One of the things I discovered in my research about the color purple is that a paragraph containing "ornate and flowery language" is called a "purple passage." Metaphorically speaking, that's a good way to describe how 2012 has been for me. Also, this year has been a major rite of passage, resulting in discovery of what a new friend of mine calls the "heart treasure," that one still point of purpose that, once discovered, turns everything else in one's life to serve it.
During the time of planning my brother's memorial, I happened to see an ad in a magazine
for the Celebrant Foundation & Institute, which trains people to
become professional Life-Cycle Celebrants - people who create and
perform ceremonies with and for people. I immediately knew this was for
me, and I entered that funny process of coming to decide something that
you've actually already decided.
At the time, I had just started working toward building my new business as a personal historian, and I questioned the wisdom of aborting that in midstream and starting another new thing. But the rightness was so apparent to me that I took the leap of faith and signed up for the training (which I'm now in the middle of).
The thing is, I knew I had found my true calling, and so many things that had happened in recent months all worked together to form one big twinkling, neon arrow pointing to celebrancy. It started with writing about wedding officiants and realizing the importance of celebrations of milestones. But the biggest thing was leading my brother's memorial. It felt totally right to me, and many people who attended, most of whom I didn't know, gave me very positive feedback; a couple of them even leaned in and whispered, "I want you to do my funeral." I know it may sound strange, but I am so intensely grateful to my brother for this gift.
I have always felt drawn toward ritual and ceremony. I've even considered going to seminary; and now, in the Celebrant Institute, I've found my tribe, my place. I'm amazed at how this vocation will draw on all my passions and talents. I'm so used to having multiple jobs, but for the first time in my life I see the various side paths all merging into one. And since focus on the client's personal story as a "hero's journey" is one of the hallmarks that makes a Life-Cycle Celebrant different from other kinds of officiants, the personal history business is also simply being absorbed into this profession.
All the bells in my heart are ringing in one accord. Hallelujah.
Showing posts with label work/business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label work/business. Show all posts
Saturday, December 29, 2012
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Celebrating Stories
In my last post, I said that the TV show My Fair Wedding has had a major impact on my life. Let me explain.
The premise of this reality show is that couples with a small budget and a distinct theme in mind for their weddings get help from world-class event planner, David Tutera. He comes in three weeks before the wedding and takes over, usually changing everything from the dress to the venue. What he doesn't do, however, is change the theme, no matter how wacky or tacky it is.
After watching the show for a few episodes, I began to realize why it was so appealing to me. (Keep in mind that I rarely watch TV, ESPECIALLY reality shows.) David Tutera has a true gift for taking the ideas and desires people have and ultimately treating them with respect, even if he begins with a little eye-rolling. He takes it upon himself to understand where his brides are coming from, what it is they truly want, and then making it happen in a way that always far exceeds their expectations. And underneath it all, I realized, his foundational philosophy is that life is meant to be a celebration that we share with our loved ones and ourselves.
I found this very inspiring, and even began to plan a Valentine's Tea Party for my closest woman friends as a result (which actually turned out to be quite lovely.)
But even more significantly, I made connections between his gifts and my own. Watching Tutera at work and really observing what he was doing made me realize that I have a similar gift in how I work with people I write about as well as those I teach writing to or do editing for. I love to tell people's stories; I love to teach people how to find their writing voice. I love to honor people's truths in these ways and even help them to recognize their own truths in some cases. And from the wonderful feedback I often get from people I've written about, from my students, and from my clients, I know that this can have a real impact on them.
Around the same time as I was getting into My Fair Wedding, I was also feeling restless, like my life was in need of some new direction. For a long time, I'd been feeling like even though I love what I do, I was missing out on time for "my own" writing. But out of the connections I was making between David Tutera's work and my own, I had an epiphany that stopped me in my tracks: Writing other people's stories IS "my own" writing. It satisfies me, and I feel called to it. Realizing this was like coming out from under a huge weight I didn't even know was there. It gave me permission to stop pressuring myself to do "my" thing, and fully embrace what I was already doing. And this led me to make the decision to launch a new service in my writing business: writing personal histories for people.
