Running With Quills, Blogsite for Jayne Ann Krentz, Elizabeth Lowell, Stella Cameron, and Suzanne Simmons
Susan Andersen
Suzanne Simmons



Stella Cameron
Stella Cameron




Kate Douglas
Kate Douglas




Lori Foster
Lori Foster



Jayne Ann Krentz, Photo credit Marc von Borstel
Jayne Ann Krentz




Elizabeth Lowell
Elizabeth Lowell




Carla Neggers
Carla Neggers











  • Saturday, June 24, 2006

    STELLA CREEPS UP ON A LOVE-HATE RELATIONSHIP


    On a summer's day when our three children were still small, my husband traveled weekly for business, and I had been doing something very dangerous--examining my life options--I told Jerry I intended to write a novel.

    Going on an old theory that once we state something we intend to do--out loud, not just in a whispery voice in our minds--we're committed, I had decided to declare myself.

    I sat beside a chest of drawers I had "antiqued" in a shade of bright yellow (garage sale chest--money wasn't plentiful) and a breeze billowed in sheer curtains at the windows. "I'm going to write a novel," I said, waiting for Jerry to look up from putting away toiletries from his latest trip. I waited and waited and finally repeated, "I'm going to write a novel." He smiled at me. My husband is a good and kind man and has always wanted the best for me. And he said, "Sure you are," with an even bigger smile.

    Even the best of people sometimes humor others...

    Everything changed for me that afternoon, everything. I was never the same person afterward and didn't want to be. Jerry's gauntlet rested on the floor at my feet, and I picked it up. In a drawer in my sewing cabinet rested a sixty page manuscript called KRINKLE, about one of Santa Clause's elves who wanted to be a doll and given to a real child. Krinkle, the youngest of the huge family of elves who were chocolate makers to Santa Clause, got his name because, as the youngest and smallest, his mean job was to make sure the colored foil papers wrapping Christmas chocolates were absolutely smooth. He wasn't well treated and even had to stay at home and keep stirring the heated chocolate while his entire family went to a fabulous holiday bash at Santa's castle.

    Shades of Cinderella?

    And so it went for sixty pages, and there it was in the sewing drawer. The story had the important stuff, a beginning a middle and an end. A rising and falling action. Heroes, heroines and villains. I knew nothing about the writing business but I set about finding out all I needed and I've been learning ever since. KRINKLE was my tricycle on the way to that racy two-wheeler I intended to ride.

    Short stories followed, and novellas, a first novel that actually interested a few industry folks. And I spent hours at the library reading about agents and publishers in general then agents and publishers individually. I studied their credentials and researched the names of their clients/stable, and made sure I knew what those people wrote about.

    Manila envelopes went out in the mail. Manila envelopes came back in the mail. And I had an important (to me) rule: Never open a rejection (yes, I had quickly figured out that the envelopes arriving back in my mailbox were not filled with contracts or checks), but never open a rejection until you finish your day's writing. This rule came from my occasional need to cry at reading those gentle words one more time, "We wish you luck placing your work elsewhere." In other words, what I'd submitted wasn't good enough--yet. But I never, ever, considered quitting.

    The heading on this blog speaks to a love-hate relationship. For me, that describes any passion strong enough to snag a lifetime of faithful allegiance. No passion comes without a price. Sometimes the return is a dose of euphoria, happiness that seems as if it can't be beaten. On other occasions suffering is the best word I can come up with for the payback I get for my dedication!

    "So," you say, "What's this all about, Stella?" The passion, of course. The payoff, off course. And how do we stay with the things (lovers, vocations, avocations, the list is long and I'll only attempt the first two) that sometimes cause unhappiness? With lovers the answer is as complicated as it is simple; we stay because we can't go, because the love is too strong to ignore, too strong to survive without. On vocations the answer is again, simple, but it is also mind-messingly complicated and worthy of a lifetime of unraveling.

    Writing is a habit to many of us, an addiction we don't try to kick because we don't want to. We are sure we would, in some way, die without the words and the stories. And unlike some tasks that may eventually be perfected--really perfected so that they can't be improved--I cannot imagine thinking I had written a perfect piece. The only reality that saves me from discovering I'm still revising the first story I wrote is that old enemy/friend: the deadline.

