur? I’m not sure. Some time after Dickens and Hugo and C.S. Lewis, but before Grisham. This distinction isn’t necessarily bad, but it does force writers who are Christian to ask: am I a Christian novelist, or am I a novelist who is a Christian? And yes, there’s a difference.

My first book, Mother of My Son, neatly fell into the genre of Christian Fiction. Well, not neatly. A drunk college girl leaving her baby beside a dumpster is anything but neat, but the story highlights redemption and found a home with a Christian publisher.

And then this other story began bubbling inside of me. As it surfaced, I realized this baby wasn’t going to make the Christian fiction cut. I could have forced a conversion scene I suppose, but the story was working and the characters had captivated me, although they were not behaving, even uttering a few mild four-letter words every now and then. My characters, those weasels, wouldn’t shape up and I couldn’t rid my manuscript of their PG profanity. As tame as it was, I knew it wasn’t going to fly in Christian fiction.

So. What’s a writer who is also a Christian to do? Pray and let the story, and The Spirit, lead.

While Christian fiction writers must realize and stay within the parameters the genre imposes, writers who are Christians are limited only by imagination and personal conviction. To be honest, I struggled over the “controversial” elements of The Ground Beneath Us but after a whole lot of praying, and after listening to reader/friend feedback, I took a cue from the Beatles and let it be.

It’s futile to write for shock value, to rebel against conventional Christian fiction simply to rebel, but neither do we want to Christianize every story. Force it to fit into a box when it shouldn’t.

Don’t murder art. Let it breath. Bring your story before the master Creator and beg for wisdom. If you’re a Christian who’s a novelist, allow your faith to flavor and undergird your writing. Allow spiritual truths to seep in and surface symbolically—often the most effective way to pierce culture and prompt readers to ponder spiritual truths they might not otherwise consider.

Life is hard. People are messy, Christian or not. Both Christian fiction and fiction written by Christians have the power to feed His sheep, to offer hope and reveal truth—all while telling a killer story.

ABOUT THE BOOK

THE GROUND BENEATH US a novel

‘Til death do us part. But what if the marriage dies first?

Feeling trapped in a lifeless marriage, Holly Lewis runs away from home one morning. She’ll come back of course, to her humdrum husband and two children, but after running into Seth, the divorced artist down the street, Holly begins to question everything. It doesn’t help matters that one of her friends seems to have an ideal marriage and another friend is starting over. When Seth helps her train for a half marathon, Holly wonders if she’s missing out on her soul mate. Should the promise she made to her husband, who now seems like a stranger, trump her own happiness? Can a dead marriage be resurrected? Available on Amazon

Author Rachel Allord
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rachel Allord grew up as a pastor’s kid, vowed never to marry a pastor, and has been contentedly married to her husband, a worship pastor, since 1995. She is privileged to be both a biological and adoptive mother. Her stories and articles have appeared in MomSense, Chicken Soup for the Soul, and various other publications. Her most recent novel, The Ground Beneath Us, released in October of 2015. Rachel lives in Wisconsin where she avidly consumes coffee, sushi, and novels—preferably at the same time. Connect with her: www.rachelallord.com RachelAllordFans on Facebook Twitter

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Who's Glory Are You Writing For?

post by Michelle Griep

Writers write for all kinds of reasons . . .

  - to escape reality

  - to create reality

  - because they 
     failed at selling 
     life insurance

But if you happen to be one of those "religious types," the standard answer when asked this question is, "I write for God's glory."

What does that even mean?

I hear that phrase thrown around a lot, probably because I hang out with Christians. But the thing is, I hear it even in my head every time I sit down to write . . . which begs the question how, exactly, does a mortal man accomplish such a huge feat? I hyperventilate just thinking about it. Who can capture God's glory in a net made of letters and words? Why would anyone try the impossible? Step a little closer and I'll tell you why.

Because God is a God of impossibility. 

In fact, the more impossible, the better. That's where His glory is really showcased.

But in what format? Must one sit down to write an epic analogy like Narnia? Or should one only write Biblical fiction? Where does that leave steampunk or blogging? Can one write for God's glory by penning a murder mystery?

Yep. Take a look at the Bible, at all the different forms of writing. There's poetry in Song of Solomon. Narratives just about everywhere. Jesus told fictional tales with a truth woven in. Some of Paul's writings read like blog entries, and the book of Revelation, if sold in today's market, would classify as a fantasy or maybe even a dystopian.

I don't think God is interested in the style or format of your writing any more than He's particularly bent out of shape about what you ate for breakfast today. God's business is heart business, and if your heart/mind/soul belong to Him, you don't need to stress about about how to write for His glory. You will.