And so I have reworked my writing business, Illuminated Manuscripts, to reflect this new direction. Rather than make this post any longer explaining about what it means to be a personal historian, I will simply direct you to my new website, www.illuminatedwritingandediting.com.
The premise of this reality show is that couples with a small budget and a distinct theme in mind for their weddings get help from world-class event planner, David Tutera. He comes in three weeks before the wedding and takes over, usually changing everything from the dress to the venue. What he doesn't do, however, is change the theme, no matter how wacky or tacky it is.
After watching the show for a few episodes, I began to realize why it was so appealing to me. (Keep in mind that I rarely watch TV, ESPECIALLY reality shows.) David Tutera has a true gift for taking the ideas and desires people have and ultimately treating them with respect, even if he begins with a little eye-rolling. He takes it upon himself to understand where his brides are coming from, what it is they truly want, and then making it happen in a way that always far exceeds their expectations. And underneath it all, I realized, his foundational philosophy is that life is meant to be a celebration that we share with our loved ones and ourselves.
I found this very inspiring, and even began to plan a Valentine's Tea Party for my closest woman friends as a result (which actually turned out to be quite lovely.)
![]() |
Valentine's Tea Party, with heart-shaped lemon lavender shortbreads and heart-shaped cake |
But even more significantly, I made connections between his gifts and my own. Watching Tutera at work and really observing what he was doing made me realize that I have a similar gift in how I work with people I write about as well as those I teach writing to or do editing for. I love to tell people's stories; I love to teach people how to find their writing voice. I love to honor people's truths in these ways and even help them to recognize their own truths in some cases. And from the wonderful feedback I often get from people I've written about, from my students, and from my clients, I know that this can have a real impact on them.
Around the same time as I was getting into My Fair Wedding, I was also feeling restless, like my life was in need of some new direction. For a long time, I'd been feeling like even though I love what I do, I was missing out on time for "my own" writing. But out of the connections I was making between David Tutera's work and my own, I had an epiphany that stopped me in my tracks: Writing other people's stories IS "my own" writing. It satisfies me, and I feel called to it. Realizing this was like coming out from under a huge weight I didn't even know was there. It gave me permission to stop pressuring myself to do "my" thing, and fully embrace what I was already doing. And this led me to make the decision to launch a new service in my writing business: writing personal histories for people.
And so I have reworked my writing business, Illuminated Manuscripts, to reflect this new direction. Rather than make this post any longer explaining about what it means to be a personal historian, I will simply direct you to my new website, www.illuminatedwritingandediting.com.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
How A Fluffy Movie Saved My Life
I'm writing this post in response to a question a friend of mine posted on Facebook; she asked bloggers what their goals are for their blogs. I started to formulate a response, and quickly realized it would be too long-winded for a Facebook comment, because I have more than one blog, and more than one reason for each of them. (It's probably even too long-winded for a blog post, but you can decide that for yourself.)
This blog was my first. And I don't think I've ever confessed this here before, but I started it because of watching that epitome of "feel-good" (i.e., fluff) movies, Julie and Julia. If you've seen it, then you know that it's based on the true story of a woman who started a blog and eventually became famous for it.
Well, I knew going in that there was little chance of fame in blogging these days, now that EVERYONE has a blog. No, what convinced me to try it was what the Julie character said in the movie when she made the decision. She said it would be a "regimen" for her, and she saw it as something that would fulfill her need to do something meaningful and creative. This inspired me, because at the time, I had been living in Taos and working at Subway for about a year - it was one of the most miserable years of my life. I was a lifelong writer who wasn't writing, and hadn't really since I'd finished my Master's in creative writing four years earlier.
For my Master's, my concentration was poetry, but I had always wanted to get into writing personal essays. Blogging seemed like a great way to do that with the benefit of immediate gratification, just getting it out there and dropping the whole burden of "trying to get published," which graduate school had completely turned me off to.
So I started this blog, and proceeded to visit other people's blogs and leave comments. Within a fairly short time, blogging completely and wonderfully exceeded my expectations. I found myself part of an eclectic online community including (to name just a few) a young man who had been homeschooled, taught in Korea, then proceeded to get his bartender's license and his pilot's license more or less simultaneously; a male Buddhist kindergarten teacher in the Bay area who is married to the town's female mayor; an Australian storyteller-poet-naturalist; a glitzy woman entrepreneur in Dallas; a Scottish woman with equally passionate interests in cooking, photography, and literary pursuits of all kinds; and several spiritually-oriented women who sort of became my church. One of those women I actually count now among my very closest friends, even though we've still never met in person.