    I would be very remiss if I didn't write that Jerry Cameron (once I'd picked up that gauntlet) became and continues to be my most faithful cheering section--just as I hope I am his in his endeavors. And I wish each of you a champion worth loving. If there doesn't seem to be a cadidate readily available, let us know. We'll all cheer for you.

    When I decided to write to you about this relationship so many of us are drawn to, I thought I might produce a funny little snippet we could laugh about together. We can laugh about all this because what we have in common, and in common with the written word is a knowing a comradeship where we share a bagful of insider jokes, sly nudges, the frequent giggles. But it seems we do well to tip our hats to the real power of passion, the power that makes us lifelong slaves who continually return to the source for fresh reminders about the strength of our addiction. Like writing, reading is an addiction. Painting, needlepoint, sailing, hang-gliding, and on and on runs the probably endless list of passionate addictions. Love of animals, children, a need to serve others. You see, the longer we think about these things, the more we'll identify.


    NOTE: The gent at the top of this blog reminds me of the day when I, with only my sixty page story in the drawer of my sewing cabinet, said, "Publishing, here I come." The lady at the bottom (I can dream, can't I?) represents all of us when we accomplish our dreams.

    What are your passions? How do you feel when you, the surfer, catch the big wave or you, the graduate student, get your next degree? Or you, the parent, get a hug from your child?

    29 Comments:

    Blogger talpianna said...

    Virgin blog!

    I envy you the confidence that keeps you trying even in the face of rejection--like Madeleine L'Engle sending out an MS and having it rejected for TEN YEARS. And when A WRINKLE IN TIME WAS finally accepted, it was an award winner. I'm reminded also of one of the characters in Olivia Goldsmith's THE BESTSELLER; her daughter committed suicide after one too many rejections, and she made it her mission in life to get the MS published--and succeeded.

    Me, I'm more the "If at first you don't succeed, the heck with it" type, unfortunately.

    Incidentally, Jenny Crusie has posted HER first book, also a children's story, on her blog. Nobody but Jenny could have written this one!

    http://jennycrusie.blogspot.com/2006/05/first-crusie.html

    ygqtca -- You go, Quill; Talpianna can applaud.

    12:52 AM  
    Blogger DFender said...

    Stella...
    I'm sure, like everyone else, I'm thrilled that you had an afternoon that changed everything for you. What you do is part of what fuels one of my passions... without authors like you it wouldn't be nearly as enjoyable, or for that matter, possible. Obviously that passion is reading. Escapism. Fantasy. Time Out. Mini-Vacation.

    Oh... I have silly passions like shoes and pajamas...lol. Then there are my life-altering passions such as that for the husband-person and our two kids. An "I love you, Mommy" were the greatest words I'd ever heard. "Love you, Mom" still ranks right up there too. Hey, they're teenagers...lol... "Mommy" is only for emergencies and when their sick so I can live without it!

    Thanks, Stella... for enjoying your passions and sharing 'em with us.

    Deb

    ylhxvhk: Youthful limbs have x-ray value, happily kicking.

    3:20 AM  
    Blogger Lori Foster said...

    Stella... Wow. What a powerful blog. Maybe it's only powerful to those of us who write. Or maybe only to those of us who, as you said, can never think a book is perfect because we'd still be revising if it wasn't for the deadline.
    I think you made me weepy, but that could be menapause. :-)
    It was so exciting when I first decided to write. It remains exciting. Isn't that something?
    And yes, sometimes it's pure suffering. I choose to think that keeps us humble.
    For me, reading rejections made me more determined. I badly wanted to say, "Nah nah boo boo. You were wrong and I was right."
    Now that I'm published, with a gazillion rejections behind me, I'm not sure who I'd say that to because 8 of the 10 books I wrote before selling truly were awful.

    Thank you so much for sharing these thoughts. They're on the money!
    Ya know, I'm so very glad you didn't give up. :-) Your books rock.

    HUGS!

