Skip to main content

What I haven't told you

 

Tea cup with book open

I told you how I started making art, when a surprise pregnancy, at the height of my business career, propelled me into an identity crisis and I went in search of who I really was. I worked through The Artists Way, discovered a love of art in my past and built a new identity around that. I hung that idea high and called it my North Star. The stories I told around that idea supported it. I talked of my love of art and how my wicked art teacher took that dream, stomped on it, and sent me fleeing into the business world. But that is not the whole story. I didn’t leave out parts of my story to lie, I just brushed past them to connect with my creativity.

I didn’t tell you about the literature classes I was taking in high school. Beloved teachers taught my literature classes and they opened the world of literary criticism for me. They most decidedly were not like my wicked art teacher, they supported and encouraged me.

I didn’t tell you there were always stacks of books piled up next to my art supplies.

I didn’t tell you I majored in Comparative Literature as an undergraduate or I spent four years reading and talking about books with the hope that I would end up teaching literature, work in publishing, or become a literary agent.

I didn’t tell you that I was too afraid to take the next step after getting my degree to pursue those dreams of entering the publishing world. I needed to go to New York City, and I was too afraid to go alone, to go to a city that had a high crime rate (I graduated college in the early 1990s when NYC was experiencing high amounts of crime). If I am honest, I was also afraid of poverty. It was expensive to live in New York. During college I worked in an office and was already making good money. I chose comfort over books. I became an accountant and, later, a business consultant.

I didn’t tell you that, a few years after graduating, I quit my high paying job to work in a bookstore with the hope that it would open the gateway to my bookish dreams. The shop laid me off after only a few months, partly because they didn’t need so much staff, partly because, I think, I was too enthusiastic and career-minded for the store manager’s tastes. Within a week of being fired from the bookstore, I was back in the office, making a good living. It was as if my foray into books never happened. (Well, I did end up meeting my husband during that little career detour, but that is a story for another day.)  

I didn’t tell you that I never stopped reading or analyzing what I read. I read a vast number of books every year and have belonged to many book clubs. If you want to talk about books with me, I will happily spend hours doing so.

I have certainly dropped hints over the years. Breadcrumbs that revealed my love of books include blog entries about what I am reading and stories about building my personal library. But I haven’t told you how these past few months of writing and reading have shifted something inside of me. I have reconnected with the wide-eyed, literature loving co-ed inside of me and she is beyond thrilled that I am exploring writing, embracing books, and publishing again. I think about offering editing services to self-published authors, drafting book reviews for magazines and newspapers, hosting online book clubs, and teaching online literature classes for people who didn’t get to take literature classes. I think about becoming an author. I am thinking about building a Little Free Library in my yard so I can become the librarian of my neighborhood. I feel like I am in vortex of possible literary ideas, with books swirling around me, and I just need to reach out and take one, open it and start reading.

So that’s what I haven’t told you. What haven’t you told me?

Comments

  1. I love this. I think we can be many things; the world of social media has led to the idea that we have to have a personal brand, spit out the same type of content as not to "confuse" our readers. But that is not how people are - we change, we have different interests (sometimes conflicting!), every photo or piece of art is not the same as the one before. I actually DO work in publishing, but you know, it's kind of like a lot of other jobs. I have too many meetings, I deal with staffing issues, and have authors who are difficult to work with. All of the ideas you have seem like great ways to engage with literature without having to deal with the politics of a JOB!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree about the personal branding! Thanks for sharing your experience with the publishing world. I was suspicious it was like that!

      Delete
  2. I love this! Your love of writing and books has led you down an interesting path and given you some great experiences to write about. Let's see...what haven't I told you? I love books and reading, but I actually prefer audio books! I'm listening to the Agatha Raisin mystery series, which is so hilarious.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I just listened to the Agatha Raisin prequel and enjoyed it. Funny that these books have been out for years but I've just run into another fan. :)

      Delete
    2. Sue, that's so great! I tried reading the print books many years ago, and they didn't interest me at that time - but now I find them so funny! I don't know if it's because of the great audio narration, or if it's because I'm around the same age as Agatha now.

      Delete
    3. I think you're right about the narration. The English accent is great.

      Delete
    4. I recently tried watching the Agatha Raisin show and didn't love it. I bet the books are better-that's the always the case!

