Out of Sync

I apologize to readers waiting for a post.  I’m behind.  Friday was my 51st birthday. I know I’m past the point where it’s acceptable to announce my age, but I don’t feel 51. I don’t know how I’m supposed to feel. I’ve lived most of my life out of sequence.

I married my one true love at age 30.  I had a teaching career for 21 years.  Instead of settling in for 10 more years of work, I quit cold-turkey to be come a mom. I was 42.  The second child came when I was 44. After spending days, nights, and weekends with other people’s children, I decided to hang around the house to raise my own.  I haven’t regretted the decision.  When people ask, “Do you miss teaching?” I answer with a question. “Do you miss a toothache when it’s gone?”

Now, I’m a writer, too.  The funny thing about writing is no matter how many craft books you read or lectures you attend, the only way to be a writer is to write.  No one can tell you how to manage your life when you work on your own.  I have tremendous days of personal insight and awareness. Then, I have days when I’m a blathering idiot.  It keeps me humble.  Just when I think, “A-ha! I know the secret to the universe.  Follow this roadmap to publication.” The earth quakes, and I shudder.  Darkness falls all around. Every good idea I ever had falls out of my head and into the circular file next to my desk.  

Last weekend BBC2 (Big Brother Crisp #2) and my wonderful sister-in-law, Cookie Crisp, came to visit.  My family gave me a fabulous birthday that included my favorite dessert, Symphony Brownies and ice cream. (Symphony Brownies are like a bacchanal for chocoholics.)  We had a great time.  

BBC2 and Cookie headed home Sunday morning.  I judged a few writing contest entries for my RWA Chapter, and  I wrote four pages yesterday.  This morning, I woke up  to discover I had lost rhythm. It happens.  When it does, I have to take a little time to get myself back together. Author, Julia Cameron advocates taking an artist date.  For me, it was an excuse to push a basket around Target for an hour.  

Now, I’m back.  E.L. Doctrow once said, “Writing a novel is like driving a car at night. You can see only as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.” Here’s to finding my way back to the road in the dark.

Symphony Brownies
2 boxes Ghiradelli Brownie Mix 
3 extra large Symphony Chocolate Bars with Toffee Chips
Preheat the oven to 350. Following package directions, mix one box of brownies and pour into a 11 x 13 inch pan sprayed with PAM.  Unwrap and place the three chocolate bars side by side on top of the batter. Mix the second box of brownies according to package directions.  Pour on top of the chocolate bars.  Bake for 40 minutes.  Cool completely before slicing.  

Power By the Hour

I went to last night’s San Antonio Romance Author’s meeting (SARA) to hear one of my chaptermates speak.  Jo-Ann Power is the owner of Power Promotions and the author of many books, most recently, Missing Member, a very funny who-dun-it about politics.  Since she owns and operates a PR firm,  Jo-Ann is an expert at book promotion.  She presented some interesting statistics.  

 Wal-Mart sells 35% of all books sold.  Of the rest, 17% are sold by independent booksellers affiliated with the American Booksellers Association (ABA), 14% by stores affiliated with the Christian Bookseller’s Association (CBA), 12% are sold at Target, my store of choice,  10% at Borders,  7% at Barnes & Nobel,  and 5% are sold at all online stores combined.  

I’m amazed the percentage of online booksellers isn’t higher.  In the romance world, online booksellers get a lot of press. The promotion and sales of eBooks are always in the news.  Jo-Ann reminded me there’s no substitute for holding a book in my hand.  

It’s something to think about.


Age Of Consent

A girlfriend called for a quick trip to the mall.  We dumped the kids on our husbands and indulged ourselves with a little shopping and a scoop of dark chocolate ice cream.  The ice cream was dinner.  Every once in a while, decadence for dinner is a good thing.  

My friend searched the racks and held up an item. “I’m too old for that.” Then, she’d put it back.  She did this more than once.  My birthday is this week.  I’m 13 years older than her.  I said nothing to draw attention to the fact.

In Macy’s lingerie department, I focused on a pair of boy cut chiffon panties with tiny ruffles in rows across the butt. They were like infant rhumba pants, except not for children.  On cue, my friend said, “I’m too old for that.” 

Before I could stop myself, I answered, “You’re never too old for anything you wear under your clothes.”

The panties reminded me of a guy I knew in college.  He played tennis. Once, I said, “I wish I knew how to play.”

He pointed to a girl on the court wearing ruffled butt panties under her tennis dress and said, “If you promise to wear those, I’ll teach you how.”  

To this day, I’ve never learned to play tennis.  I wish I had. Am I too old to learn?  Am I really too old to wear grown up rhumba pants?  

The next day, another friend came by to invite us to her daughter’s birthday dinner.  Bacon was at work. Cherry and Coco were watching television.  Friend #2 came in with her eight year old. My girls started yelling, “Mama, Mama, we have company.”  They were yelling up, and I was yelling down. Friend #2 was very confused.  

I was on the roof.  I climbed a ladder holding a large red broom.  We have live oak trees.  They shed sticky brown pollen. Barring a two inch rain, the junk will blow down a bucket at a time until all of our patio furniture is ruined.  I climbed the roof to sweep the gutters.  

I didn’t want to ask Bacon, and then, wait for him to get around to it.  I’m more comfortable with heights than he is.  I spent most of college on a ladder focusing lights for theatrical productions.  Later, I worked as a house painter.  It was a long time ago, but I don’t see myself as old.  Friend #2 thought I was funny.  She told the story at dinner.  Am I too old to climb up on the roof with a broom?  

I walk in the park every day. A man in his 70’s exercises at the same time; except, he doesn’t walk. He runs.  He runs fast.  He’s careful to stretch and warm up, but still, I don’t do what he does.  He isn’t an elite athlete, but he’s in great shape.  Is he too old to run?  Am I too old to start?

Today, I’m a moody mess.  I went back to the mall because I’d been thinking about a dress that Friend #1, my younger friend, tried on. I bought a size bigger.  When I got home with it, the dress fit, but I had trouble with the zipper.  

Frustrated, I told Bacon, “I should have known better.” I berated myself for imagining that I could wear this dress that looked great on her. The comparison made me miserable.  I found myself thinking the I’m too old thing.

The truth is: it’s a cheap dress with a lousy zipper.  Repeating the old lie is a socially acceptable excuse. We use those words whenever we feel angry or upset or incomplete or tired or vulnerable. 

Romance heroines are almost always in their 20’s because that’s the age we imagine we are before we look in the mirror.  Instead of checking myself out in the mirror as I’m messing with a bad zipper, I should put the rhumba pants on under my jeans and get on with life.  I’m not too old.


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