Sage Advice When There’s No Thyme to Write by Kathryn Ross

Kathryn Ross is back with Sage Advice When There’s No Thyme to Write! I’m sure you’ll enjoy this article as much as I did… . Thank you Kathryn!

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The Write Spice: Writing Tips for Flavorful Words
by Kathryn Ross

I’ve just returned to the world of written words, blog posts, and editing projects from a hiatus of too-much-busy. April, May, and now seemingly June, have been a whirlwind of overwhelm. Other than my writing, my full plate involved the birth of a new grandson, settling into the new normal of Nana duty each week, opening the lakehouse ministry my husband and I manage for Christian leaders, transforming a vacant marketplace facility into a one-day history museum with over 40 exhibits and historical re-enactors for our hometown’s Founder’s Day event, and the preparation of my father’s house for the impending arrival of my sister and her husband moving back to our hometown. All this, and a sprained foot, too!

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Fur Baby

Oh—and did I mention keeping up with my husband’s routine and regular home-front duties? And the cats, of course.

Yeah. I had to cut something from the to-do list or nothing would ever be to-done.

To that end, I needed to take a break from blogging until I could dedicate serious hours to my writing, once again. In so doing, I have learned a few things to encourage the writer who just can’t find the thyme to write—let alone the words and inspiration. Here’s my sage advice in case you find yourself in your own whirlwind of overwhelm with deadlines looming:

Turn Deadlines into Lifelines.
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Stop

When we struggle with too many things requiring our attention, all at the same time, we lose the ability to focus with excellence on any one thing. We may try to make our deadline, only to turn in a poorly crafted piece that is not a true representation of our ability. What we produce will have little to no benefit on our readers. We flail about like a swimmer drowning in the ocean. STOP. Stop floundering with wasted energy and little focus. Float instead. Accept that priorities may need to be readjusted for a season. Reorder responsibilities so they are manageable when new or unexpected things step into the picture. This may mean asking for an extension on a post’s due date, or even a lengthier delay in order to turn a deadline into a lifeline, allowing room to breathe, think, and function.

Retreat to Advance.
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Retreat

My husband and I manage a lakehouse retreat for Christian leaders in the church, home, and arts—including writers–in need of a respite to renew and be refreshed for ministry. As I was readying the lakehouse in anticipation of its formal dedication, I became aware that I was simply going through the motions of organizing an event. I had not fully connected to the ministry concept, even though I have spent years teaching and studying on developing a sanctuary lifestyle of retreat and renewal. On the day of the dedication, I sat by the water, waiting for the guests to arrive, and realized for the first time in months that I was in need of a respite! Just those couple of hours in a quiet, sanctuary setting prior to everyone’s arrival, realigned my inner compass with the knowledge that my greatest need to restore my writing routine was not time—but REST. I have to book myself to use the lakehouse retreat before I can adequately expect to advance in my writing goals and continued ministry.

Take Time to Smell the Flowers.

In my book, Fragrant Fields: Poetic Reflections for Journaling, I share the story of driving about on a busy day of errands when I passed a huge field of flowers I’d never seen before. The sight arrested my soul—I just had to pull over and stare into it for a while. The powerful fragrance settled my stressed mind and body. My mouth opened in spontaneous prayer, thanking the Lord for such a generous gift—to RENEW! I don’t remember how long I lingered there, but I do remember the moments spent in the field being permanently etched upon my spirit. Returning home, I was inspired to write—words pouring forth from the impact of a close encounter with my Lord built into the curative glories of Creation.

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Stop. Rest. Renew
Stop. Rest. Renew.

It’s a very similar recipe for the writer short on time to write. But also, extremely difficult to purpose into our crowded lives. Most of us are active achievers, skimping on personal time. Yet, we can achieve more when we recognize when our calendar fills to overflowing, and are brave enough to turn off the spicket. Stop. Make the effort to do nothing. Rest. Breathe in the goodness of God in our stillness—He is ever present with a bouquet of good things and beauty to give us. Renew.

So, I’m back. And better for it. I look forward to diligently applying my own sage advice to my literary life. And in so doing—make the thyme to write.

clove, lemon oil, cinnamon, garden, harvestwriters, spice, fall recipes, editors, healing, manuscript
The Write Spice: Writing Tips for Flavorful Words
By Kathryn Ross

Writer-speaker, Kathryn Ross, ignites a love of literature and learning through Pageant Wagon Productions and Publishing. She writes and publishes homeschool enrichment and Christian living books for home, church, and school. Her passion is to equip women and families in developing a Family Literacy Lifestyle, producing readers and thinkers who can engage the world from a biblical worldview. She blogs and podcasts at TheWritersReverie.com and PageantWagonPublishing.com. Connect with Miss Kathy on Facebook.

