Two Wobbly Steps Forward, Three Steps Back

Did you ever jump off a high-dive board as a child? One that was so high the steps never seemed to end? One that seemed miles above the pool and almost touched the sky? Do you remember the feeling of getting higher and higher and knowing that going back wasn’t an option because of the kids waiting eagerly behind you? How every step to the end of the diving board caused an unwelcome wobble which made you even more nervous? The butterflies in your stomach were trying to fly out of your throat because they were so anxious. Then a breeze comes along and tries to take you off the board sideways. Holding steady, you finally reach the end of the board and then comes the moment of truth. Will you turn those nerves into pure excitement and plunge into the deep end? Or will you let anxiety turn into fear and shamefully tip-toe backwards and down the ladder?

My first queries are giving me flashbacks of this favorite childhood pastime. I am on the ladder and all the world can see (or at least the few concerned onlookers – who in this case include not only the agents whose favor I want to secure, but others who have helped me and allowed me to share this journey). Each request I put out into the world is like another wobbly step on the diving board. And instead of calling me forward to the edge, they are causing anxieties which pull me back to the ladder.

Second guessing every step along the way sends me another step backwards. Should I have gotten more critiques? Did I choose advice wisely? Is my query concise enough? Is my pitch perfect?

And then come the rejections. Wow! That was fast! Such a blow feels like a hurricane-force wind trying to push me off sideways. Even though I tell myself it’s a badge of honor and a necessity to reach my destination – none of that matters up here on the diving board.

There is only one direction to success on the diving board.

As a child, those nerves were the impetus for taking the first step on the ladder. Somehow those nerves drove me forward. They always fueled the excitement that was a free-fall into the deep end. If those nerves had gone away, I don’t think I would have ever wanted to jump again. But they came when summoned and made the dive all the better.

I hope I can see the distant goal of being published clearly enough to sustain these nerves long enough to turn into excitement.

Thanks to Gaia Cornwall for her wonderful book Jabari Jumps. Every time I read it, it takes me back to my childhood diving board adventures. I thoroughly recommend it!

Topic This and Topic That

As I ponder topics for picture books, so many rush into my head. Just because it pops into my brain, does that mean it has potential? Does it mean anything to anybody else? As I bounce ideas off my patient husband I am reminded of the Jerry Seinfeld book- Is This Anything? I imagine songwriters go through the same thing. Where I don’t have to do that is in the classroom – lesson topics are obvious because I know what my students need. I know how to get them from a to z and what strategies work. But writing seems more than strategy – it’s heart and a good story. Judy Blume said, “The best books come from someplace deep inside. You don’t write because you want to, but because you have to.” And Madeleine L’Engle said “You have to write the book that wants to be written.” Well, I believe I will take a word from those wiser than me and try my instincts and heart. So what if it seems ridiculous? After all the best books are filled with ridiculous – like a talking donut who doesn’t want to get eaten, or talking grass blades that ponder identify, or a stubborn pigeon who refuses to be just a pigeon. It’s time to trust those crazy ideas and see where they lead. What crazy idea have you had that led you somewhere amazing (in life or in writing)?

For those crazy books referenced above, they are Arnie, the Doughnut by Laurie Keller, We are Growing by Mo Willems and Laurie Keller, and any of the Pigeon books by Mo Willems.

My Inaugural Post

I am so excited to begin my career as a writer! I invite you to follow along on my journey as I learn and write.

Thanks to our amazing digital age, I have been fortunate to find so many resources to help me begin my career. I currently have one manuscript out for critique with some amazing teacher friends and two manuscripts in draft stage. Ever since I gave myself permission to write stories, ideas have been buzzing around in my brain, flying into my journal, and coming to life. I look forward to where this will lead. And as part of manifesting my new career, I have created this site and blog. Consider following my site and join me on this journey!