That in itself was fulfilling enough, but there was more. Blogging gave me the confidence to think of myself as a writer again, so I started a writing business called Illuminated Manuscripts and created another blog for it. I made business cards and brochures and joined the Taos Chamber of Commerce, and out of that, I got offered a job writing a weekly column for the Taos News, which I'm still writing today. Other writing jobs came my way as well, and I have found myself living my childhood dream of writing for a living.
However, since I now had several clients and was no longer working at Subway, one might say I had a life, and blogging began to take up less and less of my time. And anyone who blogs knows that if you don't do it on a pretty regular basis, the warm glowy sense of community begins to dissolve. Less and less people comment on your blog, as you comment less and less on theirs, and after a while you just kind of lose touch altogether. In the past year or so, I've posted here very infrequently, and hardly anyone comments anymore. It sort of feels like a ghost town. I miss those golden days, but that's okay.
The blog I started for Illuminated Manuscripts never really took off at all because I found myself with more than enough work without having to promote it. I'm now about to expand my business' services and will be building a new website for it elsewhere.
My third blog came about when I decided to buy land off-grid and build an earthbag house on it. Where my purpose for The Whole Blooming World was simply to be writing and sharing that writing, my purpose for Home Sweet Hive is more to document my project and connect with other people doing similar things. It fascinates me to see that an entirely different group of bloggers has sprung up around me over there, although there are a couple of loyal readers that followed me over from this blog.
I know a lot of people blog for money, and I also know that if you want your business to grow online you should have a blog, but so far, blogging has had nothing to do with these things for me personally. However, nowadays, I write the weekly blog for the business of one of my clients, and I've seen how it can be a whole different animal. And once I get my new site up for Illuminated Manuscripts, I will be blogging regularly there for the sake of promoting my business.
Even though this blog has faded into the background of my life and there is little chance that will change in the foreseeable future, I know from time to time I'll still post here even if no one's reading it, because it's become for me a way to track and tell and change the story of my inner life.
If I hadn't watched Julie and Julia it's hard to imagine that my life would be as rich as it is today. So there's a lot to be said for fluff. For instance, milkweed is fluffy but plays several important roles: it remedies poison ivy, insulates, repels pests from plants in its vicinity, removes warts, and serves as the sole food source for monarch butterfly larvae.
But I guess some curmudgeons would consider butterflies "fluff" too. Too bad for them.
This blog was my first. And I don't think I've ever confessed this here before, but I started it because of watching that epitome of "feel-good" (i.e., fluff) movies, Julie and Julia. If you've seen it, then you know that it's based on the true story of a woman who started a blog and eventually became famous for it.
Well, I knew going in that there was little chance of fame in blogging these days, now that EVERYONE has a blog. No, what convinced me to try it was what the Julie character said in the movie when she made the decision. She said it would be a "regimen" for her, and she saw it as something that would fulfill her need to do something meaningful and creative. This inspired me, because at the time, I had been living in Taos and working at Subway for about a year - it was one of the most miserable years of my life. I was a lifelong writer who wasn't writing, and hadn't really since I'd finished my Master's in creative writing four years earlier.
For my Master's, my concentration was poetry, but I had always wanted to get into writing personal essays. Blogging seemed like a great way to do that with the benefit of immediate gratification, just getting it out there and dropping the whole burden of "trying to get published," which graduate school had completely turned me off to.
So I started this blog, and proceeded to visit other people's blogs and leave comments. Within a fairly short time, blogging completely and wonderfully exceeded my expectations. I found myself part of an eclectic online community including (to name just a few) a young man who had been homeschooled, taught in Korea, then proceeded to get his bartender's license and his pilot's license more or less simultaneously; a male Buddhist kindergarten teacher in the Bay area who is married to the town's female mayor; an Australian storyteller-poet-naturalist; a glitzy woman entrepreneur in Dallas; a Scottish woman with equally passionate interests in cooking, photography, and literary pursuits of all kinds; and several spiritually-oriented women who sort of became my church. One of those women I actually count now among my very closest friends, even though we've still never met in person.
