Seven Friends

We were supposed to make promises,
let our tongues taste commitment
and then say things aloud.

But the afternoon sun made us lazy,
lying on the warm wood of that dock,
while one—I think it was you—
dragged a reed through the waters,
that slick rip the only noise.

We were sixteen, seventeen, and
thought we’d already made our plans,
imagined the future was our own.

Seven of us that summer, and the next,
only two.

You and I made awkward conversation,
their absences throbbing like wounds
between us as we wished for that day

on the dock, when—given another chance—
we would have found our voices.

dockcrop

Untitled, for Lane

UNTITLED
for Lane

I can never forget the summer night that
turned into morning with no help from us.
We talked about waiting
but barely knew the word.

And I always thought I could teach you things,
but you were chasing sunsets and pyramids,
islands and adventure.

My words were never the hammock
where you’d nap on lazy days.

I became a moon, orbiting you,
and you became the boy
who never looked at the sky.

Luna by Adeline Spengler

Luna by Adeline Spengler

Hope Begins in the Dark

hopeinthedark

 

I love when my worlds collide.  This quote from Anne Lamott’s brilliant book Bird by Bird can be seen through every lens of this blog: faith, OCD, creativity.  Here’s the full quote:

“I heard a preacher say recently that hope is a revolutionary patience; let me add that so is being a writer. Hope begins in the dark, the stubborn hope that if you just show up and try to do the right thing, the dawn will come. You wait and watch and work: you don’t give up.”

Five Secrets

Random 5 Friday is a weekly meme over at A Rural Journal.

Today I’m going to tell you five secrets.  Well, with varying levels of secrecy.

1. After 10 years as a recruiter, I still get nervous for almost every meeting I have with a prospective family.  You just never know how it’s gonna go– you might be meeting with a world-class teenager with incredible poise and leadership potential– or with someone who can’t look you in the eye or even answer a yes-or-no question.

2. I get wildly envious of my friends’ writing.  What can I say?  I surround myself with brilliant artists, and so, while I am so happy for them and proud of them, I’m also green with envy when I read that perfect, precise, delicate, wild, and buzzing image that they wrote and I did not.

3. Being healthy is such a struggle for me.  I love chocolate and hate exercise.  In fact, the only way I can get myself to exercise is by dangling the carrot of an audiobook in front of me.  It works.

4. I want a boyfriend, like, yesterday.  A hot one.  Who likes to read and loves Jesus.  And if he has an Australian accent and is a home improvement contractor, all the better.  (Anyone know a Christian Property Brothers-esque Aussie with a penchant for great literature?)

5. I don’t read my Bible and pray every single day anymore.  And yet, God feels nearer to me than ever before.

You should tell me a secret now too.

secrets2

Fiction: How I Start

Not that you should necessarily take writing-life advice from me.  Perhaps you ought to listen to Jo Rowling and spend seven years plotting.  But this it the irrational, backward way I start a new story.

1. I have a tiny idea.  Teenaged wards of the state in hospice care.  That’s nowhere near a full-blown idea, let alone a plot, but it’s enough.  Just a tiny idea is all I need.  But I have to love it, have to want it.

2. Characters.  Whatever-this-is-going-to-be is going to be nothing without a handful of characters.  I start with names and photos, which I find by scouring the internet until angels start singing.  Again, this seems backward, doesn’t it?

Yes, I think.  Her name will be Macaulay, and she will go by Mack.  And this will be her.

mackThat’s fascinating, I think.  She has purple hair.  I didn’t know that.  Now I do.

Repeat this process for the others.  Meanwhile, little snippets of their conversation start to play out in my mind, and I write them down.  Save them for later.

3. Research– but only a little bit.  There will probably be a lot more research to come, and a lot of things will change, so I don’t want to put too much time into this upfront, nor do I want to be too committed to what I learn.  So I poke around and find what these teenagers in hospice care might be dying from.  I talk to my friends who work in the medical field and in hospice care, and I learn a little bit.  This keeps making the characters more and more real in my head.  I keep thinking of their conversations, and I keep jotting them down.

4. Sink or swim.  I dive in and write a terrible first draft, reminding myself every ten minutes that it is only a first draft and that first drafts are, by nature, going to be terrible.  I remind myself that I will revise the hell out of it later, but that there is nothing to revise until it is written.