(c) 2018 Kathryn Ross

Inspiration Happens When There’s No Time to Write

Those periods in your life when there is no “thyme” to write, may just be one of those times when inspiration happens for your next season of writing. Your next season may include getting over a writer’s block, burnout, a new blog series, an article for your next blog, the next book, the next series, the next book in a series, or a short story to name just a few. We are all in a different place in our journeys.

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Inspiration for Your Season of Writing
No “Thyme” to Write

My last article let you know that for the month of May, there was just no time to write, and I wasn’t the only one. Kathryn Ross, who is a monthly contributor to Thyme for Writers with her series, The Write Spice became a new grandmother and had no “thyme” for the month of May either, but she will be back in June.

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Graduation
Graduation

For me, the month of May included three graduations and a pinning ceremony. Wow, talk about inspiration… .

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Congratulations JC!

The first two graduations were local and only one day apart:

  • My Son graduated with a Masters of Science degree in Radiological Health Sciences, and
  • his very special lady graduated with her bachelors in Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences.
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Hooding of Victoria by Her Grandfather
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Pinning Ceremony

One week later we all traveled to our nation’s capitol, Washington, D.C. for my daughter’s graduation from Georgetown School of Medicine. My father who graduated from Georgetown School of Medicine 59 years earlier hooded her. It was a beautiful ceremony, a very special time in our lives. We also attended her pinning ceremony where she was promoted to captain and pinned by her dad (my husband). The next leg of her journey is her Neurosurgery Residency — she was one of two army selected (one of 3 military).

Talk about inspiration… . One thing I can guarantee is that these beautiful events in my life which gave me no “thyme” to write, did provide inspiration for my next season of writing — another book (yes, that story is brewing), articles, and more… .

writing, inspiration, time, events, characters, Thyme for Writers, books, articles, short stories, graduation, Washington, D.C., Georgetown School of Medicine, army, residency, neurosurgery, Georgetown School of Medicine
Victoria with Her Grandparents

What is your inspiration?

(C) 2018 Karen Van Den Heuvel Fischer

When Life Happens and There’s No Time to Write

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Save Thyme with Writers’ Conferences
Karen with Susan Elizabeth Phillips and Jayne Ann Krentz

Maybe you’ve attended conferences, read books, listened to the best and you’ve got an organized system to manage your time. Perhaps time management is still an issue for you. Regardless, there are times when life happens and there’s no “thyme” to write.

Thyme for Writers

The idea for Thyme for Writers happened a year ago. I wanted a place where writers and book lovers could go for a bit of inspiration, direction, encouragement, fun, and excitement, but I didn’t have a name for it. I brought my idea to my incredible writers group, and within minutes, Candee Fick came up with the name, Thyme for Writers, tying into my theme, adding spice to your life.

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Loveland Public Library
Author Showcase
Candee Fick
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Author Candee Fick

As a techno-idiot, the idea of me ever being able to manage and create a website was a pipe dream … until Candee. She is an incredible resource, writer, and friend. If you’re at that place where you need either writing, computer, or web help, check out her invaluable resource, The Author Toolbox. I have steadily improved and decreased the time I spend uploading and formatting all my posts, whether written by me or my amazing guests, but it still takes time.

Kathryn Ross
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The Write Spice: Writing Tips for Flavorful Words
By Kathryn Ross

Kathryn Ross has added invaluable insight to writers by tying in the benefits of certain spices and oils to a writer’s life and the writing process. She is a monthly guest on Thyme for Writers with her series, The Write Spice. Kathryn is a new grandma, and for the month of May, she has no “thyme” to write. Congratulations Miss Kathy! We’ll miss you this month, but catch up with you next!

Thyme for Writers has grown with a readership I never could have imagined and I am looking forward to its continued growth! With the exception of last Thursday, I have posted every Thursday since its start August 31, 2017. Since I don’t want to disappoint my readers, I wanted to give you a heads up that I may only have 2 posts for the month of May. Alas, I have 3 graduations:

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White Coat Ceremony
  • My daughter is graduating medical school and will start her residency in neurosurgery;
  • My son is graduating graduate school in radiation physics; and
  • My son’s very special significant other is graduating with a bachelor’s in Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences.
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J.C. & Jane

Yes, I’m a very proud Mama, and for the month of May, chances are … I’ll have less “thyme” to write. Since time management is critical in every aspect of life, especially for writers, there will be future posts on the topic. Stay tuned… .

