Thursday, February 21, 2013

I'm Published!

 
I'm Published!


I’m PublishedJ - Yay!

Okay so it’s only a small, free, local publication…but sill, its printed paper for public consumption and its glossy!  I’m kind of feeling like the North Georgia Carrie Bradshaw.  Didn’t she write a column for a local magazine?  Or was it newspaper?  Anyway, when I found out the magazine had supposedly hit the stands (and believe me, there was some doubt about this – but that’s another blog), I drove around to four different places till I found it and then swiped ten copies so I could mail them to family and friends, who live far away.  I was so excited, I couldn’t stop smiling and fist pumping.  If (when, positive thoughts to the universe) I ever get THE CALL, Lord help those around me – I will be out of control!

I first put pen to paper (or fingers to keyboard) more than ten years ago.  That was when I decided that I was never going back to a corporate office and I was going to stay home with my babes and be the next Nora Roberts.  I was going to be a writer, just like that.  Yes, ten years ago!  It took ten years to finally hit the publishing lotto in the form of a 350 word column in a magazine with a 20,000 print run.  Girl’s gotta do what a girl’s gotta do.  Beggars can’t be choosers.

A lot’s happened in those ten years.  Two more kids, autism, six moves, two states, the death of loved ones, aging, thousands of miles traveled and many milestones reached, but I never stopped hoping.  I did however, sometimes stop writing.  So I really can’t say I’ve been working at it for a decade.

In the early days, I was blindly dedicated.  In the spring of 2003 I signed up for a Georgia Romance Writers workshop to have my work reviewed by a published author (Stephanie Bond writer of romantic comedies and mysteries).  I was sooooo excited, because I was certain that I’d be discovered on March 15th, 2003, which was the date of the workshop.  Fate however, had different plans for my Ides of March.  My family’s autism diagnose blew my life apart on March 14th, 2003.  Looking back, I don’t know why or how I showed up at the event, but I did.  I numbly sat and listened to Stephanie tell me what I did right and what I needed to work on.  I cannot even imagine what she thought as my eyes glazed over, with an utterly blank look, nodding absently.  But the writer in me can still quote this sentence from the thirty-five pages I submitted that she loved:  “Janet at one time had been a debutante in Brahmin society, but at forty-five she was starting over with her eighteen year old daughter, a truck load of memories – not all of them good – and the run-down Mustang of her eldest, estranged daughter.”   In retrospect, the part about memories and starting over is kind of prophetic.

                I gallantly tried to stick with it, even finishing my manuscript while my world fell apart.  Gradually though, my broken heart could not sustain my dream and I just stopped.  I didn’t write.  I couldn’t.  Yet I never told anyone that I wasn’t writing, which I guess means that deep down inside, I knew one day I’d do it again.  Someday.

                Eventually I did, but then I’d stop, only to start again.  I would read how writers expressed that they had to write – they had to, it was who they were.  I couldn’t, so I worried maybe I wasn’t a writer.  It wasn’t writer’s block, because I certainly had tons of ideas, but I just daydreamed about them and never did anything.  Then last summer, as I was blogging on our road trip, I felt good writing.  I was excited to sit down at the computer each night.  All that time on the road got the wheels in my head turning.   I realized that the kids are growing up and asked myself the question that all moms eventually ask, “What about me?”  I also love to read and so many stories inspire me.  I’d often visit author sites (I call myself the author stalker) and book blogs and I could never get enough.  I started writing reviews on Goodreads and I loved it.  Then I saw a contest on Chick Lit Central: The Blog, for a new book reviewer and I went for it.

                Through this all, I discovered once again, that I truly love to write.  Why?  Damn if I know.  I love to communicate, but often the art of conversation trips me up.  I’ll be listening and forget the point I wanted to make.  Or I will have too much to say and I will rudely interrupt the person I’m talking to, as if what I have to say is more important (I’m bad at this, but I am conscious of it and I’m honestly trying to correct the behavior).  I also have running soliloquies in my head – all the time, and to spare those around me from hearing them, I sometimes write them for my enjoyment only.  That’s why I love blogging…I want to get it out, but it’s up to you whether or not you read it, where as if I drone on in conversation, the listener will likely have difficulty walking away.  And let’s face it, I’d never let them forget it!

                 I love to write about my family so that one day my children will have a record that, yes, I did adore them (particularly important for the fast approaching teenage years).  I also lost a parent early in life and missed out on so many opportunities to know my mom.  God forbid that if I leave this world early, I want my kids to know me.

                 Also, since I was little, I’ve had an extremely vivid imagination and I dream a lot of shit up.  Sometimes I write that down. 

                 Finally, I want to help people.  It’s incredibly narcissistic of me to think that I have the ability to do this…but I’ve often been told by people in the autism community that they admire the way I handle things.  Believe me, this has been an evolution.  If I can do it, I honestly believe anyone can do it.  That’s why I want to share my story about autism.

                 Oh yeah…that book review contest?  I lost.  But the site’s founder, Melissa, was kind enough to invite me to submit guest reviews.  I did and did and did.  Poor Melissa.  Then one day she asked me to write a review.  I was very excited.  Ironically, it was an autism memoir.  Not like an apple falling on my head or anything?  Time to get back to my book.

                 So here I am.  Since then I’ve written and submitted more book reviews and then my friend, Lise, hooked me up.  For those of you who don’t know, Lise is the one who got me the gig at My Forsyth Magazine.  Gotta love nepotism.  Who knows?  Maybe there will be other magazines and maybe there will be other blogs…but in the meantime I’m trying to go viral with my blog.  But more importantly, I’m writing all kinds of stuff, all of the time, and  I’m a happy girl!

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