5. I learn the story as I go.  I take that handful of characters I’ve created, and I put them in my hands, shake them up and then toss them into a room– or, you know, a hospice center– together and see what happens.  I’m as fascinated to find out what they’re planning as the next person is.

6. Later on, I revise.  Only after it’s written do I really understand what I was trying to say with the story– and, let’s be honest, it probably wasn’t me trying to say anything.

Your turn.  How do you start a story?  Do you plan and plot, or do you just dive in?  Where do you begin?

P.S. I really did write Mack’s story about living and dying in hospice with other teenagers.  I’m submitting it to a contest this month, where I assume nothing will happen.  Once nothing happens, I’ll probably share it on my blog or over on Crux.

P.P.S. I won the contest.

P.P.P.S. Read “Covered Up Our Names” here.

Sites & Services I Love, Part III

bloglovinbloglovin’ | Oh my goodness, I just adore this blog reader.  I load all the blogs I read into the site, and whenever I visit it, I has them all collected there for me.  No need for me to worry about ever missing a post again!  You can even create groups and sort the types of blogs you read.  I have groups for OCD, Writing & Literature, Faith & Culture, and Miscellaneous.  I feel so much more on top of things now that I’m using bloglovin!  I even added a bloglovin button to my own blog to make it easier for others to follow me that way.  (P.S. I tried to use Feedly, which a lot of sites are recommending as a replacement for Google Reader, but I thought it was difficult and unintuitive.)

OCD Network to Recovery | My blogging friend Janet at ocdtalk cooked up this ingenious plan to connect obsessive-compulsive sufferers with obsessive-compulsives who have successfully gone through treatment.  I love the idea, and I’m so proud of her for orchestrating this!  I got my first “assignment” just last week and had an amazing phone conversation with the mom of a sufferer.  I’m so excited to be a part of this network.

Google Backward Image Search | Did you know that when you’re on the Google Images page, you can click the little camera in the search bar to search by image (as opposed to searching with words)?  A little trick I learned from Catfish (thanks Ashley, haha!) that has proved handy.

Summer TBR List

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme over at The Broke and the Bookish.  Today’s topic is

TOP TEN BOOKS AT THE TOP OF MY SUMMER TO-BE-READ LIST.

summertbr

1. Monsters of Men by Patrick Ness | The third book in the Chaos Walking trilogy.  I’m reading it right now, and I can’t wait to review this series for my blog!

2. The Sea of Tranquility by Katja Millay | The early reviews of this book were so phenomenal that I pre-ordered it MONTHS ago, and it just arrived in the mail this week!  Can’t wait!

3Wild Awake by Hilary T. Smith

4. Through the Ever Night by Veronica Rossi | I loved the first book in this series, although I had thought it was a standalone book, so I was frustrated by the ending of the first book.  But now I’ve built my bridge and gotten over it and am ready for more adventures with Perry and Aria!

5Golden by Jessi Kirby

summertbr2

6. UnWholly by Neal Shusterman | Gosh, Unwind was so just thought-provoking and engaging, I don’t know why it’s taken me so long to read the next book.  It’s been on my shelf for a bit, and I can’t wait to get to it this summer hopefully!

7. Science Set Free by Rupert Sheldrake | I don’t read a lot of non-fiction, but after watching this banned TEDtalk, I requested this book from the library immediately.

8. Son by Lois Lowry | This is the final book of the Giver series!

9. Hokey Pokey by Jerry Spinelli

10. The Book of Everlasting Things by Arthur Mee

How about you?  What’s on your summer TBR list?

Grand Slam? Please?

grand slamWhen I was in high school, summers were all about loving God and cute boys at Bible camp.  Now that I’m 31, summers seem to be about throwing a wrench in my life.

Last summer, it was work related.

This summer, it’s all about housing.

As you may recall from earlier posts, my beloved roommate Desiree is getting married in August, and while I’m so happy for her and Matt, I’m terribly sad to lose her as a roommate.  She has been a comforter, co-conspirator, and companion, and she’s been by my side since the pre-ERP days.  She has the perfect sense of humor, loves Jesus with her whole heart, and dispenses compassion as if it’s on tap.  This apartment will be so different without her here.  (Thankfully, she’s only moving two buildings over– I can’t complain about that!)