(C) 2018 Karen Van Den Heuvel Fischer

Are You a Kindred Spirit? with Donna Wichelman

Welcome back Donna Wichelman to Thyme for Writers with the release of  Undaunted Valor, the second in her Waldensian Series. If you haven’t read the first, Light Out of Darkness, you won’t want to miss it!

Are You a Kindred Spirit?

A while back after I released my first book, Light Out of Darkness, I shared a meme on Facebook that resonated with my heart and soul as a writer. This week when I announced the release of the sequel, Undaunted Valor, on social media, a dear friend reposted the meme to me saying, “Resharing these truthful words.” The post brought tears to my eyes once again—partly because she remembered and partly because of the words themselves.

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BOOKS ARE MORE THAN A STORY

I think many writers feel a sympathetic response to the sentiment expressed on the meme, because our writing hits us so deeply and so personally. We profoundly understand what it means to toil over our work—the frustration when the words won’t come as well as the moments of sheer joy when the words feel so truly inspired that they seem to write themselves.

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A Solitary Journey

Also because inherent in the writer’s life is a solitary journey, I think we secretly cling to the idea of discovering a kindred spirit. We delight at the notion that when someone has read our work, we’ve brought them along on the road with us, and we are no longer alone for our efforts.

Sharing our hearts and souls through our writing can be a scary proposition. This meeting of the minds and hearts is an intimate experience that can happen in no other way. I think that’s why at times we second guess ourselves and ask, “What if nobody understands? What if I’m still alone after I’ve put my heart out there on my sleeve?”

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A Lonely Road

I believe what compels us much of the time on this lonely road is an eternal hope that we will have put together two sentences that capture the essence of all that matters and another soul will read and say, “Ah ha! I understand!” We will have found someone with whom we can share our experience and who may even laugh and cry with us over the same spilt milk, and we will have made a friend.

Perhaps all this sharing of the heart and soul seems too esoteric. But if you’re like my dear friend who re-shared the meme with me and the words on the page resonate with you, it would be my sincerest pleasure to know that I’ve found another kindred spirit on the writing journey.

Undaunted Valor Blurb:
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Undaunted Valor
Book 2 in the Waldensian Series

For nature lovers, ski aficionados, travel enthusiasts and history scholars, the French Alps offer some of the most spectacular scenery and outdoor recreation in all Europe with its majestic mountain peaks, cascading waterfalls, unspoiled forests and quaint mountain villages. People come to get away from the daily grind and rejuvenate their spirits.

But when Alessandro Marianni’s grandmother Luciana is kidnapped during a church conference in Chamonix, the same landscape becomes an ominous height to scale, and Jamie Holbrooke and her fiancé Alessandro have difficulty distinguishing between friend and foe on the race to find her. They will have to weather a rainstorm on a mountain trail, negotiate a dangerous waterfall, outmaneuver a car chase, and defy an assassin’s gun in their search.

Will they find their beloved Luciana before it’s too late? Who will die on the way to the finish line? Who can they trust? And where will Jamie find the courage to confront her adversaries? In this sequel to Light Out of Darkness, the answers will lay in unanticipated places and with unexpected allies and require Jamie to discover what it means to trust God with Undaunted Valor.

Donna Wichelman’s Bio:
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Donna Wichelman
Light Out of Darkness

Donna Wichelman was a communications professional before writing full-time. She has authored short stories, essays and articles in various inspirational publications and lives her dream writing novels and screenplays. She and her husband work with teens at their local church in Fort Collins, Colorado. They travel, bike and kayak whenever their schedules allows.

 

(C) 2018 Donna Wichelman

Buy Link: Amazon.com

Social Media:
http://www.donnawichelman.com
http://donnawichelman.blogspot.com
https://www.facebook.com/DonnaWichelmanAuthor
https://twitter.com/DonnaWichelman
https://www.pinterest.com/writeforlifewic/pins
https://www.linkedin.com/in/donna-wichelman-46149941

(C) 2018, Donna Wichelman

Balancing Written Words to Taste for Flavorful Influence By Kathryn Ross

Welcome back Kathryn Ross! Balancing Written Words to Taste for Flavorful Influence is the next in her series —  The Write Spice:  Writing Tips for Flavorful Words. From sweet to sour, salty to savory, and a tad of bitterness in between, well-seasoned stories touch readers’ taste buds with memorable flavors and healthful influence.

When you write, do you think how your words will taste in the mind and heart of a reader? Will it be winsome and compelling, inviting eager eyes to read further on, hungry for more? Or, will it be repellant and unconvincing, disgusting and dulling to your reader’s sensibilities?

Benefits

Like a sumptuous meal of many courses and flavors, your writing possesses the most healthful benefits with a balance of tastes. The old adage, “variety is the spice of life,” applies to written works, too.

