And no, for an obsessive-compulsive, it’s not pretty.
Related posts:
When Thinking Hurts
OCD Torture
A Metaphor for Obsessive-Compulsives
And no, for an obsessive-compulsive, it’s not pretty.
Related posts:
When Thinking Hurts
OCD Torture
A Metaphor for Obsessive-Compulsives
1. To honor God.
2. To respect myself as a writer.
3. To tell the story that I want to tell.
4. To write books of depth that make people think.
5. To be proud of what I write.
There’s so much more to be said about each of these, but for today, I just wanted to make this declaration.
Random 5 Friday is a weekly meme over at A Rural Journal.
My friend Anna over at Living the Story shared a painful experience in her OCD journey. She writes, “If you are a Christian and you have a mental illness, particularly OCD, your mental health and spirituality are probably all twisted up.” It’s SO true.
Look at that cover, would you? It has a horse on it. And the word Races. Those are two reasons why it’s taken me so freakin’ long to read The Scorpio Races by Maggie Stiefvater.
My friends, I was wrong– so very wrong— to have waited.
The Scorpio Races was absolutely incredible.
Even now, as I write a little summary, it doesn’t sound like something I would enjoy: a boy/man named Sean (he seems so much older than 19!) and a girl named Puck plan to participate in the Scorpio Races, a brutal race each November in which people die because of the bloodthirsty capaill uisce (mythical water horses) that are involved.
Horses. Racing. Bloodthirsty mythical beasts.
And yet, this book was SEXY.
It reminded me all over again of why I had such a giant crush on Jim Craig from The Man from Snowy River. Competency is so hot.
I had thought, going into the book, that the Scorpio Races would be this prolonged adventure (like the Hunger Games, I guess [though I haven’t read those]), but the race only covers a small spread of chapters. So I think that made me feel like the beginning was slow. But once I realized that I’d misjudged the premise, I fell in love with this book.
The writing is INCREDIBLE, and there is this dark savagery to the story. The characters are layered and don’t fall into stereotypes. The scenes are beautiful and intense. The story is laced with religion and myths and lots and lots of blood. The story is, as I said, sexy but in a beautiful, sensual way (not in a dirty or erotic way). It’s hard to explain. You’ll understand when you read it.
Because you WILL read it. I require that you read it. 🙂
This book feels important to me and the next story I want to tell, just in the same way that The Fault in Our Stars was of critical import to Truest. I want to go back and re-read so much of this book, and I just finished it.
P.S. Sean Kendrick is totally my new literary boyfriend. He has one foot on the land and one in the sea.
“Sean reaches out between us and takes my wrist. He presses his thumb on my pulse. My heartbeat trips and surges against his skin. I’m pinned by his touch, a sort of fearful magic. We stand and stand, and I wait for my pulse against his finger to slow, but it doesn’t. Finally, he releases my wrist and says, ‘I’ll see you on the cliffs tomorrow.'”
“Sean, as always, gets by on one word while everyone else needs five or six.”
“Sean does that slow sweep of his eyes that he does, the one that goes from my head to my toes and back again and makes me feel that he’s scanning the depths of my soul and teasing out my motivations and sins. It’s worse than confession with Father Mooneyham.”
What exactly is “pseudo-writing,” you ask?
Well, you could call it research.
More accurately, you could call it avoidance.
My pseudo-writing is usually writing-related, so I give myself a pass, but the truth of the matter is that it’s not really writing.
I fill out surveys about my characters. I look online for pictures of the people and places in the story. I draw maps of the location. I get really obsessed about small details and spend hours looking up stuff related to it. Sometimes I decide to design a bunch of stuff for my blog.
For example …
I knew that my character Jess was essentially Drew Roy. That part was easy.
But I literally searched the internet for hours to find a picture of Elly that matched the image in my mind. I got sort of close a couple times, but finally I found this random photo. And … it. was. Elly. A 100% match.
There’s a greenhouse in the new story, so of course I had to find some photos of that too.
