Second Acts


Montblanc F. Scott Fitzgerald Writers Limited ...

Montblanc F. Scott Fitzgerald Writers Limited Edition FP nib engraving (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

F. Scott Fitzgerald famously said, “There are no second acts in American lives.”  I have been pondering that quote for a while. Certainly this was true for Jay Gatsby, the anti-hero of Fitzgerald’s most famous work, The Great Gatsby (1925).  He ‘peaked’ in high school as ‘the football hero,’ married the Golden Girl, and ever afterwards finds life anti-climactic, “a walking shadow”…that…”creeps on its petty pace from day to day,” if you allow me to mix a few metaphors.

John P. Marquant wrote on similar themes in the forties.  In Marquant’s novel, Point of No Return, Charley Gray finally achieves the vice presidency he has long sought at his company, only to find it pointless. But he feels trapped by his own history, and the sense that he has gone too far to change his course. The idea of the point of no return is based on planes flying past a point at which they have just enough fuel to get back to where they began.  After that point you must reach your destination, or risk crashing and burning. But what is the destination of life? I don’t think you arrive by going back or being afraid to go forward. And can’t there be more than one stop along the way?

I have friends and family members who have lived brilliant one-act lives, happily and successfully. Scenes of color and vibrancy have unfolded for them and they have loved and lived. But some I’ve known are more like Gatsby or Gray trapped in a one act life, or marriage, or job that they hate. Some have tried to escape by buying the sports car, or fantasizing about a divorce they don’t pursue, or they do marry a trophy spouse in an effort at a second act, only to find that insufficient and that a meaning to life is still elusive.

I don’t think there is any magic in the number of acts we live, but in how we live them. I have found one act plays can actually be varied and intriguing and challenging.  They should not have to feel stultifying or boring. If they do they don’t have to be a point of no return, drop the curtain, begin again. Nor should anyone feel stuck in ‘act two’ or ‘act three.’  If this happens at any point I believe it is time to make a new path, even if it feels risky, to go in a direction that has the potential for fulfillment.

When I was in college I wrote these lines: “The gray and white world floats along, here and there broken by black. Gray people, gray children walk the street, not knowing where they go, or from where they came.” Perhaps I read too much Emerson or Thoreau, but I vowed not to be like that. Change is scary but getting to the end of life and realizing I had wasted it has always been my bigger fear. So in my view while you may risk income and status if you reach out for a new act, being stuck in a gray way of going through existence, if it feels like that, like just existing, risks life and meaning and your spirit.  Ultimately, it can destroy your soul.

Writing is a part of a new act for me.  I feel blessed to have been able to embrace it at this stage in my life.  Some may plan to take up a second act when they have enough money, or when retire. I’m not retired and I don’t have much money. I was lucky in a ‘gift of time’ when my job was lost to state budget cuts. Even so my largest ‘capital’ is my life and I am glad I still have some to spend.

If your dream is to write I hope you find a way to achieve it as part of your current life or as a new act; or if something else lurks in the back of your brain, I hope you bring it into the light if you believe as I do that it is only in engaging fully in the sound and the fury, in embracing all our lives have to offer, that we can truly live.

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And Now You Know the Rest of the Story?


English: Paul Harvey (left) & Zachary Scott in...

English: Paul Harvey (left) & Zachary Scott in The Southerner – cropped screenshot (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

My mother had a thing for Paul Harvey.  She loved to listen to his radio broadcasts and in particular to the stories he told.  Harvey broadcast his own daily news taken from the headlines, filled with the foibles of humanity, and liberally sprinkled with items of ‘good news’ culled from the rest.  His quirky intonations and down home style were charming, but what my mother loved best of all were the stories he told in parts about little known facts or anecdotes about historical events or characters or about well-known celebrities.  He would weave the lines together with folksy humor or with serious challenges to think, then he would build up to an unexpected twist at the end. When he revealed it he would close with “This is Paul Harvey…and now you know the rest of the story.”  Mom loved it.

People do love those little surprises that come unexpectedly, that turn expectations upside down.  Stephen King advises in “On Writing” that a good writer should plant hints to the twists so that as you begin to reveal them the reader is surprised, and then is surprised at being surprised because you have pointed the way all along.

Stephen King, American author best known for h...

