Wednesday, November 30, 2011

A New Perspective


        Sherry called and asked if I’d like to help out with the care of my friend, Flo, whose brain tumor’s growth now paralyzed her right side. Sherry was putting together a list of people who could come in and sit with Flo.  I swallowed twice, cleared my tightening throat, and said, “Sure, when do you want me?”  Flo and her husband Don seemed really old to me at the time, but they were probably only in their fifties.  They had made it their personal mission to help street kids and had a Gospel Mission down town which Don needed to tend
  
 “I’ll put you down for the lunch hour on Thursdays if that’s okay. Come about 11:00 and the next person will be there at 3:00.  I’ve got the shift just before you, and I’ll have lunch prepared.  All you’ll have to do is take it out of the refrigerator and help Flo if necessary,” Sherry instructed.

“No problem,” I said, “I’ll see you then.”

            I hung up the phone, looked around the now-quiet kitchen, cluttered with breakfast dishes, cereal boxes, milk, the ordinariness of my housewife’s life, and swallowed the lump in my throat.  Whew!  You never knew what curve balls life would throw, and whether you’d be up for catching them. I made a note on my calendar to show up at Flo’s at 11 am next Thursday.

            At 10:45 that day I left the house and headed north on West Seventh to Don and Flo’s.  I punched in my favorite station and caught the end of “Annie’s Song” by John Denver.  My thoughts floated on the notes trying to imagine what I was going to say to Flo.  What do you say to someone holding her ticket out of this life?  What did I know about it anyway?  Nothing!  The only thing I’d had to deal with was my mood swings around "that time of the month.Why couldn’t I have the faith to move this mountain and have Flo leap out of bed and dance?  How did Jesus do that anyway?  The song ended with me lost in my own wonderings.

            Ten minutes later I pulled up in front of their home, much like my own, "little boxes on the hillside, little boxes made of ticky-tacky.Only the house number, if readable, could guide anyone wanting to find you.  I was surprised when Don opened the door.  His rotund frame and crew cut, his ear-to-ear smile disarmed me; and I walked happily into his welcoming arms.  “Hey, how’s it going?” he asked, as he patted me on the back.

 “Oh, can’t complain,” I beamed.  Don had a way of banishing all my insecurities.  “Come in and give Flo a hug,” he commanded.

            Not having seen her for weeks, I wasn’t prepared to find my Big Momma lying in a hospital bed in her kitchen wearing a post-surgery butch haircut.  I didn’t want to act weird, but I froze...tears formed...throat blocked...breath stopped.  Big Momma was dying and I was here to help her negotiate the passage for four hours every Thursday.  I suddenly got it.  

          Thank God for automatic functions!  My lungs kicked in and breath entered, defrosting and grounding my body in the present moment.  I forced a smile, walked over to Flo, bent down and put my cheek next to hers, whispering, “Hi.”  I didn’t trust my voice and told myself she didn’t need a “Gloomy Gus” for a companion.  “Jesus, you’re always getting me into these challenging places.  Help!” I sighed under my breath.”

            Flo was feeling fine on her Percodan and anti-depressant.  Naturally conversational, she began giving me updates on what was happening at the Mission. What a relief!  She hadn’t changed on the inside!  We chatted happily away, and before I knew it she asked for her lunch.  The local Sunny-side radio station was playing music appropriate for an office, all upbeat and light. 

“I thought you’d have the Christian station on,” I wondered out loud. 

“I don’t get the same feeling from their music,” Flo explained.  I wondered what she meant and made a mental note to check out the differences on the way home.

            After lunch, Flo napped.  I sat across from her in an overstuffed chair and read C. S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce, an allegory of heaven and hell.  What a writer! I could feel the expansiveness of heaven and the sharp, isolation of hell. Lewis’ take on this counter-intuitive theology helped me as a feminist and modern woman relate to the Biblical concepts.

Before I knew it there were soft taps on the front door, and I rose to answer it.  Sherry greeted me and explained her earlier absence, “I didn’t come this morning, so I’m taking the last shift today. Hope that didn’t throw you. Next week, I’ll be here with you.  Flo’s son is getting married, and she’s asked me to bring her some dresses to try on.  It’ll take both of us.”  This will be interesting, I thought.  Life goes on; doesn’t matter if you’re dying of a brain tumor, you have to get a new dress for your son’s wedding.  Somehow this was encouraging to me, and it surprised me that I felt so hopeful leaving when I’d felt so Tin-Woodsman-like earlier.

            The next Thursday arrived before I knew it, and I once again rang the bell at the Holmes’ home for our grand adventure.  Sherry answered the bell, and in a matter-of-fact way ushered me to the kitchen.  There, across the hospital bed and across Flo were two queen-sized, floor length dresses in soft, shimmering knits.  Flo was grinning and I couldn’t help smiling myself.  “Well, finally you’re here!  I’ve been dying to model for you both!” she laughed.

 I wasn’t prepared for her humor.  “Doesn’t dying put a damper on things?” I asked myself.  Looking at Flo--one side paralyzed, her fuzzy, closely cropped head, her eyes shining with life--I couldn’t reconcile what I thought was reality with her relaxed and easy manner, even if she had good medication.

            Sherri and I pulled back her covers, and I climbed up on the bed to be on her left side, leaving Sherry standing next to the paralyzed side. 

           “Are you ready for this?” I looked at Flo. 

          “What do you think?” she smirked.

           “Where shall we start?” I asked Sherry. 

           “I’ll roll the dress up so just the neck opening is above her head, and then we’ll work it down from there.” 

           Okay, we got her head through easily enough. 

          “Flo, let Nancy roll you towards her, and I’ll see if we can pull this down over your other shoulder and put your arm in the sleeve,” Sherry directed.

           I bent over to take hold of Flo’s right shoulder and torso and pulled toward me.  It felt like five hundred pounds of dead weight.  Sherry pushed. I pulled. Flo ended up on her left side.  Sherry needed help with Flo’s arm.  As she pulled the dress down and I pushed the limp arm into the sleeve, I lost my balance and fell across Flo; she rolled back onto her back.  The tension around needing to be so intimate with Flo’s crippled body broke, and we both began to laugh like a couple of crazies.  Sherry got caught up in our hilarity and doubled over with great guffaws.  The kitchen rocked with our glee.  Somehow we got both dresses on and off, and Flo chose the outfit she’d wear to the wedding, "the blue one."