That in itself was fulfilling enough, but there was more. Blogging gave me the confidence to think of myself as a writer again, so I started a writing business called Illuminated Manuscripts and created another blog for it. I made business cards and brochures and joined the Taos Chamber of Commerce, and out of that, I got offered a job writing a weekly column for the Taos News, which I'm still writing today. Other writing jobs came my way as well, and I have found myself living my childhood dream of writing for a living.
However, since I now had several clients and was no longer working at Subway, one might say I had a life, and blogging began to take up less and less of my time. And anyone who blogs knows that if you don't do it on a pretty regular basis, the warm glowy sense of community begins to dissolve. Less and less people comment on your blog, as you comment less and less on theirs, and after a while you just kind of lose touch altogether. In the past year or so, I've posted here very infrequently, and hardly anyone comments anymore. It sort of feels like a ghost town. I miss those golden days, but that's okay.
The blog I started for Illuminated Manuscripts never really took off at all because I found myself with more than enough work without having to promote it. I'm now about to expand my business' services and will be building a new website for it elsewhere.
My third blog came about when I decided to buy land off-grid and build an earthbag house on it. Where my purpose for The Whole Blooming World was simply to be writing and sharing that writing, my purpose for Home Sweet Hive is more to document my project and connect with other people doing similar things. It fascinates me to see that an entirely different group of bloggers has sprung up around me over there, although there are a couple of loyal readers that followed me over from this blog.
I know a lot of people blog for money, and I also know that if you want your business to grow online you should have a blog, but so far, blogging has had nothing to do with these things for me personally. However, nowadays, I write the weekly blog for the business of one of my clients, and I've seen how it can be a whole different animal. And once I get my new site up for Illuminated Manuscripts, I will be blogging regularly there for the sake of promoting my business.
Even though this blog has faded into the background of my life and there is little chance that will change in the foreseeable future, I know from time to time I'll still post here even if no one's reading it, because it's become for me a way to track and tell and change the story of my inner life.
If I hadn't watched Julie and Julia it's hard to imagine that my life would be as rich as it is today. So there's a lot to be said for fluff. For instance, milkweed is fluffy but plays several important roles: it remedies poison ivy, insulates, repels pests from plants in its vicinity, removes warts, and serves as the sole food source for monarch butterfly larvae.
But I guess some curmudgeons would consider butterflies "fluff" too. Too bad for them.
Monday, November 21, 2011
Money-Time
My green year is winding down, and in this last portion of it, I have turned my attention toward the last green-related item I wanted to work with this year: money.
Money has always been a bit of a bugbear for me. When I was a teenager I rejected my comfortable middle-class upbringing and decided I was "anti-materialistic," i.e., anti-money.
I got over that quite some time ago, but the truth is that I've never been good with money. It tends to slip through my fingers alarmingly quickly, and my overall financial life has been very much feast or famine, and utterly chaotic.
So I've been working with a book called The Energy of Money, by Maria Nemeth, which approaches money from a spiritual viewpoint and guides you through a series of exercises to help you become conscious of and heal your relationship with money.
I'm still stuck on Chapter One, in which you are supposed to write your money autobiography. She provides a whole long list of thought-provoking questions to help the process. I shouldn't say I'm stuck, really, because even though I'm moving through this process very slowly, I AM doing it. It's eye-opening to say the least, and so I'm taking the time to really process what I'm writing.
One thing I've realized lately is that as I've been with money, so I've also been with time: confused about where it all goes. Which, of course, brings to mind that saying, Time is money. I never really understood what that meant, primarily because both time and money were such abstract concepts to me that I couldn't really comprehend either of them on a practical level.
But I get it now; it means that money comes to you for time spent earning it. Duh. Conventional wisdom might see this as a one-to-one correspondence: If I work so many hours, I will get so much pay. If I have a "bad" job, the pay will be low and if I have a "good" job the pay will be high. But frankly, I think it sucks either way, and I believe it can be different. In fact, I know it can. There's a sort of momentum that can be created around money that brings a greater and greater return with fewer and fewer hours. I've seen it in people I've written about for my Taos News column, Innovators & Entrepreneurs, and I also just know it intuitively.