      Delete
  3. Fantastic blog. You are a born writer.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Oh I so love this Laura! Writing and books have been a love of mine my entire life and probably the only title I never wore officially but always felt in my heart to be true. When you mentioned offering editing services I laughed hearing a part of me saying, "ooh me, me, pick me!" as I excitedly jumped up and down. I am working on some books now and your plans sound absolutely lovely. Cannot wait to follow this journey with you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I would love to help you edit your books. Contact me and we can talk.

      Delete
  5. Your next chapter sounds amazing Laura.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Dana! How is your search for the next chapter going?

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Garden Through the Years-June

This is our sixth year gardening. It's been a journey, every year we learn a little more. The garden has not only taught us how to grow plants, but also how to have patience and hope. It's taught me the healing power of nature. It has helped my husband and I grow our marriage through planning the garden and working side by side. It's inspired me creatively. Every year, I usually share a monthly update of my garden during the summer months. I'll continue the tradition this year, but I am also planning to share the garden's growth over the past six years. I'll show you what it looked like each month over the years. We started our garden in 2017, about 10 months after we moved to the Pacific Northwest.  My husband built our raised beds and we put up temporary fencing around the perimeter to keep the deer out. It was cumbersome to get in and out of the garden and it didn't deter the deer or the bunnies. They found a way in regardless. We grew tomatoes (too many)...

Witcherature

  There I was in my family’s half-finished basement, surrounded by my friends. It was the mid-1970s at the end of October, in a small town in Ohio and my mom was throwing me an epic Halloween party. We had just finished a game where we sat in a circle on the old rug that barely protected our bottoms from the cold linoleum basement floor. My mom started telling us a scary story that involved body parts and, as the story went along, she would pass the ‘body parts” around the circle. It was pitch dark in the room and we could only use our hands, not our eyes. Ice cold hands (water that had been frozen in rubber gloves, a heart (peeled tomato), and eyes (peeled grapes) were solemnly passed around. My friends and I were around eight years old at the time, so we tried to laugh off our fear, tried to remind ourselves it wasn’t really body parts that were being passed around, but I think we were all relieved when the story was over, the lights turned on, and cupcakes started getting passed...

Building a Cookbook Library

I collect cookbooks.  I know I could look-up just about any recipe online, but I can't give up my cookbooks. I love sitting down with a stack of cookbooks and planning a holiday meal or dinner party. Sometimes, if I'm feeling bored or anxious, I'll pull a favorite cookbook off the shelf and just read it. I love the photos. I love to daydream about making the dishes. Sometimes they inspire me so much I get up and bake something. To me, cookbooks are so much better than cooking blogs. Is it just me or have they gotten impossible to navigate? First there's the pop-up ads that always seem to crash the website at the very moment I'm rushing to check how long the brownies are supposed to bake. By the time I reload the website, I have burnt bricks of chocolate. I also hate the long, drawn-out stories before I get to the actual recipe. Don't get me wrong. I love a good story behind a recipe. Heck, when I share my recipes, I usually give you a story. What I hate about mo...

Roasted Tomatoes and An Empty Nest

          We are in the sunset days of child-rearing. Our daughter is now a busy senior in high school, with a part-time job and driver’s license. Often, there is one less face at the table, one last voice to talk about the day.      Our meals are simpler now as we no longer have to prepare healthy meals to fill a growing body. As my husband and I sit alone at the table we realize our work now is to reconnect with another, make our way back to each other. Back to the days before daughter came into our lives and the hours of our days were filled with feeding and nurturing her.      Now we turn towards nursing our aging bodies which, as it turns out, need much less food than growing bodies. We are moving away from large meals. Often, I place simple meals on the dinner table along with small glasses of wine to remind us that now we can fully sink back into the early days of our marriage.      Only it isn’t l...

Melting Reading Watching

Want to know the best way to bring on a heat wave? Blog about the lovely summer weather you are experiencing... Melting A week of heat is just breaking here and I've fallen back out of love with summer. I think I may need to move Iceland if I have any hope of truly embracing the season.  The good thing about being locked up in one's house for a week, fans carefully organized around oneself, air conditioning blasting, is that you get a lot of reading done. Since this is the year that I'm working on becoming a better writer, I've been reading more. I credit the fact that I can write to my insatiable reading habit. If you read any book about the art of writing, reading is usually touted as one of the ways to become a better writer. I patiently explain this concept to my husband and daughter whenever they find me in the middle of the day, draped over a couch, iced tea in hand, reading (instead of doing laundry or making their lunch). I'm working I announce. And I'...