            As I left that day I reflected on what Flo had taught me--not to fear the worst, to live fully in every minute we are given, to be grateful for drugs that help and not to hold too rigidly to all my natural remedies and organic foods, to listen to elevator music if that’s what helps you cope, and to be open and friendly to any caregivers that offer their loving kindness. Maybe dying isn’t the worst thing.  Maybe I can do it when I get my ticket. I just hope there will be the love for me that there was for Big Momma as I go.

Words from the Song of Songs according to Solomon rose to mind, “Place me as a seal over your heart, like a seal over your arm; for love is as strong as death, … it burns like blazing fire, like a mighty flame.  Many waters cannot quench love; rivers cannot wash it away.  If one were to give all the wealth of his house for love, it would be utterly scorned.”[1]

“Flo, pray for us.”


[1] Song of Songs 8:6-7, NIV 1982, Zondervan, Grand Rapids, MI

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Flow-of-Consciousness to Crafting a Scene


Here is an example of two different approaches to writing the same scene.  The first is called “downloading,” which is a simple, flow-of-consciousness kind of writing, the kind I do when I’m just getting the memory down.  The second is more crafted--more action, more showing, less telling--but not finely edited.  The final version, if it survives editing, will pare down unnecessary portions.  Let me know how you experience each and which you prefer and why.  (Names have been changed to protect….)

Mid-life Crisis

As I pulled the autumn-colored quilt over our king-sized bed, I looked up at the shredding curtains behind it, sighed, wondering when Ken might be willing to budget a face-lift for the room.  The necessities headed his To Do list of bill paying, but clothes, home furnishings, personal items did not have his interest; my efforts to discuss them met with a grim expression.  I was grateful he provided the necessary things, but  didn’t feel I could ask for what he saw as extras being a stay-at-home mom with only a part-time job when I could get it  Still, the shabbiness of the bedroom deepened my the low grade depression.  Our kids, Sherrie and Tom, were in elementary school all day decreasing their need for me, and I’d just completed my term as President of Women's Aglow Fellowship. I missed leading this vital, faith-filled, supportive group of women like a newly blind man misses colors.

 * * * * * *

Our friends’ used, velvety sage green carpet, now ours, cushioned my steps as I entered the bedroom and walked over to our California king.  I reached down and lifted the edge of the quilt striped in an autumn rainbow of gold, green and orange.  No apologies.  It was the 70’s.  I pulled the quilt into place and plumped the pillows.  Would Ken ever give up his lumpy one?  And what about these drapes?  I reached behind the silky tangerine curtains, now shredded where the sun shone in each morning, and pulled the cords that drew them open.  Somehow new ones never got added to the budget over which he ruled.  I made a mental note to learn how to be more assertive.  Dust shedding from the disturbed curtains tickled my nose. Sneezing, I grabbed a Kleenex from the night stand and blew.

             If only I had a good job, my own money, I could get those drapes.  On the other hand, a job would work against my hours spent volunteering at the church and at Rebound, the ex-prisoners’ rehab center.  There was always the on-this-hand-but-then-on-the-other-hand thinking with me.  I could argue both sides on every issue and get stuck in the middle.  No action taken.   Lots of practice caring for others; little caring for myself.  No wonder I experienced this low grade depression.

            Reaching down to pick up Ken’s dirty underwear, I felt the angst of being a stay-at-home mom when the kids no longer needed a lot of attention.  From the day they started school, friends had replaced the fascination they found in my company, and if they weren’t playing with their buddies, they were watching TV.  I didn’t miss diapers and bottles, but I did miss the snuggling and play times together.

My volunteer work as President of Women's Aglow was over.  God I missed those women on my board, the close friendships, the prayer for each other as we shared our personal stories, the excitement of putting on a monthly meeting for the public with good food and an inspirational speaker, other women opening their hearts to the love of Christ.  I loved leading the praise and worship portion, banging my tambourine against my leg as the audience clapped and sang “I’ve got a river of life flowing out of me….”  It had been an exhilarating ride, but now someone else was president, and I needed to take a back seat.  I tossed his skivvies into the hamper.


Saturday, October 29, 2011

Surprised by God

This took place in my late forties after several years of illness.

With a brimming cupful of spiced tea, I stretched out in my usual spot on our comfortable hide-a-bed. I pulled my baby-duck yellow, fisherman knit afghan I’d knitted years ago over my weary body.  It comforted me.  I picked up my Bible.   I was thirty chapters into the book of Job hoping to discover what helped Job deal with all his losses—deaths of children, loss of wealth, having a discouraging spouse, friends who preached unhelpful dogma to him, and finally losing his health.  One thing was clear.  Job wanted God to explain his suffering.  My mood fit Job’s well-reasoned accusations fired at God who, according to the story, had allowed the devil to take everything Job loved except his life.  The difference between Job and me that particular morning was that Job had more energy for the fight than I.

I don’t know how many days I began the morning with Job, starting with my sense of Job’s companionship in physical and emotional misery, and with his trying to make sense of it all.  I was hoping to find some healing word in this ancient sacred book, hoping Job’s story would open a window with some fresh air of hope to dispel my confusion, discouragement and apathy.

For some thirty-three long chapters I’d read Job’s protests about the unfairness of his suffering, and I was about to give up finding anything inspiring. I resolutely struggled through the next two chapters without finding anything supportive.  Finally in chapter thirty-six some hopeful words, “[God] is wooing you from the jaws of distress to a spacious place free from restriction….”[1] 

Whoa!  What’s this? Although I had gone as far as I had set myself to read that day, this scripture injected new hope and vigor into my soul.  It was enough to keep me going into chapter thirty-seven.  It wasn’t just the words that struck me, but a permeating sense of Presence. Past experience had taught me to believe that when I was gripped by a passage of scripture, God was making the passage personal to me.  Here God was saying to me, “Nancy, I’m working to move you out of this prison of misery, to a place where you can live your life fully!”  I sat up straight, shifted the book in my hands, when I read the words, “Then the Lord answered Job out of the storm.[2]  My heart started to race.  I set my tea down so my shaking hands wouldn’t drop the mug. I read the words again, “Then the Lord answered Job….

 It’s difficult to explain just what was happening inside me at that moment.  For thirty-seven chapters I’d been mired in Job’s suffering, his agonies, his confusion, his frustration, his endless questions, monologues to his God who seemed to be absent; and my heart was echoing his sentiments.  It was as if my experience and Job’s experience had become one.  Then an encounter, God showed up to answer Job’s questions!  GOD showed up!  God was aware of Job, had heard Job, cared about Job, wanted to teach Job how to view his current difficulties, and for Job it was as if he and God stood face to face!   I’d put a lot of stock in theology and spiritual practice, but it was the impact of my own sense of meeting God face to face through this scripture, words infused with truth, that shifted my whole perspective.  If hope were a waterfall it would have drenched me in that moment.  All the good I’d believed about God came back to me, all my wilted faith flowered again.  I didn’t know how and I didn’t know when, but I knew in the depths of my soul that God was real, personal and willing to be involved in my life.  I’d always known this, but it had faded, and now it came alive again.