Stephen King, American author best known for his enormously popular horror novels. King was the 2003 recipient of The National Book Foundation’s Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. Taken at the 2007 New York Comicon (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I have a number in The Call.  William Walton, my writing partner, loved my ending, the twists and how I had planted clues to them. I wanted him, and everyone who will hopefully read it one day, to read the surprises and say “oh…of course.”  One of my other goals was to have there be so much energy at the climax that the reader was driven to finish, and only as they thought of the ending after finishing the book would they look back and fully enjoy how many hints they had missed that were so obvious in retrospect.

The other day William called after reviewing the first three chapters of what I swear is the final draft. What he relished the most in rereading the book this time was discovering how often and how early those clues were ’embedded.’  I hope I have lived up to King’s advice and Harvey’s wisdom.

Of course before I can say to you, “and now you know the rest of the story,” about my book, I have to finish editing, write my query letter(s?) and get it published. So here is my report:  First five chapters re-edited (in two parts first on a hard copy and then inputted into the computer manuscript.)  1,121 words cut so far in this my last take at tightening and clarifying.  My largest effort has been shortening dialog (and sometimes even reattributing it.) The biggest challenge is in three person dialogs.  It’s not easy to keep tag lines to a minimum with three characters while still being clear on who is speaking!  I am striving to eliminate anything even slightly redundant or irrelevant.

I started this blog in June 2010 as I was trying to finish what I then called my book and now know was only my first draft. In February 2011 I finished that. Since then it has been send to readers, edit and re-edit.  Now hopefully I am driving toward a final draft.  Five chapters down, seven to go. Thanks for walking with me on my journey to ” the rest of my story.”  This is Joanne Eddy…..Good day!

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Remembering to Whistle


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Getting A Toe in the Door to my Dreams


You all know the saying about what the three key things are in selling a house…location, location, location.  I don’t know about you, but the key for getting almost every job I ever got was in “who did I know” or contacts, contacts, contacts. Having just looked for a year and a half for a new job (while finishing The Call), sending out hundreds of resumes, then getting a job in just three days after a friend raced to my house to tell me about a job opening, I am more convinced of this truth than ever.  Now, about publishing, I am thinking that the three keys may be networking, networking, networking.

Why so?  Because I may just have gotten a toe into the door to my dreams.  If so it came because of having made a connection to a local reporter.  First we became acquaintances and then friends,  then she invited me to a discussion group of women she knew.  She got me to introduce myself to the other group members who included a woman who simply introduced herself as a “marketing specialist.”  Then she insisted I describe my book.  I got interested questions and because I felt no pressure I did a vivid portrait of characters and plot.  Then more questions and more depth of description…then the marketing specialist told me she did marketing for Simon and Schuster and several other publishing companies and would like to see my manuscript and show it to some agents she knew.  Wow!  I still haven’t stopped walking on clouds.

I don’t know if this will be the key to a future publication but it is a toe in the door.  And to quote the Bellamy Brothers song Hang On To Your Dreams:

When you’re lookin’ for the rainbow’s end, Follow your nose, you’re a rambling rose, And it might just be round the bend…Trust in your toes ’cause they knows where they goes.  They’re just following the feeling within.

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Making a Dent in the Universe


Steven Jobs suggested that we all should embrace a goal to “make a dent in the universe.” There is no question he did.  An inventor, creative designer, innovator, and marketing guru, Jobs succeeded in changing the computer industry, the digital movie industry, and the record or product end of the music industry.

What about the rest of us?  Are we up to his challenge? Or does that seem too impossibly grandiose an ambition?

Perhaps we miss the point.  In his powerful book, Turning Stones: My Days and Nights with Children at Risk, a Caseworker’s Story, Marc Parent concludes with the story of an elderly nun whose convent is sent on a sight-seeing trip to visit the Grand Canyon and a number of others of the best known tourist sites in our country.  At every stop this one nun slips away from the awe-inspiring vistas for a few minutes, wandering apparently aimlessly, occasionally stooping to examine something on the ground.  Finally, the driver, who has noted this behavior, can no longer restrain his curiosity and asks the nun why she does this. She asks him what he has noticed about her walks. He observes that she often picks up a rock and puts it back. She tells him that what he missed was that she turned over the stone before she returned it so that the place will be forever changed because of the one small difference she has made there.

