Shutup and WRITE!

Strong, focused women help guide the way.

All of us — especially writers — need friends who can cut through our crap and help us stick to our path. Cherish yours — or go find one. Until then, you can borrow Sandi.

My friend Sandi is whip-smart, tough, lovely and wise. One of her super-powers is to make order out of anything. Even my messy mind.

She quickly sees a simple structure that guides what belongs and what must go, then strategically edits — usually with the very best, well-maintained tool for the job — to bring anything into proper order and alignment with purpose. 

It may be a pile of stuff, a room, or project in her family’s home. A schedule. A life. A group of people on a noble mission.

Sandi inspires other people, too, to reach for their bigger, better purpose. She’s in high demand, her days jam-packed with making things happen.

So I always feel lucky to visit Sandi and her beautiful family and home in Boston, where we met many years ago. They are gracious hosts who open their home and guest room, lovingly absorb me into their family life. They even drive me around, ask nothing in return and make it all look easy. True hospitality. I feel like a queen. 

I visited in late March, hungry for a burst of new, spring energy and for the tried-and-true inspiration of a writers’ conference at Boston University, my alma mater.

The conference was fantastic.

But the shiniest take-home gem was Sandi’s insight.

Sandi at her 50th birthday celebration.

Filling My Cup

Sandi met me at South Station. I arrived rumpled from the train ride, yet glad for the long, productive stretches of work time above the soothing rhythm and gentle rumble of steel wheels.

The next morning, we sipped our coffees and the green smoothies Sandi made from her new blender as powerful as a boat propeller. We shared the spring sunshine and news from our families and our work. Tending a rich, longtime friendship in person always fills my cup.

Sandi’s kind, capable and generous husband is doing well. Their two sons are growing fast, becoming young men and thriving. She’s crushing her calling in philanthropy — which is so gratifying. I remember when she envisioned her purpose and aligned her life so she could go to graduate school.

We talked about my family and my personal writing work, my commitment to tell the story about how my dad’s broken families had gathered together around him for a surprisingly wonderful dinner, a story of making peace in my family-of-origin that brought me great peace and healing. Read that story and related ones.

I’m determined. I’d achieved a few small victories. But things weren’t quite working out along the course I’d plotted. Muddled and anxious, I mulled over what to do next.  

Pitch Perfect & Perfect Timing

Sandi listened.

Obsession? Check. Life experience? Yep, got that too. Many, many drafts and rough pieces on the hard drive. 

But where’s it all going? What’s the plan?

Not your job to worry about that, she said. Just keep writing the story.

“Write your story,” she said. “Nobody has that story but you.”

“So … I just need to —”

“SHUTUP AND WRITE!” 

I busted with laughter. 

“Thank you,” I said. “Now I just need to your picture and that quote on top of my desk!”

Even better. Sandi whipped out her phone and recorded her own voice and cartoon head — an animated “memoji” — speaking those three words three times, then shining her beautiful, computer-generated smile. One quick swipe and it was on my phone, too.

Anytime I’m stuck, I’ve got this little video of her lovely, floating head with her black-framed glasses looking stylish and super-smart in her stunning, shimmering gray bob, and pearly smile.

“Shutup and WRITE!”

Beautiful. Brilliant. Simple.


Life is Hard — We Need Our Tribe

Sweet darlings: Cherish any friend who can cut through your crap and tell you what you most need to hear. If you don’t have a friend like that, turn off this screen and go find one. Go do something you love to do and smile at someone who seems nice. Strike up a conversation. See where it goes.

Then find another until you have a bunch. People are busy and you need backups. Make them your tribe. I’m so very grateful for my large tribe, my family-of-choice built over decades. You know who you are 😉

Life is hard. Discovering and actually fulfilling our life’s purpose? Also hard, hard work. 

This is especially true if you are a writer, artist, creative, free agent or entrepreneur. We make stuff out of nothing. Start over from scratch all the time. Fail a lot. We must fail fast and keep pivoting toward success.

It gets lonely. We need our friends. Our tribe. They are essential support, conduits for inspiration, delivering whatever pep talk we need at that moment: Keep going. Keep showing up. Keep making. Trust. Believe. 

Necessary Isolation

I do most of my writing work alone. I must in order to get my highest-priority writing done.

But then I get a little too isolated in my bubble. A little weird. Suddenly, I’m on the yoga mat in my studio spooning with the big dog. (Not that there’s anything wrong with that!) Or, I’m wandering around outside mid-day in the clothes I woke up in, still all disheveled with bed-head because I went right to the desk and got in the zone. Then … just forgot to check the mirror.

I need to come out of the cave, put on some lipstick and dance with my dearest friends. We all do.

Flashlight for the Dark Forest

Then, Sandi and I dove deeper — because while she’s right, I still need a rough idea of a road map, a sense of structure. I’d explored a few initial book ideas long enough to know they would dead-end. I’d been thinking and thinking on my train ride … thinking so very hard. Stuck on where to go next.

Sandi shared her refreshing, very cool idea for a structure. I love it. 

