Tag Archives: inspiration

Writer’s Group at Cuppa Austin

I am experiencing my first Writer’s Group that Lori invited me to. at Cuppa Austin on Parmer close to Mopac. It is a nice little coffee shop. I got a breakfast taco, hot tea, and iced tea. They have a selection of loose teas to choose from and the baristas were cheerful. My kind of place.

We have a row of tables and 7 people have shown up so far. This is already more successful than any Writer’s Groups I’ve ever hosted. No one talks. They just work. It seems like a productive group. I have gotten four chapters edited. I am now halfway finished editing my BlackIce novel. Making progress!

And yesterday, my best friend Erica helped me get my website “landing” page set up so when people go to marshallpress.net they will see something (instead of a fake page.)

I Started a Publishing Business!

Marshall Press

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Today was exhausting!  I am about to fall in bed, but must share the victories of my day.

  • Set up my address for Marshall Press at the post office.
  • Got my dba (doing business as) paperwork filed with the county for Marshall Press (which is good for the next 10 years.)
  • Opened a bank account for Marshall Press with a company VISA and everything!
  • Set up my account with my new banking information for publishing with Kindle Create / Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing.
  • Purchased marshallpress.net domain name for the next 10 years from NameCheap.
  • Created an account on Bluehost for my marshallpress website to be hosted for the next year.
  • Created an account with FreeImages to be able to use lovely images on my sites.

There is still more to do, but that is all for one day.  I am going to relax in my comfy quarters for the last night of my retreat and enjoy one more glorious morning of tea and writing when I awake.

Writer’s Retreat

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I rented a cabin on a river to do a 4-day Writer’s Retreat. I am on day 2 and have finally gotten into an actual honest-to-goodness project that resembles both productivity and creativity.

I took a break and looked back at some old posts on this blog. I found one from 4 years ago dreaming of doing a cabin in Colorado someday for the entire summer. That is still on my to-do list, but I don’t know if I would want to be without my sweet husband for 3 whole months. He has kind of grown on me.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The lighting was too bright, so I created my own stained glass window.  Intermittent rain on a metal roof has been music to my ears. 

I have a little air conditioner and two fans creating the necessary chill factor to keep me comfortable and my favorite snacks and beverages to keep me fueled.  Of course hot tea is at the ready.

Nature has invaded my domicile twice now.  I’m hoping that is as bad as it gets.  Otherwise, the accommodations are quite satisfactory. 

BlackIce mock cover                                                                                    

This is the novel I have decided to focus on as my project.  It is an old one I wrote in 2008.  A colleague made the cover.  

I am on the editing and revising stage – about 1/4 of the way through.  Once done, I have to put together the front and back matter (dedication, copyright, about the author, etc.)  Then I plan to upload my first ever book for publishing.  It is actually coming together.

I’m thinking of different names for different genres – too confusing?

R. Marshall – YA

Mrs. Marshall – Children’s Books

Juanece – Romance

  • My thinking is that kids who love a chapter book about 3rd graders won’t accidentally stumble upon a wild adult romance novel.
  • Teens looking for age-appropriate adventure won’t get tricked into baby stuff.
  • It could possibly keep my different writing age groups separate and safe.  
  • Just something I’ve been mulling over for a while now.

Creative Project

My best friend convinced me to participate in a project combining my poems with her photographs.  I sent her this poem and she found the perfect photograph to go with it.

Lifted gently from my bed,

I dangle in your arms

safe and peaceful

riding dreams of breezy nonchalance

inside acorns of emotion.

Tiny kernels of light

speck frozen in vision’s grasp

just on the edge of horizon

the edge of reality

the edge of self.

A merging of wellness

and pain, fate and chance…

simplified seconds that

encapsulate infinity

between beats of my heart.

Each outward breath fills the universe

with life, spaces out the stars,

until the drawing in again

collapses solar systems,

visits death on the unsuspecting.

And as I lay me down you keep

my soul, my LORD,

my love in sleep.

-Rebekah J. Marshall

bitties

Photograph by Erica Smith. http://thebitties.squarespace.com/new-blog/

 

Creative Project

rose dying

Photograph by Erica Smith.  http://thebitties.squarespace.com/

My best friend convinced me to participate in a project combining my poems with her photographs.  She sent me this rose and I had to write a paragraph about it.