When I realized that one of the characters walked with a limp, I went off on a tangent, looking for photos of awesome canes meant for teenagers (there aren’t a lot out there). I spent, oh, an hour or two researching canes. (And wouldn’t mind some more photos, if you find any cool canes meant for a 13-15 year old boy.)
I still need to sketch out a map of the boarding school and nearby town where the story takes place.
Still trying to decide if pseudo-writing is productive or not … anyone care to weigh in?
The Beginning of Everything by Robyn Schneider | Have already started this one and am loving it!
Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell | Pre-ordered this one million years ago.
OCD Love Story by Corey Ann Hayou | My YA world colliding with my OCD world? Very intrigued by this book!
All Our Yesterdays by Cristin Terrill | This one has been getting such rave reviews! I’m so very excited.
More Than This by Patrick Ness | After the Chaos Walking trilogy, I am dying to read anything of Ness’s!
Sex and Violence by Carrie Mesrobian | I met Carrie at a writing conference this spring, and I’m super intrigued by the premise of this book.
The 5th Wave by Rick Yancey | So many great reviews!
And in the I-think-it’s-about-time category:
The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater
The Truth about Forever by Sarah Dessen
My Life Next Door by Huntley Fitzpatrick
How about you? What’s on your fall TBR list?
Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme over at The Broke and the Bookish.
I’ve mentioned my trichotillomania before on my blog, but I don’t talk about it very often. It’s not OCD, but it probably lies on the obsessive-compulsive spectrum.
As an OC, I can tell that it is different but related. In my experience, it’s not induced by an intrusive thought, although I do pull out my hair significantly more when I’m stressed. Usually, I will feel a hair on my scalp that doesn’t feel like the others, and it doesn’t feel “right” until I pull it out. So, in that sense it does function kind of like my compulsions.
I pull from the crown of my scalp. I have a little sprig of hair there that I have to hide. It’s been this way for maybe a decade.
Interestingly, I want to pull out other people’s hair too. If they have black hair and I see a couple pieces of gray, I want to pull them. Like, REALLY bad.
A former therapist encouraged me to squeeze my fist as tight as possible when I want to pull– I tried it, and it fascinatingly does mimic the release I get from pulling my hair. Sometimes I try that.
I’m so grateful to have my OCD under control. I wonder if I’ll ever feel the same about my tricho.
Today’s book review is a very, very special one because it’s a review of the upcoming book of Addie Zierman, one of my friends and a member of my local writing group. She had, however, written her memoir before she joined our group, so while I see drafts of her newer projects, I actually had not yet read much of When We Were on Fire.
At our last writing group meeting, Addie said, “I have an extra ARC [advance reader copy] here in my purse, if anyone wants it.”
I called dibbs before anyone else had even processed her sentence. (Too bad that’s not an athletic event. I could gold medal in Calling Dibbs.)
I tore through her book, friends, and you will too.
When We Were on Fire is Addie’s story of growing up in and embracing an all-consuming evangelical culture that was sometimes abuse masked as spiritual fervor. It’s a story about becoming disillusioned with the evangelical church, swimming(/sinking) in the darkness of depression, and then clawing her way back into the light.
For those of us whose histories are full of high school mission trips, WWJD bracelets, and Christian rock, Addie’s memoir is like listening to someone else tell our own stories.
But better.
Addie is terrifically honest and vulnerable, and her writing is deep, moving, and lyrical. I kept texting her as I read, pulling out sentences that hit my heart like truth.
Simply put, this is a must-read for those of us in the evangelical community. It comes out October 15th, one month from today, and you can pre-order it from these places:
Read the Prologue and First Chapter HERE.
I was thinking recently of my earliest days of writing, back in elementary school. Indulge me while I share a few memories along my writing journey? Thanks, friends.
