Categories
Writing with a Disability (Different Ability)

Baby Steps

After my accident, I was eager to get back to my old life. Why wouldn’t I? I was in college and those are supposed to be the best years of our lives. But, I spent most of my junior year in the hospital struggling to do everyday tasks.

I was young and full of life, ready to conquer the world. The only problem was, I didn’t understand the extent of my injuries. After only working with a physical therapist for one day, I believed I was strong enough to do everything I used to do.

The next day I wanted to use the bathroom like a normal twenty-something-year-old, so I convinced a new nurse to help me. Everything was fine until I leaned forward to reach for toilet paper….

It was like a bodybuilder slapped me on the back of the head. I lost my balance and did a belly flop onto the floor. The elderly nurse toppled with me and had to call in a second nurse to help get me back in my hospital bed. That incident taught me a lot about life and my new normal.

  • Passion can be good and bad.
  • We need to be realistic about our abilities.
  • Excitement isn’t the same as experience.
  • It’s important to be coachable/teachable.

When I first began my professional writing training, I came across a quote from Christian author Jerry Jenkins about how writers can succeed that has stuck with me to this day.

“In any writer, I look for the –ilities: humility, teachability, coachability, availability, and flexibility.”

Jerry B. Jenkins in Writing for the Soul

While passion and talent are crucial to a writer’s success, the “ilities” are key to funneling them into a successful writing career. You may know your story or prose, but the best writers know they don’t know everything. They understand the need to hone their skills; we all start out taking baby steps in our writing careers.

Baby Steps?

As 2020 comes to an end, most of us are excited to start a new year. With the arrival of vaccines for the Covid-19 virus, we are all eager to get back to life as usual. We are heading into 2021 expecting a better year.

But, it’s not exactly full speed ahead. There are still hurdles to overcome, precautions to take, and getting used to a new normal. Even if that’s not the news you want to hear, there’s still hope.

We are all going to have to start out taking baby steps, especially for writers. We can prepare and plan, but we must be realistic. Most of us writers have dreams and aspirations about successful writing careers, but the sad truth is few writers make a full-time living solely from writing.

Those who are successful didn’t start there. They too had to take baby steps in their careers. Having all of the talent in the world or the most riveting story concept can only get you so far in the modern publishing era.

As writers, we will crawl before we walk and some of us will never be able to sprint like the pros. Be patient and navigate the baby steps of the writing life. Start with smaller projects

  1. Blogs, reviews, magazine articles, newspaper columns.
  2. Opinion pieces, devotionals (Christian market).
  3. Promotional material.
  4. Build a social media presence.
  5. Consider a podcast.
  6. Build your brand.
  7. Develop your writing voice.
  8. Keep learning the craft and honing your skills.

The writing industry is constantly in flux. Successful writers keep learning the craft either by online courses or in-person conferences. Last month I attended my first conference in three years and I learned a lot. Goals like these are basic baby steps to getting the end results.

Getting Results?

Living with a disability is a lifetime of baby steps towards a new normal. Although baby steps aren’t the goal—they are a process of getting results.

Twenty-three years ago I began a process of baby steps of relearning everything in life. There are a few things I still cannot do, like play guitar or type, but I have learned to live with the new normal I gained through taking baby steps.

  • Stronger muscles.
  • Learning how to fall and get back up (hopefully).
  • Learning new skills.
  • Be patient (huh!)

Positive results don’t always come easy. Likewise in writing, we can only get results after taking baby steps.

Martin Johnson survived a severe car accident with a (T.B.I.) Traumatic brain injury which left him legally blind and partially paralyzed on the left side. He is an award-winning Christian screenwriter who has recently finished his first Christian nonfiction book. Martin has spent the last nine years volunteering as an ambassador and promoter for Promise Keepers ministries. While speaking to local men’s ministries he shares his testimony. He explains The Jesus Paradigm and how following Jesus changes what matters most in our lives. Martin lives in a Georgia and connects with readers at Spiritual Perspectives of Da Single Guy and on Twitter at mtjohnson51.