Why did these words initiate such a light-filled, transforming moment?  I saw in a blaze of spiritual insight that understanding wasn’t what Job needed.  What he needed most and what I needed most was encounter, to be acknowledged, responded to, to know we were known and valued by a God “in whom we live and move and have our being,” as the ancient Greeks put it.  My physical and emotional distress had been a muffling agent to the presence of God in my life, and I needed the living God to break through to me and remind me of my belonging and belovedness, that the world still made sense, that my place in it and my relationship to God made sense.  What I needed was an epiphany, the manifest presence of God to me in a way I could fully comprehend.  Job had his, and I was having mine!

What God goes on to say to Job in the verses that followed didn’t matter at the time to me, the words just kept reinforcing this direct encounter Job was having, and that I was having in that moment. God directly speaking to me, making Presence felt and known in an unmistakable serenity yet all my attention on alert status, my mind experiencing a light-filled awareness, my chest filled with a luminous spaciousness in a rare communion with Spirit, in Oneness with Wisdom and Love. This entire experience was quiet and simple, nothing outwardly dramatic, and yet everything changed within me.

As I continued I read Job’s words, “My ears had heard of you but now my eyes have seen you,”[3] I thought I knew just what he meant.  Most of my Christian life was spent living by faith, choosing to believe that the Divine was with me, loved me and was involved in my life whether or not I saw what I considered evidence of this.  But when, by grace, I experienced an epiphany, a manifestation of the presence of God, I lived in a moment of clarity, of sight, of a reality that truly exists and confirmed my faith.  This was one of those moments.

As I became more conscious of what had happened through my reading, the hardness of my life as a chronic invalid was softened by an even greater truth I needed to know again, the transcendent reality that the cosmos is saturated with the love of God which is given freely to all who would draw near, and that a meeting of God in the human heart is actually possible.  And here, on the blue-plaid hide-a-bed, this meeting was happening to me, in me. 

In this fresh revelation, a semi-transparent cloud settled over all that was painful, unpleasant, and sad, over all my troubling unanswered questions, and grace lifted my heart to worship, to love and adore this mysterious God.   I sat, breathing freely, full breaths of hushed life, companioned by the ancient Job and infused with the cosmic breath of God; me, unexciting as a child’s milk spilled out on the table, bathrobe clad, barefoot, alone in the moment, and still chronically ill.  It didn’t matter.

Troubling questions would haunt me later.  Why don’t we have life-sustaining revelations, manifestations of God each and every time we’re hurting, confused, lost?  Why are epiphanies so few and far between?  God came near to me and healed me in my mind and soul that day, but not my body.  Why was that?  If God can appear and put an end to mental distress, why doesn’t this happen when asked…every time?  What I learned was that these questions must not be allowed to stop me from asking for God’s help and remaining open and expectant.  God’s promise is that if we draw near, if we take the time and energy to place ourselves in a receptive frame of mind, and do so for as long as it takes, God will come near to us,[4] and it will make all the difference.






[1] Job 36:16a NIV, 1988
[2] Job 38:1, Ibid.
[3] Job 42:5 NIV 1988
[4] James 4:8a, Ibid.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Some Thoughts About Marketing and Publishing Your Book

Recently I attended a workshop on marketing and publishing your book, presented by the Purple Sage Publishing Consortium here in Reno.  Pat Holland Connor was the speaker, and shared about her book, Doorways to Significance.

Her first statement was: "Marketing and publishing my book is my business today!"

Pat spends all her working time marketing her book now that it is published.  She has had a lot of help from a local publisher who provided a variety of services from which she could select according to her needs and budget.

Indie Publishing

At our Unnamed Writers Group meeting Saturday, Cindie Geddes of Lucky Bat Books gave us a knock-out presentation on the new e-book publishing route.  She urged us not to get agents or go the traditional publishing route for at least the next two years as things are in a huge transition, and authors are getting tromped on in the process.  Instead she recommends Indie publishing (independent publishing), and says, "Drop the words 'self-publishing.'  Her group, Lucky Bat Books, provides all the services an author needs to get published.  You pay only for the services you need, and the author doesn't have to pay ongoing publishing costs to them.  Her website is:  http://luckybatbooks.com


Here are the blogs she recommends, and they are compelling and relevant:

The Business Rusch by Kristine Kathryn Rusch (I had trouble accessing this blog.)

http://www.deanwesleysmith.com/ by Dean Wesley Smith (Really helpful!)

  http://accordingtohoyt.com/by Sarah Hoyt (Has left her agent for indie publishing.)

http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/ by Joe Konrath (Has had amazing success with e-books!)

Here's a definition for indie publishing:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_press

Out of the Doldrums

When first posted under this title, the content was incorrect.  Here is the appropriate content.



After eighteen years of chronic illness, I developed any number of strategies to beat the blues.  When my ability to cope dropped near zero, I wanted an elevator with an H button for heaven.  Not having one at hand, I did the next best thing.  I went to bed for three days.  My model was Jesus in the grave three days and then, voila! Resurrection! On my three days I did nothing but eat, sleep, void, and watch funny movies.  I didn’t try to be nice or appropriate to anybody or do anything I didn’t want to.  I always got enough energy that way for my coping dial to turn up to a good six or seven for several more weeks.

But for days when I just have the blahs, I make ketchup.  After researching and trying several recipes, I’ve put together one that I’m quite fond of.  It’s simply called Nancy’s Ketchup Recipe.

On a bleak day towards the end of winter, I looked at the time and noticed it was almost two o’clock p.m.  I was still in my rose colored chenille robe with its cuffs tarnished from too many breakfasts and not enough washings—typical attire for miserable days.

Time to get going! Do something for god’s sake!

I mentally ran through a list of things I like to do, and making ketchup rose to the top.
Tomato juice…sweetener…arrowroot for thickening…the ingredients tumbled through my thoughts energizing me enough to get to the spice cupboard.

I arranged everything I needed and reached into the kettle cupboard to pull out my red Dutch oven, a spur of the moment buy-on-sale at Kohl’s some months before.

