Unsearchable RichesChristian. Veg*n. Writer. Wife.

1 Frippery

A usual scene.

5:21AM The alarm goes off. Jess smacks it, waits for it to go off again.

5:30AM The alarm goes off. Jess smacks it, wakes up Toady.

Toady: Did you hit snooze?

Jess *perky smile*: That was the snooze.

Toady: *groan*

5:35AM Water running in the shower, Jess is asleep.
——-

That all happened today except the last part. Normally Toady has to get ready for work and I sleep until he needs me to make breakfast (and lunch), but it’s Saturday! No work! No packing of lunch!

…. Same alarm routine, though.

He’s writing this super technical master’s thesis so he needs to be up early. It has DIAMONDS. And LASER BEAMS. I, uh, am just writing. It has A DEAD GIRL. And MAYBE TIME TRAVEL.

I think Toady wins this round.

5 Uncertainty

Something’s been bothering me. There’s all this talk lately that’s supposed to be inspiring. It generally is coming from people who have made it and can look back in hindsight and say don’t give up. It can get better.

It’s been a common thing in the writing world, success stories, right? I went to a Bible study last week that talked about God is in control no matter what, and I loved it, until the discussion where it was everyone sharing that same success story pitch, how life was so hard but in hindsight I see how God took care of it.

I don’t, as a rule, have a problem with success stories. I mean, even something less achievement-based, like telling someone Mr. Right is out there bothers me.

What if he’s not? What if you are never going to look back and see how God fixed this, you aren’t going to feel he is in control? What if you keep working and you never, ever get published?

That’s why I hate success stories. They’re from people who are no longer in the situation, so they’re, well, kind of meaningless, because there is no guarantee that things will work out for me the way they did for them.

(I MUST say here, though, that God IS still in control, and this is precisely the time you need to believe it most - when you can’t see it. Sort of the ultimate definition of faith, now isn’t it?)

But the writing thing, or the marriage thing, Those are concrete so let’s go with those.

Hope is beautiful. I’m a hopeful person. Hope is what we have when we have no guarantees, no promises, not even a hint that what we’re doing is the right thing, or will ‘pay off’. (As Rachelle Gardner says, what that phrase means is a whole other post.)

So you can tell me how things worked out for you, and that can inspire and fuel my hope…. but I guess what bothers me is that often we allow that to keep us from accepting reality, that it might never happen. Because if it happened to you, it could happen to me.

But can it? Sometimes. Sometimes not.

I think I’m bothered because that’s all it does, offers a somewhat false sense of hope. Hope can’t come from the outside. We have to believe, ourselves, that we are good enough to get the agent, not oh if it worked out for you it might work out for me. Hope doesn’t work like that. It can’t, or it’s false, it’s getting your hopes up.

Because when you tack on the outcome of the story - the resolution that things work out - you negate the help you can give, because you’ve lose the fear of the uncertainty we’re still living in. I don’t identify with you anymore. Because I’m still in the darkness, and I might not get out. You can’t reassure me because you did. That’s not helpful.

Sometimes it can even be harmful, like when I see that, and recognize that it might not happen. That’s an easy way to start a depression. You mean well, to be encouraging, but face it, at the heart, these sorts of stories set up comparisons. You did it, so if I don’t, something’s wrong with me.

I’m not saying stop sharing success stories. But maybe focus on what you went through, on remembering it, than trying to provide the “this could be you” object lesson. Because it isn’t any lesson. Your “don’t give up” is my “that worked for you.”

Yet, of course, if I give up, I’ll never know, now will I?

This is why I stopped writing ’smart’ posts. I don’t know what I’m saying, just trying to explore thoughts. Have any on this idea?

I’ve been reading LotR for like a month now. WHEN WILL IT END? Ugh. I love the movies. Return of the King is probably one of my favorite movies ever. But the books, oh they drag, they draaaaag. I tried reading them right after watching the movies. I just made it to Rivendell before I forgot to pick it back up again. That was, like, three years ago, right?