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Heart Health & Magnesium

Human taste-buds are highly charged nerve endings on the tip of the tongue, uniquely designed to identify five basic tastes categorized as either aversive or appetitive. For instance, sweet tastes clue our bodies into energy-rich foods as sure as bitterness warns the body of possible poison.

Unless you’re a coffee or cocoa lover, bitter flavors that often elicit a sweet response.

Five Taste Senses

There are five taste senses that bode benefit or harm regarding foods, much like the words we choose in our storytelling. Whether we’re crafting a fictional tale or non-fiction essay on crucial topics, the words we use must be garnished with “the write spice.” Sprinkle your words generously with these four tastes:

Sweetness is the taste commonly associated with sugar. It is a pleasant taste that can energize and delight in measured doses, but also cause illness in excess. How you add sugar to your story, in wise amounts, evenly distributed—with an extra dollop on top at the end—will determine the satisfaction of the story, leaving its reader lifted and smiling.

Lemons

Sourness in taste is a clue to the acidity of a thing. Perhaps this is best used in smaller doses. Though youngsters gravitate to the shocking sour flavor of certain popular candies, sour, well diluted, is best. Consider the sharp pucker of a pungent lemon slice until squeezed into a tall glass of water where a spritz of sour gives just the right bit of refreshment. So, too, a pungent word or scene can arrest a reader’s attention with a refreshing perspective if mixed well.

Saltiness in foods is what makes the bland turn to bliss on the tongue. Consider how dull any dish is without a dash of salt. Salt levels in processed foods makes them tasty. Salt and sweet together are especially addictive. But, remember—a little dash’il-do-ya. High salt/sodium content in foods makes the heart race and is not healthy. Again, a pinch of salt and a cup of sugar blend brilliantly in baked goods and storytelling.

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Balancing Written Words to Taste for Flavorful Influence by Kathryn Ross

Savory flavor is where you’ll find more substance, such as in broths and cooked meats. Our writing should be savory with substance. Say something! Savory tastes are the low notes that add depth and gravy—I mean, gravity—to your work. If we want to provide healthy influence with our words, make the body of your work something a reader wants to savor in their heart and mind—the meat and potatoes of the meal.

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Dark Chocolate – Good for Your Heart and Mind

Bitterness in foods may be immediately repulsive and unpleasant, but a bittering agent may be just the nutritional ingredient to make your dish effective. So, too, in your writing, a blob of bitterness stirred into the mix—like unsweetened cocoa powder added to a cake batter—might just surprise you when you taste the finished product. Sometimes a bitter twist in your writing is the unexpected plot element that ultimately sweetens by the end of the story. The surprising flavor keeps your reader engaged until, mixed together with the sweet, sour, salty, and savory, you have a delicious dish that will prompt your reader to ask for second helpings!

clove, lemon oil, cinnamon, garden, harvestwriters, spice, fall recipes, editors, healing, manuscript
The Write Spice: Writing Tips for Flavorful Words
By Kathryn Ross

Writer-speaker, Kathryn Ross, ignites a love of literature and learning through Pageant Wagon Productions and Publishing. She writes and publishes homeschool enrichment and Christian living books for home, church, and school. Her passion is to equip women and families in developing a Family Literacy Lifestyle, producing readers and thinkers who can engage the world from a biblical worldview.

She blogs and podcasts at TheWritersReverie.com and PageantWagonPublishing.com. Connect with Miss Kathy on Facebook.

(C) 2018 Kathryn Ross

Retire? What Are You Talking About? with L.A. Sartor

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L.A. Sartor

Last week I posted L.A.’s article, My Journey As A Lesson/Inspiration/Gift. What I didn’t mention, was that last week’s article was written as the bio for this article, Retire? What are you talking about? When I read it, I felt that her journey needed to stand alone, to provide a lesson, inspiration, and gift to us all. If you missed that article, it’s worth checking out.

 

Retire? What Are You Talking About?

A few weeks ago, I was talking to a neighbor and telling him about my latest book when he interrupted me.

“You retired from one job, when are you going to retire from this one?”

I was absolutely flabbergasted and speechless – which is a rare occasion for me. Thinking for a minute as I was trying to decide if he was telling me something like I should consider retiring because I wasn’t getting rich from this, or gulp, that I was getting older.

Finally, I asked him what he meant.

“Why are you working so hard at this point in your life?”

“Because I love it and frankly hope to write until I can’t think of another story,” I replied without hesitation.