Categories
Embrace the Wait

Survival Tips for the Waiting Part of Writing Tip #19 – Remain teachable

My dear Mother-In-Law is ninety years old, but she’s not like any senior citizen you’ve ever met. Power suits, three-inch heels, bright red fingernails, and crimson lipstick are her trademarks. She’s a celebrity in her neck of the woods, not only because of her dynamic style and outgoing personality, but because she’s spent her whole life caring for others. Just a few years ago she retired from running a non-profit organization and is still active today as a representative of the Texas Silver-Haired Legislature. Yes, at age ninety!

I’ve often pondered the secret to my MIL’s success. The answer hit me one day as I witnessed her interaction with my fifteen-year-old daughter. My daughter was trying to teach her the clapping game Miss Mary Mack. Time after time again my MIL would get half way through the rhyme and accidentally clap left when she was supposed to clap right. But did she quit? Never. She laughed at herself while my daughter giggled with her, then they would begin the game again. She was teachable. Yes, at age ninety!

Teachability is one of the most valuable tools in any successful writer’s tool chest. Most of us begin the writing journey with tons of it, but as legendary basketball coach John Wooden states it: “It’s what you learn after you know it all that counts.”

Here are five probing questions to keep us on the path toward teachability:

  • Am I willing to ask a question even if I’m afraid they will expose my ignorance?
  • When my writing is critiqued do I listen openly for truth or do I become defensive?
  • Am I willing to learn from a writer with less experience or fewer credentials than me?
  • Do I remain open-minded about doing things differently than I’ve done them before?
  • How do I handle failure? Do I consider it an opportunity to learn?

Scripture: Proverbs 9:9, Proverbs 15:32, Proverbs 1:5, Proverbs 19:20

Fun Fact or Helpful Resource:
If you’d like to catch a glimpse of my amazing Mom-In-Law in action here’s the link to a news story from a few years back.

Annette Marie Griffin is a award-winning writer who speaks at local women’s group meetings and women’s retreats on the topic of biblical womanhood and finding our identity in Christ. She is the Operations and Events Coordinator at a private school for special needs students and is the editor of their quarterly newsletter. She has written custom curriculum for women’s retreats and children’s church curriculum for Gateway Church in San Antonio, Texas where she served as Children’s Ministry Director and Family Program Director for over twenty years. She and her husband John have five amazing children and two adorable grands. She’s a member of Word Weavers International, ACFW, SCBWI, and serves on the Board of Directors for The Creative Writing Institute.

Categories
Book Proposals

But My Writing’s Good…Why Can’t I Get An Agent?

I remember those days of whining to myself. “But it’s good. Everybody says so, especially all my friends and family.” Sigh … yes, I’ll admit it. I really took those familial critiques as having substantial meaning. And … they … did … not. And not because their opinions weren’t valuable, but because they do not know the market, no matter how many books they read. Or how well versed they think they are.

Most readers have a few authors that they have read for years, maybe even decades, and that makes them loyal readers, not professional reviewers. And once a reader is with an author that they like, they will accept however that author writes for the most part: good or bad, contemporary or old and stale, or anything in between.

Agents are always looking for fresh voices. New takes on old stories, new ways of expressing the same thing, because let’s face it, there aren’t that many new themes and/or ideas out there. So how do we sell it? A fresh voice that uses all of the new trends in writing, that steps outside the box for lack of a better expression, and who knows what the new readers are looking for.

How does a writer stay abreast of trends? How do they develop their voices? How can they get a chance to show off what they can do?

Let’s explore the answers to these questions:

  1. attend conferences and workshops
  2. attend conferences and workshops
  3. attend conferences and workshops

Did I really answer all of those questions the same way? You bet I did. Because at conferences you’ll find numerous agents, editors, web designers, other authors, those who can help you build platform, and so on. It’s an opportunity to network, learn in classroom settings, discuss trends in the industry at appointments, network with and possibly join a critique group, and to get feedback on your work. HONEST feedback from someone who doesn’t have your friendship to lose if they don’t like it.