    Lori

    4:03 AM  
    Blogger Cbell said...

    I love to write. I love it. I had not come to the point where I called myself a writer until last week.

    The reason: I finally did something about it. I am now in the beginning stages of an online creative writing course offered by a local university and I could not be more excited. If nothing else, it gives me reason to write more often. Even about nothing. I love it!

    I don't have children or a husband... so I'm going to opt for this to be my biggest passion (at this time)

    Thanks for the inspiration gals!

    5:40 AM  
    Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Stella, I envy your passion! Unfortunately I seem to be a bit lost after I recently graduated... (I'm in Australia in case you are wondering...) I have no idea what to do and even books are no longer that interesting. (got replaced by the internet)

    P

    6:44 AM  
    Blogger susanna in alabama said...

    I have too many passions :) I need to be more focused. But it's difficult. I have the attention span of a five-year-old full of candy, so the best I can do is manage to keep a finite number of things in a revolving cycle - write, read, quilt, cross-stitch, write, decorate, cook, write... And that's not including my vocation, which involves both writing and teaching.

    The things that remain constants are my writing and my needlework - I have been a writer in some paid fashion for more than 20 years, from journalist to grant writer, and putting words to paper in any context is a joy to me. I haven't been brave enough to focus on my fiction, but I'm getting braver. And I can honestly say that the fiction writing I do now is night and day better than what I did 15 years ago.

    Just as I have piles of notepads full of notes on stories and characters, I have piles of fabric for my quilting. My favorite things to buy are books, notepads & pens, and fabric. I suspect at some point I'll write a mystery with quilts at the center. What a joy to combine passions!

    And thank you for sharing your life story, Stella, and thank you too, Lori (I'm reading and very much enjoying "Just a Hint - Clint" right now!). It's encouraging to hear, again, that talent will succeed if bolstered with sufficient practice and perseverance.

    8:06 AM  
    Anonymous AgTigress said...

    That insight into your own history as a novelist is illuminating, Stella. Thank you for posting it. :-)

    My own passion has always been my professional work, but, to make that more complicated, writing is an integral and very important part of that work. On the academic side, it is essential, both because it is a duty to make information and results available to other scholars, and for the usual 'publish or perish' reasons of status and position. Writing for the general, popular market, on the other hand, is a matter of choice, and I do it because I want to communicate my interests and enthusiasms more widely. Even so, I have never thought of myself as 'a writer'.

    I have tried writing fiction, to see if I could: it was a valuable practical and intellectual exercise, but I am under no illusions about my talents in that direction. I do not have the vital creative spark.

    :-)

    8:35 AM  
    Blogger Sheri Adkins said...

    Stella:

    I had the honor of meeting you at a conference a few years ago in Columbus, Ohio. Your keynote speech, as well as a personal conversation we had that day, were so inspiring to me. You told me to own my passion for writing, to tell people what I do, and not to wait until I am published (if that day ever comes) to claim that I am a writer. I wanted you to know that I took your advice to heart and it really changed my outlook on my life. In fact it changed my life.
    Until then I considered writing a hobby, something I loved to do in my spare time (as if we ever have spare time.) I battled with my passion for writing vs. the other passions in my life (kids, hubby, home, work, etc.) and writing rarely won that fight. That is why it took me years to write my first manuscript. It wasn't until I followed your advice that I truly identified myself as a writer. It had never been something I allowed myself to really be. It was a part of my soul, but I had diminished it to a level of frivolity. Until then my hubby, lovely man that he is, considered my writing in the same manner he looked upon his love of fishing--hobbies we enjoy. You helped me to see that to be a serious writer, I had to be taken seriously. I had to own my passion, talk about it, and be proud of it.
    I'm sure with all the many, many fans you meet each year you likely don;t remember that conversation. However, I thought it might be interesting for you to know how that day inspired me as a writer. This blog resonated with me as well. Thanks for sharing your passion with all of us.

    Sheri Adkins

    10:00 AM  
    Blogger Michelle Buonfiglio said...

    What an intimate story to share, Stella. Especially because I see, from these comments, so many writers struggle with the "can I call myself a writer if I'm not getting paid" dilemma.