There are many ways to “dent the universe.”  Some of them are grand, writ large in 48 Point Bold, Steven Jobs’ style.  Others are humble.  Mere stones.   But reminiscent of Eiseley’s Star Thrower, they matter to the starfish that makes it back to the ocean, or to the child that Parent saves.

The point, as I see it, is not whether others recognize the ‘ping,’ or the dimple, or the size of the hollow we make or leave in our passing. There are billions of stars in the universe, but only one you, one me, in this place, in our time.  And though we may only pass through this life once, we can chose to live deliberately as Thoreau advised.  We can leave something of ourselves behind in every place and in every person we meet. We choose. We can be the speck of sand that becomes a pearl in the life of a friend. Small to the eye of the world, even microscopic.  Priceless, nonetheless.

My book may or may not be published.  My dent in the universe may only be noted by those who love me.  But anyone can turn a stone.  All of us can make a difference.

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Giants Among Us – A Tribute to Steve Jobs


As an epic, my novel, The Call, is filled with grand characters, admirable heroes and heroines.  As the military leader of the best cavalry in the land Lord Edmond saved his country, then turned his back on the tributes to keep a promise. But when he channels the gift of his vision into training and breeding horses, his stud is soon recognized as the best in the land. Jerzy, a natural leader, hidden in a small village to protect Lis, is proclaimed mayor.  It is like that with leadership and vision. They are innate, irrepressible, and clearly recognizable.

Unfortunately in our more ordinary age it seems there are fewer and fewer giants among us.  We had them in abundance during the formation of our country and at many critical junctures. And I don’t just mean the presidents and politicians, but the pioneers, explorers, inventors, the Einsteins, the Fords, and the Edisons, the Renaissance men like Benjamin Franklin who discover electricity, create a new and effective stove design, who conquer every sphere they enter, even the court of Louis XVI!  Today we lost one in Steve Jobs.

I am not the computer master my husband is. He’s a Mac nut, even had a Newton and of course started with a 2C. But even I recognize brilliance and the ability to take something complex and make it accessible. Jobs seduced me and other non-techies into trying computers.  He created cool designs that grab the imagination.  The older generation, as well as the young, could use what he created and enjoy it in the process.  We blog and we tweet, we use ipads, iphones and apps readily because he made it easy. In many ways he changed the world by spreading simple, usable, technology throughout it.  Of course that was accomplished because he identified a need we didn’t know we had, created an elegant but utilitarian product to fill it and then sold us on the concept! He was one of those giants who is being mourned not only in the tech world, but in the world of marketing, art and design.

Since 1995 Steve Jobs conducted his battle against his illness with incredible dignity, living every day in the moment and challenging us to also live each day as if it were our last.  His commencement speech at Stanford is widely quoted in the ways when I was in college we quoted Thoreau on “living deliberately.” His illness taught him urgency and wisdom. Thankfully for us, his determination and his doctors bought us some well-lived years after his diagnosis.

No one should die at 56 and our world cannot readily sustain the loss of this kind of mind. Perhaps it was because Job’s brilliance burned so brightly that his body couldn’t sustain it. Certainly it is the mega-watt level of his intellect that makes it hard to believe Apple will ever be the same. The footsteps left by giants cannot be filled by mere mortals. Yet I hope that at least in heaven a new star shines and God is listening to the Heavenly Choir on his iPod. Stay hungry, stay foolish, Steve Jobs, you will live on in our memory.

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Helping life make sense and making sense of Life.


Man thinking on a train journey.

Man thinking on a train journey. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Joan Didion said, “I write entirely to find out what I’m thinking, what I’m looking at, what I see and what it means. What I want and what I fear.”  But you don’t need to be “an author” to do this. I have long recommended writing to people in my therapy practice, like journaling, or writing a letter to someone who has caused pain, (which you may or may not send), or narrative therapy, a practice of writing to access deeper thoughts and feelings.  Writing things down and then rereading and re-thinking helps anyone who does it (in whatever way) come to a better understanding of where they are, even who they are.  It helps life make sense.