IN A WORD: invaluable

While I occasionally find authors through my email, most of the clients that I pick up are from conferences. Why is that? Most folks who are willing to pay for a conference have done their homework, learned their craft, and worked hard to be able to get to a conference. It means time away from family, a chip at the finances, but it also means time spent with others who GET US. Other folks with voices in their heads that just have to get out. They are writers who have thick skin and can take it when their work is confronted. They can say, “Wow! I didn’t know that. That certainly isn’t what I learned in Advanced English class.” In other words, they are teachable writers willing to listen, to learn, and to apply.

So, why can’t I get an agent? I am probably not taking all of the above seriously. I am convinced that I already know everything. I don’t work with critique partners. Why bother? They don’t know any more than I already do. I can’t afford to attend a conference (you can’t afford NOT to). I have an MFA in creative writing, so why bother? I know it all, right?

Leaving old notions behind, being teachable, learning to build platform, writing the best novel you possibly can after learning all the ins and outs of the industry, and you WILL be on your way to connecting with an agent or editor for your work.

There are conferences available from $99-all the way to WOW! break the bank.

Do your best! Nothing comes free. It comes with hard work aimed at a teachable spirit!

You can do this … yes, you can!

Linda S. Glaz is an agent with Hartline Literary Agency, and also the author of eight novels and two novellas, so she “gets” writers. She represents authors in both the Christian and secular communities. She speaks at numerous conferences and workshops around the country each year. Married with three grown children and four grands, she lives in a small town where everyone is family.

Categories
Embrace the Wait

Survival Tips for the Waiting Part of Writing Tip #12 – Be On Guard Against Pride

I once did a brief stint as a nanny. I absolutely loved the baby I took care of, but the mom and I had little in common. She was a young mom with her first child. I had been a stay-at-home mom for over twenty years and was looking to re-enter the workforce.

Each weekday at 7 am I would arrive at their house for work. I would take their precious six-month-old from her crib, change her, love on her, feed her breakfast, wash the dishes left scattered from the previous evening, then carry out a variety of household chores along with my nannying duties. This all took place while the baby’s mama worked-out, watched television, and spent time on the internet in her upstairs loft area.

Once per week I would purchase groceries for the family. How I loved those shopping trips. It was a time to escape the house, with my little sidekick, and be free from the weird, intermittent, scrutinizing gaze of the mom.  While on one of these excursions I learned a valuable lesson. That fateful day a note was scrawled at the bottom of the usual, lengthy, handwritten grocery list. It read, “Some of these items may not be familiar to you. If you need help, feel free to call.”

That note rattled my cage. Who did this woman think she was? Did she presume I was a total ignoramus? Did she not realize that I had been purchasing groceries since before she was born? Yes, their family may have had a higher economic status than I. And admittedly, the dinners I prepared for them every night seemed foreign to my traditional taste buds. But if I could successfully follow the fancy recipes to cook their trendy, health-nut cuisine then surely … surely, they could trust me to read and execute a basic shopping list. The nerve.

I was indignant from the time I entered the grocery store’s sliding doors until I reached the last item on the list. It was then that I realized I was in big trouble. The final line simply read, “frozen concows”.  Mind you, this was before the Smartphone era—no instant information available at my fingertips. I broke into a sweat and began scanning the frozen food shelves, like a pirate hunting for lost treasure. Concows, really? What kind of hipster, voodoo, culinary nonsense was I hunting for?

Thirty minutes later I had thoroughly examined every item in the massive frozen food section. No luck. My angel baby still sat contently in her toy laden grocery basket sling. I opened some organic fruit puffs, placed a few in her lap, then frantically called my husband. “What in the world is a concow?” I said, the moment he answered the phone. After several humorous quips, because that’s how my hubby rolls, he finally admitted he had no idea.