    Your early comment about "if you state it aloud, you're committed," really resonates with me. My job developed from my wanting to write a romance. I'd started. I'd told people close to me I was doing it. And, unfortunately, the people I love believe in me. Know what I mean?

    But instead, I've got this great gig and I'm passionate about writing about romance authors and their books. And I've got a manuscript I don;t much care about right now.

    But as jazzed as I am with what I'm doing, part of me is a little embarrassed -- and a little annoyed, truth be told -- when an author asks, "So, what are you writing?"

    The non-Pollyanna part of me wants to answer, "Why don't you ask me again after I've written your review?"

    11:34 AM  
    Blogger Shiloh Walker said...

    my passions are my family and my writing.

    My writing makes me feel like I'm certifiable on most days.

    My family... well, when they aren't MAKING me certifiable, they are making me laugh and they are the reason for getting out of bed.

    Loved the blog.

    2:20 PM  
    Anonymous Julie Rowe said...

    I will never forget the moment when I read my first acceptance letter. Yes, I got an email acceptance from a magazine that I'd sent a 3 page essay to on spec.

    As soon as I read the words "we like it and we want to buy it." I screamed like someone had stabbed me in the gut. My kids came running, afraid I'd done myself an injury.

    Next to giving birth to my children it was the most thrilling moment of my life.

    That call meant several things to me:

    Validation - yes, my writing is good enough to pay for and to publish.

    Vindication - I hadn't wasted my time with my "little hobby" as some have called it.

    I stll feel the same thrill, to a sightly lesser degree (my kids no longer worry that I'm having a stroke), every time I have an article assigned or accepted, or a request for a full manuscript.

    Cheers, Julie Rowe

    6:18 PM  
    Blogger Stella said...

    How complicated we are. Even when we cut our feelings down to a few simple words, when the topic is something we love, we have some pungent things to say. I'm touched particularly by those who still feel either anger or embarrassment at reactions to their writing. Frustrating, isn't it, but work on some truly killer comebacks. Even thinking about them will make you feel invincible!

    Another thing I see is that many of you are dedicated to making sure your family situations and other relationships work. This is a grand plan and if someone things it's easy, they haven't given it a try.

    How come I haven't seen anything from a surfer, hang-slider or truffle sniffing dog handler yet?

    Cheers, Stella

    6:26 PM  
    Anonymous Ranurgis said...

    Well, Stella, those of us hanging around here come for the people who are blogging here--and those are you writers.

    Now I'm not what I'd call a writer myself, certainly not of fiction which I can consume and enjoy best. As I've mentioned before, I can write an essay on facts fairly well, but I discovered recently that even presenting facts can be done in many different ways: you can state facts drily, or you can make it enjoyable with an eye- or mind-catching opening sentence or title, just as you can fiction.

    My passions are reading and language. What I definitely do not have is any person who supports me unwaveringly. My brother basically won't come into my apartment because it "smells of musty books". And my love for correct English, apart from the new words that are coined, is denigrated by most people with a "Who cares?" Why then do they wonder that I'm depressed, stressed and can't get going on anything useful.

    I have no real validation from anyone. Yet, when I see the language being used in books, blogs, newspapers, magazines, the Internet, I cringe. I allow an exception for chats, though I try to write mine as meticulously as my typing permits. Often there is no more rhyme or reason there. It might not be so bad if all the people that read this sometimes hacked-up English were native speakers who go by the sound of the language rather than having to go by the written word and its actual meaning. To native speakers "there's" and "their's" seem understandable and interchangeable, just like between you and I. However, if you are not a native speaker and have had to learn a language using rules, I know that you will get confused in trying to figure out what the writer meant especially since there is no such word as "their's"; it's "theirs".

    I've taught both English and French as second languages. I had to learn both by learning to apply rules. I still went to school during the era in which schools taught what "case" followed a preposition like "between" (objective case: me, her, him, us, them); "you" is (unfortunately) the same when used as the subject of a sentence or as an object. It can make a big difference to what an ESL learner understands and what a native speaker does.