I started the roommate search back in January, when Des and Matt first got engaged, and actually, it was pretty simple.  A new friend agreed to live with me, and that was that.  I moved forward for months with that plan, even re-signed my lease with that friend in the back pocket.

Just last week, she backed out.

So instead of seven months to find a new roommate, I now have six weeks.

I don’t want to slam that friend– she really is lovely– but she did put me in a tight spot.

I’ve already signed the lease.  I can’t afford to live here alone.  I don’t have anywhere to move to even if I did break the lease.  I want to stay.  I’m suuuuuuper picky about whom I’ll live with (after living with Des for six years, how could I not be?).  And in the back of my head, I keep thinking, If you don’t find someone right away and are paying alone, can you really afford to start grad school in January?

Not to mention I felt like a loser getting “dumped” by a potential roommate for a different one.

But here’s the thing …

Joseph on his way to Egypt.  Moses at the Red Sea.  Easter weekend.  Things can look pretty dark, even right before brightness bursts over the scene.

The bases are loaded.  The crowd is watching intently.  I’m so grateful that it’s not my turn in the batting line-up.  It’s His.

It’s always His.

grand slam2

OCD Stockholm Syndrome

First things first, I am a guest blogger on Monday at my friend Hannah’s blog, Prayers of Light.  Over there you can read a little something I wrote about Digory Kirke, about finally getting to hear the rest of the story.  Fellow Narnia geeks like me and Hannah are more than welcome to check it out!

Let’s talk about OCD Stockholm Syndrome, yes?

OCD.  Obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Stockholm Syndrome.  When hostages love their captors/abusers.

OCD Stockholm Syndrome.  When obsessive-compulsives ironically cling to the disorder that holds them in bondage.

“OCD Stockholm Syndrome” isn’t a real term, but it’s a real thing– and one I don’t think we talk about that often.  It’s confusing and senseless, and I don’t claim to understand it myself.  But this blog is in the business of shining light in dark places (mmm, lights all around!), so I thought I’d write about it.

I hate OCD.  I really do.  I think it is an ugly, vile, reprehensible disorder that steals joy and leaves people in shackles.  So, tell me why it is that, after my cognitive-behavioral therapy was over, I asked my therapist, “Do I still have OCD?” and when he said, “Yes,” I felt relief.

I think I was worried about what I would lose.  OCD had woven its way through me and entangled itself so deeply through me that a big part of me was worried that I would lose my personality if I lost OCD.  I also thought I’d lose my reputation as the “thinker” amongst my circle of influence.  As a Christian, I worried that I would lose my desperation for Christ if this disorder vanished because, after all, hadn’t it motivated me toward loving my God?

Once I watched a talk show where an audience member asked a question to the girl on the stage suffering from anorexia.  The audience member had formerly been through treatment for anorexia herself, and she asked (with incredible insight), “Sometimes don’t you feel like anorexia is your best friend?” and the girl on the stage answered, “Yes.”

At the time that I watched this talk show, I had not yet undergone ERP, and I remember thinking, I understand that.

It’s bizarre, I know.

When I communicate with other obsessive-compulsives, there is often a theme of therapy-avoidance that runs deeper than just a distaste for the hard work and anxiety that characterizes Exposure and Response Prevention therapy.  There is this deep-seated worry that ERP will not only erase OCD and anxiety from their lives– but a part of themselves.

I didn’t like to talk about this with people because it seemed so contrary to everything I stood for.  How could I hate OCD with everything inside of me– and yet still cling to it with such a quiet desperation?  It made no sense, and even to this day, I still have not figured it out.

freedom

But I wanted to talk about it on my blog because it’s a real thing– a real thing that sometimes prevents sufferers from the relief that is available to them.  I don’t know a lot about this strange phenomenon, but I do know this: I was worried about losing my personality, reputation, and desperation for Christ, but now that my OCD is under control, I am finally the Jackie I was supposed to be; I am still a deep thinker but now my thoughts are productive and not circular, and I actually have a greater capacity for deep thought because I am not sent reeling in terror by my thoughts; and I finally feel the nearness of God.  Whatever was lost doesn’t compare to what I gained.