Recently I was browsing at one of my favorite websites, mythinglinks.org, and I came across a very interesting page about money. The author of the site, Kathleen Jenks, laments that in terms of earning a living, "it's been unsettling to face the fact that I've lived most of this lifetime feeling like a racehorse hitched to a plow."
Reading this really bummed me out, because I can relate. I also recently interviewed a woman for my column whose work life as a freelance writer and a teacher parallels mine. But she just started an online business (her website is journalsandnotepads.com), and she talked about how different this is from freelancing, where you're selling your TIME.
That conversation got me thinking about starting my own online business, but that's a story for another day. The significance for this discussion is that it was yet another pointer to my need to focus on my relationships with time and money. I began to think that perhaps a budget would not be such a bad thing after all. And while I've always been okay with schedules, I haven't been disciplined enough about them when I'm working at home on "my own" time. So I decided that thinking of a schedule as a sort of time-budget might be a better idea - to trick myself into sticking to it, essentially. I've decided that the planner I get for 2012 will have the hours of the day in it so that instead of just making a list of what needs to be done each day, I can actually schedule all of it.
I also signed up at Mint.com. I had read several very good reviews of it, and then came across another one recently that finally convinced me to check it out. And I have to say, I LOVE it. I honestly cannot overstate how much this tool is helping me at last to really grasp my money situation and how to manage it. It's like when you look at what appears to be the chaotic blur of a stereogram and then finally see the image, and go, "Oh wow, yeah," and your eyes relax. For the first time in my life, I have made a balanced budget that is realistically based on what I actually have coming in, and I can see exactly where all of my money is going.
This is both relaxing and and freeing, which is ironic, considering how long I resisted budgeting because I felt it would be so stifling.
It's an interesting side benefit that budgeting my money is helping me budget my time as well. I'm currently writing an ebook for a client who pays me an hourly rate. It's up to me how many hours a week I put in. What I've been able to do is put into my Mint.com budget the amount of money I need to make monthly working on the ebook, and then figure out exactly how many hours a week I need to put in to make that happen. Cake!
All of this has resulted in an incredible feeling of awakening and empowerment in these areas of my life. I realize now that I've always let money and time just kind of happen to me, but I'm increasingly feeling like I'm in the driver's seat. Money and time are tools, and while there will of course be unexpected things that happen and certain limits beyond my power to change, overall it's possible to exercise control over how I receive and use them, and in doing so, the mysterious result is abundance.
Money has always been a bit of a bugbear for me. When I was a teenager I rejected my comfortable middle-class upbringing and decided I was "anti-materialistic," i.e., anti-money.
I got over that quite some time ago, but the truth is that I've never been good with money. It tends to slip through my fingers alarmingly quickly, and my overall financial life has been very much feast or famine, and utterly chaotic.
So I've been working with a book called The Energy of Money, by Maria Nemeth, which approaches money from a spiritual viewpoint and guides you through a series of exercises to help you become conscious of and heal your relationship with money.
I'm still stuck on Chapter One, in which you are supposed to write your money autobiography. She provides a whole long list of thought-provoking questions to help the process. I shouldn't say I'm stuck, really, because even though I'm moving through this process very slowly, I AM doing it. It's eye-opening to say the least, and so I'm taking the time to really process what I'm writing.
One thing I've realized lately is that as I've been with money, so I've also been with time: confused about where it all goes. Which, of course, brings to mind that saying, Time is money. I never really understood what that meant, primarily because both time and money were such abstract concepts to me that I couldn't really comprehend either of them on a practical level.
But I get it now; it means that money comes to you for time spent earning it. Duh. Conventional wisdom might see this as a one-to-one correspondence: If I work so many hours, I will get so much pay. If I have a "bad" job, the pay will be low and if I have a "good" job the pay will be high. But frankly, I think it sucks either way, and I believe it can be different. In fact, I know it can. There's a sort of momentum that can be created around money that brings a greater and greater return with fewer and fewer hours. I've seen it in people I've written about for my Taos News column, Innovators & Entrepreneurs, and I also just know it intuitively.