    Well, there I go on my hobby horse. I should leave this for another occasion, provided anybody really is interested in correct English and not only in a great story. You see, I stumble over every mistake I come across. Does that matter to me? It sure does. It pulls me out of the story and focuses my mind on the mistake. Is that bad? I think so. Can I stop myself from doing it? No, unfortunately I can't. It's become too ingrained in me during my years as a teacher and even before. How many of you have seen a sepulchre lifted by a king, provided of course, that you know what that is?

    Do I ever make mistakes? I sure do. Everyone does. Proofreading your own work is the worst thing you can do. You see what you expect to see. Let someone else do it. If they are reasonably adept at English, they'll notice the mistakes you made. Mine lately have twice been confusing "sight" and "site". Does that really matter? Well, they do mean something different and come from different roots. And no, contrary to what many people say, English is not an easy language.

    Thanks so much, Stella, for sharing your story and making clear to me what I lack most: Somebody who may doubt I can achieve what I want to do but who supports me nonetheless because he loves me and wants only the best for me.

    Please let me know about mistakes you find here. As I said, I'm not perfect either but I have nobody to proofread for me. My sister is a big help but she lives too far away. I do sometimes send her things by e-mail, certainly anything that would ever go into print.

    10:48 PM  
    Blogger Jay said...

    This is a great blog, Stella. Thank you for sharing such a personal part of your history with us.

    It's strange, but a few years ago I went through a personal burnout and then there was no passion for anything. Before that, my passion was life - being, feeling, learning, experiencing. Not being bored was my passion. I wrote, drew, did jigsaws, played with dogs and horses, travelled, socialised, sang, danced, loved, laughed, lived.

    It's been coming back to me, slow and fragmented. It's lovely to feel that bright spark of anticipation about life again.

    So I guess I could say my current passion is learning to live again. :)

    Oh, and my dogs don't sniff truffles, but they can find a pinprick of blood from a mosquito bite. *g*

    11:30 PM  
    Blogger Stella said...

    Time to start the early morning session.

    Validation, respect, enthusiasm. These three jump out at me from the most recent posts. We need validation to reassure us that we aren't delusional. We can validate ourselves but that's harder than having someone else do so in a world where we're taught we MUST have public approval. I recall a lady who had written the story of her family crossing the country by wagon train. She put enormous research into the project and it was fun to read, fun and interesting. But it wasn't commercial so it became an effort for her personal enjoyment. If I'd written the book, I would have felt I'd done something wonderful for myself and my entire family. Not the case with this woman. I only saw her really animated when she saw her own "letter to the editor" printed in a paper. Shouldn't we be better judges of our accomplishments than that?

    Respect. Those who don't respect others are missing the biggest opportunities of their lives. Respect works in a circular fashion--need I expand on that? Ranurgis, I truly respect those who have a love affair with language. My own deep affection for it helps my attitude, I'm sure:) Your fascination with English shows in your beautiful writing.

    Enthusiasm. The comment about losing the spark hits hard because I believe we all struggle with this beast at times. I do. A desperate feeling when all I want to do is sleep. That's a funny reaction since sleep is often elusive for me.

    What a treasure we have in communication.

    I forgot to mention that I was a passionate roller skater, high jumper and tennis player--each at a different point in my life. When I skated, I did so each day. When I jumped, I was the last to stop practice and only did so when light failed. Tennis? Oh, boy. Five times a week and if I could get a game on the weekend, I did. Perhaps obsession is a word to explore!

    Stella

    3:08 AM  
    Blogger DFender said...

    Uhm. I'm an accountant but it's not a passion...lol...it's a paycheck.

    I love shoes and pajamas. Those are passions...lol. The perfect pair... of either... is out there and by golly I'll find it! Not really emotional but fun nonetheless.

    Now the husband-person... hockey, boxing, guitar and surfing... lol... all passions, pastimes, hobbies and loves of his. The perfect slapshot, the perfect right cross, the perfect song, the perfect wave... all out there somewhere, waiting to be discovered.

    Aw Stella, I love that you make me consider the things that I normally take for granted... *hug*

    Deb

    3:32 AM  
    Blogger Suzanne Simmons said...

