Wednesday, February 15, 2023

We Love Our Readers Giveaway

 Happy February Readers!

February is the month we celebrate love. As an author, I am so thankful for all your love and support! I wanted to show you how much I love all my readers by partnering up with Celebrate Lit Publicity for their We Love Our Readers Multi-Author Giveaway.

Here is your chance to win 45 books or a $500 Amazon card to buy a ton of books for yourself in Celebrate Lit's We Love Our Readers Giveaway.

Click here to enter: https://promosimple.com/ps/23a85/2023-we-love-our-readers

The event and giveaway is going on now through February 19.



Thursday, January 26, 2023

Love & Thanks



Recently I read an article that said scientists had done a study and discovered that successful couples say one phrase more often than other couples. While I thought it might be words of encouragement or a simple "I love you", the answer was more simple. They said thank you. It's more than just a casual 'thanks' though. It's about being specific with your gratitude. So saying something like, "Thanks for making dinner tonight. I was really wiped out after such a long day, and it was nice to have dinner ready by the time I got home." Not only does it focus the attention on the good things in the relationship, it's also contagious. It doesn't take long for it to become something that both partners do.

Since the next book in the Holliday Hotel series is the Thanksgiving book, I found this very interesting. Obviously giving thanks and gratitude would have to be a feature in the book, that's a given, but maybe it needs to be a key component, not only of the situations in the plot, but of the relationship between the characters as well. Is it possible that being grateful not only keeps the relationship strong, but can it help someone fall in love in the first place? 

What if one of them felt continually unappreciated and struggled with their own value? Then having someone who noticed the things that they did and thanked them for it could get them to take notice of that person. Or maybe a character has only had superficial relationships based on shallow things that can change like looks or wealth. When someone appreciates them for what they do and who they are, they finally feel like someone knows them at a deeper level like they've always wanted. There are lots of ways to incorporate thankfulness into a romance.

It makes sense. When I think about the times I'm most upset with my husband, it's because I'm focusing on myself and all the things that are wrong instead of being grateful for all the things that he does for me and all the blessings that we have together. I truly believe that God had a plan for our relationship and designed for us to be together, so shouldn't I spend more time being grateful? 

How can we shift the focus? The article suggested studying your spouse, following them around and taking notes of what they do. Personally, I wouldn't enjoy being treated like a science experiment, and I doubt my husband would either (he'd find ways to turn it into a joke). I think a better option would be to try to find one thing a day to thank your spouse for, something specific, and something that shows that you truly see them. Once that habit begins to take shape, I think that gratitude will start to become second nature. 

In real life, I think this goes beyond a marriage relationship. How much nicer would our work place be if we genuinely and specifically thanked people? How might our kids respond when we thank them earnestly for the ways they help out? Would our friendships grow deeper if we showed gratitude for what they do and their support? It's something that requires so little effort, and yet can make a huge impact on others.

Love and thankfulness go hand-in-hand. One helps the other to grow. Let's be a people who appreciate others and tell them about it!


Photo by Marcus Wöckel: https://www.pexels.com/photo/silver-colored-heart-lock-bridge-883466/

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

New Years Giveaway

 


Happy New Years Readers!


To kick off 2023 I wanted to do something special to get your year started so I have teamed up with Celebrate Lit to do a huge giveaway just for you!


Here is your chance to win over 45 books or a $500 Amazon card to buy a ton of books for yourself in Celebrate Lit's Happy New Year Readers Giveaway.


Click here to enter:

https://promosimple.com/ps/24309/2023-happy-new-year-readers-updated


The event and giveaway is going on now through January 15.

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Forced to Rest



At the beginning of November, I had a passing thought. I hadn't been sick since January. I'll admit that I felt pretty proud at that moment. Sickness and I don't have a great relationship. I'm the type of person that fills my calendar and is on the go most of the time. Sickness slows me down, and it's never a good time to be sick because there's always something going on. I'm too busy to take time off.

But sometimes there isn't really a choice, and I'm forced to rest. About a week after I had the thought of the last time that I had been sick, I got laryngitis. I felt fine, but I had no voice. As a teacher, that's a problem. So I took three days off to recover. They were the best sick days I've ever had, because I felt fine and had energy so I was still able to get things done, but I really couldn't teach. I still went in to work after school and graded papers since I had to go to pick up my daughter anyway. It wasn't so bad. I was sick, but felt pretty good and didn't get too far behind. 

