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Heart Lift

If I Only Had an “Always Learning” Brain

“No thief, however skillful, can rob one of knowledge, and that is why knowledge is the best and safest treasure to acquire.”
L. Frank Baum, The Lost Princess of Oz

Janell Rardon Heart LiftGreat writing makes us think. Makes us look in the mirror of our own lives, oftentimes seeing ourselves in the reflection.

That is exactly what L. Frank Baum and his brilliant work, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, does to me. With the insights of a high-powered fashion designer, he clothes each and everyone of his character’s with layers of warm-and-fuzzy, tough-and-tender and lofty-and-loving life lessons.

If I Only Had a Brain

Meet the Scarecrow. To the naked eye, he’s just a silly, lanky pile of straw dressed in farmer’s clothes.

But with each line of Baum’s writing, we find out more and more. That seeming senseless scarecrow had one driving intention: to have a brain. Over and over again, he cries out, “If I only had a brain.”

[bctt tweet=”Great writers make us think about our own lives.”]

Writing Well Requires an “Always Learning” Brain

You must write every single day of your life…You must lurk in libraries and climb the stacks like ladders to sniff books like perfumes and wear books like hats upon your crazy heads… may you be in love every day for the next 20,000 days. And out of that love, remake a world.”
Ray Bradbury

Writing well, in my humble opinion, requires an “always learning” brain.  Almost every day I wear a beautiful necklace I found on Etsy that reads, “Ancora Imparo,” which translates, “I am always learning.” While researching for my first book, I read that Michelangelo, at the ripe age of 81, was heard saying, “I am always learning.” Stunned by this fact, I remember thinking, “How on earth did a man who painted with angelic brushes and chiseled with heaven’s hands feel that he still had more to learn?”
I couldn’t help but think, “If Michelangelo felt that way, shouldn’t I?”

If I Only Had a Brain

Three Simple Little Ways to Cultivate a Teachable, Always Learning Brain

Be willing to be a beginner every single morning.”
-Meister Eckhart

A teachable spirit is inherent in some, but to others it must be acquired.

I like to think I am teachable, but just in case I forget or get too big for my britches, I take
the ceremonious time every morning to put those words around my neck, as if my day’s productivity relied on it. I lay the palm of my hand over it, repeating a quiet prayer. When the day is done, I repeat the ritual, silently thanking God for Michelangelo’s words and for the courage and strength given to put them into practice.

As writers, we have to keep learning and growing and opening our hearts to the endless possibilities
that exist for our lives. The craft demands it from us. Sometimes it is a labor of love, sometimes it makes us crazy and sometimes we want to quit altogether. But, we can’t. Like the scarecrow, we have to pick up the hay, restuff ourselves, and keep on moving towards Oz.

[bctt tweet=”As writers, we have to keep learning and growing and opening our hearts to the endless possibilities of more.”]

Thanks to Mr. Baum and his lanky scarecrow, I’m offering three simple little ways to cultivate a teachable, always learning brain today:

  1. Wake up with a prayer on your lips, “Ancora Imparo, Lord, ancora imparo. Help me learn one new thing today that will help me become the writer you designed me to be.”
  2. Amid the controlled and oft-uncontrolled chaos of the day, breathe in something creative. Somehow. Some way. Somewhere.
  3. Don’t go it alone. Dorothy needed the scarecrow. The scarecrow needed Dorothy. We are built for community. When and if possible, try to attend a writer’s workshop, either in-person or online. Creativity flourishes in these synergistic environments.

[bctt tweet=”Three simple ways to cultivate a teachable, always learning brain.”]

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Heart Lift

One Very Important Lesson Dorothy Taught Me – Remember Your Why

Can’t you give me brains?” asked the Scarecrow.
“You don’t need them. You are learning something every day. A baby has brains, but it doesn’t know much. Experience is the only thing that brings knowledge, and the longer you are on earth the more experience you are sure to get.”
L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

Janell Rardon Heart Lift

At the Onset of Dorothy’s Journey to Oz.

When Dorothy set off on the yellow brick road, she had one intention: get to Oz in order to get back home. As we all know, the journey was anything but easy. Dorothy met huge obstacles like flying monkeys, scathing evildoers, poisonous poppies and talking trees, yet her purpose remained very clear: Dorothy wanted to get back to Kansas and nothing was going to stop her.

[bctt tweet=”Every journey will have its obstacles. Be ready!”]

