I think and think and think and …

overthinking

 

And no, for an obsessive-compulsive, it’s not pretty.

Related posts:
When Thinking Hurts
OCD Torture
A Metaphor for Obsessive-Compulsives

Writing-Related Things I Want Even More Than Publication

crying writer1. 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 History as a Writer

DSCN1003I 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.

Win-Win-Win?

My big question as of late was this:

How do I honor God, myself, and my agent when we seem to want different things?

A little backstory: my novel has significant religious themes, ones that are important to me.  (Like, the-core-of-who-I-am important.)  My agent thought it all needed to be toned down in order to sell.  At first, I thought I was going to refuse.  I really did.  I didn’t even look at my manuscript for over a week.

Then, one night, I had an epiphany.  I had thought epiphanies were accompanied by a choir of angels or a visible light bulb illuminated over one’s head, but it turns out that they can be just as quiet as a word crawling into your mind while you try to sleep and making a nest for itself there.

The word was parables.

In scripture, Christ told stories all the time.  Parables.  Lots of people believe that parables were intended to make things easier for people to understand, but that’s not actually what the Bible says.  Essentially, scripture says that parables were meant for some to see … and some to not.

I wondered, Can I bury these truths so deep in my story that those who want to see them will see them– and those who don’t want to won’t?

It seemed like the one and only way to satisfy my agent while also honoring the story I wanted to tell.  It also seemed terrifically difficult.  Shooting for such a minuscule target.  I knew I wasn’t good enough writer to do these edits without help.

So I prayed.  A lot.  And spent time in scripture.  A lot.  And wrote an okay new first draft, a better second draft, third …, showed it to my writing group, wrote another draft or so, and after two weeks of attempting to create a parable, I sent my revisions off to my agent.

Heard from him today.  Thumbs up.

He’s going to send the manuscript out to editors on Monday.

win win

 P.S. If you’re a person who prays, would you pray for my manuscript to find favor with an editor?  I’m sooooooo nervous!

Books I Would Love To See As A Movie

Movies that are either in production or at least are surrounded by rumors of going into production:

The Magician’s Nephew | To my knowledge, this one has not yet been confirmed.  But I NEED it.

The Night Circus | This is going to be a sensory masterpiece.  David Heyman is producing!

The Book Thief | The release date was moved to November 15.  OHMYGOSH, there are PHOTOS on the IMDB site!  Fangirling right now.

fangirl

The Fault in Our Stars | Nervous about the casting choices for this, but trying to have faith.  John Green approves!  In fact, of Shailene Woodley, he said, “Also loved what she did. She made me cry, and TFiOS-related things basically never make me cry, on account of how I know what’s going to happen and everything.”

Jellicoe Road | This is currently the most important adaptation to me.  It basically ALL hinges on whom they cast for Jonah Griggs.  Pictures of places they are scoping out for the movie here.

asdfjkl

Books I Desperately Want to be Made into Movies:

The Sky is Everywhere | But I literally can’t picture an actor with a good enough smile to play Joe Fontaine.  Ideas?  OHMYGOSH, IMDB says it’s “in development.”

sheldon

Saving Francesca | need Will Trombal to be on the big screen.  (Come to think of it, I think this one is actually going to happen!)

Piper’s Son | The answer is always “More Marchetta please.”

Lumatere Chronicles | We need the equivalent of young Eddie Redmayne for Finnikin.

young eddie

Truest by Jackie Lea Sommers | Come on.  A girl can dream, right?

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme over at The Broke and the Bookish.

A Fun Writing Update for My Blog Readers

My last update on the writing front was on June 5th, when I wrote:

I am in the middle of writing a short story.  It’s about four teenaged wards of the state living in hospice care.  Morbid much?  But I feel very invested in these thirteen pages, very passionate about these four friends who have no one but each other as their time is running out.  My writing group is helping me with the next draft, and I’m hoping to enter it into a contest before the month is over.