    Great blog, Stella!

    My top three passions: my family, my writing, and having fun, more or less in that order. Needless to say, these three are sometimes at odds with each other. :-)

    The challenge is finding a workable balance between the three. The problem: the balance is fluid and never static. It's a juggling act each and every day.

    But nothing beats the hug from a child.

    6:49 AM  
    Blogger TashaDMS said...

    About ten years ago I received my first acceptance letter. I chose not to answer it. I was very young at the time and I really wanted to know if my writing was good enough and once I knew that it was I wasn't sure it was ready for the world at large. I still write when I have time that isn't slotted for my two, soon to be three, kids, husband, school, and internship. However, that isn't a lot of time. My husband has been my biggest supporter through everything. He has been asking me when I'll have time to finish my novel since we got married. He can't wait to read it. I married the sweetest and most supportive man I've ever met and every day that he helps me reach one of my goals I'm even more thankful for my good fortune. I'm sorry that I've had to put my passion of writing on hold for a little while but there are some things that must take precedence. Hopefully I'll be able to pick it up where I left off, better than ever. Good luck to all of you. Just keep in mind rejections are just opinions... you'll eventually find someone who loves what you've written.

    7:50 AM  
    Blogger Shelli Stevens said...

    Wait a minute. I was just going to write a comment and read the above one? Does that person have any idea of who you guys are? My lanta. We fall at your feet!

    Okay onto my comment.

    Hi Stella! I love hearing you talk, or blog, you have the best stories. I'm excited to hear you again at the ECWC.

    And yes, hugs from my toddler are wonderful. :)

    Got Body of Evidence the other day. Can't wait to read it!

    8:41 AM  
    Anonymous Steve C said...

    What are my passions? There are times when I'm not sure I have any. Those youthful days of acetylene intensity seem so distant now, smothered by a decade of personal turmoil. How does one care enough to be passionate when your best day is playing Bastogne to the world around you?

    You write. You start with a shred of idea or even no idea at all. Cathartic streams of consciousness which prove you're still alive. Words become sentences, sentences scenes. A reality forms. An escape. Or perhaps an ideal.

    I finished my third novel today. Five hundred and ten pages of some of the most difficult writing -- and some of the easiest and most enjoyable -- I've ever done. I don't know if it'll sell. I'll stop short of saying I don't care because I do. I care a lot. But that's secondary to the sense of personal achievement that's only now starting to surface.

    I've written my agent with the news. I've sent the obligatory "woohoo" to my writing groups. And I'm taking a promised 72 hours "off" to hit the last revision pass with fresh eyes.

    Yeahright.

    Already the seeds of the sequel are forming. And how cool is that? I get to further flesh out these people I've lived with these past two years (yeah, I write slowly, sue me) and take them to the next level. Considering who they are, that promises to be awesome.

    Passion? Yeah, I have passion. But more importantly, I have perseverence.

    I am writer! Hear me roar!

    9:39 AM  
    Blogger DebVA said...

    Greetings to the Quills group from Rome...What a great place to be for reflecting on a blog about the passions in life! Since I'm here on business, I have to admit that my work is one of my passions, especially since it affords me trips like this one...reading, writing, good wine and cooking are others. I am passionate about those I love...and sometimes that really does mean accepting the good and bad in relationships. You love them...and sometimes would happily strangle them.

    I recently read a humorous essay about the joys of women over forty. I think part of it captures my pasionate nature exactly. To quote, "A woman over forty won't cause a scene in an expensive resturaunt or at the opera...but she will kill you if she thinks she can get away with it." ;)

    Deb

    11:01 AM  
    Anonymous Ranurgis said...

    It's wonderful to read all the passion that comes out in these comments.

    Thanks, Stella, for the encouraging words. I discovered how thoughtful you are when I read that first book "Moontide" of yours. I don't know how many you wrote before that but I could feel the passions the two protagonists had. It really was different from any other book I'd ever read. I know no two writers are ever the same but sometimes you can't make such a clear distinction between writers. If I can remember what the first book was about that I read by a particular author, then I know that is a special one. And you truly are. Now I just have to find some more of your books. I have a few more buried here in the basement somewhere, but I'll also try to get some from the library. You certainly have a very distinctive voice.