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Retired

We chit-chatted a few more minutes and he went back to his yard, probably not giving another moment’s thought to the conversation. While I, on the other hand, thought about it for days. Then I recalled a conversation we’d had a few years ago when he mentioned that once he’d retired, he wasn’t using his brain much and his body seemed to be falling apart.

It dawned on me that I was doing what I loved, and he was bored out of his mind. Was he jealous? Maybe. Not of my income certainly, as he was wealthy already, but that I was engaged, constantly learning new things since I indie publish, and wear all the hats associated with creating and publishing a book.

And most of all I have something to look forward to every morning.
So there is a lesson in this conversation that stays with me. Find something to do that you love. Never let anyone tell you that you can’t do it and when you’re done with that love, find another.

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Prince of Granola by L.A. Sartor

Prince Of Granola is my 7th book, and I have so many ideas and series that I want to write, I can’t imagine retiring.

I have a favorite saying, it’s not mine, but it summarizes my thinking perfectly.

To Be Happy You Need Three Things
Someone To Love
Something To Do
And Something To Look Forward To

And I truly believe in what it says.

L.A. Sartor is a bestselling, award-winning author. She began telling stories around the age of 4 when her mother, at L.A.’s insistence, wrote them down and L.A. illustrated them. As an adult, she writes suspense and action-adventure novels with a dash of romance, and screenplays—she’s had a contracted adaptation! She lives in Colorado with her husband whom she met on a blind date. L.A. loves to travel and thinks life is an adventure and we should embrace the journey. She has a blog and a mailing list.

(C) 2018 L.A. Sartor

Buy Links:

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Nook
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Social Links:
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Facebook Author Page
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Our Five Year Mission — To Seek Out New Life & New Perspectives with Brad Leach

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Brad Leach

Welcome Brad Leach to Thyme for Writers as he shares Our Five Year Mission —  To Seek Out New Life and New Perspectives…

Romance writers want to entertain readers – and to help them. This is especially true with writers of faith. If something from their story encourages a reader, it gratifies the author. With the fantasy genre, I hope to do the same.

 

I remember how a Star Trek episode (the original series) helped me see racial issues in a new way. I attended junior high in the early 70’s, and race relations had been turbulent. Think 1960’s. StarTrek had the Enterprise come across a planet where the entire population had died, save two humanoids. Beaming up these two individuals for a rescue, Captain Kirk and his crew were surprised to discover a violent and mutual hatred existed between the two men. Each survivor demanded that Kirk intercede with his power and authority to render “justice” against the other.

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Our Five Year Mission —  To Seek Out New Life and New Perspectives… with Brad Leach

It was obvious that these aliens had a peculiar pigmentation pattern that divided their bodies vertically. One half of their body was black, and one half was stark white. Doctor McCoy noted that they were clearly derived from the same species. The only difference, but a major one to the aliens, was which half of their body was white or black. One alien’s right face and hand was white, while the other alien’s right hand and face was black. This minor difference over which side was black versus white festered for centuries, culminating in planet-wide violence, that killed all but these two survivors.

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StarTrek Crew

Now the aliens blamed each other. The Enterprise members had to break up several assaults. The crew couldn’t understand such bigotry, while the aliens couldn’t understand how these humans accepted the differences between Asians, Blacks, Whites, and Vulcans. Someone had to be superior, someone subjugated. The episode ends with the aliens transporting back to their dead world, driven by their hate to try and kill each other.

 

I then imagined how earth’s racial strife might look to some alien. They wouldn’t have had the biases, the history, or the past wounds and insults that our various cultures had suffered. They would only see deep divisions over minor differences. Then I imagined how God must view such differences. He made all these places and cultures. Did He make skin of one color so it could hate another color? Star Trek didn’t solve bigotry, but it let me bypass the culture to see the issue in a different way.

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The Wizard of Oz

And I found that equally amazing. Fiction’s power to take an issue, give it a new setting and different particulars, to produce a fresh perspective, intrigued me. Take the Wizard of Oz. Running from something – Dorothy’s black and white home, means running towards something else. In this case, technicolor trouble via a witch. Star Wars? Giving in to the dark side of our nature leads to our corruption.

So how can Christian writers put forth Biblical ideals in new ways? Can a romance novel personalize the pain adultery causes? Could ten mystery books illustrate a violation of each of the ten commandments? How about a science fiction trilogy chronicling an enslaved human race, rebelling against aliens, and after several impossible showdowns, leaving on a 40-year voyage for a new planet?

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To Boldly Go…

In what ways can your story offer helpful lessons in a new light? As authors reflecting Christ’s message, let’s strive “to boldly go where no man has gone before” so that people may see what they’ve never seen before.

