The truth is, it’s
Sunday and I don’t want to think about marketing my book. I have plenty of
excuses—I just returned from a weekend of boating and on Wednesday we were
caught in a storm and we nearly drowned on Lake Mead and on our drive home our truck began to lose oil
and I’m much too traumatized to write about book sales—but the real reason is—I
don’t want to. So there it is.
But don’t despair. Tomorrow I’ll be back talking about
group-blogs. It’s my turn to post on The Author’s of Main Street, a blog I
share with 13 talented and diverse writers. 13 women I wouldn’t recognize if I
passed them on the street, but I have a warm and fuzzy place for them in my
blogger heart because they help me and I hope I help them and together we created a blog for readers who love contemporary romance.
So until then, here's a post I wrote last December. It’s about doing what you really want to do.
A
few days ago I cleaned out a drawer. This is remarkable in and of itself, but
the remarkable thing was I found a letter I wrote to myself ten years ago. At
that time I was serving in a young women’s presidency and the letter was an
assignment given by our young women’s president. The president and I had been
friends since our oldest children were age three. We bought our first homes at
the same time and had children roughly the same ages. Fifteen years later, we
served in our church youth group. Barb was the president. I was her first
counselor. I had children between the ages of 18 and 4. Barb had four children. She
also had cancer.
This
was a busy time for me. I had six children attending five different schools. I
had pianists, flutist, horn players and violinists. I had a track star, and a
swim team captain, a book addict, a comic book groupie and a junk food junkie.
I had a rental property (which meant I had pesky renters.) I was training for a
marathon and I owned an overweight, frequently naughty beagle. I remember that
busy time and wonder how I ever had time to write to a novel, but I did.
Because I wanted to.
Looking
back, I realize now that everything I did I did because, quite simply, it was
what I wanted to do. And I’m glad.
A
few years after serving with Barb in the young women’s program I was called to
be the Relief Society president. I helped plan Barb’s funeral. I dressed her
body in temple clothes. More than 800 people came to her service. I hope the
years until my own funeral are long and many, but because of my experience at
Barb’s I hope I can say when I’m on her side of the veil of life--I did
everything I wanted to do.
I
don’t think my life will be measured by the books I’ve written on the shelf,
but by the people I love sitting on the pews. The books are something that I
squeeze into the corners of my busy, full life. I love them, too. But not as
much as I love the people I live with.
And so, I do what I want to do. Today I don't want to talk or think about marketing my book. Tomorrow will be a different story and a different post.
No comments:
Post a Comment