I wonder what’s on KUNR? (the public radio station.)

I pushed the power button on the kitchen boom box and went back to my self-prescribed, anti-depression ritual.  Classical melodies infiltrated my gray mood and brought some soothing tones into my heaviness as I began combining ingredients.  That done, I started the good part, the long, slow, aromatic task of keeping my brew from burning on medium high heat.

My robe redecorated itself with new blots and blotches of red as an assortment of bubbles burst releasing their yummy tomato smells.  I ignored the new stains.  I was in an altered state--stirring…smelling…humming…listening.

The male radio anchor began giving the history of the next piece, the Olympic Symphony by Panayoti Karousos with movements named after exotic Greek gods and goddesses, all of whom I’d been studying in my Ancient Literature group.  I smiled as the first piece sent its shivery notes down my back.  Wakefulness began to rise within me like yeast in fresh, warm dough. 

In this moment I am a mythological crone stirring my cauldron accompanied by ancient goddesses.  In me the sun has come out from behind the clouds.


Thursday, October 6, 2011

A Coming Out Party

All the food was ready; the sweet-acerbic smell of my famous Hawaiian meatballs filled the kitchen.  Sodas were chilling in the forty-year-old cooler on the well-worn redwood deck.  Lee had just hosed it down for the expected crowd and an after-the-rain smell hung in the air.

Tension in my stomach and shoulders reminded me I was losing control over my private space.  I told myself there was no reason to be anxious--these were all family and friends coming to this celebration!--but I wasn’t sure just who would actually show up.  Will there be enough people coming to make it feel like a real party?  I already knew my son wouldn’t be coming, and that had dampened my mood.

As I set out the iced tea the doorbell chimed, and when I ran to open the door my heart leapt into my throat.  It was Carol Purroy, my writing teacher, with a pot of raspberry-colored flowers in a hand-thrown pot.  I shouted out her name with great delight and drew her in.

No sooner had I helped her orient to the surroundings than other guests began coming.  Lee took over the door as I moved them outside to the newly landscaped garden—one of the two big reasons for this party.

 I repeatedly explained my design, “This is a Jungian conceptual garden where union of the opposites is the key. Here is the English country garden with its daisies and roses representing Western culture.  On the east side is the Japanese garden with its heavenly bamboo and rounded bridge over the dry creek bed—Eastern culture.  Uniting them is the labyrinth, the feminine aspect.  Looking up the hillside outside the split-rail fence, you’ll see the rocky ledge with iron benches—the masculine element.  Here on the level ground we have the formal, cultivated area and just outside the gate to the hill is what I call the wild garden with naturalized plantings from Western high desert areas.”

I smiled as I noticed guests beginning to walk the labyrinth in measured steps and a quiet, meditative mood.  Let there be much prayer and praise in this place!

A half hour into the festivities, Heidi came up to me with her toddler and pre-teen explaining she needed to leave.  Chevy, the baby, was having too much fun rearranging the rocks of the labyrinth and she’d had it trying to keep up replacing them.  I urged her to stay just a few more minutes so I could unveil my new painting for everyone, and she agreed though she wrinkled her brow warily.  I asked Tina and Lee to shepherd everyone in for the event.

      I brought a little stool in from the deck so when I removed the cloth I wouldn’t jerk the painting off the wall.  When everyone was comfortable, I teased off the drape to soft gasps of pleasure.  Using the laser pointer Lee had bought me at Walgreens that afternoon, I pointed its scarlet light at an assortment of symbols, explaining their meaning, such as the concentric circles representing campsites, or in my case, places I’d lived; wavy lines indicating trails, my path to the next home site.  It was the story of my life told in golds and reds, purples and whites, all dots, circles and lines in the style of the Australian indigenous peoples.

      In that moment, with the dearest people in my life all facing me, obviously enjoying themselves, giving me their rapt attention, I felt completely at one with all things, quietly filled with a gentle ecstasy of welcome.  Lee told me later I was radiant, and I knew my own inner gold had finally escaped its introverted container and was shining for my entire world to see.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Another Possible First Page

Let me know how you like this new first page and whether you like it better or not as much as the last one I posted:


Nancy Pfaff  Memoir—first page  9/16/11

            As long as I can remember I’ve been searching. What I was searching for I couldn’t say for many years. My search was subdued and almost invisible until a Sunday school teacher shot holes in my simple faith the fall I turned thirteen. This marked an initiation into the darker side of life, a turning away from the light. That year our class of eighth graders was filled with high energy, every class was a chance to socialize with all my best friends and my new boyfriend, LeRoy Nutting. But that youthful simplicity and joy in my faith ended on that fateful Sunday in 1954 as Mrs. Decker launched into her “enlightened” teaching on the debunking of the Virgin Birth.

            Now up until that day, I wasn’t any Bible expert, I hadn’t memorized more than two psalms and no bible verses, I had no opinion on other religions or who was in or who was out, what was acceptable and what was heresy, I just loved my little white bible with my name engraved in gold leaf—Nancy Lee Watson.  My childlike assumption about what that bible contained was that it was full of good stories from a long time ago, and these stories were fun to enter into in my imagination—Daniel in the lion’s den (Hopeful, but doubting that my faith could stop the mouths of lions.); David and Goliath (Rejoicing in a child having conquered a giant.);  and Jesus born in a stable in Bethlehem (Hopeful that there were families who loved each other and helped each other because my family was in constant fermentation from the disease of alcoholism.).

Whether these stories were literally true or legendary or inspired by God but not literally true or something else didn’t enter my thoughts. I simply believed them as they were written. What was important and essential was that these stories inspired a sense of radiance, revealed a sparkling cosmos bigger than the one I lived in day-to-day, stirred a sense of wonder that drew devotion out of my inner soul for this God who mysteriously became involved in lives and accomplished miracles.  Sunday school, the bible, hymn singing all pointed to this light and luminous other world; and my undiscriminating heart resonated to its numinosity.

But back to Mrs. Decker, my weaver of evil spells.  She was an overstuffed, middle-aged woman with unruly black hair, and an attitude that said, “I am so very informed and modern in my thinking!”  She launched into her version of the birth of Christ, “Now the bible says that Mary was a virgin, and that God gave her Jesus in a miraculous happening, but we don’t have to accept this ancient and superstitious tale.  Mary could easily have been a virgin, but contained within herself both male and female parts which could produce the child quite easily.  We can see this in nature.  Many plants have complete flowers with both male and female parts.”