Recently I was browsing at one of my favorite websites, mythinglinks.org, and I came across a very interesting page about money. The author of the site, Kathleen Jenks, laments that in terms of earning a living, "it's been unsettling to face the fact that I've lived most of this lifetime feeling like a racehorse hitched to a plow."
Reading this really bummed me out, because I can relate. I also recently interviewed a woman for my column whose work life as a freelance writer and a teacher parallels mine. But she just started an online business (her website is journalsandnotepads.com), and she talked about how different this is from freelancing, where you're selling your TIME.
That conversation got me thinking about starting my own online business, but that's a story for another day. The significance for this discussion is that it was yet another pointer to my need to focus on my relationships with time and money. I began to think that perhaps a budget would not be such a bad thing after all. And while I've always been okay with schedules, I haven't been disciplined enough about them when I'm working at home on "my own" time. So I decided that thinking of a schedule as a sort of time-budget might be a better idea - to trick myself into sticking to it, essentially. I've decided that the planner I get for 2012 will have the hours of the day in it so that instead of just making a list of what needs to be done each day, I can actually schedule all of it.
I also signed up at Mint.com. I had read several very good reviews of it, and then came across another one recently that finally convinced me to check it out. And I have to say, I LOVE it. I honestly cannot overstate how much this tool is helping me at last to really grasp my money situation and how to manage it. It's like when you look at what appears to be the chaotic blur of a stereogram and then finally see the image, and go, "Oh wow, yeah," and your eyes relax. For the first time in my life, I have made a balanced budget that is realistically based on what I actually have coming in, and I can see exactly where all of my money is going.
This is both relaxing and and freeing, which is ironic, considering how long I resisted budgeting because I felt it would be so stifling.
It's an interesting side benefit that budgeting my money is helping me budget my time as well. I'm currently writing an ebook for a client who pays me an hourly rate. It's up to me how many hours a week I put in. What I've been able to do is put into my Mint.com budget the amount of money I need to make monthly working on the ebook, and then figure out exactly how many hours a week I need to put in to make that happen. Cake!
All of this has resulted in an incredible feeling of awakening and empowerment in these areas of my life. I realize now that I've always let money and time just kind of happen to me, but I'm increasingly feeling like I'm in the driver's seat. Money and time are tools, and while there will of course be unexpected things that happen and certain limits beyond my power to change, overall it's possible to exercise control over how I receive and use them, and in doing so, the mysterious result is abundance.
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Just an Update
First, I must apologize for my appalling lack of presence in the blogosphere of late. I have been so crazybusy with other endeavors that I haven't even been reading, let alone commenting, on blogs very much. At this point, I've pretty much accepted that it's just going to be like this for a while, maybe until fall. But I do miss you all.
So why have I been so busy, you may ask? Well, I'm working on a twelve-page manuscript for the Taos Summer Writers' Conference, which I'll be attending all next week. The manuscript is a piece about my relationship with the San Francisco de Asis church, which I'm writing a book about.
I'm also in the middle of several grants with looming deadlines, and I've had two sets of houseguests in the past couple of weeks.
But the news I really want to share is that I'm now co-writing a weekly column for The Taos News, called "Innovators & Entrepreneurs," profiling local businesses. Turns out joining the Chamber of Commerce was a really wise move, as this is how I got the gig. My first article was published last Thursday, and can be viewed here. I love love love doing this column!
So that's pretty much it for now - I just wanted to let you all know that I haven't forgotten about you or your wonderful blogs, and I look forward to catching up on them all when my life slows down again. I hope you all are having a wonderful summer (or winter, depending where you are).
So why have I been so busy, you may ask? Well, I'm working on a twelve-page manuscript for the Taos Summer Writers' Conference, which I'll be attending all next week. The manuscript is a piece about my relationship with the San Francisco de Asis church, which I'm writing a book about.
I'm also in the middle of several grants with looming deadlines, and I've had two sets of houseguests in the past couple of weeks.
But the news I really want to share is that I'm now co-writing a weekly column for The Taos News, called "Innovators & Entrepreneurs," profiling local businesses. Turns out joining the Chamber of Commerce was a really wise move, as this is how I got the gig. My first article was published last Thursday, and can be viewed here. I love love love doing this column!
