Emerging Artists Collective

writing girl againMy college writing mentor Judith Hougen started an artist group in the Twin Cities called the Emerging Artists Collective, and we had our first meeting in November.

I cannot tell you how amazing it was to be gathered with other Christian artists (writers, filmmakers, visual artists) to discuss faith and writing.

The thing that stood out to me most was a quote Judy shared.  I have been looking online, and I can’t find the quote, but it went something like this: “The older I get, what I mean by Christianity and what I mean by writing are largely the same thing.”

I love that.

It’s true that in my own life, my faith and my writing have become terrifically wrapped up.  When I write, I feel like I have spent time with God.  It all feels very mysterious to me, but I love that too (of course I do).

Related posts:
The Faith of a Pantser
Why Christians Should Write

 

Do You HAVE to Finish a Book?

to readFor many years I have fallen on the “no, I do not have to finish a book” side of the argument.  My reasons are that there are so many GREAT books out there that I won’t waste my time with ones that don’t hold my interest.

However, there was recently a great blog post over at the Rabbit Room in which Pete Peterson talks about his reasons for plowing through.  You can read it here.

So, your chance to weigh in: do you have to finish a book once you’ve started?  Why or why not?

Related post:
I miss reading.

To My Teachers

In 1957, Albert Camus won the Nobel Prize for Literature, whereupon Camus wrote this note to one of his teachers:

19 November 1957

Dear Monsieur Germain,

I let the commotion around me these days subside a bit before speaking to you from the bottom of my heart. I have just been given far too great an honour, one I neither sought nor solicited.

But when I heard the news, my first thought, after my mother, was of you. Without you, without the affectionate hand you extended to the small poor child that I was, without your teaching and example, none of all this would have happened.

I don’t make too much of this sort of honour. But at least it gives me the opportunity to tell you what you have been and still are for me, and to assure you that your efforts, your work, and the generous heart you put into it still live in one of your little schoolboys who, despite the years, has never stopped being your grateful pupil. I embrace you with all my heart.

Albert Camus

It made me think of the teachers who have most impacted my life– in particular, my writing life.

Mrs. Schmidt, you let me interrupt what we were doing that day in sixth grade to declare that I wanted to start a class newspaper– and then you let me run with it.  In fact, it was an article I wrote for the A8 Express that I entered into a Young Authors Conference contest that year, an article that won me a “scholarship” to attend that conference, where I sat amongst other 10- to 12-year-olds and thought, “I want to be good at this.  I want to be the best one in this room.”  Thank you for always, always encouraging my creativity.  You’re an amazing teacher, and while I have told you that before, now I’m telling everyone else.

Mrs. Grams, I can remember when you arrived at our high school.  I was a junior in high school; you were fresh out of college, newly married, and I was completely smitten by you.  My junior and senior year were one giant attempt to please you, and your approval was always so, so ready.  You gave me my earliest editorial experiences, and you let me read one of my short stories in front of the classroom.  Did you know I first discovered e.e. cummings in your classroom?  (I like to think of it as an incredible byproduct of standing near to you.)  And when you returned my portfolio to me, it said, “All I can say is KEEP WRITING.”  Those words propelled me into college.

Judy Hougen, when I sat in your Intro to Poetry class my first year of college, I was terrified that I would be found out as a fraud.  Instead, you took me aside after class one day and asked if you were crushing my poet-spirit.  Maybe you saw the fear in my eyes!  But you gave me three years of the best (and most intense) writing instruction of my life, and your red pen helped me develop a thicker skin, one I’d need for the harder edits that would come post-college.  You talked about writing and faith like they were a knot I’d never be able or want to untie.  Your theology around memoir writing has stuck with me for the last decade.

Dear Deb, Betsy, and Judy, thank you for your investment in me.  I am a better writer– and a better person— because of you.

thank you2

Jackie’s Holiday Book-Buying Guide

So, you want to support the book-lover in your life with an amazing literary Christmas gift– only you don’t know where to start?  Well, you’ve come to the right place!  Just identify your gift “target” in the left column and see what I suggest you purchase in the right.

holiday book buying guide

Didn’t see your target audience?  No problem!  Leave me a comment describing the person you’re buying for, and I’ll leave you my best suggestions!  (I mean this.  This is serious business, people: I’m all about getting amazing books into the right hands!)

Related posts:
My Book Recommendations

It could be the smiling person next to you.

depressed

Only my closest friends and family ever really knew what I was dealing with.  I smiled a lot, was the class clown, told great stories, graduated summa cum laude.  No one would have looked at me and guessed that I was drowning in depression, a slave to OCD, driven to certainty in unhealthy ways.

Try to hear what people aren’t saying.  And have more discussions.

Related posts:
My Darkest, Lowest Days
The Sons of Korah Get It

#GIVINGTUESDAY – Help support Pediatric OCD Programs TODAY

When I was just seven years old, I didn’t know WHAT was going on with me … and I wouldn’t find out until FIFTEEN years later. Add another five years onto that before I got appropriate treatment. Think about giving to this fund today. I did in honor of my friend Madeline, 11-years-old and kicking OCD’s butt!

Jeff Smith's avatarIOCDF Blog

OCD begins in childhood. Despite this, it takes an average of 14–17 years between onset of symptoms and access to effective treatment due to stigma around mental health issues, and lack of awareness about available treatment options.

We are working to change this, and you can help.

giving tuesday

You have no doubt heard the terms, “Black Friday” or “Cyber Monday,” referring to the Friday and Monday following Thanksgiving, the two largest shopping days of the year and the official start of the holiday shopping season.  Last year, a group of community organizers (including the United Nations Foundation) wanted to create a new day that celebrate giving instead of shopping — this day was meant to honor giving back to the community by donating to a charity or volunteering to help others.  They named this day #GivingTuesday.

Today, December 3, 2013, is the second annual #GivingTuesday, and we need your help.

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OCD: Unwelcome but not Unexpected

How many times do I have to say that OCD is a joy-thief before I should realize: Oh.  Hmm.  You’re pretty happy right now.  OCD will be along shortly to steal that away?

I should learn to brace myself.

On Friday, November 22, I announced on Facebook and on my blog that Harper Collins offered me a two-book deal.  Shortly thereafter, amidst all the “likes” and congratulatory comments and joyful sharing, OCD came calling.

I spent the majority of the evening obsessing over future revisions.  

not you again

I practiced ERP, walking myself through that lovely mantra of “it’s POSSIBLE, but it’s not LIKELY,” then discussing with a friend (asking for no reassurance), and also spending time in prayer.

Life, as I continue to learn, is risky, and the more I learn to embrace risk and uncertainty, the happier I am.

Which is why I flat-out refuse to flat-out refuse any revision suggestions.  I will consider everything my wonderful editor suggests, knowing that God is in control and that Jill loves my characters too.

In this sense, I’m growing as an obsessive-compulsive in remission, an author, and as a person.

Jackie 1
OCD 0

Related posts:
Uncertainty is the Key
Uncertainty
Taking Risks