This time I’ve made it all the way to Denethor’s pyle. Go me! But I’ve been suspiciously not reading for at least a week now. I finally caved and bought some fun urban fantasy, which I’ve devoured. Oh, I needed it. (Note: Stacia Kane’s Downside books are brilliant but not for the easily offended or most Christians, which is sadly often the same thing.) My creative well is sparking. I’ve got ideas that are fuzzy and just out of reach, and, well, I wants them, my precious…. Okay, maybe I’m enjoying LotR more than I let on. ;)

On the writing front, I rewrote CT in under a week, putting it into first person from third. Am going to probably have to do another pass of it, expanding characterization/arc, cleaning up some plot things and nasty exposition that resulted from the speed of that rewrite (sigh). I’m excited for it, but the character stuff is driving me crazy. It’s so my weakness. But I SO LOVE CT, and Ronnie and Adrian and Torin. I don’t love Duncan, but he fascinates me.  Also, I swear my next novel will not have any boys whose name ends in -n. (*thinks for a minute* - wait, I failed already. Jin.) I am willing to keep rewriting CT until it sparkles brighter than a vampire in sunlight.

Which I suspect means I’ve finally, truly, conquered my revisiphobia. RAH!*

But before I do that next pass, I’m waiting for some query reply stuff. And to let my brain cool from the last pass. And to, you know,  figure out an attack plan.

So I’m hoping those fuzzy ideas unfuzz. Just refilling the creative well (aka reading) and toying with thoughts. Doing beta-reading, too, which helps me see the problems in my own work sometimes. And I guess I have to finish reading LotR.

*Trademark Jackie Kessler.

0 Happy Anniversary!

Jess to Uncategorized  

Today marks five years for Toady and me. I’ll spare you the deliriously sappy post that otherwise accompanies this kind of announcement, not because I don’t love seeing them, but because I don’t have one written. Gonna just go give Toady his card instead. :)

0 I Should Update!

Jess to Uncategorized  

I’ve decided I love revision after all. I’m rewriting CT into first person because the biggest complaint I’ve gotten on it is a lack of voice/description. I am much more pleased with it now; it did feel flat before. I worked on the first 50p yesterday. I was up at 4:30 because I couldn’t sleep, finally around 6AM I sat down and opened Word. I had to shower and eat breakfast, so I quit around 8AM, and then Toady and I went to play roller hockey with some friends. We got home around one, and I went straight back to work.

Until ten pm.

I slept in until 6:30AM today. *G* But managed to go back over the back half of those 50p because I knew mushy-brain would mean I missed a lot of stuff. Sure enough, tons of sentences like “I clenched her fists,” or “Ronnie licked my finger.” Well, that’s awkward.

Now I’m getting ready for church at 9:30AM. That seems so late to start a day! Ha. I am loving this rewrite and can’t wait to query the new version to agents I haven’t tried yet. The query I have needs a tiny bit of tweaking but this rewrite isn’t changing anything in the plot, just adding in voice and depth.

I’m also going back over an older MSS of mine and getting some beta reads on it; it’s better than I had thought at the time, but does need work. I want to do that work.

Who knew? I declare this the Half a Year of Revisions, and I am in love with them, even though they are blood-sucking hard things, they are wonderful.

Or maybe it’s 7:45 in the morning on a Sunday, and I’ve finally snapped.

0 Odds and Ends

Jess to Uncategorized  

I’m learning to love revision. I realize reading over my revisiphobia posts that it sounds like I hate and am opposed to revision. Not so. I might not enjoy it, but it’s SO necessary! I’m willing to rewrite the whole book if need be, if that’s what it’ll take to make it better… but only if I have to. ;)

I say this because I didn’t write this weekend. I had those thirty pages and couldn’t go forward. There are a couple reasons for this. The first is that I’m, you know, querying, and my attention when something lacks closure is totally preoccupied with the open thing. I simply can’t focus on the new work, constantly looking over my agent list, adding notes for how to personalize their queries, looking for agents I might have missed - who knows, s/he could be the one! - and generally obsessing. I’ve never been a great multitasker for this reason. But I know my weaknesses at least.