Now growing up in a ranching and farming community, you would think that I was well acquainted with the reproductive process, but I was a town kid, and the only sexual sight I had witnessed was the castrating of the male calves at branding time when I visited Sandra Galeppi, a school mate who lived on a ranch.  Oh another classmate and I had sneaked a medical book from my parents’ bookshelves, had perused various genital diagrams, found them disgusting, and decided we would never have intercourse, but just swim in a pool with our husband and get pregnant that way. That was the extent of my sexual thinking. So with Mrs. Decker tying the Virgin Mary to a plant which could reproduce itself sexually my mental acuity began to fade. My mind kind of tried to wrap around the words Mrs. Decker had sounded in my ears, but I couldn’t make sense of it.  What punctured my resonating heart was that God didn’t do miracles; it was all ancient superstitious stuff, something out of the wilds of time when the inquisition burned people at the stake for being witches.  

 In this crisis of faith, fate marked me to forever search out the numinous and my relationship to it, although it would remain at an unconscious level for many years.

            I never went back to Sunday school.  I gave up believing in miracles…for a season. 



Wednesday, August 10, 2011

A Transforming Moment with Friends

The Pearl Ceremony

            As my fiftieth birthday approached, I wanted to break out of this invalid cycle, if only for the day, and do something unique. When I’d turned forty, I’d felt like I hit a milestone—free to be me!  At fifty I felt like a survivor, weather-beaten, but centered in faith, hopeful and determined.  The word that inspired me now, that lifted me up above my daily grind was “perspective.”  I’d seen the best of times and the worst of times and become a seasoned soul.

As I thought about what could make my birthday meaningful, I decided to invite my best friends to join me.  Six women had come to be superb buddies as we met for prayer weekly in my home.  I knew they would be willing to help make the day special.  It had been fifteen years of chronic illness, and I didn’t feel up to going to restaurants or movies with lots of people, so I felt challenged to come up with something new.

For a moment I fell into a daydream remembering the highlights of our group.  Ours wasn’t the average prayer group that prays for the sick and suffering in the local church.  Our group was organized with a vision and purpose to change our city through love.  We called ourselves Servants of Vision and committed to pray for the visions of  pastors in our area, believing that God had or would reveal these visions to each of them.

            I don’t remember how I came to know each of these women, but we had developed a strong bond as we prayed together for these pastors.  Karen was a nurse and member of a local, independent charismatic fellowship.  Marie was a hospital chaplain nearing retirement age.  Pam was a recent casino executive who had recently found Christ and was choosing a new path.  Carol was heavily involved in Aglow, a women’s charismatic fellowship.  Chris was a busy volunteer at her non-denominational evangelical fellowship.  Sarah was an executive assistant for a local church. 

            The plan around which our group centered grew out of my time in the Philippines.  When I had attended the Lausanne II meetings in the Philippines in 1989, I studied under a world demographer from Norway who inspired me to put together something I called Battlestations, groups of prayer warriors who were intent on seeing their cities come to know the love of God in Jesus Christ. This Norwegian demographer said that Reno, Nevada, was a predictor of trends. What was happening in Reno was a forecaster of what would later happen in the rest of the United States. Being from Reno, this released my imagination.  If the Christian church in Reno could cause a noticeable change as a result of bringing people into the love of God in Christ, it could become a model to change the world.  Even Billy Graham at one of his Reno crusades had said as much, “If Reno becomes known for salvation, the whole world will be changed.” It was around this hope that our prayer group was organized.

            Our basic plan was to identify people involved in the “mind molders” in our city—education, the justice system, business, churches, the family, media and politics.  We would pray for these people. Our desire was that God’s grace and power would enable each Christian in each mind molder to share their faith and invite their colleagues and friends to church. Although I was ready to move the vision into reality, Karen stood firm that we must spend time waiting on God in prayer rather than charging ahead to make something happen on our own.  She seemed to think that maybe the vision was of God and maybe not.  It was hard for me to accept, but I respected Karen’s depth of wisdom drawn from hours in the presence of God in prayer.

            One memorable day as we sat in my living room praying out loud for the needs of our city, a profound hush came over us and we barely breathed.  We all experienced Jesus standing in our midst, present in all his fullness of love, encouraging us in what we were doing.  This was the first time I had been part of a group when such a personal visitation took place and all present were aware of it happening.  It was as if we were the musical instruments in God’s orchestra, and the Spirit was animating us.  Happenings like this drew us close.

            When we finally felt ready to take action in the city, and since I was still associated with Church Resource Ministries, a missionary organization based in southern California, I visited all the local pastors willing to talk to me.  That is on my good days.  I asked them to a free lunch explaining we would have a special speaker to help churches reach the city for Christ.  I invited our Director of Missions in the United States to address them.  Then our prayer group got busy making the best lunch we could, renting the club house in my condominium association, and making the setting beautiful.  We were heartened to have over twenty pastors attend from a wide variety of Christian backgrounds. 

Several pastors were willing to continue meeting on a regular basis.  Out of this came a city-wide gathering of thousands meeting at the Lawlor Events Center, the sports stadium at the University of Nevada.  When numerous men, women and children came forward to accept Christ or to rededicate themselves, I felt amazed that our small group could catalyze something this significant.  I firmly believed in the power of prayer, and this cemented my conviction.  Our prayer group felt optimistic that we had made a good start to change our city.  We were enthusiastic about continuing, and began planning to involve more prayer groups city wide.  It delighted us that we might just be able to change our world as we changed the Reno and Sparks areas.

At the same time, I felt perplexed.  What I had envisioned was each church identifying the ten percent within the congregation who had the spiritual gift of evangelism. From my church growth training I knew that ten percent was a good average per church.  These ten percent would be trained to reach the mind molders most appropriate to them.  As these were successful in bringing new people into the churches, they would share with others and train others who would do the same.  Each new individual or family would be invited to list people they knew who might be interested in an invitation to church, and this would repeat in a continual loop as the seventy-five percent of the unchurched in our area found a suitable church family.  In other words, I envisioned a slow, steady, continuous growth over many years rather than a high visibility, high cost one-time event.  What I envisioned were more and more Christians in the mind molders knowing each other and organizing in their arena so that the slow tide of Christian love would increase integrity, honesty, kindness, consideration and the common good would rise.

            I pulled myself back from my reverie to consider my birthday.  Somewhere in the back of my mind I wanted to celebrate the lessons learned through the many years of set backs and illness.  My long term illness was my irritation, and I longed to transform the dis-ease and unhappiness into something more life giving. As I pondered this challenge, the image of a pearl came to mind.  The pearl is formed from a piece of silt that has gotten into the oyster. It causes irritation and the oyster secretes a fluid to cover it up-- voila, a pearl is formed.  Could my friends and I make a pearl out of my distress?