The first time I can remember wanting to write a book was when I was in second or third grade. In fact, I did determine to write a book– and so began copying down one word for word from a book about rocks (I was fascinated by rocks). It didn’t occur to me that this was plagiarism. 🙂
Soon after that, my friend Megan and I decided to write a series (Nothing like diving right in, eh? Straight from plagiarism to a full-blown series!) about a family of seven or eight kids we had made up. We figured out all sorts of details about these kids (their last name was Poinonia), including what their personalities were like, their favorite foods, their ages and grades. I remember there was a troublemaker named Otis. There was also an older brother named Billy. Other than that, I have no recollection. After all this planning, I think I only ended up writing one story about them– in particular, about Billy, who fell in love with Kate. Then they had to leave for college and their love was tested– they didn’t know how to find one another (it didn’t occur to me that you could tell your boyfriend/girlfriend where you were headed). There was an epic fight for Kate’s love– and even a wedding! I illustrated this book too. Yup.
In fourth grade, I wrote a story about the Easter bunny. It was for school, and I wrote waaaaaaaay more pages than I needed. I loved that story.
In fifth, I wrote my first poem. The first simile I ever remember using was about running around like a chicken with its head cut off. I’m glad I’ve gotten more profound, less cliched.
In sixth grade, I asked my teacher if we could start a class newspaper. I was the editor-in-chief, and I entered an “article” I wrote for the paper into a young author’s conference contest, and I won. When I attended this day-long conference, surrounded by other 10-, 11-, and 12-year-olds, I had my first bout of writer envy. In one of my sessions, we got a writing prompt, and when some of the kids read their freewriting aloud, I knew it was better than mine.
In junior high, I wrote my first “book.” It was about best-friends-turned-competitors Mariah and Kayy, both trying to get the one open spot on their track team. When one of them tripped during the big race, though, the other turned around and helped her friend to the finish line. I thought it was pretty powerful. Ha!
In early high school, I wrote my second and third “books” (I put them in quotation marks because they were really more like short stories, but the point was that they were complete— I started so many more things than I finished). My second book was a thriller about a jealous best friend who faked her friend’s boyfriend’s suicide (did you follow that?). But my third, my magnum opus, was about a girl dying of emphysema (Do people die from emphysema? My character did.). It was the best thing I had ever written in my life up until that point, and I was terribly proud of it. I stayed up late one night, probably till about 2 AM, finishing that story, tears streaming down my face. I had this strange, never-again-replicated out-of-body experience while writing that. It was like I was floating above myself, watching myself type out Kelli’s heart-wrenching deathbed scene. I felt like a real writer after that.
My junior year, I took a creative writing class, and that teacher gave me great confidence in my writing, telling me to “never stop.” After a conversation with her, I decided I’d be an English major in college.
Oh college. By this time, I considered myself a poet and was focusing more on that than on any kind of fiction. My poetry teacher took me aside freshman year of college to make sure that she wasn’t “killing my writer soul.” I assured her that I was surviving just fine. Funny to think back on it– I still was a pretty poor writer at the time. I had been (probably) the best writer in my grade at my tiny high school, but now I was in a bigger pond– ALL the writing majors had been the best writers at their high schools. I struggled but got good grades (thank God for the chance to revise my final portfolios!).
I remember my second year of college, I was in a fiction-writing class, and I loved my story idea– wrote and wrote and wrote and was thrilled with my many-pages-long result. In my critique group, there was a girl who had written a short, two-page story that was far more poignant and beautiful than mine. More writer envy.
I took a writing of young adult literature class and really floundered in it. Who knew this would later be where I’d return and find myself at home? (My professor kept saying that my images were “too erotic”– I was like, “HUH?? They’re not even KISSING.” Apparently the shock of my character’s red hair against her white comforter was titillating.)
My senior project for college turned out pretty well– four poems and a short memoir piece. I worked my butt off on those five pieces, and I am proud of them (I’ve even posted some of them on my blog), and after my senior project was done, I had nothing left to give.
For three years.