Writing is different than talking…even when it is stream of consciousness.  Often we talk “off the top of our head” without filters, say things we perhaps only mean in the moment. Even when unfiltered the act of writing typically gets us more in touch with our inner self. We may start with ‘surface thoughts,’ write out a line or two or three, or a page out of anger or reactivity. But if we keep going, and page follows page, we begin to naturally organize what we are thinking into something more cohesive and more aligned with the values we cherish, the beliefs that form our foundational thought. When it is there in type on a document or as lines of ink on a page, it becomes a creation, external to us.  That makes it more objective. We can look at it, read it, and assess its connection to who we were, who we are, or who we wish to be. And unlike the words we speak we can then realign them until they take us to where we want to be, without inflicting hurt while we are doing it.

I believe I am doing that in my writing.  My last post, In the Ashes of My Brothers, on 9-11 and my experience there, was very different from all the rest of those on this blog, not focused on the process of writing or my experience of ‘becoming’ an author.  It was a memoire of a profound time, but a filtered memory, viewed through ten years worth of reflection.  Writing it down brought back a depth to my experience for me. I was there again, vividly, almost re-experiencing it. At the same time putting words to it helped further hone the perspective on the experience that time has provided.  I hope reading it not only allowed a reader to walk with me in the ashes, but also opened for them a new perspective, a new way to make sense out of that experience.

I guess just as a short piece of any writing captures a moment or a perspective, a novel or long piece can capture more.  The Call contains even more of my life experience, my sense of values and ethics.  It captures metaphorical pieces of my cultural background. It helps me make sense of my life in a very big picture. This grand landscape contains the past of my heritage, some of my past, the present parts of  my beliefs and interests woven with characters that include my grandchildren and other loved family members.  Also very important to me is my intent that The Call be an outreach to the future.  I write it so that it might be a vehicle to make sense of life for people who read it now, and for future generations I will never know.

Writing helps me make sense of life in the small parts of the every day and in the capital L of Life in the grand scheme.  It helps me sort things out and keep things balanced.  I hope you find that it provides those resources equally for you.

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In the Ashes of My Brothers – a 9 11 Remembrance of my service at Ground Zero


Astronaut on moon copyAmerican history is filled with iconic moments that live forever in everyone’s memory. They change the course of events and drive our collective lives as a people. Some of you could tell of December 7th and Pearl Harbor. I can remember hearing over the school PA the announcement of President Kennedy’s assassination. Many of these later memories have become visual in our television age: Neil Armstrong’s ‘step’ onto the moon, the explosion of the Challenger, 9-11. You can probably call up pictures of these events.

plane-hitting-second-tower-9-11All have personal elements. For me Tuesday, 9 11 started with a 7:30 appointment, so I was in my car headed to the Salvation Army in Syracuse, New York when the first plane hit the twin towers. I heard about it on the radio. I visualized a small commuter plane, but got to work troubled. With several colleagues, one whose brother was a NYC Police Officer, I went to our training room to see the news. We were watching when we saw the second plane strike the South Tower.

The Salvation Army logo (Anglophone Version)

The Salvation Army logo (Anglophone Version) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

For me the next few days blur together fast. The Salvation Army has an Emergency Response arm and is the only agency in New York State authorized to provide emergency services at crime scenes. As the Director of Family Services at Syracuse Area Services I am called to recruit volunteer counselors to go to New York City and to get training for them. Bobbie Schofield, our Executive Director, Tom Schmitz, the Upstate NY Human Services Director, and others work on innumerable details including getting us clearance to enter the perimeter around Ground Zero.

my-shirt-and-helmet-911-copy-2By Wednesday, my team is organized and Bobbie has asked my husband, Doug, who helps with their training, to go with us because of his trauma response background. By Thursday our volunteers are trained, badges and shirts prepared, and we have a place to stay at Star Lake, a Salvation Army Retreat Center.

Friday the 14th we are in New York and meet with Major Molly Stotzburger who leads the support services at Ground Zero, personally serving as chaplain at the on-site morgue. Then we are at the Salvation Army on 14th Street dividing ourselves into day and night crews with 12 hour shifts. ( To the left the helmet and shirts we wore.)

Site Map for Ground Zero from Wikipedia.

wikipedia-wtc-site-map-copy

firefighters-walking-down-west-street-copyFollowing firefighters, our whole team walks in together down West Street which was closed, goes through a military check point at the perimeter of Ground Zero and walks to the Salvation Army Canteen preparing food near Vesey Street. So the night crew, the Night Crawlers, which Doug was on, can get some rest they leave. Our first day shift lasts until they come back at midnight. Later “the Day Watch” will work 10am to 10pm and Doug and the night crew 10pm – 10am.

world-financial-buildings-groun-zero-copywfc-911-disaster-dustFar left picture, sunset across the debris facing World Financial Center 2 (with dome), to its right WFC 3 (pointed top).  Picture of WFC2 and WFC3  on right when the South Tower collapsed.

