Categories
Writing with a Disability (Different Ability)

It’s Okay To Ask For Help

Recently, I had a bad fall off  my bike, it was the first time in years I had fallen while biking on the road. I forgot how terrible the sting of asphalt on the flesh is. Although I was able to quickly get up, fix my bike, and get back on the road to finish my ride; I  have felt embarrassed since the fall.

Maybe it was embarrassment or pride, but I didn’t want to go see my doctor and decided to let a few friends know about my painful experience. No one likes having to ask for help for whatever reason. Take your pick from.

  • We don’t want to be a burden
  • We don’t want to be seen as vulnerable
  • We make assumptions

After my car accident in college, there were a lot of things I couldn’t do and some I didn’t know that I couldn’t do. Of course, I didn’t want to ask for help, especially for basic things like feeding myself or using the bathroom in an actual bathroom.

It wasn’t until I fell off the toilet that I realized just how helpless I was. Even one nurse couldn’t help me. Nope. It took two nurses cramming into the bathroom to get me up and back to my bed.

I don’t know about you, but I consider using the restroom a private matter and I hadn’t needed help using it since I was a toddler. Back then, I also didn’t know I needed help. 

“As to diseases, make a habit of two things – to help, or at least, to do no harm.”

Hippocrates (Greek physician)

Helpless

Living with a disability for the past 26+ years has taught me that it is okay to need and ask for help. Regardless of who you are, though, in time you will need some form of help. When I began the process of returning to work after my accident, I learned about the Americans with disability Act’s provisions for disabled persons.

Under the ADA persons with disabilities can ask for reasonable accommodations to help them do their job, ask for equipment or devices to help them do the job, and request modified work schedules to help disabled persons perform at their best.

Still, for me and many others, it can be hard to ask for help. But, if we swallow our pride there are many benefits to asking for help according to Restless.co/UK.

  1. Asking for help can boost happiness and improve connection with others.
  2. Seeking help is important for health.
  3. Asking for help encourages healthy relationships.
  4. Asking for help can boost confidence and self-esteem
  5. Asking for help can increase productivity

Since falling off of my bicycle, I have been struggling to prepare for an annual writer’s conference I attend, so I decided to reach out to a few writer friends for help and advice.  Being hurt both slowed me down and reminded me of the importance of asking for help.

Thanks to the help from my writer friends, I have been able to get everything I needed done to prepare for the conference. I have learned in the past decade that writers enjoy helping other writers because they know we are better together!

Better Together?

 It is important to understand we are better together because that is when and how we can help each other. Even if you don’t have a disability, at some point in life will humble you and you will have to ask for help.

By the time you read this, I’ll be attending the Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference to get help learning more about the craft, networking, and helping other writers who are attending for the first time.

 No writer starts at the top of the writing chain; we each must endure the pitfalls of the writing journey. It is important to network with other writers. Below are five ways writers helping other writers helps you from Writers in the Storm.

  • Read and review
  • Beta reading
  • Critique groups
  • Blogging
  • Social Media

If you are attending a writer’s conference this year, please keep in mind it is more than just an opportunity to see friends and socialize, it is an opportunity to get the help you need and to help others get the help they need.

 We are all on the writing journey together, just at different stages of the journey.    Serious writers attend writing conferences because they understand it is okay to ask for help!

Martin Johnson

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 MartinThomasJohnson.com  and on Twitter at mtjohnson51.

Categories
Devotions for Writers

It’s Okay to Ask for Help!

She stopped to adjust her baby on one hip while juggling luggage with the other. Her son came up behind with his kid-size rolling case and her husband scrambled ahead with dual strollers and a suitcase.

“Can I help you?” I asked.

“No,” she said. “I’ve got it.”

She resolutely forged ahead to find the airline desk.

“It’s okay to ask for help, mom,” I murmured.

How often have I refused help when it was obvious to everyone else I needed it?

Sure, a body can only be too careful in our world these days. But some of the best stories come from strangers helping one another.

How about your writing? Could you use some help with your assignments? A second set of eyes can scan for errors. Someone with grammar skills can hone the manuscript. A critique group can brainstorm catchy titles. A writing partner can polish ideas. A writers conference can open doors.

How will you ask for help to get to the place where you can soar?