Aging gracefully is overrated –

probably perported

by the stoic who know no other way.

Can’t a compromise be reached

between classy and ridiculous?

Let me wear sandals in winter

and white in the fall if I

have the notion.

I’ll refrain from telling you your business

if you forgive my lapses of social etiquette.

Let me grow round and happy,

be silly in love like a school girl,

and I’ll still sip tea on Sunday afternoons

as expected.

I happen to enjoy tea

anytime

anywhere

for any reason.

But you can think it is because

I am being proper

if that makes you happy.

And we can both be content

in the end because we

lived lives full of what

we deemed valuable.

All of our loveliness will shrivel,

but the fragrance of our souls

will linger in the smiles of our

children and grandchildren

and the stories they tell of us.

I want my story memories

to be adventures

full of laughter,

not faded photographs

posed with ankles crossed,

pearls placed just so.

-Rebekah J. Marshall

 

Mother of the Year

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So…disregard my last post.  Apparently, my daughter appreciates and loves me with all her heart.  She even claims to be following in my footsteps in her attempts to be a good parent to her own daughter.

She gave me a beautiful little collection of gifts for Mother’s Day and wrote sweet lines in a Wonder Woman card.  She even went to the effort to have my granddaughter “write”/scribble in a card.  I was moved to tears.

In her forgetfulness, she dropped it off at my house, but accidentally left it in a spare room instead of putting it somewhere I would find easily.  She finally asked if I liked my presents via text and I was quite confused.  Was she joking?  Did her text count as a present?  I’m not even really a present person – or at least I didn’t think I was.  I like words, sweet words in a card, letters, songs and stories, or good conversation over tea.  That is what makes me feel loved and cared for.  That, and acts of service (if we’re talking the love languages.)

Once the confusion was cleared up, I had the best belated Mother’s Day ever.  She quoted the poem “Walk a little slower, Mom, for my feet are small.  I’m following in your footsteps and I don’t want to fall…”  The card featured Wonder Woman and said “Superheroes don’t always have a secret identity…sometimes they just go by Mom.”

She gave me some cute little jewelry items and a plaque that says, “The Best Moms get Promoted to Grandma.”  My favorite is a journal.  Inside she taped ticket stubs of movies we went to over the years as she was growing up.  It was very thoughtful and took some planning.  It was movies like Race to Witch Mountain, various Twilight movies, Harry Potter movies, The Help, Salt, Pitch Perfect, etc.  Then, sprinkled throughout the journal are fortunes from fortune cookies she saved over the years and quotes from wrappers of Dove candies and various other types of saying.  On one page she drew a lovely little turtle mama holding her turtle baby on her back.  I’ve always called her my baby turtle.

I’m still glad I broke down that dilapidated old rocking chair.  It was an eye sore and a hazard.  It is time for rose colored lenses, as one of her quotes says in the journal.  I am ready to start making my life beautiful, and some of that beauty might just come from re-framing my perspectives.

 

Mother’s Day Fail

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These are the remaining pieces of a symbol of my failure as a parent.  Let me explain…

Prior to the birth of my first child 20 years ago, I had this idea of taking photos in a rocking chair.  It was similar to my dreams of keeping photo albums of my kids, making quilts of their little outfits, framing their artwork to hang around the house, being a stay-at-home mom, and homeschooling.  Ummm…much of that did not happen, at least not to any success.  However, I did buy a rocking chair that I found second hand and spruced it up with pillows.  For the first few months and years of my kids lives, pictures were taken.  I have no idea where they are.  I’ll find them someday.  The chair followed us from house to house, but the picture idea was forgotten over time.  I chalk it up to laziness, forgetfulness, uncooperative non-participants in my household, but mostly, weariness.

Parenting never turned out to be as much fun as I imagined.  My co-parent ex-husband and I could not agree on anything, my kids found all of my ideas unpalatable, and I had to work two jobs just to pay the bills, which left very little time for arts and crafts.  Also, turns out, I hate arts and crafts, scrap booking, photography, homeschooling, and quilting.

Long story short, my kids are adults now and trying to make it as grown ups.  They resent me for never letting them have t.v., forcing religion on them, being poor, and who knows what else, but I know they also love and respect me.  I am the one they call in the middle of the night when they need someone the most.  They texted me for Mother’s Day.  They are not really at a place in their lives where I can expect gifts or cards or dinner out.  They are in survival mode.