With several others my first task is to clean a place inside the lobby of the World Financial Center Building 3 (WFC 3) on the corner of Vesey and West Streets, facing World Trade Center 6.  We will organize hot food and drinks there. Those are plain facts, but now let me take you into the heart of Ground Zero.

Salvation Army Major Robert Reals comes to me and asks if I can go in with him to minister to those responders working inside the site who won’t come out to eat. Walking behind him, I see his footprints appear ahead of me in the pervasive blanket of thick gray dust, our footfalls completely muffled by it.

escalators-wtcWe walk through the eerily quiet financial building, past the motionless escalators and empty rooms. No people, no movement, just a hallow emptiness that somehow echoes a soundless sadness to my straining ears amidst everything that just stopped three days before.

firefighters-on-debris-pile-copy

With a bucket in each of my hands filled with bottles of water and bars of chocolate, I am led to “the pit.” No, not the deep hole in the earth that months from 9/11 will be what Ground Zero becomes, but rather to the pile of burning rubble, that the first responders call the “pit of hell,” and is what the Twins Towers became when they fell. As we go outdoors for a diagonal shortcut across a small plaza, going past empty tables I see that every inch of the exterior of the building is covered with pictures of the missing and every tree trunk is wrapped in them.

wanted-poster-copyThe sun is setting. It is early evening, but the silence in a place clearly intended for many hundreds of bustling people is almost painful. As we near the door to the wing of the building bordering what was the West Street highway I see a copy of a tabloid paper pasted to it proclaiming, “Bin Laden Wanted Dead or Alive.” Alive has been struck through with red magic marker, so that it now reads Bin Laden ‘Wanted Dead.’

We enter the World Financial Building 2,(WFC2) across West Street from the North and South Towers (World Trade 1 and 2) and turn into a service corridor lit by glaring yellow emergency lamps, completely filled with fire hoses. Water has seeped from the hoses and I hesitate to step on them, but there is no choice. I slip off once into water that is over my ankles. I shift my buckets and walk on.

Entering a hall we cut through a destroyed bathroom. The stall doors have been blown off the hinges, unfilled toilets exposed. We enter another lifeless room shrouded by the ever-present dust and it takes a moment before I realize it was once an exercise center, the empty bikes and treadmills inert testaments to lives that stopped.world-trade-center-nighttime-teeth-copyFollowing the hoses which snake across the floor we reach the back wall and a bank of windows the gym enthusiasts must have looked through as they watched the West Street traffic and performed their daily ride to no where. All the glass has been blown out or perhaps whatever shards remained were removed. Now the hoses snake through and Major stops and points me forward.

Almost like a movie where the soundtrack stops and then abruptly restarts at too loud a volume, as I crawl through the window my ears are inundated. All my senses are engulfed. High intensity emergency lights held aloft by cranes shoot yellow spotlights on a scene that no movie could do justice. Smoke rises from the debris which reaches up for stories, looking like a building constructed from tinkertoys, destroyed by an angry two-year-old. This pile reaches high into the sky.

rescuse-workers-in-smoking-wreakage-copyI crane my neck and see figures moving amid the wreckage, a bucket brigade shifting the rubble in the unstable pile carefully with shovels, looking for survivors. Dogs and their handlers are circling, searching, moving spot to spot.  The sparks fly from the cutting tools of volunteer iron workers seeking to free the lost.

deris-south-tower-girders-copyIn the twilight red-orange light shines up from different places in the pile where the fire still rages at 1500 degrees. It will burn until December.  Over everything else there is a smell that is unlike anything I have ever smelled before. It fills my throat and I feel it in my chest, smoky, sweet, heavy, cloying.