At the Onset of Our Journey to Being an Author

At the onset of any journey, spirits are high, aren’t they? Even if the odds are stacked against us, we feel a certain indomitable spirit fueling us. As “almost authors,” our Oz is clear: We are going to get published.  Yet it doesn’t take long before we, too, face obstacles dressed like rejection letters, negative feedback, restless nights and lonely days.

[bctt tweet=”Writers face the obstacles of rejection letters, negative feedback and often, long days and lonely nights. Don’t quit. “]

Remembering Our Whys.

“If you only have brains on your head you would be as good a man as any of them, and a better man than some of them. Brains are the only things worth having in this world, no matter whether one is a crow or a man.”
L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

One Very Important Lesson Dorothy Taught Me

Why, then, do we so easily lose heart? The fact of the matter is clear: the obstacles in our way become fear-producing hindrances instead of courage-filled hurdles.

Hindrances stop any and all forward motion.

Hurdles might stall us, but ultimately, we will figure out how to jump over them.

Sometimes, like Dorothy, we need a little help along the way.

Dorothy meets a seemingly silly scarecrow who longs to have a brain.

Without skipping a beat, Dorothy invites the Scarecrow to join her on her journey to Oz. She realized they are better together than alone.

One Very Important Lesson Dorothy Taught Me

Thank you, Dorothy, for exemplifying the power of relationship and community.

We need each other. When one of us falls apart and loses the straw stuffing of our being, the other can pick us up and help put us back together again.

[bctt tweet=”Hurdles might stall us, but ultimately, we will figure out how to jump over them.”]

That is why we are here. To help your hindrances become hurdles. To help you train for the marathon of authoring and publishing.

To help you reach your very own Oz, where you, too, can see your dreams come true.

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Heart Lift

Follow the Yellow Brick Road

Janell Rardon Heart Lift

‘You have plenty of courage, I am sure,” answered Oz. “All you need is confidence in yourself. There is no living thing that is not afraid when it faces danger. The true courage is in facing danger when you are afraid, and that kind of courage you have in plenty.’”
L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

The writing, publishing journey is very much like following the yellow brick road.

When that famed Kansas cyclone whisked Dorothy from her dull, grey Midwestern farmhouse and into a magical, marvelous country filled with odd little Munchkins, everything in her world changed. The familiar faded into the shadows and Dorothy had to see with new eyes.

We’re Not in Kansas Anymore

At one time or another, we’ve all felt like Dorothy. When the cyclone of change whirls us into new, unfamiliar territory, we have to see with new eyes. Orient ourselves in order to gather our senses and acclimate.

[bctt tweet=”The world of publishing is a whole new world. Orient yourself in order to gather your senses and acclimate.”]

I remember my first Dorothy-like-experience [in the publishing world] at the ICRS (International Christian Retail Show, formerly knows as the CBA). It was the year 2005. I was attending the CLASS Graduate Seminar and was ripe and ready to meet with agents and editors. With fresh, hot-off-the-press one sheets in hand and a heaping dose of big dreams in my heart, I made my way to the first event.

When I walked through the doors to the massive hall where the ICRS was taking place, I hesitated. Greeted by looming life-size banners of familiar Christian authors hanging from the rafters, I immediately felt “a little feeling” I hadn’t felt in awhile.

Intimidation.

Orienting to a New Normal

Later, in the first session, I found myself with about fifty first-time-author wannabes. One by one, agents and editors spoke to us about what they were looking for in an author and his/her manuscript. Some were highly encouraging, others, well, let’s say, not so much.

“We won’t even look at you or your manuscript unless you can sell at least 30,000 copies,” one editor remarked. “You know, like Joyce Meyer.”

We all looked at each other. Does he know he is in a room full of first-time hopefuls? How on earth would we know if we can sell 30,000 books?

[bctt tweet=”Every new journey requires courage, heart and wisdom.”]

I went back to my hotel room and cried. No, sobbed. Having grown up in the competitive world of dance, baton twirling, and beauty pageants, I wasn’t quite prepared to experience the same heightened competitiveness in this arena.

This is Christian publishing, right? No competitiveness or jealousy or comparison here.

A Whole New World

“Experience is the only thing that brings knowledge, and the longer you are on earth the more experience you are sure to get.”
L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

After a quick phone call home to my husband, a little pep talk with myself, and a prayer to God, I realized I had to see with new eyes.

The publishing world is indeed a whole new world.

It’s one thing to sit behind my computer, writing what my friends and family think is the next bestseller, yet another to place it before industry professionals whose fingers rest on the pulse of marketability, cultural trends and ultimately, sales.