"The good man out of the treasure of his heart brings forth what is good; and the evil man out of the evil treasure brings forth what is evil; for his mouth speaks from that which fills his heart."
Luke 6:45

Perfect for  NANOWRIMO.
Like what you read? There’s more. WRITER OFF THE LEASH: GROWING IN THE WRITING CRAFT is a kick in the pants for anyone who wants to write but is stymied by fear, doubt, or simply doesn’t know how to take their writing to the next level.

Michelle Griep’s been writing since she first discovered blank wall space and Crayolas. Follow her adventures and find out about upcoming new releases at her blog, Writer Off the Leash, or stop by her website. You can also find her at the usual haunts of FacebookTwitter, or Pinterest.

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Sticks And Stones? They Hurt. Words? They Can Kill Me

by James L. Rubart

Remember being told to memorize this classic line when you were a kid? “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.”


What a crock. 

Anyone who’s been alive for more than three years know that bruises and breaks to our bodies can heal much faster than the ones to our hearts and minds. In truth, countless word attacks are still not close to being healed; at least that’s the case with me. You too?

Two Quick Stories

Back in the late 90s, when I was still extremely nervous about my writing, I took a chance and asked an acquaintance (who shot TV commercials for my ad agency) to read a short story I’d written. At that point, I’d never shown any of my fiction to anyone but my wife so it wasn’t easy for me to take the risk. 

But since my  acquaintance was a director, I had this ill informed and ignorant idea that if he liked it, he could get it into the hands of people who knew about a thing or two about publishing. He didn’t read it, but  did give it to his camera man who my acquaintance said knew what made up a good story.   

His camera man read it. Said he didn’t get it, that it didn’t make sense. Disjointed. I took that to heart. The words went deep. Killed me. I shut down and buried my writing dream and didn’t risk again till years later. When I finally did, I showed the short story to four friends who all said it was one of the more powerful stories they’d ever read.

Story Number Two

In the summer of ’12 I taught a class on fiction at the Oregon Christian Writers Conference. During the class I asked the students to give me their pitch. I gave a quick response to each. A year later, one of the students came up to me and said, “You told me my idea wouldn’t work. You were flippant. You didn’t give me any reasons why it wouldn’t succeed and it really, really hurt.”

I was stunned. I didn’t remember saying that, and it's not my nature to react that way. But it doesn’t matter. That’s what she heard. (Are you impressed that she had the guts to confront me about it? I was. Highly. We talked it out and are now good friends--and she is a talented writer.)


The Moral of the Story(s)

Be careful. Of who you listen to. Of what you allow inside. Some people (like my director/camera man acquaintances) don’t know what they’re talking about. Talk to people who do know. Guard our hearts above all else, yes?

And realize that you might be saying things to writers a few paces behind you on the publishing path that will have a significant impact. For good. Or for pain. 
I don’t think we realize what an impact our words can make. Actually yeah, I guess I do. 

I remember vividly when I first jumped into the publishing world in ’06 and the offhand encouragement I received from a number of people I admired. They probably wouldn’t recall saying anything to me, but I remember. Their words gave me hope. Helped me persevere. Kept me on the path. I bet someone has done the same for you.

Yes, the words we write are powerful. We craft them to be that way. Just don’t forget how powerful the ones we speak can be and how we need to craft them with just as much wisdom.

James L. Rubart is 28 years old, but lives trapped inside an older man's body. He thinks he's still young enough to water ski like a madman, and dirt bike with his two grown sons, and loves to send readers on journeys they'll remember months after they finish one of his stories. He's the best-selling, Christy award winning author of seven novels as well as a professional speaker. During the day he runs his marketing company which helps businesses, authors, and publishers make more coin of the realm. He lives with his amazing wife on a small lake in eastern Washington. More at www.jameslrubart.com



Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Write from the Deep ~ Karen Ball & Erin Taylor Young

A publishing professional for over 30 years, Karen Ball has overseen fiction for Tyndale, Multnomah, Zondervan, and B&H Publishing Group. She’s worked with such notable authors as Francine Rivers, Karen Kingsbury, Robin Jones Gunn, and many others. Karen is currently the owner of Karen Ball Publishing Services, LLC, a literary agent with the prestigious Steve Laube Agency, and an award-winning, best-selling author.

Erin Taylor Young is passionate about helping others embrace deep places with God. She’s an acquisitions editor and author liaison for Redbud Press, a publishing company she helped to found. She's also an award-winning humor writer. Her recent book, Surviving Henry: Adventures in Loving a Canine Catastrophe, has been repeatedly accused of making readers laugh until they cry.


Tell us about your new project.
K: Write from the Deep is a podcast and website resource to encourage writers, to help them remember why they're doing what they're doing, and to equip them so that they can rediscover the joy in the task God has given them, the task to share His truths through the vehicle of words.

E: What she said.