Exercise:

  1. Elijah asked the most unlikely for a meal when he approached the widow. 1 Kings 17:7-16 says her cupboard was bare. She complied and the Lord provided. How can the Lord provide for another through your need? Purpose? Dignity? Companionship?
  2. Jesus asked the disciples for support when He wrestled with impending arrest. (Matthew 26:36-46) They were privy to the power of prayer when they later faced persecution and overwhelming circumstances. How can your anguish provide comfort to another who has a front row seat to your story? Persistence in pain? Perseverance in brokenness?
  3. Samuel needed help discerning the Lord’s call. When he asked Eli repeatedly for clarification, Eli recognized God’s hand on the boy. Who can you ask for help in seeking the Lord’s direction for your words? (1 Samuel 3:1-9)
  4. Mary and Martha asked Jesus for a healing. Instead, they got a resurrection.(John 11:1-45) Could your need provide a greater testimony to God’s work in your life?
  5. Jesus asked, “How many loaves do you have?”

The disciples replied, “Seven, and a few small fish.” (Matthew 15:32-38)

Maybe your small offering will be used to feed more than you can imagine?

Our words can open God’s Word when we vulnerably share our needs. Ask Him for help.

“He said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.’” 2 Corinthians 12:9 (NKJV)

Do you need a helping hand? It’s okay to ask.

Sally Ferguson

Over 140 of Sally Ferguson’s devotionals have been published in Pathways to God (Warner Press). She’s also written for Light From The Word, Chautauqua Mirror, Just Between Us, Adult Span Curriculum, Thriving Family, Upgrade with Dawn and ezinearticles.com. Prose Contest Winner at 2017 Greater Philly Christian Writers Conference.

Sally loves organizing retreats and seeing relationships blossom in time away from the daily routine. Her ebook, How to Plan a Women’s Retreat is available on Amazon.

Sally Ferguson lives in the beautiful countryside of Jamestown, NY with her husband and her dad.

Visit Sally’s blog at sallyferguson.net

Categories
Book Proposals

Discover the Power of Asking

Writing is a solitary profession and the majority of writers are introverts. Book proposals are a powerful business tool even if you self-publish to create the business plan for your book. Do you have to do it completely on your own? Not necessarily. I want to encourage you to discover the power of asking. Here’s two practical ways to use this power and improve the quality of your proposal.

1. Get endorsements or a foreword from well-known people.

I can already hear the objections. “I don’t know anyone famous or well-known. “ I know your proposal will stand out to the editor or agent with endorsements or a foreword from easily-recognizable authors or business people or celebrities. As an editor, I’ve sold my publication board on a concept (and could make a contract offer) with a foreword or endorsement in the author’s proposal. I’ve written books with forewords from Billy Graham, Jackie Joyner Kersee or Mark Victor Hansen.

Here’s what people outside of publishing don’t understand. These people did not write their foreword. I wrote the foreword, and then asked for their permission. To handle this successfully, it will take a bit of work, research and writing on your part. The first step is to write a “draft” endorsement (a paragraph) or a foreword (a short article about 1000 to 1500 words) and ask the person to review and approve the contents.

Imagine yourself as a ghostwriter for this person then write what you want them to say in the first person tense. It is easier for that person to review your writing and possibly change a few words, then approve it instead of creating it themselves. Your advanced work on the writing will make it easier for someone to say yes.

In your proposal, make sure you have a realistic list of possible endorsers. For example, don’t include Dr. James Dobson or Chuck Swindoll if you don’t have a long-standing personal relationship with them. It is rare either man will write an endorsement for a book. Years ago, I received a proposal and the author touted a possible endorsement from bestselling author Beth Moore. I called this author and learned this possibility was not outrageous because she had a personal relationship with Beth Moore. Editors and agents are quick to spot and reject an outlandish list of endorsers so be realistic.

2. Find a critique partner or join a critique group.

During my early days as a writer, I found a small critique group and it propelled my writing to new levels of excellence. When you have a critique group (online or in person), you are getting feedback from readers before sending it off to an editor or agent.

You don’t have to take all of the feedback and have to filter to select which to accept and which to reject. Yet this feedback can be invaluable to improve your book proposal or sample chapter. You will have to reach out and ask to find this group or person but a critique group will give you the writer’s edge with your submissions. I have more detail about critique groups at: http://terrylinks.com/critique

Neither of these two methods is easy or simple but will be well worth your efforts if you use the power of asking. It will greatly improve the quality (and possible acceptance) of your book proposal.

W. Terry Whalin, a writer and acquisitions editor lives in Colorado. A former magazine editor and former literary agent, Terry is an acquisitions editor at Morgan James Publishing. He has written more than 60 nonfiction books including Jumpstart Your Publishing Dreams and Billy Graham. Get Terry’s newest book, 10 Publishing Myths for only $10, free shipping and bonuses worth over $200.. To help writers catch the attention of editors and agents, Terry wrote his bestselling Book Proposals That $ell, 21 Secrets To Speed Your Success. He answers to your proposal questions at: www.AskAboutProposals.com. Check out his free Ebook, Platform Building Ideas for Every Author. His website is located at: www.terrywhalin.com. Connect with Terry on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.