He and I spent twenty minutes brainstorming the dilemma. I tried to pick the word apart. I knew the root word con meant with. So, it would stand to reason that a con-cow must be a product that contained cow–or beef. But my husband quickly reminded me that con could also be an abbreviation for contra, which means false or against. Considering the family I worked for ate mostly vegan, that made more sense to me. We concluded the item in question must be a faux beef product. Feeling more equipped for the battle, I hung up with my husband and headed for the fru-fru frozen foods section to continue the search.

When I could find no meat substitute branded with that name, I finally broke down and asked a store associate for help. He took a moment to look over the same frozen section I had surveyed all afternoon then confidently declared that their store must not carry frozen concows.

Somehow, that didn’t seem right. And I could not—would not—return to my employer and admit to her that I had no idea what a concow was.

“Just call the lady you’re working for and ask,” my friend advised when I phoned her to vent. But I couldn’t. I didn’t want to admit to this mom, who didn’t even take care of her own kid or house, that she was more knowledgeable than a seasoned homemaker like me. Also, I didn’t want to give her the ammo to treat me like an underling when I was already feeling like one. After I made this shocking and shameful confession to my friend—while having a total meltdown, a still small voice from within pinpointed the problem. Pride.

Pride had been lurking in the shadows of my thoughts since I had first taken the nanny position and had finally reared its ugly head in the middle of aisle 15. I had never considered myself a stubborn or prideful person. But God has a way of using everyday frustrations to expose the hidden places of our hearts. I decided to humble myself and call my employer for help. She didn’t answer. “What now, Lord,” I asked.  I looked down at the crumpled list in my hand—and viewed the last entry with fresh eyes. The scripty handwritten letters I had deciphered earlier as an “n” and “w” were actually “u”s. The item she wanted me to purchase was couscous. It was misspelled.

Pride can be as difficult to spot in our own hearts as concows in a grocery store. Why? Because often our eyes are so fixed on what we perceive as truth that we neglect to acknowledge the source of truth.  As writers—detection become even more complicated. There’s a fine line between professional confidence, which we are always encouraged to project, and pride—the counterfeit. That means, if we are writing for Him we must remain ultra-vigilant against the corrosive nature of this sly vice.

Pride can undermine our teachability, ruin our professional relationships, and even poison the very words we have chosen to write for God. The funny thing about pride is—those who are plagued by it are usually the last to recognize the infection.

Have you ever dismissed a writing craft teaching because the instructor was much younger than you? Have you ever quit an agent or turned down an offer to submit to an editor because you felt you were not given your due respect? Have you ever secretly felt animosity toward someone who won a contract or contest because you knew you were more talented than them?  Are your social media posts preachy in nature and directed toward a group of individuals you hope to reach? Are you easily offended when someone critiques your writing? Do you feel the need to work your list of writing achievements into a conversation to gain other’s esteem? If so, you may be dealing with pride. May God open our eyes, examine our hearts, correct our path, and conform our writing to glorify Him.

Scripture: Philippians 2:3, James 4:10,  Proverbs 11:1

Fun Fact or Helpful Resource: One of the best, and most painful, resources I’ve ever found to help diagnose pride is Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth’s Evidences Of Pride test. It can be found here.

Annette Marie Griffin is a award-winning writer who speaks at local women’s group meetings and women’s retreats on the topic of biblical womanhood and finding our identity in Christ. She is the Operations and Events Coordinator at a private school for special needs students and is the editor of their quarterly newsletter. She has written custom curriculum for women’s retreats and children’s church curriculum for Gateway Church in San Antonio, Texas where she served as Children’s Ministry Director and Family Program Director for over twenty years. She and her husband John have five amazing children and two adorable grands. She’s a member of Word Weavers International, ACFW, SCBWI, and serves on the Board of Directors for The Creative Writing Institute.

Categories
Writing with a Disability (Different Ability)

Able-ities

My first days in a rehabilitation hospital after my accident were some of the most difficult days of my life, but they were also full of crucial lessons to learn. Being young and full of life, I thought I knew it all—furthermore, I thought I could do it all.

