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- Lexxie Couper (The Writing's On The Hand)
Hey, Kim…I got out of the rocking chair :) I’ve been known …
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I’ve learned to take a pencil and paper to bed with me. …
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hugs on the shoulder You definitely should get out of that chair …
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I admit, I’ve found I enjoy writing the menage scenes. I have …
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Great post, Dawn. I’ve written a few menage a trois stories now. …
Best Mommy-Writing Tool EVER
There are tons of writing tools out there. Go ahead, Google “writing tools.” That’s right—almost four million hits! There is, of course, the indispensable computer. (Does anyone use a typewriter anymore? What did we ever do before Microsoft Word and track changes? Yes, I remember the days when I should have bought stock in white-out and kept Mike Nesmith’s fortune growing – hey, Monkees’ fame couldn’t last forever!)
Rosie's Promise
A summer of love, choices, and change…
Billy Ray and Rosie, each full of the promise of innocence and youth, want more than their rural Midwest home can offer. During this tumultuous Vietnam era, Rosie is excited to accept a scholarship to college.
But Billy reveals his defiance of his pacifist, preacher father by declaring that at the end of summer he will enlist to fight in the war.
With the realization looming that all they may ever have is this one last summer together, Billy Ray and Rosie explore their youthful love and passion. Rosie swears to wait for his return from Vietnam.
But only Fate knows how long Rosie’s promise will keep her waiting in bittersweet vigil—and what the consequences of their actions might mean for their future.
Isn't It Romantic?
I’m glad Valentine’s Day is over. Honestly. And it isn’t because I’m one of those woman who dreads v-day as “Singles Awareness Day”, either. I’ve been happily married for almost eight years.
The truth is, I hate Hallmark holidays. Yes, I know the history behind Valentine’s Day is longstanding, blah blah blah, and that Sweetest Day is the real Hallmark holiday. But to me, any holiday that forces someone to try and be romantic is a Hallmark holiday, meant to sell candy-filled cardboard hearts and pricey love cards, most of them not even printed on recycled paper.
Do I sound cynical? Maybe I am. But I’m a cynical romantic.
I just believe romance shouldn’t be scheduled.
I know, it’s the typical feminine you-should-read-my-mind response: “If I have to tell you, then it doesn’t count!” But stereotypes have to come from somewhere, don’t they? There is something about the element of surprise that makes romance… well, romantic.
Flowers are nice. Cards are nice. Candy is… well, fattening. (If it’s chocolate, though, that’s an immediate override.) Still, any of those things given on a socially pressured romantically-induced day? Eh. Not so exciting. I mean, sure, nice… but romantic? No. Not really.
Romance, you see, is bigger than that.
And it’s not just about the surprise, either. Romance is even more complicated than that. Because he can come in with court-side seats to a basketball game and a brand new gift-wrapped set of hubcaps – for his car.
“Surprise!”
Right. Some surprise.
Romance is spontaneously selfless. It’s thinking about someone else and acting on that thought. It’s also about taking chances, making yourself vulnerable, and exposing yourself. Um… well, not in the ‘flasher’ sense… although I can think of a few situations where that just might count as romantic! (grin)
A man who buys you roses and chocolate and gives you a card on Valentine’s Day is sweet and thoughtful. But is he romantic? I don’t think so.
A man who stops and picks wildflowers from the side of the road on the way home from work in the middle of June and remarks, “They were so beautiful, I couldn’t help thinking of you…” as he walks in the door…
(melt)
Now we’re talking romantic.
Even better are the times when it goes beyond spontaneous and leaps into risky, when I can tell he’s been listening and paying attention to the whims and call of my heart. Maybe even more than I have. Those acts are a true gamble on his part, and because of that, they are the most amazing.
One of the most romantic things my husband ever did was to tell me to close my eyes and hold out my hands (this was in the middle of my doing dishes, so I grabbed a dishtowel and did as he asked…) and then spilled a bunch of seeds into them.
“What’s this?” I asked, even though I knew already, somehow.
“You’ve been talking about planting a garden… here are the seeds to begin.”
I just stared at him, my heart melting. I’d mentioned it a few times, in passing. But here he was, making it real, in the palms of my hands.
“There’s a bunch more in here,” he said, holding up a gift bag.
(swoon)
A man who knows me? A man who listens? A man who pays attention and takes leaps of risk over tall doubts in a single bound to give me a gift he’s not 100% sure about, but he thinks, maybe…? A man who does that spontaneously, outside of a greeting-card sanctioned holiday?
Now that’s romantic.
So when I say I’m glad Valentine’s Day is over for another year, I really mean it. It’s not that I don’t appreciate thoughtfulness on any day of the year – I do. But thoughtful doesn’t necessarily equal romantic. And what I really want, what I crave, what feeds my soft and open feminine heart is romance. True romance.
And now that “Singles Awareness Day” is behind us for another year, I’ve got 364 more chances to experience some real, spontaneous romance in my life.
What’s that? Oh right… I forgot.
Well, at least there’s 246 more days until Sweetest Day…
Ten Green Writing Tips

We authors have always been notorious wasters of resources and energy for the sake of our art. Think of the writers staying up late at night, burning whale oil or candles to pen their tomes on expensive parchment with precious ink. Of course, nowadays, we burn incandescent lightbulbs and use precious wattage to run our PC’s, but still… As Kermit says, “It isn’t easy being green.” So how can a writer go green? Here are ten green writing tips for you to consider:
