Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Being Still Amid a Busy Life

A woman has a very busy life. There are kids, family, husbands, bosses, friends, pets, finances, homes and more that take up her time.

Studies show that not only is the average woman busy from the time she gets up to the tie she goes to bed, but she also is reducing her sleep time because she has too much to do.

Does this sound like you?

You must learn to slow down. It takes self-determination and control. But it can happen.

Being busy all the time not only affects a woman's physical life, but their spiritual life as well. I know. It's really hard to slow down for anything, even for God.

God can help put your life in perspective. To do so, you must be still and know God. When you take time to be with God, you can build a better relationship with Him. When you focus on God, you can remember how vast He is. God knows everything. Always remember that.

God is everywhere. He's the focus of the universe. Knowing all of this really puts your life into perspective, don't you think?

When you are still, you are refreshed spiritually. You gain a new sense of how important you are to God.

Just think about it.

Be still. Listen for God's voice. He loves you. God whispers his love, support and reassurance to you.

Can you do it? Can you be still enough to hear God's voice?

Be still and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the Earth! -- Psalm 46:10






Saturday, March 02, 2013

Happy Birthday, Dr. Seuss - An Inspiration to Writers


Stamp
March 2nd is the day a very wonderful man was born. Theodor Seuss Geisel; born in 1904 - he died in 1991. Happy 109th birthday, to the most beloved children's author in the world.

Did you know that he wrote under several names? Dr. Seuss, Theo LeSieg, and Rosetta Stone? Yep, that was a new one for me too. I always thought Rosetta Stone was a language teaching software. 

Here's an interesting fact from Wikipedia: "He was a perfectionist in his work and he would sometimes spend up to a year on a book. It was not uncommon for him to throw out 95% of his material until he settled on a theme for his book. For a writer he was unusual in that he preferred to only be paid after he finished his work rather than in advance."

How many writers can say they do that in this day? Dr. Seuss, (pronounced like "goose" rather than how he originally pronounced it like "voice") and his submission style can be a standard of which other writers can aspire. 

"Dr. Seuss practiced what he preached: his first book, And to Think I Saw It on Mulberry Street, was rejected by 27 different publishers before it finally got picked up. “Think left and think right and think low and think high. Oh, the thinks you can think up if only you try!” Seuss once wrote. Try, try, try again, he did." Read more: http://newsfeed.time.com/2012/03/02/happy-birthday-dr-seuss-9-facts-to-know-about-the-famed-author/#ixzz2KmmnZHqG

Perseverance is the name of the game. Never give up, writers. Never give up.

Copies of Dr. Seuss's books
I can quote you all the books he wrote and the number of sales he had, but leave it said that he sold a LOT of books. And, he wrote so many I can't count.

He was a prolific writer, not only in books, but in the advertising world, and as a cartoonist. Mr. Geisel, before he became the renowned "Dr. Seuss", did basically anything he could to make ends meet during the hard times of the Great Depression and World War II. Most of his work during that time was with advertising for such companies as: Flit ( an insecticide), General Electric, Standard Oil, NBC, and a local brewing company. He never gave up on his illustrations,stories and humorous articles. He published in Vanity Fair, Life, Judge, and other newspapers and magazines. 



March 2nd is also the day set aside for National Read Across America day. What a great gift Dr. Seuss left to this world.

Although Dr. Seuss made a point of not putting a moral in his stories, he's been quoted as saying "kids can see a moral coming a mile off", he wasn't opposed to writing about issues and was quoted "there's an inherent moral in any story" and that he was "subversive as hell".

Do you consciously put a moral in your stories? Do you intend to have one when you start your story or does it just come naturally at the end?

I write about strong women put through major conflict that challenges their identity as a person to see how they react and how they grow as they fight their way through.

What do you write about and how do your characters grow?