How to Stay Friends without Social Media

How do you stay in touch with people once you leave social media? This one of the main concerns I hear from people when they find out that I’ve quit social media. To be truthful, you will fall out of touch with some people. But you know, that’s not always a bad thing. At least it wasn’t for me. According to anthropologist Robin Dunbar, the number of people humans can sustain relationships with is 150. He based this number (called Dunbar’s Number ) on the size of the human brain. The thesis is that primates are wired to be in group sizes that will assist with survival. While there are arguments about the validity of this theory, I know I feel stressed-out when I have too many relationships going on and not enough time to nurture them.   Being a good wife, mother, daughter, sister, and friend is very important to me. It brings me joy to take care of the people I love. I cook for them, check-in on them regularly, and give them my focused attention when I am with them. But I mus...

Oh Christmas Tree

    This Year's Tree  Yesterday was a beautiful day in my little corner of Washington state. An early snow turned our yard into a winter wonderland, making it a snow-globe-perfect-day to decorate our Christmas trees.   Pancake Ornament on Kitchen Christmas Tree Yes, I said trees, we have two! One four-foot, white tree that goes in our kitchen and holds all our food-themed ornaments and then another, traditional, evergreen, seven-footer in our living room that all the rest of my sizable ornament collection goes on. My husband claims I take our tree decorating too seriously. Maybe I do, but I don’t hear him complaining when we snuggle up in front of our tree and its magic engulfs the room. I have developed a process over the years that I think makes our tree special. I’ll share it with you in case you want to up your tree decorating game this year. Layer Your Tree   Christmas 1978 (I'm in the white. My Dad loved having a huge tree!) I was raised by a m...

The End of Self-Doubt

  I've been thinking a lot about my career. I have been everything from a financial controller and business consultant to an artist and now a writer. I've spent the past couple of years developing my writing chops and figuring out what I'm going to next. Lately, some very exciting opportunities have come up and with them, the old demons of fear, self-doubt, and self-sabotage. As I've aged, the patterns of my past are becoming clearer-just before I am about to level-up in my career or business, I pull back. I use the easy excuses of wanting to care for my family, to be home with my daughter. Such excuses sound so honorable. And they are. I convince myself that I am not walking away from an opportunity because I am afraid. No sir. I am walking away because my family needs me. It makes it easy to say no when opportunities arise. Yet plenty of woman are able to raise children and have successful careers. Why didn't I believe I could too? Letting go of my art business in...

Ghosts of Christmas Past

One of the best Christmas gifts I ever received was a Sindy doll’s dining set from my father’s sister, my Aunt Kathy. Aunt Kathy always bought my sisters and I the best presents. She had three boys and I think she relished the chance to hit the girl’s section of the toy store. Many of my most beloved gifts were from Aunt Kathy. I mean, she’s the one who bought me The Barbie Beauty Center Styling Head too. Oh, I can still smell it-the plastic, sweet smell. I remember the way the powdery, blue eye shadow glided onto Barbie’s perfect eyelids, smooth as silk. And how her hair, always satin blonde, immediately became tangled, never to be like new again. But back to Sindy’s dining room set. A creamy, French provincial style. It was made for Sindy dolls but at my house, Barbie took it over. Barbie was kind of priviledged and tended to think the world revolved around her so she often furnished her life from the spoils she stole from other dolls. She took my Jody doll’s dog and, worse,...

Leaving Social Media

I took my first social media detox in November 2018. I decided to take a break for 30 days. It felt amazing and I learned a lot about myself and my use of social media. I returned to social media, as planned, determined to take the lessons I learned from the detox to mindfully interact with Facebook and Instagram. I had the very best intentions. By May 2019, all my good intentions were forgotten and I found I was back to a place where social media was affecting me negatively . I promised myself that I would get back on track. (You know where this is going, right?) Before long, I was back to what I perceived as an unhealthy relationship with Instagram and Facebook. Something needed to change. The pandemic hit. I used it as an excuse to stay 'connected'. Instead of feeling connected, I watched in horror as people tore each other apart online, saying things they would never to say to one another if they were face to face.  In September 2020, I deleted my business page and told my...