            I was reading books on women’s rituals, and began to reflect on what might help me with my celebration.  My creative juices began to flow.  Where sluggishness and stagnation from the illness hung over me, now I began to breathe in a new air, a sense of coming alive again.

            First I talked to my husband about buying a pearl necklace. I didn't tell him about giving away my other one. I had placed my good pearl necklace on the altar of our church one New Year’s Eve when I offered my life to God in a kind of Ignatian[1] pledge: “I desire only what is conducive to my soul, not preferring health to sickness, riches to poverty, honor to dishonor, long to short life, ....” That night I felt open-hearted, loving God and desiring only what God wanted for me.  The deepest love and most unconditional and continual acceptance of me as a woman and a human being was given to me by Jesus Christ, and my heart overflowed with wanting to return that abundant love.

            That New Year’s eve, I was still recovering from my hysterectomy surgery, and even with the ovaries left, I was having hot flashes and mood swings, mainly toward depression.  Feeling anxious and concerned some weeks earlier, I followed my heart and spent more time in prayer and reading the scriptures.  I was particularly drawn to Philippians 3:10-11, I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings….  So when Pastor Melson invited the congregation to come forward and place a token of their commitment of themselves to God on the altar, I was moved to do so.  I had a problem though.  I had nothing I could place on the altar of my own because I hadn’t brought a purse.  The only thing I could give was a strand of beautiful cultured pearls that had been with me since I was 12, a gift from my uncle Jack, my mother’s brother.  I hesitated.  Nevertheless, my heart was so intensely devoted to God at that time, having known his love for me in a very personal manner, I walked slowly down the isle and laid them on the altar.  When I did inquire about the strand some days later, no one knew what had become of it.  I missed those pearls.

            Don, always wanting to make ends meet and avoid unnecessary expenses, was cautious in his support of the suggested pearl shopping trip, but following his helpful pattern, he opted to give me his support.  We went to two or three jewelry shops; I didn’t have energy for more than that, and the necklaces they showed me were all very inferior. The graduated pearl necklaces fell far short. There were no knots between the pearls and the strands wouldn’t hang straight.  They looked like they were made without care which made me doubt their quality.  They were irregular in nature and didn’t have much of a polish.

Finally I found a string that was gorgeous—eighteen inches long and each pearl a delight to the eye.  The pearls were all of one size rather than graduated, but they were beautiful.  The price tag opened my eyes wide!  I don’t remember exactly how much they cost, but $1,500 seems to stick in my mind.  Nevertheless, Don said he’d pay two thirds if I would pick up the rest, and I agreed.  Not having many dollars in my personal account--I hadn't worked for years--I hated to take it all for the necklace.  At the same time, I was choosing to see each of my trials infused with new light, and the necklace became a numinous symbol of transformation to me. Each pearl represented a particular ordeal from which I learned a wonderful lesson.  It was my attempt to integrate what had happened to me and to sweeten the hard times of my life.  I was reminded of the time God told Moses to throw wood in the water at Marah to take away its bitterness, a foreshadowing of Christ bringing light into our world.[2] 

            I thought my friends and I needed to make something together when we met, so, being a bread baker from way back, I decided we would make bread, knead our sorrows into it, the sorrows of our mothers and their sorrows. Each of us had a portion of the recipe—flour, sugar, oil, yeast, salt.  We combined the ingredients, tore the dough into seven pieces, one for each of us, and began to knead them. We silently meditated on our intent—to acknowledge and honor the sufferings of the women we were, all the way back in our heritage, and the wisdom and strength that each woman gained through facing and dealing with her trials.  Rather than speak our families’ secrets out loud, we quietly meditated on current and ancient sorrows being softened in the dough as we worked it, symbolizing the fermenting of difficulties into something wonderful like a good wine.

After combining our individual pieces into one dough, we divided it in three parts, rolled them into long fingers and braided them into a loaf, all pairs of hands taking turns.  We left our creation to rise while we shared. After baking, it would be a wonderful-smelling loaf to have with fresh butter and home made preserves.  I smiled to myself as I reflected on what was to come.  My whole body felt comforted, and my heart swelled with pleasure as a feeling of belonging and community wrapped me like a soft shawl.

            We moved into the living room overlooking Reno and its eastern mountains.  I’d placed a wooden rolling pin and seven ribbons on the coffee table for our next experience. We would tie our ribbon on the rolling pin, and tell a story of a great sorrow together with the profound wisdom that arose from it. The rolling pin would act like a "talking stick" in Native American circles. Whoever had the rolling pin would be able to say what she thought as the others listened.  The bread would rise and bake as we talked.

            None of us had heard each others' stories of hardship and lessons learned.  The room was intensely quiet as each woman tied her ribbon on the rolling pin and initiated her narrative.  Our love and respect for each other rose like the yeast dough in the dining room, the energy in the room becoming tender and full of mutual affection.  Each one entered into the sharing with openness and trust.  My heart repeatedly broke and mended as I felt my friends' grief  followed by inspiration from the lessons they had learned.  A sudden sense of coming of age, of being finally all grown up, of being fully adult settled gently over me as autumn leaves descending on a quiet fall day.

            Occasionally we would tend the rising bread and then return to our sharing.  When it came time to put it in the oven, and as our intimate time continued, the aroma of fresh baking bread added to the nurturing, healing atmosphere.  Only our youngest member in her early thirties hadn’t met with a great trial to share, and this surprised me.  Somehow I thought everyone age thirty and up would have a story of grief surmounted.  Her contribution was just as wonderful as she shared how our stories touched her.

      The story I told was about my long, chronic illness with no basis to believe my health would ever change.  With my head down and voice low, heavy with memories, I told of my long, lonely days, many of them in unrelieved pain--the endless days of more of the same. As I turned to the lesson learned, my body shifted and straitened in the chair.  I got my breath back, and went on.  One winter day my daughter, Kristina, recently released from the Army, breezed into our condo.  "Mom, put on a coat.  I'm taking you out of here."  It was one of my better days.  I was up, dressed in hot-pink sweats, and thinking, "Yeah.  I'd like to get out of here!"  She took me to our Paperback Book Exchange on Vesta off Wells Avenue.  As she browsed in science fiction, I rambled to the back of the store and the Christian used paperbacks.  One in particular caught my eye, The Seven Story Mountain by Thomas Merton.  Intrigued by the title, I bought it.  As I read about this twentieth century Trappist monk and his spiritual journey, and later other books of his, I was led to a monastic quote,  "Stay in your cell, and your cell will teach you everything." 