About a week and a half later, I came home from school with a scratchy throat and a cough. I had felt fine that morning, but this virus came on quickly. By that evening I had a fever of 102, chills, and aches. Two more days off of work and a weekend of rest allowed me to recover. This illness was not as productive as the first since this time I felt terrible. Another forced rest at a busy time of year. 

With two illness under my belt, I was already regretting my thought at the beginning of November, and beginning to feel like I had jinxed myself. I'm not normally superstitious, but this might be an exception. 

During final week of school before Christmas break, I woke up at four in the morning with stomach pain. I didn't want to admit that I would need to call in yet again, but as the hours passed and the pain remained, I knew that I would not be able to teach that day either. My husband took the kids to school, and while he was gone I text to ask him if he would take me to the emergency room when he got back. Knowing that I'm not one to admit that I'm sick or need help, he dropped our daughter off early and came back to take me to the emergency center near our house. 

The emergency center was amazing! They got me into a room before I had done much more than put my name on the paperwork. The doctor saw me soon after and let me know what tests they were going to run. He hadn't been gone long before they got me for the CT scan. The results were back soon revealing that I had appendicitis. Another forced rest, and this time it was going to be longer than a couple of days.

By 3:15 pm, I was in the operating room. It was startling how quickly everything went, and it testified to how urgent my situation was. Doctors and nurses seemed surprised that I had only started feeling pain that morning, so I figure my appendix was in pretty rough shape. I was in enough pain by this point, that I was happy to be getting surgery.

It's now been two weeks since my surgery. I've found that I'm a very impatient patient. Since the surgery was laparoscopic, I had placed unrealistic expectations on my recovery. I expected to be sore for a couple days, and then be feeling almost back to normal. For a week and half I barely moved from my spot on the couch because it was the only place I felt comfortable. Sleeping was difficult because every position hurt. Finally, I turned a corner, and felt more tender than sore. I praise God for the timing of that, because the first day that I wasn't in a lot of pain was the day before Christmas Eve. This allowed me to attend our Christmas Eve service at church and go to all the family activities planned through Christmas weekend. 

It's not surprising that I often push myself too hard and end up feeling a little tender as a result, but the doctor was pleased with my progress yesterday. I'm still in stretchy pants because jeans are not comfortable, and I still have to take it easy or I'll regret it later. I still have another 2 weeks of lifting restrictions as well. 

This was not how I envisioned my November and December going. I didn't want to spend most of my Christmas break in pain on the couch. Still there have been some benefits to this forced rest. I've had some nice evenings of relaxation with my family. I've had some extra time to write. My husband has taken very good care of me, and it's been nice to be spoiled a little bit, nice to be cared for instead of caring for everyone else for a little while.

There's a saying that if we don't schedule time to rest, our bodies will choose a time to rest for us. I run my life too busy, too stressed, with too little sleep, and my body forced me to rest - again and again and again. I need to be better about making time to rest, choosing to say no, and taking care of me. 

I'm not one to make resolutions for the new year, but I do believe in being aware of where I need to change and grow. This is something I need to work on as I enter 2023. I need to plan more time of rest, get better sleep, and take better care of me. 


 Photo by Pixabay: https://www.pexels.com/photo/blur-close-up-coffee-coffee-cup-236699/

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Merry Christmas Readers Giveaway


 Merry Christmas Readers!

This Christmas I wanted to do something spectacular to show you how much I appreciate all your love and support throughout the year so I teamed up with Celebrate Lti to do a HUGE giveaway!

Here is your chance to win over 50 books or a $500 Amazon card to buy a ton of books for yourself in Celebrate Lit's Merry Christmas Readers Giveaway.

Click here to enter: https://promosimple.com/ps/2266d/2022-merry-christmas-readers-multi-author

The event and giveaway is going on now through December 17

Thursday, December 1, 2022

Grumbling vs. Gratitude


 

My classroom rules are all Bible verses. I love this because my students can see that these aren't just things I've randomly come up with to make their time in school miserable or take away their fun. These are things that God wants us - all of us - to do in life. They're not just for the classroom, but for home, work, church, social events, everything. Each new class has a unique personality and they seem to have difficulty with a different class rule every year. This year's class has trouble with this rule: Do all things without grumbling or disputing, (Philippians 2:14)

It's so easy to grumble. "Do I have to do this?" "Why do we have to do so many problems?" "I hate math!" And it's not just my students. I can find myself grumbling as well. "Ugh. I do not want to go back to work tomorrow." "I have so many papers to grade!" "I hate dealing with these things." 

So what's the cure for grumbling? Gratitude. I started something with my class where whenever they grumble, I ask them to give me something they're thankful for. If they're upset because it's not a lab in science today, they might say something like, "Even though we're not doing a lab today, I'm thankful that we get the opportunity to do labs in science." It's amazing how quickly their attitude changes when they have to think of something they're thankful for in response to their grumbling. In fact, often they can come up with more than one, and their classmates start chiming in with more, too. Pretty soon they realize that they have a lot of blessings to be grateful for.

It's a practice that can help me, too. Even though I'm not looking forward to going to work tomorrow, I'm thankful I have a job. I'm thankful that I love my school and my co-workers. I'm thankful that my job helps to not only supply my family's needs, but some of our wants as well. Even though I have a lot of papers to grade, I'm thankful for the progress I see my students. I'm thankful for technology that makes it so that I don't have to average grades manually. Even though I hate dealing with difficult situations, I'm thankful God is with me. I'm thankful He guides me and gives me wisdom in how to respond. I'm thankful for an administration that is very supportive to teachers. My whole outlook changes when I take a moment to switch to an attitude of gratitude. 

I think that's why 1 Thessalonians 5:18 says, "give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you." We don't always know God's will for our lives, but here in the Bible we clearly see that God's will for us is to be a people who give thanks. It takes our focus off our difficulties and turns it to the One who is the giver of every good and perfect gift (James 1:17). 

There are seasons in life that this practice becomes even more difficult. I know that looking at my examples above one might think that it's easy to give thanks when your biggest problems are as insignificant as I described. But what about when a loved one has died, or a diagnosis has been given that you hoped you never have to face? What about when a marriage is crumbling or a wayward child is breaking your heart? Does it still work then?

Yes! I know this from experience. 1 Thessalonians 5:18 was my verse of the year one time. I resolved to come up with something I was thankful for every day of the year. That year God showed me the power of gratitude. My dad was in the hospital for a month with severe pancreatitis that almost killed him. In fact, he had medical personnel stopping by his room simply because they had seen his chart and couldn't believe that not only was he alive, but he wasn't even in a coma. At this same time, my grandpa was diagnosed with kidney cancer. Later that year, a woman that I had known from youth group gave birth to her first baby and a few days later slipped into a coma and died. Eventually both my father and grandfather ended up back in the hospital for more surgeries. It was year that I spent so much time in the hospital that I accidentally turned into the hospital parking lot out of habit one day. It was a difficult year, but I found that searching for things to be thankful for made the year easier to cope with. I was thankful that both my father and grandfather survived that year. I was thankful that my friend had wisely made arrangements for her baby. There were so many blessings that I could have easily missed because I was too focused on the problems. Gratitude doesn't change the situation, but it lifts our focus to the One who knows our situation intimately.

Life is hard. We never know when things will seem to be flipped upside down. Gratitude keeps us from wallowing in the problems, and instead lifts our attention to God.

“Scripture quotations are from The ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.”

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Sneak Peek at Harvest Hollow

 


I'm so excited to announce that my new book is now available! I wanted to share a little bit of it with you, so here is chapter one. Enjoy!


“I’m not going and that’s the end of the story!” Autumn couldn’t believe that her boss, and the person she considered a good friend, would even ask it of her.

On the screen of her laptop, Ally Breen tilted her head to the side. Video conferences were the only way she had seen her friend in over a year. Autumn had thought Ally understood, but apparently, she was like everyone else who thought it was time to get on with her life. As if that were a possibility!

“Autumn, it’s time.” Ally’s voice was low. Her light brown hair hung to her shoulders in waves and her eyes, the color of maple syrup, were framed by silver glasses. “I’m not telling you to move on.” Autumn snorted, but Ally continued. “But you haven’t left your house in over a year and it’s becoming a phobia.”

“So, send me to the grocery store! Don’t send me across the country!”

Ally’s eyes watered, and she looked away from the screen for a moment. As if gathering her composure, she leaned in. “This isn’t my decision, Autumn. I’ve given you as much time as I could. You have no idea how much I have fought for you, but Harmon is done. He hired you to be a travel blogger, not to sit at home. While we’ve appreciated your help working from home editing and brainstorming, Harmon says that if you’re not going to do what he’s paying you for, then he’ll find someone who will.”

Tearing up, Autumn looked over at the framed picture on her desk. The mountains in the background were covered in snow. In the foreground, a man with longish blond hair curling from under his red beanie had his arms around her. It seemed like a lifetime ago. “He didn’t hire me to be a travel blogger. He hired us, but there is no ‘us’ anymore.”

Ally leaned back in her chair. “Harmon sees your talent. Logan was not the only one with skills, you know. You have plenty of ability yourself.”

“I have no desire though. I don’t want to travel anymore.” Why couldn’t they all understand that her life had altered that day? She couldn’t be who she used to be.

“I understand, but unfortunately this is sort of an ultimatum. You either go visit Willow Creek for a month, writing a blog once a week with photographs attached, or you need to find another job. Harmon Bryant has been more than patient with you Autumn, but his patience has run out.” Ally leaned in again. “I know it won’t be easy, but this is a stay at a bed-and-breakfast in a small town in America. You’re not being asked to go backpacking across Europe alone.”

Autumn shook her head. It didn’t matter where they sent her, she wouldn’t go. “Then I guess I need to look for another job.”

She had never seen Ally look so sad and defeated. “I told Harmon that’s what you would say, but he was unflinching.” She sighed deeply. “Look, I don’t meet with him until the end of the week. Why don’t you consider it for that long, and then let me know? Everything is always scary at first.”

“I’m not going to change my mind.”

“Probably not.” This time Ally didn’t bother to try to hide the tear that slid down her cheek. “I guess I had hoped you would see that you still have a purpose, that you didn’t die with Logan for a reason.”

Another tear tracked down Ally’s cheek, and Autumn watched it in stunned silence. Ally was tough. She had never seen her cry.

Ally sat up straighter in her chair and wiped her cheek with such force that Autumn thought she was warning any other tears that might be ready to escape what would happen to them if they had the audacity to leave. “I don’t care what you say right now. I’m giving you until the end of the week. I’m begging you to talk to the people who love you most. If any of them tell you that you are handling this in a healthy way, then I will miss you, but I won’t say another word.”

“You don’t have to miss me. We’re friends. We’ll see each other outside of work.”

On the screen she saw her friend tip her head to the side and frown. “I haven’t seen you outside of a computer screen for a year and then it’s only been because you have to talk to me for work. Do you really think our friendship will survive if you leave Travel On?”

Autumn wanted to argue, but she couldn’t. In fact, the only people she had seen in person in the past year were delivery people, and her sister and brother who refused to let her completely disappear from their lives. She didn’t think Ally would count the delivery people in the list of ‘people who loved her most’ so it was only Gracelyn and Skylar, and she was fairly certain that neither of her siblings would agree that she was handling her grief in a healthy way. Both of them had tried to entice her out several times in the past year, but nothing had succeeded.

“I’ll think about it.” It was the most she could offer.

“That’s all I ask.” Ally’s mouth tightened for a moment, then she added, “You can do this, Autumn.” Then she ended the video call.

Her eyes went back to the picture on the desk. “Oh, Logan, why did you have to leave me?” It wasn’t the first time she had whispered the words. She had screamed those words, cursed God for taking her husband away from her, sobbed into her pillow until she fell asleep. Nothing dulled the ache. Nothing brought him back.

She stood up and tightened the drawstrings on her baggy plaid pajama pants and shuffled into the kitchen to get some dinner. Opening a can of soup, she poured it into a bowl and heated it in the microwave. Besides the humming of the appliance, there was nothing but silence. She hated it, and yet it enveloped her every day.

Other than editing other people’s blog posts and researching possible travel destinations for other bloggers at Travel On, her small apartment sat silent. She never turned on the television or listened to music. Books were her friends and her phone kept her as connected as she wanted to be.

At first her friends and family had respected her space. Then gradually they began to tell her it was time to rejoin the living, to stop grieving, as if that was possible. Friends eventually stopped trying. It was depressing spending time with her. She was well aware of it. They could only stand the darkness for so long, then they wrote her off and walked away.

Skylar and Gracelyn were different. Autumn couldn’t get rid of them if she wanted to. They came over unannounced and didn’t care what she wanted. Gracelyn would bring her new books and chatter until she thought her ears would go numb after being in silence for so long. Skylar always brought her favorite foods. He claimed she needed to take better care of herself.

Both of her siblings seemed sort of lost as well though. As the oldest, Autumn had protected them through school. Then their mom had left them when they were all still teenagers saying she needed to ‘find herself’ – whatever that meant. Autumn had taken over the responsibility of cooking and cleaning the house on top of her school work to help out her dad. Only six months after she had married Logan, her dad had died of a heart attack. Once again, it had been her that had held the family together.

But when Logan died, there was no one to hold her together. Try as they might, Skylar and Gracelyn had no clue as to what she needed. She didn’t even know what she needed.

Her phone pinged and she saw a text from Ally. Check out the b-and-b. It’s called Holliday Hotel. Super cute! She was about to toss the phone onto the counter and ignore the website link her friend had sent when it pinged again. You promised to think about it!

Autumn sighed. She clicked on the link and scrolled through the options. The rooms were each themed after a different holiday. While it could have been really cheesy, the decorations were well thought-out and beautiful. Nothing made her want to leave her tiny apartment though.

As she was about to close the link, something caught her eye. A room was called Harvest Hollow and it was supposed to be the Halloween themed room. It was strange that they hadn’t named it something that represented Halloween closer. She opened up the photos and scrolled through them. The room was decorated in various shades of oranges with pops of green and purple. Like the other rooms, it was decorated in a way that paid homage to the holiday without feeling like the room was done by a small child on a post-trick-or-treat sugar rush.

Her eye caught the room’s name again. Harvest Hollow. Her mind switched it. Autumn’s Hollow – a place to heal. The words repeated themselves through her mind again and again. It took her breath away for a moment. She hadn’t felt that still small voice in a long time. Was it possible that after she had turned her back on God, He still would speak to her?

“Is this where I should go, Lord?” It felt strange to pray. Since Logan’s death, she hadn’t prayed at all, except at the beginning when she begged for God to take her, too. When He hadn’t answered that prayer, she had stopped praying and wallowed in her grief.

Autumn’s Hollow – a place to heal.

She knew she needed to heal, but she wasn’t ready. The grief was familiar and if she decided it was time to move on, she was afraid that it would mean that she would start to forget Logan. It felt like a betrayal to move forward in life when he couldn’t.

It’s time.

She gasped at the words. They were so final and intense. It was time.

“I’m not ready. I can’t do it.”

Be strong and courageous. I am with you. I will not leave you.

Her eyes filled with tears. He should have left her. She hadn’t stayed faithful to Him. She didn’t deserve His love or compassion, but she supposed that was the point of grace. It was undeserved.

“I’ll go, but it won’t be easy.” She felt calm as she picked up the phone and sent a text to Ally.

I’ll do it. Please have them book Harvest Hollow for my stay.

The bookshelf near the computer was filled with notebooks. Most had already been filled in, but there were a few that were blank. She grabbed one of the blank ones. It had an orange cover, and made her smile as she remembered the orange palette the room had been decorated in. She opened it up and ran her hand along the first page. Blank pages were always so full of possibility. With a pen she began to write in her loopy letters a list of the things she needed to do before she left. Her hand only trembled a little as she realized that for the first time, she would be planning it all by herself.

She closed her eyes and took a deep breath. She could do this, and she wasn’t by herself. Opening her eyes, she steadied her hand, and continued to write.


If you're interested in reading the rest of Autumn's story, you can find it here: Purchase Harvest Hollow

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