My familiar faded into the shadows of seeing writing as both business and ministry.

Three “Heart Lifting Tips” for Your Journey Down the Yellow Brick Road

The road to the City of Emeralds is paved with yellow brick,” said the Witch of the North, “so you cannot miss it. When you get to Oz do not be afraid of him, but tell your story and ask him to help you. Good-bye, my dear.”
-Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

I’d like to invite you to join me as I follow the yellow brick road of writing and publishing. Over the next few posts, we will be looking at heart lifting tips sure to give you courage, heart, and a whole lot of wisdom.

[bctt tweet=”Believe in the Giver of your gift. He is with you on this journey.”]

  1. Before you take your first step on the yellow brick road, remember you are not in Kansas anymore. Believe in your calling and your capacity and potential as a gifted writer. You are up to this challenging journey. Every little detail of your life has brought you right here. This truth will empower you as you move through the dark forests and deadly poppy fields.
  2. When you meet the lions and tigers and bears of rejection, oh my, keep going. Their scare tactics, discouraging, often-well-intended voices and intimidating schemes are meant to thwart your progress. Yes, you’ll feel overwhelmed and fatigued and on the verge of quitting, but you can’t.
  3. Remember you are not alone on this journey. There are others. Find support at quality writing conferences and seminars (we’ll talk more about this later), online sites like A3Authors and local/regional writing critique groups.

Follow the Yellow Brick Road

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Heart Lift

Celebrate Small Successes

Janell Rardon Heart Lift

Sometimes our light goes out, but is blown again into instant flame by an encounter with another human being.”
Albert Schweitzer

Knowing Our Why

It’s a known fact. Women my age are having plastic surgery. In 2012, 14.6 million cosmetic surgeries were performed, both minimally-invasive and surgical.  In fact, TIME Magazine insists that before it is all said and done, everyone will have something done.

While I can’t say I agree with that statement, I do agree with the “why” behind their findings. Staff writer, Alice Park writes, “Putting aside reconstructive surgery, facial plastic surgery is all about vanity.”

Ouch. 

Vain Pursuits

Vanity? That’s a little harsh, isn’t it? Or is it?

In Webster’s 1828, he defines vanity as, “Emptiness; want of substance to satisfy desire; uncertainty; inanity.”

Taking it one step further, vanity comes from the L. root, vain, [want], meaning, “Proud of petty things, or of trifling attainments; elated with a high opinion of one’s own accomplishments, or with things more showy than valuable; conceited.”

More showy than valuable. Elated with a high opinion of one’s own accomplishments.

I like to think I have “no vain pursuits” or “vanity” in my writing career, but then I remind myself that Ego doesn’t die quietly.

[bctt tweet=”Ego doesn’t die quietly, does it?”]

Have you noticed how sensitive Ego is? How easily bruised? How darn much it desires attention and affirmation and applause?

And, Almost-an-Author Ego wants every publisher to think they have the next bestseller, wants to win every contest, and so wants their novel to be the next Hollywood blockbuster.

Sell 2,000 copies? Oh no, that is just not good enough.

Isn’t a Heart Lift Way Better Than a Face Lift?

Years and years ago, the beloved Elisabeth Elliot looked me in the eyes and said, “Janell, don’t ask to be a writer. It’s a hard, isolating vocation. If God calls you to write, then He will be with you in the isolation. Seek Him.”

I did exactly what she said. I sought God. And, I believe He did call me to write.

[bctt tweet=”The writing life requires resilience.”]

I have held Elisabeth Elliot’s words close to my heart, because writing is indeed hard. It requires so much from us and often doesn’t give a lot back in return.

But when it does give back, the reward is rich, satisfying, and as Christians, eternally significant.

[bctt tweet=”Do you need a heart lift today?”]

I can’t offer you a face lift today, but I can offer you a heart lift, which I think is way better.

Each and every post written with your heart in mind.

Today’s Heart Lift: Celebrate the Small Successes

Most of us will never have a best seller. Hard truth, but no sugar coating here. That doesn’t mean we will stop dreaming or honing our craft or believing God to expand our spheres of influence. We will keep putting words on paper and praying they will impact this world for good.

AND, most importantly, we will celebrate every single small success along the way, both individually and corporately.

[bctt tweet=”Celebrate every small success.”]

What small success will you celebrate today? Please share it with us so we can celebrate with you.

Until next time, do something special for someone in your life. I bet they could use a heart lift!

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