Where did the idea for this project come from?
K: Erin and I were together and I was telling her that I had noticed over the last several years how discouraged writers were. It doesn’t seem to matter if they’re just getting started or even if they’ve been successful, so many are struggling…feeling as though they’ve lost the joy of what they’re doing. I was so grieved that these amazing people who have shared so much with their readers, who’ve been given this task from God to bless and encourage and challenge others, are struggling to hold on to—or even regain—the passion and the joy of writing. I just kept wishing there was some way that I could help them.

E: And I’d been noticing that in the midst of writing conferences, where we’re focusing on craft and pitching projects, it can be so restorative and refreshing to hear teaching from people like Allen Arnold that focuses on the writer’s heart. I wished there was a way to bring that type of message to discouraged writers everywhere, or to those who feel overwhelmed, dry, or just plain used up.

How did the two of you get-together?
E: Karen’s teaching and writing—her underlying message of encouragement and her focus on obedience to God—has always resonated with me. She has a remarkable ability to speak truth into the hard places where we writers find ourselves. I’d been encouraging her to write a book based on her blog posts, but I could see she didn’t have the time to do it. One weekend as I was praying for her, the answer dawned on me. She needed a cowriter—someone to cull through material, organize and edit it, and help weave it all together into book form. It seemed the perfect solution to get the benefit of Karen’s 30-plus years of experience out there. Then came the next revelation—maybe I was supposed to be that cowriter. At which point I questioned whether this was an idea planted by God or just a random neural hiccup in my brain. I mean, compared to Karen, my publishing perspective is pretty dang puny. So I didn’t say a word to her about any of this. I figured if it was from God, He’d make sure it came up again, and then I’d know.

K: And here’s the beauty of how God works. That very weekend I was at a brainstorming retreat with a group of writer friends. We had just brainstormed the book that Erin’s been talking to me about. We pinpointed what the message and the focus should be, so I was really wanting to do this book. But as excited as I was about it, when I got back home the thought of going through all of my blog material and organizing it…it was so overwhelming to me, another thing to add to my already overloaded to-do list. I told God I’m willing, but I just can’t. Not on my own right now. So…any chance You can send me some help? A couple of months later, I went to visit Erin. I didn’t mention any of this to her, but it was very much on my mind and my heart.

E: As we were talking one morning, the idea of Karen writing a book came up again, and the issue of her lack of time being the stumbling block. That’s when God tapped me on the shoulder and said, “Tell her what you’ve been thinking…”

K: It was so funny, because Erin started to talk to me, and she was almost apologetic saying, “Don't feel like you need to do this,” and “Don't feel like this is something that you have to respond to”—

E: More like, “Don’t laugh at this, but…”

K: As I was listening to her, I think my mouth was probably hanging open. Everything she said hit home and resonated. I looked at her and told her, “This is God. Pure God.” Because what she was saying about coming alongside me and helping organize was exactly what I’ve been praying about. And God was telling her the same thing.

E: And the rest of Write From the Deep just came from that point.

So, then, what does Write From the Deep mean?
K:  That’s a great question because it means different things to different people. When I talk about writing from the deep, I mean those deep places of struggle, the places where it feels so dark—like you’re in a cave and you can’t see anything. You’re not sure where you’re going, where it’s even safe. All you can do is listen to that small whisper from God telling you, “Step here…stop. One step to the right…stop…”  You take one, trusting step at a time. That’s how publishing feels to so many people. Something else that I’ve noticed is that when we’re in those deep places, all we want to do is get out of them. And yet it’s in those very places that we find our truest voice and our truest message as writers. So we need to embrace those places... to listen to God and be with God and let Him refine us through them.

E: For me being in the deep is about soaking in God and in His word. It’s about embracing Him and letting Him sink deep into our hearts. When we’re in those deep places of pain it’s easy to close off and not let anyone or anything in. But so often the enemy is already in there with us. That’s why it’s so important to let God into those deep places. It’s where we’re the most vulnerable, it’s where we most need healing. And I think the deep is where His word can become clearest. It reminds me of how water soaks through the earth—how it filters into something more and more pure as it seeps through layers of dirt and rock. When we’re writing the messages that come from these places, we’re writing what we’re most passionate about, in our most authentic voice.

What made you choose the format of a podcast rather than blog?
E: I don’t think we ever intended it to be a podcast exactly, it just turned into one. There will still be books and a website, but at the same time we wanted something that was easier and more accessible for people who might be tired and who just can’t cope with reading right then. I was at the ACFW conference last year, and happened to be talking to Thomas Umstattd Jr., who does the Novel Marketing podcast with Jim Rubart, and the idea came to me about using a podcast to help meet the need of ministering to writers’ hearts. I ran the idea by Thomas to see if he knew of something already like it (and to see if it was dumb—that whole random neural hiccup thing and all). He thought about it for a couple minutes, nodded slowly, and said, “That’s a very interesting idea.”