She handed me a flashlight for the dark forest. By the time we parted, I could see the bright hash marks on the tree trunks, marking the trail.

I soaked in her invaluable strategic vision. My pro retreat became a sacred and spiritual one, because this whole project is a leap of faith I must make. If I shutup long enough to listen, and keep the faith, I am granted priceless, divine guidance. It’s a deep-tissue spa treatment for my brain and psyche. 

Sandi shared her divine gift for alignment — to properly organize space and time around goals — a nudge, some encouragement. Now, it’s up to me to plot the course.

Later in the weekend: “Plan your work. Work your plan.” She said it to her younger son about a bike repair, but I grabbed that little morsel, too, and packed it away. Simple. Priceless. Strategic.

I returned home to our valley refreshed, inspired and clear as a bell, because I’d been to “the mountain” — one that just happens to be in the heart of a major city that was once both my playground and kiln.  

I’ve been writing. Aligning. Committing. Shutting up for long stretches so I can say something. Plotting and planning my work. Working my plan, baby. 

Thank you to my talented, generous friend for her divine guidance. Now — shutting up. So many miles to go.

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Being Brave ~ The Big Work of 2019

The first workday of 2019 tested my New Year commitment to be brave.

I pictured 65 fifth-graders staring blankly back at me for what was certain to be an agonizing 45 minutes. I caught myself clenching my shoulders and stomach, breathing shallow and typing with sweaty palms.

What would I say to them? How would I connect with them and hold their attention? 

Husband in Hot Water

Then I got really grumpy with my husband — despite that he’s an almost absolutely perfect man, and definitely perfect for me. (Read Meeting my Superhero.)

Weeks before, he’d asked me to talk to students at his school about writing.

No problem, I said.

Over the holidays, he was sketchy whenever I asked about details — until the morning before the talk.

Talk about writing with 65 fifth-graders for 45 minutes, then questions.”

“Excuse me? 65?! 45 minutes?!”

Yeah.

Grumbling through the First Work Day

I stressed through the afternoon. By the evening, now really tired, I had more preparation to do.

I was ticked — and I told him so.

He headed to bed. I grunted and growled. 

Good night, hon,” he gently said, and tiptoed upstairs.

Themes, not Resolutions

I’ve been dreaming of a big year ahead, and now it’s here. I don’t bother with resolutions. They are too rigid for me. Feels like a setup for failure. 

Instead, I pick themes for the year and commit to chipping away at them slow and steady over the course of the year. So if I skip a day, it’s no big deal, I just double-down the next day, or next week. 

One of my two big themes for 2019: Be Brave. 

In a few weeks, I’ll speak in front of hundreds of people. I’ll have no notes and nowhere to hide. No podium. No table. No panel. 

Just me and my story. I will feel naked. I will feel vulnerable. I may throw up beforehand. 

I’ve been preparing since mid-October — and I’ve been working on this story for eight years.

Still — This is completely outside of my comfort zone. My happy work place is at my oak desk, in the light and warmth of my home office, with the dogs curled up on the floor, snoring. Comfy in my yoga pants, surrounded by all my favorite thing-a-majigs: Family pictures — including one of my badass grandmother who served in World War II — inspirational quotes, a book of gratitude word art, colored lights in the big red jar.

But I also know growth is at the edge of my comfort zone.

Being Brave

Kids make me brave. My stepsons, the college students I work with — and those fifth-graders — who were awesome.

By the time I faced them, I was ready to roll.

Since they are learning about narrative writing, I thought they may like the story about what happened when a squirrel turned up on my kitchen cutting board. Especially since they know one of the main characters, my husband.

Maybe someday they’ll remember this when they pick up the book of our family tales that’s bouncing around in my head. (Current working title: Underpants in the Cast-Iron Skillet, a Squirrel on the Cutting Board, and other tales from the Man Cave.)

My parachute plan, should the kids blankly stare back: Lead them through jumping jacks. All those cardio kick-boxing classes I taught in a former life come in handy.

Fully Engaged

The kids were great sports about trying the writing exercise, listened politely, responded when I asked them questions, asked thoughtful questions and became more and more engaged as we went. 

We spent about 90 minutes together, talking about writing. No jumping jacks needed.

Back in the car, trapped in end-of-day gridlock in the school parking lot, I got it. My heart swelled with greater appreciation for my husband.

He believes in me. He is such a natural teacher. He knew it could be great for the kids — and me — and also knew he could pull the plug if I choked.

And, if he had told me the details a week earlier, I’d have a full week to stress and obsess about them. His way meant just one day of my grumbling and growling.

So, thanks to him, my 2019 big theme to Be Brave is off to a great start. No other choice, really.

And big thanks to the college student who urged me to pitch the talk. 

“If you don’t get scared, then you aren’t living,” she said. “Nothing worth doing is easy.” Adding that next to the quotes on my wall.

Happy New Year, everyone. Let’s have a great, big, juicy, grateful 2019.

Two girls go on a snowy hill during a mountaineering adventure in the mountains.