Instead, I spent all day in my pajamas watching Netflix, writing, reading, and sipping hot tea on my back porch as it rained softly.  The eyesore that used to be my rocking chair sat in pieces taunting me for the first few hours.  I asked my husband if he knew what happened and he said that the back of the chair just slid off.  I’m not sure how the back of a chair just slides off, but that’s what he said.  It struck me that tomorrow would be recycle day and if I could fit the pieces of the rocking chair into the recycle bin, I could dispose of it.

Without thinking, I began tearing it apart.  I expected to feel sad, angry, disappointed, or some such other negative feeling.  Instead, I really didn’t feel much of anything.  I think part of me is tired of feeling regret, shame, and anger about the past.  Maybe I am numb.  Maybe I’m in denial and will feel something later.  I think I’ve just accepted that in the area of parenting, I have failed more than I have succeeded.  So, the rocking chair is disposed of and I’m planning to find a softer, more comfortable outdoorsy chair that I can share with my sweet new husband and my adorable granddaughter.

And if either of my kids decide to come over for a visit sometime, maybe they’ll let me take a picture of them in my new chair.

 

 

David Sedaris

I had so much fun attending a reading by David Sedaris last night.  I was up in the highest most dizzying section of Bass Concert Hall -row X- suffering from occasional waves of claustrophobia.  To my left was my good friend Debbie, who sent me the link to the event in the first place knowing my love of all things Sedaris.  To my right was my patient husband, humoring me with his presence since I accompanied him to an event of one of his favorite authors Neil Gaiman.

Debbie laughed hysterically, having never read anything by David Sedaris and finding his humor both offensive and alternately laugh-out-loud funny.  She was dabbing at the tears forced by her laughter the whole time.  My husband chuckled a few times, and only took away a horrible joke I would never ever repeat, even on threat of death.  Really, that was your favorite bit?  I was appalled.  David would be proud.  I laughed so hard at one point that I was unable to catch my breath and panicked a bit because I could imagine myself passing out and catapulting multiple stories to my death.  My husband said the railing 10 feet down would stop my descent.  That’s comforting.

Mr. Sedaris came out wearing culottes.  My first comment of the evening was, “Is that a kilt?”  Nope.  He proceeded to explain that these were one of his finds on a shopping trip to Tokyo.  He enjoys finding the oddest pieces on his shopping adventures.  Then he writes about them, especially pleased if he gets odd looks or comments from passers-by.  I looked up how to spell culottes and they are defined as “women’s trousers, knee-length, usually cut to resemble a skirt.”  Yep, that is exactly what he was wearing.

We didn’t stay for the book signing.  I’ve done that before and it is underrated.  He is a character, but I would rather admire him from afar than have actual personal contact.  When I met him at a book signing years ago before he got so famous, I gave him a copy of one of my short stories, merely for his entertainment.  He wrote me back, a postcard, saying he read the story on the plane flight home and found it entertaining.  I got a kick out of that.

He has many critics, I’m sure.  He can’t be politically correct to save his life.  He cusses, has absolutely no filter, reads pages of his diary that make even die-hard fans squirm in their seats, then poses questions and ideas that make people want to throw rotten tomatoes at him.  I love that he is that brave, that honest, that humble.  He doesn’t take himself seriously at all.  He doesn’t really seem to care what anyone thinks of him.  He just tells funny stories of the world as he sees it and that makes me happy.

I am nowhere near as brave, as curious, as fascinated by the macabre, or as willing to let my freak flag fly as David Sedaris, but I am certainly a voyeur who enjoys reading about his adventures.  I appreciate his humor, his opinions, his observations, and his ridiculousness, and am thoroughly entertained by it all.

me talk pretty

This is my favorite book by David Sedaris so far.  They are all great, but I laughed out loud the most while reading this one…and have returned to it the most to share with others.

Once Upon a Time – (Day 30)

I have to finish these sentences:

Once upon a time there was:  a woman who thought she was fine all by herself.

Every day:  she worked, took care of her kids, spent time with friends, and enjoyed her alone time.

One day:  she met a young handsome man who she thought she could have a silly fling with no strings attached.

Because of that:  she fell in love and realized she wanted to spend her life with him.

Until finally:  she asked him to marry her and he said yes.