I walk forward a few steps gingerly stepping on aluminum panels. These were blown from the outer covering of the buildings, used to give them the ability to flex with the wind. teeth-2-copyTen feet in front of me jagged pieces protrude from the rubble and make me think of garish teeth, pointed and broken in the slack-jawed grin of some horrible smashed alien creature. Standing still it strikes me that my climb through the windows is comparable to what it would be like to be able to climb into my television. Everything seems unreal and yet strangely too real. The sights are ghastly and then the sounds begin to sort themselves into things I can understand.

freeing-damaged-firetruck-copyAhead of me a crane is struggling to pull a crumpled something from the ruins of the highway. I think of trash compactors and wonder what it once was. The chain creaks and strains, metal shifts and I stare caught in fascination as shards of other ruined things fall from the flattened something. Finally, it is free, but I cannot find a name for what it had been.

fireman-chief-white-hat-wtc-copySomehow, with its freedom, I too am freed and I realize I should pick my way forward and try to help. I approach a group of firefighters just in front of me who also have watched this small resurrection. Two of them wear the white hats of officers. Fearing to intrude on their intimacy, timidly I offer my water and chocolate. Several reach in and begin to pick out candy bars. Most take water. I walk on a little further and before I can truly adjust, or even know how, I have given away all I have brought with me.

As I head back to the windows I see that only the two officers remain watching the crushed box swing from the end of the crane. I see flecks of red paint and finally realize this was once a fire truck. As I pass, one officer says with unbearable sadness and resignation, “I just hope they find him so I can give him back to his mother,” and I realize this crumpled truck was what brought his son to serve in this place.

fireman-red-hat-wtc-copyMy whole life names have been lost in a black hole in my head. The name of this officer, imprinted on his helmet, has been seared into my heart forever. Later that week at a Memorial set up near the waterfront I will learn that among the missing is a firefighter with the same last name. My heart aches and my tears fall. For me, he has come to represent all the first responders who gave their lives to save others. (I have decided against sharing his name on the chance it might cause someone pain.) When I return home it is months before I can see a police officer or a firefighter without tearing up. Every anniversary I listen to the reading of the names of the fallen and when his name is read I mourn his loss.

Over the next days, as we serve, there were many striking, poignant events, some so painful I have only shared them with Doug but these I will share:

  • leaving Ground Zero that first night when our shift was over, we drive past New Yorkers all along the West Side highway holding vigil with candles and signs thanking us for serving, we arrive at a restaurant where everyone stands and applauds us and someone pays our check;

members-of-our-team-on-the-girder* the next day, Saturday, taking over an aid station set up on a girder from the South Tower in front of World Financial Center 2 (WFC2) by Leia, who lived just a block away, which she has run without sleeping since that disastrous Tuesday; (my only picture of the pretty rudimentary aid station to left.)

  • talking to FBI officers whose evidence tent is to the left of our girder aid station. They are sorting through artifacts looking for evidence and we can see their sharp-shooters on surrounding buildings;

arial-view-of-ground-zero-copy* Being told we must move from the girder in front of WFC2 as larger equipment was now able to come into “the Pit” and it is no longer safe and having dozens of firefighters and police move all of our supplies to a new spot under a walkway bridge over Liberty Street connecting World Financial 2 to World Financial 1 in a matter of minutes.(WFC2 is the green domed building in lower right of the picture, the walkway is between the smaller two domes to the right of WF2.  WF3 with the pointed green capped is to the left. Later, when the glass began to fall from the walkway bridge, they moved us again to a nearby corner.)

  •  speaking to the architect of the Twin Towers who came with the original blueprints seeking to help the rescuers locate potential spots where people might have sought shelter;
  • looking at hundreds of firefighters and police officers lined up waiting for the honor of going into the pit and praying with one of them, a police officer named Hope;
  • taking water bottles from those who chase our van desperate to do something simply because we recognize their need to help;
  • fireman-chief-white-hat-wtc-copystruggling with the EPA who kept threatening to shut down our aid station. While there are many Canteens and the major Salvation Army Feeding Station on Vesey Street, I tell him we need to stay to help the Rescue Workers who won’t leave the pit. He says he can bring the National Guard with him to make us move.  Seeing my debate a Fire Chief and a Police Chief approach me to ask what is wrong. When I tell them, the Fire Chief says, “We want you here. Our guys need you.” The Police Chief says, “Don’t worry about the National Guard. They aren’t carrying guns, but we are.” The Fire Chief concludes, “You aren’t going anywhere.” Both promise they will talk with Mayor Giuliani. The aide station is never closed.
  • talking to the firefighter whose clogged, dust filled mask hangs from his neck while he tells me, “Don’t worry the smoke can’t hurt me, I am breathing in the ashes of my brothers;
  • befriending the police and fire chiefs from Oklahoma City who ask me what I need, and then, somehow, bring me a gigantic box of ice  on a fork lift, along with a wheelbarrow and shovels;
  • thanking firefighters from Corpus Christi for their service and having them call me their ‘adopted’ sister, of being called an angel when I tell them they’re my heroes;
  • developing a list of “suppliers” who I can call for boots, gloves, cigarettes, anything, who find gators to bring them to our aid station;

