Archive | November 2010

How are things in Gloccamorra?

Reading Time: 2 minutes

The past week or so I’ve been in a slump. Literally. No energy and just wanting to curl up with a good book.  Matter of fact, I’ve done a lot of that. Curl up by my pillow in my room and bury myself in novels. Since I had finished writing my NaNoWriMo novel (rough draft), I’ve read the works of others. I call it research as I read in the genre I write. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.

I understand however that in reality, I am depressed. It hit when I remembered the anniversary of a miscarriage and the trauma that surrounded that time. It was highlighted by the fact that seven years later, I still had no support from people in my life who are pledged to love and care for me. This was amplified on Thanksgiving Day where alcohol and thoughts of shopping were more important than relationships or *gasp* giving thanks to God from whom all blessings flow! Why was I with these people?

So I feel a bit like the leprechaun, Og, from Finnian’s Rainbow which just happens to be the play my husband and I attended on our first date. The funny thing is other than “How are things in Gloccamorra?” – are the words I remember from the scene below  that resonate with me: “Doom and gloom, gloom and doom!”

Ah, but gold was not meant for mere humans.

I am not in the worst funk ever. But it is amazing how the holidays can remind us of things we have lost. And I am reminded once again that this world is NOT my home. My Gloccamorra is heaven and my pot of gold lies in my future there – walking on streets paved with that glorious mineral, alongside my Savior.

Nature’s first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.

(‘Nothing Gold can Stay”, Robert Frost)

I need to remember where I’ve buried my treasure. It cannot be found in human beings who will only let me down. Yes, I can enjoy those holy moments that come in this sinful world. But ultimately I need to dig myself out of my hole to see the Creator of the rainbow, and not so much the mythical pot buried at its end.

Am I talking in circles? Maybe. But hey, that’s just where I’m at today. And that’s okay because as I told a friend on Facebook the other day, diamonds shine brighter against a black cloth and the stars shine brighter in the darkest sky. In my darker moments, God’s glory is greater to me and more desirable than if all the lights were turned on and I was feeling great and the world was my oyster (okay, but then we get to pearls, let’s just not go there here!).

Anybody struggling like I am? David writes in Psalm 38:9 “LORD, all my desire is before You, and my sighing is not hidden from You.”  Even in the darkness, I am not alone – and neither are you.

Thanksgiving

Reading Time: < 1 minute

I don’t want to get all sappy on you for this holiday.  We should always be grateful to God for all He does for us daily. I pray you enjoy time with people who love you and build you up. Have a great meal.  And just maybe you can laugh a little too.

Fact or Fiction?: Cherie: A Forgettable Tale

Reading Time: < 1 minute

“Have you found it yet, Mommy?”

“No, I haven’t” said Cherie in frustration.

“Do you remember where you last had it?”

“If I did remember, I would not be having a problem, or asked you to help me search.”

“But Mommy,” asked the precocious six year old, “how did you lose it in the first place?”

“Again, I do not remember, Dear.”

“But, you remember me and Daddy, right?”

“Yes.”

“And you remember your friends?”

“True.”

“So what is it you have forgotten?”

“Everything else.”

“Mom!”

“Okay, I forget birthdays and to pick up milk at the grocery store. Things like that.”

“But you never forget to pick me up.”

“True.”

“So why is it important to find. You seem okay to me.”

“Because I used to remember everything, and I can’t anymore! I desperately need to find my memory!”

“Maybe you are trying to stuff too much stuff into your head,” giggled the little girl.

Cherie smiled, “Maybe so.”

“But Momma, you never forget the really important stuff.”

“Tell me that when you are missing your snack in tomorrow’s lunch. I seem to have forgotten your yogurt!”

“Oh, Mom! I love you anyway – don’t forget that!”

“I won’t, Honey. I won’t.  Cherie bent down to give her daughter a hug, totally forgetting what she had been looking for.

‘Twas the Night before NaNoWriMo

Reading Time: < 1 minute

If you follow me on facebook, you already know that once again NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) has taken over my life and with great joy I have allowed it to (as will 200,000+ around the world!)! Here was my creativity before I jumped into my third historical novel “Sir Michael’s Mayhem.”  So for the sake of silliness. . .

‘Twas the night before NaNo and all over the world

Fingers were stretching to write their first words.

Computers were warmed up and coffee mugs did appear

For NaNoWriMo was finally here.

50,000 words in thirty days

Madcap writing and lives in a craze

To keep up with that word count dost

To be considered a “winner” at any cost.

Word widgets and badges and guilt monkeys galore,

A Viking, a ninja, throw those in and more!

Without warning plot bunnies might strike

But we must keep writing till November 30th at midnight.

So why do we do it? This made dash to write?

When we put the rest of our lives on the back burner each night?

Because there’s a deadline and everyone has a story,

Only some of us quit when the going gets gory.

So press on to the winner circle, my Wrimo friends!

It’s the only way that this month should ever end!

And I’ll celebrate with you as we collapse in a heap,

Rubbing our carpel tunnel wrists as we fall fast asleep.