     As if God were speaking directly to me, I understood that if I would see my illness as my monastic cell, choose to live in it with openness to the Spirit, God would teach me everything.  This illness could not hold me back in anyway from becoming the person I was meant to be.  I loved the scripture from Philippians 1:6, "...being confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus."  Suddenly my prison doors of illness flung open and my mind and spirit were released to live fully in the midst of uncertainty.  Meaning and purpose flooded my soul, and I was gloriously free even though nothing had changed.  My face glowed with joy and determination as I finished.  My friends smiled encouragingly, eyes shining with unshed tears.
            When all the ribbons had been tied on the rolling pin, all the stories shared, and the room was brimming with healing and support, the timer dinged.  The bread was finished.  We took it out of the oven, chatted sociably, so different from our serious exchanges, and let it cool enough to slice.  Fresh creamery butter and homemade strawberry preserves were ready to spread.  We each helped ourselves and returned to the living room to wrap up.  Each of us was beaming and pink cheeked from the wonderful love and life given to each of us by each other.  Truly our sorrows and been turned into dancing in this simple celebration.  Then, grinning, the other women presented me with a small gift box nicely wrapped.  In it was a pair of pearl earrings, simple studs, to match the necklace.  Such a feeling of sweet gratitude engulfed me, I was so honored to receive their present. 

As I stood facing them, wearing the lovely necklace and beautiful earrings, I felt the richness of the day, the wonder and depth of sharing life’s hard lessons and declaring that great good was harvested in spite of temporary devastation.  My sense of invalidism was replaced with an inner feeling of strength.  In that moment I felt able to stand in the face of any difficulty.  It was their love, support and understanding, together with all our sorrows and gleanings shared, that in some mysterious way had transformed my loneliness as a chronic invalid into one of the most stunning days of my life.


[1] St. Ignatius of Loyola was a great evangelist in the sixteenth century.  He developed a series of spiritual exercises to help new Christians grow.  One of the exercises involves this pledge.
[2] Exodus 15:25

Thursday, August 4, 2011

First page of my memoir

I'm trying different styles for my first page.  Here is one.  Let me know your reaction.


As the crossing lights blinked and the guard came down, Dorothy lit a cigarette as she thought how much she would rather be taking this train to San Francisco than where she was headed.  Yet she knew she had an appointment that couldn’t be postponed.  Her labor pains were now five minutes apart, and St. Mary’s Hospital was just blocks away.

 The first snow of the year was falling in Reno that November 15, 1942, and she distracted herself by watching them light on the windshield.  Her husband, Ken, a beer in one hand and steering wheel in the other, was eagerly listening to the radio. The latest updates on the naval battles of Guadalcanal were on. It would be a turning point in World War II.  In nine months Ken would be in Tucson, Arizona, where he would become an aircraft gunner.

“Do you have to listen to that now?” criticized Dorothy.

Ken gave her a disgusted look and kept on listening.

I burst into the world some hours later, was scrubbed and pressed and whipped off to the nursery.  There the prayerful and practical Dominican nuns hovered over me like the Holy Spirit hovering over the waters at the creation of the world.  This auspicious beginning combined with my great-grandmothers prayers, destined me for a life-long search for meaning and purpose.  My life was imprinted with “wanted by God” from that day, not an easy claim to live with considering the two parents I inherited whose focus was on this life and times when my eyes saw a distant reality.  But the awareness of something more would only develop in my late twenties. 

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Parental Taboo


After-the-game dances were common at DCHS, Douglas County High School.  I loved the music and dancing with the guys, gossiping with the girls, and generally hanging out.  We wore our school clothes, which meant sweaters and skirts for the girls and shirts and jeans for the guys.  Oxfords and ankle socks were in fashion.  Trying to white-wash those shoes every day with the watery, white shoe polish available at the time was a chore I would have put off indefinitely except I didn’t want to be embarrassed by all the scuff marks I put on the shoes daily.  The music was from 45 rpm records, little, black, plastic discs with a big hole in the middle.  One of the students manned the record player.

            We all knew each other because the whole school was only 150 students, thirty-some in my class of 1960.  At one particular dance, which I was really enjoying, I was asked to move to the music by one of the Indian boys from the Dresslerville Indian Reservation.  He was soft spoken, very attractive and kind.  I loved dancing with him.  I don’t remember ever having been asked to dance by an Indian boy before, and I smiled the whole time.

            After the dance, I drove home in the old, soft-top jeep my dad let me use to get to and from school.  It was basketball season, and the weather had turned cold, so I was glad the jeep’s heater put out a good steady flow of hot air.  The dances were usually over early, about 9 pm, and I was tired from the long day.  I probably said good night to my mom and went up to bed.

            The next morning, my mother called me over to the floral, slip-covered couch to talk with me. 

            “Nancy, I heard you were dancing with an Indian boy at the dance last night.” (Word got around fast in our small, country town of 2,500).

            “Yeah, Mom.  It was great!  He was a good dancer and a really nice guy!

            “There’s something you need to know about Indians and non-Indians; they don’t socialize together.  It’s just not something that is done.  People who marry other races are never accepted on either side nor or their children.  I don’t want to hear about you doing this again.”

As she talked, and being the compliant, pleasing child I was, I became embarrassed about having broken her social code.  It never occurred to me that her code might be something I should question.  I remembered her talking to me about the movie, Showboat, in which Ava Gardner passes for white when she is a mixed race.  Mom talked about it as something disgraceful.  It never quite got through to me what that was all about, but I picked up the tone of shame in my mother’s voice and adopted it as my attitude.  I think it had more to do with how mother would be judged by her peers than what I was actually doing.

At another level, mom and dad were very respectful and polite to the Indians who shopped in our store, The Minden Dry Goods.  At Christmas time the whole family wrapped dozens of presents for Indian children which dad delivered.  Carolyn was the Indian woman who came in weekly to help mom with the ironing.  Everything was cotton in those days and needed to be ironed.  With two girls and one boy wearing different clothes each day, Mom's ironing really piled up.  Mom had great respect for Carolyn and Carolyn for Mom.  Carolyn even took Mom hunting for wild onions once, so I think they socialized some.

I’m glad this indoctrination of the separation of races disappeared as I rubbed elbows with many nationalities in college, and other venues.  The social view has changed with me and my adult children.  Racial identification, gender differences, these are far down the list on how we choose our friends.  It’s much more important that we share similar interests and are honest and trustworthy.