Yes, it’s true. I took a three-year hiatus from writing after college graduation. I don’t regret it either. I filled that time with reading tons of amazing books. I imagined I would write again, and I was smart enough to realize that reading would be planting seeds in me for future writing. (I’m glad I knew that– I’m not entirely sure how I did, but I was very aware that I was sowing seed for later harvesting.)
Meanwhile, my OCD (still undiagnosed) went out of control. I briefly lost touch with reality and began to seek help and a diagnosis (yay!), and I couldn’t help but chicken-scratch my thoughts and cries for help in those terrifying months. Eventually, I began to collect all those pieces together, imagining that I could write a book about my OCD experience.
I had intended for it to be full of stories and poems from my real life, but my scrupulosity was so extreme in those days that I was terrified to misquote someone.
So I changed it to fiction.
Around this time, my friend Anna gave me The Book Thief by Markus Zusak, and it was after this that my writing finally started to improve. Thank you, Liesel, Rudy, and Max! (And Anna!)
I spent four years on that book about OCD, and then after that, I read The Fault in Our Stars and decided I wanted to try young adult fiction. I spent 19 months working on my first YA novel, and that brings us to today …
where I wait,
dreaming of a book deal,
and reflecting on all the touchstones that add up to Jackie Lea Sommers, the novelist.
… and, really, to all freshmen who are attending a private Christian college.
Hello.
I could not be more thrilled for you to have chosen a Christian community like ours the way that you did. Some of you knew you wanted to attend from the moment you stepped onto campus. For others, your campus visit was like a seed of possibility planted in your heart that eventually grew to a full-grown decision. Some of you are making huge sacrifices to be at Northwestern. Some of your parents are.
Savor it.
While I would never tell someone that the college years are the BEST four years of your life (life keeps getting better and better … or at least, it should!), they are definitely some of the most important and unique years of your life. You may never again have the opportunity to live and learn and work and grow in a community of believers that will foster your spiritual growth and academic prowess the way you do in these four years. For some of you, this semester might be all you have.
So please cherish it.
Look, I know that life is still life and that homework can be lame and that you’re not expected to love everything, but I will tell you this: there will likely come a time in your life when you will look back at your UNW years and think, I wish I had been more intentional.
You will probably never again have the opportunity to hear from amazing men and women of God– not to mention international leaders, public speakers, theologians, comedians, and scholars– every single morning. Listen well. Put your phones away. When I was listening in chapel the other morning, I kept thinking, If I were to do this all over again, I would eat this up. Truth on a spoon. And yet, I remembered myself as a college freshman, thinking so differently about those expository days in chapel.
Get to know your professors. They are some of the smartest people you are ever going to meet in your life, and you get these four years to sit at the feet of Socrates, so to speak. Listen well!
Pour effort into your friendships. Some of these may last into eternity. I thank God for Tracy and Megs and Cindy and so many others who are still my favorite people, still making new memories with me, all these years later.
Give each other grace. Please. Ten years from now, your world is likely going to have so many more shades of gray in it and you don’t want to look back and say that your black-and-whiteness didn’t show people Christ. (In fact, some of you probably won’t be able to even accept the grayness of that last sentence. I hope you will one day!)
Do things with excellence. Not to get an A. Not to impress your professors. But because your God has given you gifts with which to honor him.
Seek out a mentor– an upperclassman, a professor, a staff member.
Be vulnerable. Seek out health and healing while you’re still young. Schedule a visit to Counseling Services if you need to. You’re going to kick yourself later when you realize you could have gotten free therapy but now that you’re graduated, you have to pay an arm and a leg and offer your firstborn child as collateral for counseling. You’ll be kicking yourself too that you could have started that journey toward wholeness so much sooner.
And yes (I’m gonna get myself in trouble for this, but …): skip class every once in a while to lie on the campus green with your friends and talk about theology and who is cute in your Western Civ class and what you want to do with your lives.
The entire community is so glad you’ve joined us. Make the most of it. Suck out the marrow, friends.