I read an interesting and encouraging post by author Jane Kirkpatrick and asked her to share of version of it here. (Don't you love her friends Bo and Caesar?) -- Sandy
Jane: My friend author maryanne radmacher has a saying: "In all seasons, harvest." Another word for harvest is "YIELD." As writers we can't wait for publication to be our harvest; we need to find that yield in the every day. Here's how I define it...
Jane: My friend author maryanne radmacher has a saying: "In all seasons, harvest." Another word for harvest is "YIELD." As writers we can't wait for publication to be our harvest; we need to find that yield in the every day. Here's how I define it...
Y = "Yes!" A writer's
passion and enthusiasm must come first. I get vexed with writing sometimes.
All I have to do to get out of it is to
read the want ads and then my Yes! is loud and clear. Get back to doing what
you're privileged to do and find a Yes! in every day.
"I" stands for Incarn,
an old medical term that means "to grow new flesh." From the
disappointments of a manuscript rejection to those terrible reviews, writers
can't allow ourselves to be defined by the wounds. I grow new flesh by remembering why I write
in the first place: I want to bring healing and hope to a troubled world; I
want to memorialize a particular period in history or one of my characters
based on a real person; I feel called to do this work. Hurt feelings
is evidence of our compassion. Writer's need that compassion to help
readers feel.
"E" means Engagement. I
struggle to engage. I'd rather be in the 1850s, writing. But my writing is more
authentic when I tumble myself into the daily needs of living. How can we as
writers do what Kafka suggests a story does, "be an ax to the frozen sea
within us" if we live disconnected from the world? Our harvest will be
ice.
"L" stands for Letting
go. If I write all day long and enjoy it, then I feel guilty for neglecting my
family, the dogs, cooking meals. If I don’t write all day long, I feel guilty
for neglecting a gift, my passion for storytelling. I have to learn to let go
and be wherever I am: writing or connected to others.
"D" stands for Donation.
A group of colonists I wrote about had a "Diamond Rule" that urged
followers to each day make someone's life better than their own. Dr. Karl
Menninger the famous psychiatrist noted that generosity was the single most
important indicator of a person's mental health. "Generous people,"
he wrote "Are rarely mentally ill." So to have a great yield, finding
time to give to someone else promises a mighty harvest down the road.
As ranchers, we kept diversifying
to find the right harvest. But every day we found a reason to be grateful, even
the years the harvests were lean. I'm not wealthy as a writer; we weren't as
ranchers either. But we have a privileged life being able to do the things we
love and we learn something new from each endeavor. On this journey called life
we will often have to yield, let others go before us; and we can still find the
harvest in every season.
Have you allowed yourself to YIELD as a writer? What has your harvest looked like?
~~~
Jane Kirkpatrick is a New York Times Bestselling author of 25 books including Where Lilacs Still Bloom (a
Carol Finalist) and her latest One Glorious Ambition, The Compassionate Crusade of Dorothea Dix. For 27 years, Jane and her husband lived on a remote Oregon ranch seven miles from their mailbox on a road called Starvation Lane. They raised watermelons and grapes, alfalfa and cattle and learned much about harvests and yields. You can receive her Story Sparks newsletter by visiting www.jkbooks.com
Carol Finalist) and her latest One Glorious Ambition, The Compassionate Crusade of Dorothea Dix. For 27 years, Jane and her husband lived on a remote Oregon ranch seven miles from their mailbox on a road called Starvation Lane. They raised watermelons and grapes, alfalfa and cattle and learned much about harvests and yields. You can receive her Story Sparks newsletter by visiting www.jkbooks.com