    BTW, did you at least make up a book about "Krinkle" for your children? My mother wrote a book about two flowers getting married and wrote it out in calligraphy before I was even able to read. She drew accompanying black silhoutte-type scenes for it. It's certainly more than 55 years old now but it is one of my greatest treasures. At the time she wrote it, money and materials were both scarce in Germany but the work of her hands made it so much sweeter. For her 80th birthday/family reunion, I translated it into English and my brother, who does desk-top publishing designed the printing and each family that was invited received a copy of it as a memento of our mother and of the occasion held at the lodge my sister and brother-in-law owned. It was a wonderful time for all of us who attended from Australia, Germany, Montreal, and the West Coast from Seattle to Santa Monica.

    She was a writer as well--though not as much of books as of articles for our church magazine.

    4:35 PM  
    Blogger Karibear said...

    I am a writer. Poetry, an intermittent essay, a short story that was supposed to be a snapshot scene from a novel which stopped with the shortie [I didn't think I could improve on it], and several novels under construction.

    My real passion other than writing - right up there with writing, in fact - is rescuing unwanted pets. When I still lived in Alaska I was an informal rescue. I had a fair quantity of dogs mostly, never too many to take care of, tho that stretched a time or so. I knew I'd gone too far when I called about a dog in Matanuska Valley [I'd always wanted an Irish wolfhound] and after several phone calls to the man who was giving him away, he finally said he was actually trying to get hold of so-and-so, because I've heard she does very well with taking care of dogs other people can't or won't keep. I started laughing and said I never did introduce myself, did I? That's me! He ended up shipping me his dog at his expense. I often wish I'd thought to ask him how he'd heard of me...

    So - passion. My kids are one, but they've grown to the point where they just worry me. My husband is one, but he's another one that worries me, for a variety of reasons, none of which are relevant to our relationship. My passion for animals is limited now to dogs - no more cats, only one bird. And in between all the above, I write.

    4:52 PM  
    Blogger talpianna said...

    Ranurgis, I'm inviting you to bring your passion for language to

    http://forums.delphiforums.com/dictionary/start

    The Tigress and I hang out there all the time.

    jzrfj -- Jenny & Zoe run from Jayne.

    5:42 PM  
    Blogger cate said...

    My faith, health, family, home and hobbies (reading is one of them)are my passions. I work or play at all of them every day! I would be very cranky if I didn't. lol

    3:53 PM  
    Anonymous Ranurgis said...

    Actually my faith is one of my passions too. But just like everything else, it needs to be nurtured and encouraged. But without my faith, I'd have given up long ago.

    5:53 PM  
    Blogger Stella said...

    I'm glad to see the mentions of Faith. We seem a little hesitant to bring that one up most of the time:)

    Cheers, Stella

    9:43 PM  
    Anonymous Ranurgis said...

    Yes, unfortunately we are. Christians are getting a bad rap and rep these days. Yet we shouldn't be afraid to speak out. In instances that were important to me, I have. I just did so recently.

    When I come down to basics, the one thing I wouldn't want to miss is my faith in Jesus Christ and His saving power. It underlies all that I truly believe in and do. I'm certainly not perfect by any means. I have to struggle against a lot of sins in my life. I don't always do what I know He would want me to do and everything in which I do not follow Him and His word is a sin. In this world we will never be perfect but we have to strive to obey Him, to ask Him for the strength to do so. Contact with other believers has certainly been lacking in my life since I became too ill to work almost 11 years ago. But I know that He is still faithful in spite of my failings. I am still in the palm of his hand and though I feel largely unloved and unlovable, He still loves me more than I ever deserve.

    I can do without books, though I wouldn't want to, but I can not do without Christ.

    4:22 PM  
    Blogger Stella said...

    Ranurgis: Thank you for sharing. I don't think there are many of us who aren't struggling through.

    Best, Stella

    1:07 AM  

    Post a Comment

    << Home

    Powered by Blogger