Then, on June 19th, I let you in on my writing process, specifically regarding the hospice care story, leaving a tiny P.S. at the end of the post:

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.

Well, guess what?

That short story– “Covered Up Our Names”– won the contest!  I’m so honored to be the 2013 winner of the Katherine Paterson Prize for Young Adult and Children’s Writing, a contest hosted by Hunger Mountain.

If you click here, you can even see their little write-up about me!  They called it a “powerful” story, and that fills my heart with deep gratitude.  The contest judge was Rebecca Stead, 2010 winner of the Newbery Medal.  I read her book “When You Reach Me” nearly one year ago and reviewed it on my blog, saying:

Brilliant!  I actually shouted aloud the moment that everything finally clicked into place for me– I was that excited.  Absolutely loved it.

writingI am thrilled that my story will be published in Hunger Mountain, and I’m so terribly grateful for the cash prize, but what makes the entire enterprise so special to me is that Rebecca Stead loved my story.

I’m honored and elated.

I want you all to read the story!  I imagine the rights will revert back to me after publication, so I’ll anticipate sharing it with you then.  Or you can purchase a copy of Hunger Mountain 18 for just $12.

 

 

Over at The Redeeming Things

Today, I am blogging over at The Redeeming Things, the blog of Trinity City Church, where I am blessed to worship and fellowship here in the Twin Cities.  I’m blogging about the intersection of my faith and my mental illness.

Here’s the beginning:

RedeemingThingsJLSLast week, while listening to an audiobook by Anne Lamott, she mentioned a line she tries to live by: “And may the free make others free.”

I had to rewind a few seconds and listen to it over again. And again, amazed at the stark and beautiful way these few words summarize the last four years of my life.

I have obsessive-compulsive disorder, an anxiety disorder that preyed on all I most value: faith, friendships, vocation. Forget all media has ever taught you about OCD—it is not a funny, quirky, bothersome nuisance. Instead, it is a hellish, tormenting thief and tyrant. It caused me to question whether God was real, if he loved me, if I loved him, if I was going to hell, if writing fiction was sinful, if people were demons, if real life was real life– but not in the normal way that all or most people question such things. With “normal” minds, thoughts come and go freely, but with OCD, the gate is broken, and the thoughts get trapped inside the head, never making progress or finding resolution. Without the resolution, an obsessive-compulsive becomes lodged in a perpetual state of panic and terror. OCD is slavery, and I was in bondage to it for over twenty years. I was a tormented pot that complained to the Potter, “Why-why-why did you make me this way?”

To read the rest, jump on over here.
photo credit: izarbeltza via photopin cc

My Favorite Things

My friend Elyse recently posted about her favorite things, and I wanted to do the same!

1. The perfect phrase/image.  My writer’s heart takes delight in the phrases that make me catch my breath.

starsburnedmyeyes

2. Certain kinds of awkwardness.  Primarily of the I-think-we-have-crushes-on-each-other type.

awkward

3. Color.  Especially really rich reds and purples.  (More details here.)

redandpurple

4. Creativity and the joy that comes from it.  Although this is bigger than writing, writing probably tops my list!

writinggirl

5. Deep conversation sprinkled with silliness.  One of the common threads through my closest friendships!

convo

Bonus–

6. Smells.  Current favorites are lilacs, mown grass, and Love, NY&C fragrance.

lilacs

I’m an unmarried adult.

I don’t have a husband.  Or even a boyfriend.

But I am an adult.  I’m thirty-one.  I have a full-time job.  I pay rent, buy my own gas and groceries (and everything else).  I am emotionally mature.  I make my own choices.

So why have I heard twice recently that marriage makes someone an adult?

First a coworker said to Matt (the groom), “You’re getting married!  That’s awesome.  Welcome to adulthood, buddy!”

And someone at the wedding said tearfully of Des (the bride), “Wow, I can’t believe she is finally an adult!”

I was offended both times.  Marriage is not a magical door to the land of Adulthood.

So what do you think: am I too sensitive or do people speak too thoughtlessly?

adulthood