(C) 2018 Brad Leach

Thyme with Other Writers by Amanda Cabot

Texas Dreams trilogy, the Westward Winds series, the Texas Crossroads trilogy, A Stolen Heart, Christmas Roses
Amanda Cabot,
bestselling author of more than thirty novels

We are happy to have Amanda Cabot as our guest today on Thyme for Writers.  Amanda is the bestselling author of more than thirty novels including the Texas Dreams trilogy, the Westward Winds series, the Texas Crossroads trilogy, A Stolen Heart, and Christmas Roses. A former director of Information Technology, she has written everything from technical books and articles for IT professionals to mysteries for teenagers and romances for all ages. Amanda is delighted to now be a fulltime writer of Christian romances, living happily ever after with her husband in Wyoming.

Thyme with Other Writers

I’ve been a fan of this column ever since Karen began it and continue to be impressed by the variety of advice other writers have provided in their posts. They’ve definitely added spice and seasoning to my writing journey.

I found myself nodding in agreement as I read Ann Gabhart’s “Thyme to Think and Dream” post last fall. Ann challenged us to spend time alone, just thinking, and to let ourselves be bored, since boredom can lead to daydreaming, and daydreaming can trigger the sparks we need for a new story. While I agree with Ann, today I want to talk about the other side of the coin, namely our need for time with other writers.

Texas Dreams trilogy, the Westward Winds series, the Texas Crossroads trilogy, A Stolen Heart, Christmas Roses, writing tips, writers’ group
Thyme for Writers

Writing is, almost by definition, a solitary pursuit, and many writers either are or become introverts, simply because they spend so much time with only their characters for company. Don’t misunderstand me. Characters can be wonderfully entertaining, but they have their limits. They are, after all, imaginary.

As writers, we’re communicators. I suspect that need is part of our DNA, which is why we spend so much time on email loops, reading various agents’ blog posts, and checking in with other writers. All of that is good, and it serves a valuable purpose. But it’s not a substitute for time with real, live writers. We need to emerge from our writing caves and spend time, not only with friends and family, but also with other writers. That’s why I recommend that all writers join a writers’ group.

Whether you call it networking or simple camaraderie, the sharing of ideas that occurs in a writers’ group is truly priceless. Only other authors understand the problems you’re encountering. Only other authors truly understand the joy of a first sale or the euphoria of receiving a letter from a reader telling you she stayed up all night to finish your book. Only other authors can help you find a way to salvage a manuscript when you’ve received what feels like the hundredth rejection on a story you thought would sell the first time out.

But, you might be saying, I can get all that online. Not so. Virtual hugs and smiles aren’t the same as real flesh and blood ones, and even Facetime conversations aren’t the same as being together. In order to grow, in order to thrive, we need to be in the company of other writers.

It may take a while to find one with the right chemistry for you, but once you’ve found a group where you feel comfortable, you’ll wonder how you ever existed without it. Share thyme with other authors. It’ll renew your enthusiasm for writing and provide the seasoning you need to turn a good manuscript into a great one.

Amanda Cabot, Cimarron Creek, A Stolen Heart
A Borrowed Dream
by Amanda Cabot
Cimarron Creek Trilogy

Check out Amanda’s second in the Cimarron Creek trilogy, A Borrowed Dream scheduled for release March 20.

There is no such thing as an impossible dream … .

Catherine Whitfield is sure that she will never again be able to trust anyone in the medical profession after the local doctor’s treatments killed her mother. Despite her loneliness and her broken heart, she carries bravely on as Cimarron Creek’s dutiful schoolteacher, resigned to a life where dreams rarely come true.

Austin Goddard is a newcomer to Cimarron Creek. Posing as a rancher, he fled to Texas to protect his daughter from a dangerous criminal. He’s managed to keep his past as a surgeon a secret. But when Catherine Whitfield captures his heart, he wonders how long he will be able to keep up the charade.

With a deft hand, Amanda Cabot teases out the strands of love, deception, and redemption in this charming tale of dreams deferred and hopes becoming reality.

(C) 2018 Amanda Cabot

Buying Links
Amazon
Barnes & Noble
Christian Book Distributors

You may connect with Amanda at:

www.amandacabot.com
https://www.facebook.com/amanda.j.cabot
https://twitter.com/AmandaJoyCabot/
http://amandajoycabot.blogspot.com/

Humbly Grateful Or Grumbly Hateful? with Jane Choate

Welcome Jane Choate to Thyme for Writers! Jane is such an inspiration to so many of us… . Thank you for sharing!