Friday, June 3, 2011

How can I enrich my writing with details from the five senses?

When I studied Christian spirituality at Creighton University, I learned an ancient technique of meditation Ignatius of Loyola (16th century) called "contemplation."  Using the same technique, you can ponder your scene and enter into an imaginative experience from which you can gather compelling details.  The techniques I'm giving you below are geared for meditation of the events in the life of Jesus, but meditating on the event in your story that you wish to explore will also work.

St. Ignatius of Loyola taught a form of meditation with scripture he called contemplation.  It is a way of entering into a Gospel story and experiencing it as if you were there.  As a result, the story and the people in it, especially Jesus the Christ, come alive and interact with you.  The result can be transforming.
The imagination turns out to be a powerful way of knowing. Using this power that you have, you can pull together images or data that might seem to be worlds apart and make coherent sense of them. Great scientists and inventive technologists say that, after you’ve gotten all the information, then real knowing begins: you have to re-envision things, see them anew, differently. That demands imagination.
So you use this great God-given power in prayer. You are likely to have a common problem with this power: It is unruly. Our imagination turns to fantasy on the slightest provocation—leaving the real world behind and enjoying a never-never land. You probably know that the great religions have developed ways of taming and focusing the imagination, and some of their disciplines are aimed at that. Here is one proven way to focus your imagination in order to come to know, love, and follow Jesus better.
    1. Read a gospel passage slowly.
    2. Quiet yourself
    3. Imagine an object in the scene
    4. Enlarge your vision to things near the object and finally to the whole setting
    5. Imagine the whole setting as vividly as possible
    6. What kind of place is it? Clean or dirty? Large or small? What about the architecture? The weather? Time of day or night?
    7. Let the whole scene come to life
    8. See the people. What are they doing? How many people? How are they dressed? What are their concerns? What are they saying? What are they doing?
    9. Enter the scene. What are you doing there? Why have you come to this place? What are your feelings as you survey the scene and watch these people? What are you doing? Do you speak to anyone? To whom?
    10. Notice the central figure. Where in the crowd is this one? What do you say to this one? What do you ask? How does this one reply? Spend as much time as you can getting as many details of this one’s life and person as possible. What sort of an impression does this one make on you? What are your feelings while you converse with this one?
    11. As you are speaking to this one, out of the corner of your eye, the Holy One approaches, (Jesus). What are the Holy One’s actions and movements. Where does this one go? How does this one act? What do you think the Holy One is feeling? What does the other say? How does the other respond? What happens?
    12. Dwell on the Holy One. This Holy One turns to you, engages you in conversation. Talk to this one about what you have experienced. Ask any question you wish. Listen to the Holy One’s response.
    13. What are your feelings?
    14. Spend some time in quiet prayer with the Holy One.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Should You Self-Publish?

Generally publishers are not interested in a self-published book.  However, if you can be sure of selling 3,000 to 4,000 copies, you can show the publisher you have a market.  The people I know who have been successful at this sort of thing are very out-going, good marketers, self-promoting with high-energy. 

12 Reasons Agents Dump Your Book

Here are the most common reasons an agent puts down your book:
1.  It has a prologue which gives information that happened a significant time before Chapter 1.  Instead, make it Chapter 1.
2.  Descriptions go on and on without any action.  Instead, work descriptions into the story rather than having them stand alone.  Here's a good example from Frederick Buechner's, Telling Secrets"One night we went to compline in an Episcopal cathedral, and in the coolness and near emptiness of that great vaulted place, in the remoteness of the choir's voices chanting plainsong, in the grayness of the stone, I felt it again--the passionate restraint and hush of God."
3.  It has a ragged, fuzzy point of view.  Instead, have a series of significant, meaningful scenes, each moving the story forward to its conclusion.
4.  The opening is predictable.  Instead, start with something surprising, or a brand new way of expressing your idea, or a metaphor that is compelling and readers can easily relate to it.
5.  It begins with, "My name is...."
6.  Nothing happens in Chapter 1.
7.  The writing is full of cliches, time-worn patterns of speech; or the reader is led to believe one thing and then tricked, such as, in the last chapter the whole story turns out to have been a dream.
8.  The main character in Chapter 1 dies.
9.  The characters in the story are too perfect, no flaws, ... boring.
10. The writing has inauthentic dialogue.  No one really talks that way.
11. The story goes on and on and no plot is in sight.
12. All the information about the characters is dumped in the first few pages.  Instead, flesh out the characters over time in what they say, do or don't say or don't do.

If Asked For A Synopsis

If an agent or publisher finds your submission intriguing, they may ask you for a synopsis.  For the best chance of having yours read, make it one page of four to five paragraphs, although it could be as long as four pages.  The first paragraph should have a "hook," something as engaging as your opening scene.  The next paragraph or two
should contain a mixture of character sketches and why they are worth reading about, interlaced with the plot highlights.  Then the core conflict should be expressed.  Note that conflict can be between persons, a conflict of values within a character, and even conflict with the environment such as in a mountain-climbing story.  Finally, the conclusion of the tale needs to end the synopsis.  It is even better if you combine the explanation of the conflict and the conclusion in one paragraph.  While you may hesitate to tell the whole story in brief, giving away the ending, no self-respecting agent or publisher will bother with your synopsis if you don't give it to them.

Why I Disappeared for Two Weeks

How good it is to be on the recovery side of pneumonia!  What seemed to be nothing more than allergies turned into something very sinister.  Did you know you can have pneumonia and not have a fever?  Well, I just learned  you can. Thank God I'm attuned to my body and noticed that I'd taken a turn for the worse.  That got me in for a chest X-ray which confirmed the diagnosis. A bump on the road was confusion over medication.  My doctor prescribed doxycycline hyclate (dh), 100 mg.  The pharmacist declared that wouldn't help me heal from pneumonia.  The paper that came with the medicine warned that I mustn't take it with penicillin, but my doctor already had me on penicillin for a sinus infection.  Neither pharmacist nor doctor seemed to be able to help me understand just how to take the dh.  I was frazzled to say the least and feeling rotten anyway.  What to do?  I called my daughter who has "suffered much at the hands of many doctors" and she cleared it up right away--actually dh is often prescribed for pneumonia.  And, after getting clarification from my doctor, I could ignore the warnings on the paper the pharmacy gave me.  After the first dose I began to breathe easier, and now a week has passed and I'm back on my feet blogging, or is that back on my seat blogging???