No one could tell me anything and nothing could stop me well…except for myself. When I got to breakfast and saw all the other patients were senior citizens or severely disabled, some of which had food falling out of their mouths as they ate, I told myself I was better off than them and wanted to go back to my room. Then, while I ate, I noticed there was food on my pants. The food was falling out of my mouth as well, I was humbled.

As I struggled to push away from the table, a nurse returned to help me. She smiled and told me she was there for me. That was when I realized how my life had changed.

Later I had trouble relearning how to tie my shoes. The physical therapist told me it would be a lot easier if I would listen to her and let her help. I remembered when I was little and all the times my father tried to teach me something new.

He was a sergeant in the Army, yet gently encouraged me, “I want to help you do this, but you are going to have to listen to me and do as I say.” He taught me to do so much in three simple steps.

  • Focus
  • Listen
  • Learn

Little did I know that my father’s wise instruction would guide me in life even if I didn’t have the ability anymore.

Ability?

The dictionary defines ability as, “Possession of the means or skill to do something; a talent or proficiency in a particular area.” In writing, as in life, we don’t all have the same abilities. But we all have certain abilities that make us who we are.

And if we follow my father’s sage advice, we can learn from each other and gain new abilities. After my accident, I was unable to return to college to finish pursuing my degree in English.

I gave up on writing because technically I could no longer physically write. Then about nine years ago I received a packet in the mail about a professional writing program for Christians.

The state I live in gave grants for persons with brain injuries like myself and I applied for the funds for the courses and writing software that would allow me to write with speech.

I applied and was accepted into the Christian Writers Guild writing program where I was mentored by some of the best writers and editors in the business. Their knowledge and abilities would foster the abilities and stories I have.

During the course, I read what the owner of the school looked for in aspiring writers. Jerry B. Jenkins notes, “In any writer, I look for the –‘ilities’:

  1. Humility
  2. Teachability
  3. Coachability
  4. Availability
  5. Flexibility”[i]

In our writing careers, as in life, we must apply each of these “ilities” if we want to learn or gain new abilities. The best writers are always learning. They know it’s okay to ask for help and are willing to accept a helping hand.

Help?

Not long after I began taking writing classes again, a friend from church approached me about getting her books published. She told me she already knew how to write and didn’t need to learn how to share her stories.

Despite having no training as a writer and only having experience in the Army’s medical field, she was confident she had what it took to make it as a writer. Although I was still learning myself, I wanted to help my sister in the faith.

Her biggest problem was, she didn’t want my help to become a writer; she wanted a shortcut to being published. Every time she saw me, she asked if I would give her emails of the editors and writers I was learning from.

Again, I cannot express how difficult and time-consuming it is to break into the writing business. There are no shortcuts to publication, albeit self-publishing is a quicker path, it isn’t a guarantee for traditional publication.

Fear not, the writing community is more than willing to help out aspiring writers. Perhaps not the way most would-be authors desire, but the community gives nonetheless. As my first writing mentor, Roger Palms wisely shared, “Successful writers let their writing speak for itself—learn the craft.”

In writing, it takes time to:

  • Edit your work.
  • Develop your voice.
  • Know your message.

Furthermore, as I’ve learned from being disabled, possessing the right “ilities” makes it easier to learn new abilities.


[i] Jenkins, J. B. (2006) Writing For The Soul. Cincinnati, Ohio: Writer’s Digest Books. Pg 105.

Martin Johnson survived a severe car accident with a (T.B.I.) Traumatic brain injury which left him legally blind and partially paralyzed on the left side. He is an award-winning Christian screenwriter who has recently finished his first Christian nonfiction book. Martin has spent the last nine years volunteering as an ambassador and promoter for Promise Keepers ministries. While speaking to local men’s ministries he shares his testimony. He explains The Jesus Paradigm and how following Jesus changes what matters most in our lives. Martin lives in a Georgia and connects with readers at Spiritual Perspectives of Da Single Guy and on Twitter at mtjohnson51.