“Are you humbly grateful or grumbly hateful?”  (from a Hallmark movie)

High Risk Investigation, Jane Choate, humbly grateful, grumpy hateful, grateful, responsibility, words, praise Him, give thanks to Him, talents, our best, kindness, sticks and stones
The Tight Sweater

When Karen asked me to write a post for her excellent “Thyme for Writers,” I didn’t know what I could write about.  I tried on several ideas, but none really fit.  They chafed at me, like a too-tight sweater.  And then I heard the above piece of dialogue from a movie, and I knew I had my subject.

We are all charged with being grateful to the Lord, but I think writers bear a special responsibility to use our words to praise Him,  to give thanks to Him.  It is the Savior who has given us our talents, and it is to Him we owe our best.  What does  it mean to give “our best?”  Words have power.  When we use ours to show our gratitude to the Lord, we give our best.  When we use ours to lift another up, we give our best.

High Risk Investigation, Jane Choate, humbly grateful, grumpy hateful, grateful, responsibility, words, praise Him, give thanks to Him, talents, our best, kindness, sticks and stones
Humbly Grateful

What about the “grumbly hateful” part of the above?  Most of us have probably known an individual who uses words as weapons, as a means to put others down, to demean and to humiliate.  Words have power for the grumbly hateful  as well as the humbly grateful.  Those of you of a certain age may remember a playground chant:  “Sticks and stone may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.”  Even as a child, I recognized the falseness of this, for I knew that words hurt.  I knew it from personal experience.  My heart knew it from my torment when I was bullied.

High Risk Investigation, Jane Choate, humbly grateful, grumpy hateful, grateful, responsibility, words, praise Him, give thanks to Him, talents, our best, kindness, sticks and stones
WORDS AS WEAPONS

I have not always been kind with my words; I have been among the grumbly hateful, and sometimes I still am.  I have used words as sticks and stones.  Today I resolve to do better, though I know I will slip at times.

Humbly grateful or grumbly hateful?  The choice is yours.

Jane McBride Choate is a proud mother and grandmother as well as being staff to a cat who believes she is of royal descent. Writing is Jane's dream job, an avocation as well as a vocation. Sharing her belief in God and in the power of love is the perfect reminder her that the best things in life are not things.
JANE CHOATE, AUTHOR OF HIGH-RISK INVESTIGATION

Jane McBride Choate is a proud mother and grandmother as well as being staff to a cat who believes she is of royal descent. Writing is Jane’s dream job, an avocation as well as a vocation. Sharing her belief in God and in the power of love is the perfect reminder for her that the best things in life are not things.

 

 

(C) 2018 Jane Choate

High Risk Investigation, Jane Choate, humbly grateful, grumpy hateful, grateful, responsibility, words, praise Him, give thanks to Him, talents, our best, kindness, sticks and stones
High-Risk Investigation by Jane Choate

What Jane didn’t mention in her biography is that she is an amazing author and prolific writer with a multitude of published books and short stories. Her latest is High-Risk Investigation, a romantic suspense I could not put down. It’s a must read!

Preparing Your Writer’s Garden to Grow: 6 Steps to a Fruitful Manuscript Harvest by Kathryn Ross

Kathryn Ross is our guest today on Thyme for Writers as she shares the next in her Write Spice Series: Preparing Your Writer’s Garden to Grow: 6 Steps to a Fruitful Manuscript Harvest.

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Preparing Your Writer’s Garden to Grow

March is still pretty chilly where I live. Unseasonable warm days are kept in check with bursts of unseasonable cold and the last few roars of winter snow storms. I am dreaming about springtime and harvest, but not keen to venture out into the yard with spade and hoe in preparation for such dreams to come true.

In fact, I tend to regularly make the mistake of waiting until a happy, sunny day in May before I venture to the local garden shop looking for some green veggies to plant or springtime bulbs the wise gardener buried last fall. With a patient smile, the shop attendant explains that the reason there are so few vegetable greens left for planting in May is that they should have been planted in March for a truly fruitful harvest. But in March, I was only dreaming about such a thing, bundled in my sweater and hoping the wind chill and gray sky wasn’t so foreboding.

sweet Italian Basil, garden, herbs, farmers market
Sweet Italian Basil — Home Grown

Better gardeners than I brave chilly March days with solid plans and preparations for lush foliage and home-grown vegetable goodness later in the year. Whether it is planting trays of select seeds to sprout indoors before replanting after the frost dies or taking hoe in hand to whack away at the winter hardened earth, clearing away the leftover debris of last season greenery, smart and serious gardeners get to work by March to reap rewards in summer and fall.

I may never attain Master Gardener when it comes to preparing my floral and vegetable fields in a timely manner. But I can apply this principle of preparation and planning to my writing life and the harvests I dream of reaping from my Writer’s Garden.