The other reason relates to revision. I’m an intuitive writer, and in this new story, my main character, Davit, gets a ragtag group together. In my head, he gets Jin, then Rose, and then Phoebus. As I was writing, this dude Sel popped up before Rose. And I ground to a halt. I realized I’ll need Sel to get Phoebus, but he so does not belong in the novel yet. So this morning I axed the four pages since I met him, and am picking back up with Davit and Jin on their way to meet Rose. The four pages with Sel are fun. They’re good pages, I can see why I wrote them, how they work… but in my gut I know they’re wrong. Sel will be most useful later, convincing Phoebus to join the crew. So that’s where he’s going. Bye-bye, Sel. See you in another thirty pages or so. (Yes, Heather, Sel is named after your Sil. And he’s rather a minor character, but look! You have an homage!)

Why is it that over the weekend I think of all sorts of things to blog about (usually Christianity-related) but come Monday when I sit down to type them, they are gone? Annoying.

0 Onward!

Jess to Uncategorized  

We switched internet service providers so I was offline for a couple days. I managed not to go insane by starting my new novel. I have thirty fun-filled pages so far. Aiming to hit forty today.  I love drafting! I’d go faster if I could but it kills my wrists, boo.

I’m trying to find a cool working title for this one. So far it’s just LONGNIGHT. Snooze. I’m really focusing on characterization in this novel. I know it’s my weakness right now. The two main characters so far are great foils for each other, and they’ve been fun to write because of it.

We’ve been in a crazy heat wave for the past month or so, and it’s finally raining! I’ve never been so excited for rain. Hopefully that will cool things down.

My mother was hospitalized again. What is it about July? She has congestive heart failure and things just keep going down hill. She seems to be holding steady for now, but it’s a trial. She can’t walk three steps without struggling to breathe, but getting the fluid out of her lungs has helped. So if you pray, I’d appreciate you remembering her. I am unsure as to her salvation (and isn’t that true of everyone but yourself? Only God knows the heart).

0 July is Tomorrow

Jess to Uncategorized  

Which means I start the new novel. Good thing I finished all my revisions by yesterday. (Yes that means I’m submitting. Hush.)

The new novel is already in development, and has been, for a while, but for my record I’ll say I started it in July, because I haven’t been able to focus on it until now. I have the world mostly built and know a few of the characters, but I have a lot to decide. It is traditional fantasy, and I have not decided if it should be as a young adult or not. I think so. But it is much bigger than my other ideas and stories, and involves delicate relationships and hard ideas and things that could be inconvenient if I were unwilling to be brave. It is rather an adult story told through a young adult’s eyes. That is on purpose in accordance with my theme.

Last night as I lay in bed waiting Toady, the One Sentence clarified. While I know much of the shape of the plot, this helps me focus it and gives me a way in. I love this stage, the pre-writing planning and uncovering, when I surprise myself. I also love the drafting. It’s the revisions I don’t like, and I am glad to be done of them for now.

On another note, I am reading The Lord of the Rings. It is slow but nice. I had tried to read it shortly after the movies but was too impatient. I thought I had quit at Tom Bombadil but I think I must have made it to Rivendell last time. I am just through the first half of the Council of Elrond now, and Gandalf has just asked what to do with the ring.

0 Revision, The End

Jess to Writing  

I have learned a lot working on CT.

The most important of things is to trust myself and my process. I said a while ago I did a lot of work up front in hopes of minimizing revision. It worked. My revisions have been not very difficult. First I fixed the back end. Then I sent it to people. I have since fixed the front and gone over it again. (The middle was solid.)

Also, that I wasted too much time and angst on revision. I could have been done and halfway through my next book if I had knuckled down the way I do when I’m drafting. I let myself flounder with it because it was new and stressful, but if I had just done it, it wouldn’t have been as stressful! Go figure. (I feel like this paragraph applies to my entire life, actually.)

So from now on, do all the work up front, and trust revisions to fall as they may. They will not kill me. Because, you know what? The fear - revisiphobia - is rooted in perfectionism. How can I fear revision if I do the best I can? What loss is there? It will be as good as I can make it, and either that’s ‘good enough’ or it’s not.

1 Yes, That

Jess to Uncategorized  

I know I’ve beat the dead horse on the intersection of fantasy and faith, but for a wonderfully written interpretation, read R. J. Anderson’s short essay here.