So that's pretty much it for now - I just wanted to let you all know that I haven't forgotten about you or your wonderful blogs, and I look forward to catching up on them all when my life slows down again. I hope you all are having a wonderful summer (or winter, depending where you are).
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Illuminated Manuscripts Virtual Ribbon-Cutting
The last couple of days have been productive. I brought the final draft of the case statement I've been working on for UNM-Taos to the Executive Director yesterday, and she loved it. The people I've been working with are really happy with my writing. This excites me because the stuff I'm doing is easy for me and I love doing it. Which has inspired me to finally get off my butt and start promoting my writing and editing business, Illuminated Manuscripts.
I went and joined the Chamber of Commerce today! I'm official! And I'm going to their monthly Mix and Meet this evening. I'm hoping not only to network about this business, but also to eventually find someone who wants to open a laundromat with me. Wish me luck.
And just now I got the blog for Illuminated Manuscripts ready for action and put my first post up. I'd love it if you guys would hop over there and let me know what you think. I'm open to any feedback you have. Criticisms, suggestions, whatever. And if you know anyone that needs writing or editing services, keep me in mind!
I went and joined the Chamber of Commerce today! I'm official! And I'm going to their monthly Mix and Meet this evening. I'm hoping not only to network about this business, but also to eventually find someone who wants to open a laundromat with me. Wish me luck.
And just now I got the blog for Illuminated Manuscripts ready for action and put my first post up. I'd love it if you guys would hop over there and let me know what you think. I'm open to any feedback you have. Criticisms, suggestions, whatever. And if you know anyone that needs writing or editing services, keep me in mind!
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Titles
One of the reasons it's taken me so long to post this is because I couldn't come up with a good title. I have to admit, I'm a bit obsessive-compulsive when it comes to titles. I love coming up with names for things, whether for blog posts, cats and dogs, or potential band names. I've come up with so many great band names that then go right out of my head. I really should write them down.
And speaking of titles, I have a couple of new ones in my life, which is why it's getting harder for me to post regularly. One of my new titles is "Board Director." I joined the board of Taos Youth Music School, an after school program my son participates in. (Think "School of Rock" - it's awesome.) Another new title is "Quiet Day Coordinator." My friend Cathy and I are planning a quiet day at our church which will occur next Saturday.
I've had the title of "Instructor" for a while now, but at this time of the semester, I have the additional title of "Paper Grader." Oh boy. I've already attended two grading sessions for the exit essays with the other English instructors, and will attend two more next week, in addition to grading all of the final papers for both of my classes.
A title I've had off and on for years, but am now actively pursuing again is "Self-Employed Writer & Editor." I've started a business called "Illuminated Manuscripts" which offers professional writing and editing services. My slogan is "We'll polish it until it shines." Here's the logo I designed:
I just got my first contract with UNM-Taos to write grants for their campus expansion! If you need anything written, edited or proofread, let me know.
Thanks to the Postman, I also now have the title of "Superior Scribbler." Thanks, Postman!
1. I am a follower of the Eat Right 4 Your Type diet., and have been for almost a year. My blood type is O positive. I've heard a lot of arguments against this diet, but it's worked great for me, not just in terms of weight loss, but overall health and sense of wellbeing.
2. I smoke hand-rolled cigarettes, Drum brand. The last of my nasty habits from the good old days of debauchery.
3. I can tell you what year a book was published within five years by smelling it.
4. I love to make collages. Here's one I made for someone after I posted here about needing to show thanks to certain people in my life:
And speaking of titles, I have a couple of new ones in my life, which is why it's getting harder for me to post regularly. One of my new titles is "Board Director." I joined the board of Taos Youth Music School, an after school program my son participates in. (Think "School of Rock" - it's awesome.) Another new title is "Quiet Day Coordinator." My friend Cathy and I are planning a quiet day at our church which will occur next Saturday.
I've had the title of "Instructor" for a while now, but at this time of the semester, I have the additional title of "Paper Grader." Oh boy. I've already attended two grading sessions for the exit essays with the other English instructors, and will attend two more next week, in addition to grading all of the final papers for both of my classes.
