Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Long days and luck by Liz Flaherty #RomanceGems

If March comes in like a lion, it will go out like a lamb. 


Yep. But the lamb hasn't been around at all this year, has she? It's all been the lion. Curmudgeonly and quarrelsome and wanting things all his own way. (You notice what I did with gender there. I'm sorry, but only sort of.)

Sometimes, these days, I don't feel so lucky.

I hope you are all doing well through this crisis in our times, this March in history that may go on for a long time yet. I also hope you're finding productive things to do, finding happy in unexpected places, and practicing kindness even if you have to do it through gritted teeth sometimes. 

If you're a writer, I hope your voice is intact and speaking prolifically on your computer screen. Mine--huge sigh that just made the curtains move--is not. Although I'm still blogging and writing my weekly newspaper column, I'm discovering my creativity is only working in fits and starts--and stops. With the latter coming a lot easier than the former. 

What to do?

Well, as most of us have learned over our often long and sometimes illustrious careers, the thing to do is run with it. Although this is a different crisis, it's certainly not our first one. Most of us have known several long Marches in our lives. So, here's my list.  And, while you're at it, stay home (if you can) and stay safe. 

  • Write in spurts. My friend Jana Richards wrote about the 100-word challenge on the Word Wranglers blog. Much of the time, you keep on going, but even if you can't, there's that 100 words that weren't there yesterday. 
  • Give your best voice to blog posts and other short works. My columns lately have been some of my best. Not only have they felt the best to me, but have been well received by the people who read them--for which I am most intensely grateful.
  • Be productive in other ways. Like many other sewists, I'm making surgical masks. It helps to fulfill a need for others and it answers my own wish to do something. I have friends who are baking their own bread, others who are making desserts that make my mouth water just thinking of them, and still others who are reviving an old (and for me, best forgotten) habit of spring cleaning. 
  • Read. I know "soul food" is a cultural term, but it can also apply to things beyond actual food. As in anything that lends succor to the soul. I'm reading old stuff, because I don't want surprises or deep thought or worry. I want laughter and relief and familiarity. 
  • Speaking of laughter, I'm taking any road to it I can find, including things that are pretty tasteless. 
  • I miss the fellowship of church, but I can sing along with anyone I like on YouTube. I can even shut the pastor down if s/he goes on too long!

Please let us all know how you're "running with it," how you're making this long March into spring something that will have as many good memories in it as bad ones. How you're finding your own luck when it seems to be elusive. 
If I sound like I'm preaching, I apologize--I don't mean to. I wish you all happy days ahead. Once again, stay home and stay safe. 

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Come back to check out April's Rafflecopter!





https://www.youtube.com/embed/Qb35f5aZkdE


***
Friendship has been so much a part of my life, one of the many areas I have indeed been very lucky. In the course of that luck, I've read and loved a ton of books with strong friendships as part of their theme, beginning, I think with  Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm and Emma, Anne of Green Gables and Diana, and Trixie Belden and Honey Wheeler. 

What this means, of course, is that I had to write a girlfriends book. It's been a few years, but The Girls of Tonsil Lake is still one of my favorites. Vin, Andie, Jean, and Suzanne are some of my most beloved heroines. I hope you'll check them out. 

They were four little girls living in ramshackle trailers beside a lake in rural Indiana. They shared everything from dreams to measles to boyfriends to more dreams. As they grew up, everything in their lives changed--except their friendship. Through weddings and divorces, births and deaths, one terrible secret has kept them close despite all the anger, betrayal, and pain.

Now, forty years later, facing illness, divorce, career challenges, and even addiction, the women come together once again for a bittersweet month on an island in Maine. Staring down their fifties, they must consider the choices life is offering them now and face the pain of what happened long ago.

Secrets are revealed and truths uncovered, but will their time together cement their lifelong friendship--or drive them apart forever?






18 comments:

  1. Hey, great name. I love friendship books and how their lives have changed, stayed the same or crashed. Hopefully none of that your friends, but life can be a challenge. My excitement today is to drive a three mile loop to keep my Prius charged today.

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    1. Go slow. :-) Hopefully, I will go pick up eggs today.

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  2. I’m still under quarantine from our travels and now that the quarantine act is enacted in Canada that means even taking the dog out for a walk is forbidden. Canada is very serious about social distancing. I’m about to make an online order for groceries with a pick up date of next week sometime. We’ll be able to go get the food ourselves..yeah! One thing I’ve enjoyed is making a coffee and drinking it during a Facetime visit with family. We sip our drinks together and chat like we’re in the room. The quality of those visits has changed for the better. I’m reading historical romance because today’s headlines drift out of my mind. Writing is in very short bursts. I will try the 100 word challenge. Today!

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    1. Good luck, Bonnie. It's helped me a lot. I actually made 500 words yesterday, and was unreasonably proud of myself! Enjoy your visits with your family.

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  3. I haven't changed much in my life except not going to the store at all due to my asthma. My husband has needed to get our food. I still sit outside and write and do all my authorly stuff. The thing I'm doing more of is READ! I took advantage of some of the book sales authors are having and stuffed my Kindle. I'm hoping to find a few new-to-me authors who I can go back to once all this has let up.

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    1. I haven't checked, but I imagine this has been good for many of our sales.

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  4. Wonderful post, Liz! I find I'm spending more time in the kitchen, instead of writing. It's my way of handling the stress of worrying about family (son was tested yesterday) and friends. What I miss is the "freedom" to get in my car and run errands with my 86 year old mother or taking a walk to meet her at our local coffee shop. Yet I'm ever the optimist and know that there's a hidden message for all of us. As of yesterday, I'm back on my schedule of writing and looking forward to April.

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    1. Oh, yes, April! I hope your son is free of the virus--my daughter-in-law tested yesterday, too. Blessings, Mary.

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  5. I was depressed for a while. LOL I think it definitely comes in spurts. I've made a few changes that has helped tremendously. Our daughter is on chemo meds so I told her that I don't want her going to the store for us. We'll order next time and pick up. We shouldn't have to worry about our children, too. Your book sounds great!

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    1. Thanks, Karen. Yeah, the kid worry goes on and on, doesn't it? I hope your daughter stays free from the virus and that all goes well for her.

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  6. Definitely there are days when I feel distracted, and concentrating enough to string a sentence together is tough. I'm pushing through. I'm also baking more. Not so good for the waistline. Finding beauty and feeling grateful every day helps.

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    1. Yeah, distraction is the name of the game, isn't it? My weight is holding, but I still want to eat. Constantly.

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  7. Just grabbed your book. Looks like the perfect read for these times.

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  8. Great post, Liz. I've always wished I had those kinds of friends you mention in your book. I've only kept good friends with one high school friend. Life changes and we change with it. Due to my lousy left ankle and problems walking, my life hasn't changed that much. My husband I call Hero does online shopping which he picks up curbside or has delivered to us. Our church service is online, our church Sunday School is held via a conference call. I miss seeing my children but both are high risk and promise to stay home. Hero and I are plodding along pretty much as always, but with prayers for and thoughts of friends.

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    1. Our lives are much less changed than those of younger people, too. Take care, Caroline!

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  9. I always enjoy your posts, Liz. I love that we're all trying to make lemonade out of the lemon that is today's world. I'm sewing masks, reading more, and actually writing more too. My advice to everyone? Do your part and don't spread. Stay healthy and be happy.

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    1. Whoever said “always do your best” had it right. We are seeing a lot of “best” these days.

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