and a lifetime later, on my last day, I am orienting my replacements. We round a corner that I forget leads to the morgue. Seeing the flag draped body of a fallen firefighter ceremonially carried from the site, we snap to in a salute while bagpipes cry a farewell. And in that moment I realize how numb I have become, that it is only in standing with Kent, an Ottawa fire chief who rode his motorcycle from Canada to come to help America, and seeing his pain at the loss of this brother, that reawakens me to the loss once more.

In these ten years many reawakening moments of pain and loss have come, each time taking me by surprise, sweeping me back to Ground Zero, to that place hallowed by the ashes of my brothers.

%22cross%22-at-911-copyMy last memory is the one I will leave you with. As we prepare to leave for the final time, those around us begin to point to the elevated walkway bridge under which we had the aid station for a time.  As heavy equipment moves beneath it, the glass in its windows begins to fall. A view of Ground Zero is revealed through the broken panes, open to the harbor. I talk to several firefighters who point out that the braces that previously held the glass now perfectly form a cross. This cross was only one of many formed by beams and girders in the rubble.

Somehow, I pray all of us may always find a way to view Ground Zero as we did that day through the cross of our shared humanity, our shared membership in the family of America, through the cross of our shared faith and our belief that those who died live on. May we recover the unity we shared on 9 11.

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Not All Blogs Are Created Equal…


International Library of Children's Literature

International Library of Children’s Literature (Photo credit: japanese_craft_construction)

I don’t think I have posted this before but I happened on this when researching query letters… Nathan Bransford is a children’s book author and former agent. This site has great links and everything you ever wanted to know on query letters so I thought I’d pass on….
http://blog.nathanbransford.com/2010/08/how-to-write-query-letter.html

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How To Fill The Well


Ernest Hemingway said, “I learned never to empty the well of my writing, but always to stop when there was still something there in the deep part of the well, and let it refill at night from the springs that fed it.” This made me think. Where do I, where do you go to fill the well of your creativity?

I know that may not be an easy question. For me it started with research, but family was always an integral part of it.  Joy, love, the core of my spirit is nourished by my family. And while I have not spoken of it on this blog before, elements of my characters in The Call are deliberatively, if only in part, modeled on family members.  The Call is largely historical fiction, and though mixed with forklore, a significant part of my motivation for writing it was capturing an awareness of their own history for my children and grandchildren. Therefore I chose personality traits of my favorite uncle, my mother, and my grandchildren and wove them into the characters.  No one character is all anyone and all have fictional parts, but my family did inspire many of them.

Yet though they helped shape some of the characteristics of my protagonists they were not the originating “spark” for the book.

So what got me from thinking about ‘someday’ writing a book about ‘something’ to actually conceptualizing and writing The Call.  It started with curiosity, I think, enhanced by what I heard someone describe as a “what if” statement.  First I got intrigued by a quirky bit of history about a medieval Queen, who actually served in her own right as King  – “Lex Polonia.”  Then when she died with her child 15 years later the what ifs appeared…what if the child didn’t really die….and this led to what if the Duke who married her killed her to remove her as a potential rival, but her followers rescued the child and put her in hiding.  Since then there have been many more what ifs, one leading to another.

So how do I fill the well…I soak up the love of family, I sing (did I tell you I sing?) for the joy and stress reduction it brings me, and I let my imagination soar to a thousand possibilities, to untold what ifs….  and last but not least, for me, I people watch. I find people unendingly entertaining.  We are fascinating, ridiculous, annoying, wonderful, evil, malicious, caring, tender beings….including me.

So how do you ignite the spark of your imagination? How do you fill the well deep enough to let you dive unabashedly to the depths and then shoot to the surface brimming with ideas?

I


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