A title I've had off and on for years, but am now actively pursuing again is "Self-Employed Writer & Editor." I've started a business called "Illuminated Manuscripts" which offers professional writing and editing services. My slogan is "We'll polish it until it shines." Here's the logo I designed:
I just got my first contract with UNM-Taos to write grants for their campus expansion! If you need anything written, edited or proofread, let me know.
Thanks to the Postman, I also now have the title of "Superior Scribbler." Thanks, Postman!
So the rules of the game are that you're supposed to:
- Thank whoever nominated you for it...
- Post, paste, or patch the award's image onto your own blog...
- Tell your readers seven things they don't yet know about you...
- Pass it along to seven more bloggers...
- And notify them personally when you have done so.
1. I am a follower of the Eat Right 4 Your Type diet., and have been for almost a year. My blood type is O positive. I've heard a lot of arguments against this diet, but it's worked great for me, not just in terms of weight loss, but overall health and sense of wellbeing.
2. I smoke hand-rolled cigarettes, Drum brand. The last of my nasty habits from the good old days of debauchery.
3. I can tell you what year a book was published within five years by smelling it.
4. I love to make collages. Here's one I made for someone after I posted here about needing to show thanks to certain people in my life:
5. I've had some really nutty jobs. Years ago, I did Tarot readings for LaToya Jackson's psychic line. I also did singing telegrams for a while, but got fired because I sucked so bad.
6. My Myers-Briggs personality type is INFP. It used to be INTP - I'm pretty borderline between Thinking and Feeling. It changed after I had kids.
7. As a kid, I was obsessed with the band, Kiss. My mom took me to the concert at Maple Leaf Gardens when I was 10 or 11. Destroyer was my favorite album. I had 43 Kiss posters up in my room, and threw a yearly birthday party for Paul Stanley. I dressed up as him for Halloween once.
Now I'm supposed to give this award to seven other bloggers. This is the hard part, because I'd like to award every blog I follow.
1. The first blog I'd like to award is Whatever else my life is...it is also this dazzling darkness. Rebecca has been a major inspiration in my blogging (and spiritual) life lately. She lives in Alaska and loves snow. She's an amazing photographer and writer, and reading her blog always brings me a feeling of peace.
2. Dan Gurney at A Mindful Heart gets the next award. Dan is a kindergarten teacher - he's taught at the same school for 29 years! His blog is a wonderful mixture of spiritual insight and challenge and simple appreciation for life.
3. Jennifer at One True Self is an amazing woman. She has an aura of childlike wonder and innocence, but has worked very hard in her life to retrieve that. And now she expresses it in her blog in the most honest and moving and helpful ways.
4. Kat and Bet at The Bobwhites also get my vote. I came across their blog via the "Next Blog" button (and this was when it still took you to a totally random blog). These ladies live in different states but grew up together. They blog about everyday things with humor and linguistic dexterity, and they also present wonderful recipes. You would not believe some of the things these ladies have cooked and baked. You should definitely check out their gingerbread houses.
5. Even though the Postman beat me to it, I have to offer this award to the lovely, stylish, savvy, feisty Entrepreneur Chick, whose blog and emails have offered me major encouragement as an entrepreneur. She's also frequently hilarious and highly entertaining.
6. I recently discovered Dreamfarm Girl. This woman is a splendid writer. Her blog covers a lot of territory, from the minute to the cosmic, but she manages to work it all together in a very satisfying way.
7. I have to give this award back to the Postman. His was one of the first blogs I started following, and I still just adore it. He will always have a very special place in my blogging heart. I love his wit and style, and his immaculate vocabulary. His blog is quirky; it covers aviation, cocktail reviews, and strong opinions on a number of things ranging from samurai warriors to cartoons to snack foods. An entertaining, insightful, humorous, and often informative read. I never thought I'd learn so much about aviation - and like it!
That about wraps it up. Which reminds me. Now I get to also carry the titles of "Gift Wrapper," and right now I'm going to be "Holiday Baker." I'm making some truly decadent Bourbon Fruitcake today. Well, starting it today, anyway. It actually takes two weeks of soaking in brandy before it's done.
NO FRUITCAKE JOKES!!! It's my blog, and I'm banning them. I like fruitcake. A lot.
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