The Writer’s Garden
The Write Spice: Writing Tips for Flavorful Words, The Gatekeeper’s Key, Kathryn Ross, writing tips, manuscript, garden, harvest, ideas, grow, writing life, inspiration, harvest, fruitful writing, procrastination, work space, clutter, organize, journey, editing, focus
When we don’t take care to prepare our fields…

When we don’t take care to prepare our fields for the desired harvest of a fruitful writing life, we reap little, with no healthy green goods to take to market. Here are six things you can do for properly preparing your Writer’s Garden in hopes of harvesting a manuscript in due season:

  • Break Up Fallow Ground in your lifestyle to prepare your Writer’s Garden soil for creating life-giving words. Removing the things that block you from your writing goals. This can be bad habits like procrastination, poor organization, a cluttered workspace, or an overburdened schedule of busy activities that dry up your mental focus and vitality. List the fallow ground blockages that keep your creative soils from being prepared and whack away at them.
  • Plant Inspiration Seeds Early by jotting down your ideas as soon as they come to you in a file or binder. When you come across a resource that you think will prove fruitful in the future, plant it right away. This could be a book (hard-copy or digital) you know will be invaluable to your research, or a computer file with website URLs saved to follow-up on later. Perhaps an image is inspiring to you for your project purposes, or even a physical object. Collect them as you find them and plant them in your creative space where you can brood over them for a time.
  • Water Ideas Daily with free writing on your project topic. If you’re working on a series of online posts, a fiction book, a non-fiction manuscript, poem, play, or what-all, visit your ideas on the project regularly. Discipline yourself to water it, in effect, by expanding on your previous work. This could mean reading another resource to add notes to your research. It could mean writing another chapter, or just adding another layer to a character description or plot outline. Visiting your Writer’s Garden with the water can of daily work feeds your inspiration seeds to take root and sprout.
  • Weed Carefully, at least once a week, with focused editing. Clear out unnecessary material and keep your writing and project work focused so only the strongest shoots are getting the nutrients of your skilled efforts. Don’t allow unruly vines to grow and choke out the full potential of your project.
  • Control Pests that seek to steal, kill, and destroy your precious harvest potential. Culprits such as Fear, Complaint, Laziness, Stress, Depression, Envy, Disobedience, and more can eat away at every new stem of writing produced if allowed to remain in your Writer’s Garden. Look for them hiding under the leaves of your work and brutally remove them.
  • Harvest on Time—not too early and not too late—to get the best nutrient return on your fruitful garden of words. In due season, under the blessing of the Lord, you will reap the benefits of what you have sown and stewarded, enriching both writer and reader.

This month, when farmers are already tilling the soil and planting crops for summer and fall harvests, are you planning how you’ll prepare and tend your Writer’s Garden?

(C) 2018 Kathryn Ross

clove, lemon oil, cinnamon, garden, harvestwriters, spice, fall recipes, editors, healing, manuscript
The Write Spice: Writing Tips for Flavorful Words
By Kathryn Ross

Writer-speaker, Kathryn Ross, ignites a love of literature and learning through Pageant Wagon Productions and Publishing. She writes and publishes homeschool enrichment and Christian living books for home, church, and school. Her passion is to equip women and families in developing a Family Literacy Lifestyle, producing readers and thinkers who can engage the world from a biblical worldview. She blogs and podcasts at TheWritersReverie.com and PageantWagonPublishing.com. Connect with Miss Kathy on Facebook.

The Write Spice: Writing Tips for Flavorful Words, The Gatekeeper’s Key, Kathryn Ross, writing tips, manuscript, garden, harvest, ideas, grow, writing life, inspiration, harvest, fruitful writing, procrastination, work space, clutter, organize, journey, editing, focus
The Gatekeeper’s Key by Kathryn Ross – Nominated for Christian Indie Awards 2018

Writer, speaker, teacher, and enrichment artist, Kathryn Ross, sweeps readers into the story-worlds of Jane Austen, C. S. Lewis, Hannah Hurnard, Marguerite de Angeli, John Bunyan, and others, exploring powerful truths to fulfilling God’s plan for your life in her latest publication, The Gatekeeper’s Key—nominated for the Christian Indie Awards 2018 in the devotional genre. Discern your place and season, with encouragement to see purpose in boundaries, find comfort in trials, and gain fortitude in going forth. Short story, personal testimony, excerpts from classic literature, visual imagery, challenge questions for discussion, and journal prompts for writing assignments draw you before the Gatekeeper. It’s quite a journey—but you’re never alone. Always in His Presence, with an Invitation, a Gatekeeper, and a Key. Perhaps more than one. Purchase on Amazon or direct from Pageant Wagon Publishing.