K: It made great sense to me when Erin came to me and talked about doing a podcast, because, yes, we want to provide resources, but we also want create a sense of community, of a place where people can come and rest and find things to encourage and equip and energize them. A podcast is a great way to do that, because they can just click the button and listen. They can find our podcast on our website: www.writefromthedeep.com and also on iTunes.

What else are writers going to find on your website?
E: We have all kinds of resources we hope will encourage people and help them through their deep places. We have books we recommend, videos, and we’ll do some craft tips as well. And we’re working on some collaborative book projects. But I think the primary thing is still the podcast.

K: We're doing different kinds of podcasts. Some will be just Erin and me talking about what we’ve seen and learned, some will even be on craft. And others will be conversations with writers who've experienced the struggles, or have gone deeper with God on their journey into writing. We hope to join people together, to say to them, “You’re not alone. This is a safe place for you.” 

We assume you’ve both been in deep places…
K&E: Absolutely. Too often.

So what keeps you going when you hit those places?
K: The knowledge that I don’t have to deal with all of this by myself. God is there with me every step of the way, and all I need to do is take my focus off the circumstances and get it back on Him. The fact that I have friends and counselors with whom I can talk and who will pray with and for me. People like Erin, who’ve been there themselves and can speak truth to me rather than platitudes. Also, the kinds of books and resources that we are putting on the website. The words from those who’ve known the emotions and struggles I’m facing. And you know, sometimes I find my greatest momentary encouragement from looking at funny things, whether it’s memes with funny sayings, cartoons…anything that can get me out of the funk and back into seeing things with a better perspective.

E: What keeps me going is the absolute perfect peace that we find when we go deeper into God. It draws me. It makes me hungry for more. It makes me thirsty to drink and let God fill me with the abundance of who He is and what He wants to give to me, which is really just Him. I keep finding that the more I know Him, the more I want to know more of Him. Being in His presence…that’s more powerful than anything I could find on earth.

What books have helped you the most in the deep places?
E: Okay, I’m going to stick with my focus here. I am one of those people who is serious about memorizing Scripture because it speaks to my heart like nothing else. That doesn’t mean that there aren’t other great books out there, because there are. But one of my favorite books in the Bible is Jeremiah. You talk about deep places—here’s a prophet who never saw anyone listen to his words except to do the exact opposite of what he said. Or to use them as an excuse to arrest him and plot to kill him. Shoot, they even burned his book. How’s that for a bad review? Here’s a guy stuck in the midst of the consequences of Judah’s sin, and all he had was God, and all he could do was be obedient. And therein was his joy. I haven’t faced anything like that. He was a guy who walked in deep places and was faithful, and that inspires me.

K: I always go to the Psalms, because David is such a whiner. I relate to David. I relate to “How long, O Lord?” And yet, he always ends with praise, with an acknowledgment of who God is. And Streams in the Dessert. I’ve gone through that devotional every year since I discovered it because I always find new truth and new help in it. We like to forget that we’ve been called into a fellowship of suffering with Christ, but that’s exactly what this whole gig is. It’s about learning to be a servant, learning to keep hold of the Savior in the midst of the difficulties, in the pain. The writers in Streams always speak truth and peace to my heart.

Best advice you’ve been given in the deep places?
K: It's actually the same message we want to share through Write from the Deep, and that's the fact that I'm not alone. I never have to face any of this by myself. God is right there with me, and His heart is grieved even as my heart is grieved. He doesn’t delight in my struggles, but He’s present in them. He’s working to refine me, to make me a purer reflection of Christ.

E:  Remember your heart’s story. When we’re discouraged, when we’re frustrated, when we’re hurting, remembering our story is remembering how God took care of us in the past. How He led us through the wilderness and brought us to exactly the right place at exactly the right time. God’s credibility is in that. He wants us to remember those things because His past performance is His guarantee of future performance.

Worst advice?
K: “God can’t want you to be this unhappy.” That is, hands-down, the worst counsel I've ever been given. Because frankly, God isn't all that concerned about my “happiness.” He's concerned about my obedience, my refinement—and He's concerned about my joy— which is a far more powerful thing than happiness could ever be.

E: I get my advice from Karen, so it’s all been good.

K: It’s been great.

E: Yes. Right. That’s what I meant.

Erin, what is it like to work with Karen?
Ummm…chaos—in a nice way.

Karen, what’s it like to work with Erin?
Ummm…reaaaalllly organized—in a nice way.

E: And that’s why we make a good team. We balance each other.

Parting thoughts?
E: Write from the Deep is not about me, and it’s not about Karen. It’s about you. It’s about writers. It’s about anyone who wants to use creativity to share and to express the messages God has planted inside them. We want you to know that we’re here for you and we want to hear from you, too. Join us in the deep!

K: What she said.