Sonia Marsh - Gutsy Living

Life's too short to play it safe

  • Home
  • About Sonia
  • Blog
    • Starting Over
    • Solo Cruising
    • Travel & Adventure
    • Peace Corps
    • Writing & Publishing
  • Books
    • Freeways to Flip-Flops
    • My Gutsy Story® Anthology
  • Media
    • Press Kit +Videos
    • Print Media
    • Awards-Reviews-Testimonials
    • Sonia’s Blog Tour
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Archives for My Gutsy Story

A “Gutsy” 79-year-old drives a FV432 Armoured Personnel Carrier

August 18, 2014 by Sonia Marsh 1 Comment

Barbara Charlene Barker

Driving a Personnel Carrier

“My Gutsy Story®” by Barbara Charlene Barker

 I try to remember how I got so old. At each birthday I feel as if I am taking another step down the road to perdition. Some youthful diversion is needed.

Every Monday and Tuesday I volunteer at the police department and drive a police car  around the city to check on homes of vacationers. But anyone can do that. Originally, I wanted to jump out of an airplane, but my doctor said no, I have a crushed vertebra.

My son, Scott came up with a good idea.  He wanted to go to Bovington in England to ride in a tank and drive a personnel carrier. We both live in California, Scott lives in San Diego, and I live in Garden Grove. That would be quite a trip to become better acquainted with war machines. I said yes immediately. The event was being held at the Tank Museum. An application arrived; I wondered if they would accept me. I’m seventy-nine and I have diabetes.  I did not volunteer the fact that six years ago, I broke my hip and my elbow.

On May 9, 2014, we flew out of Los Angeles, (LAX) to Heathrow Airport, near London. We then took a train to Wool, a town close to the Tank Museum.  The day began with breakfast and distribution of black jumpsuits with the Tank Museum logo on the back. That was a good beginning; I like jumpsuits. Three teams of seven were formed; I was on the red team and the only woman there. A minder was assigned to each team. A minder is a classy name for babysitter. The minder provided encouragement, enthusiasm, and guidance.

Our team was assigned to drive the personnel carrier first. A van took us to the driving area on an army base. When we got there, the personnel carrier (FV432) was chugging smoke out of the top mounted pipe. The greenish-black FV432 weighs 25 tons, and can carry 10 soldiers. Its  top speed is 12 miles per hour, and it can travel 35 miles on one tank of gas.

(Video From YouTube, not from Barbara Charlene Barker)
My son, Scott, was one of the first drivers and he came back with thumbs up and a smile.

When it was my turn to drive, I was unable to raise my leg high enough to climb on top of the personnel carrier. I thought I had to give up, but the minder said to climb in the back door. Crawling over various objects to get to the driver’s seat, I ruined my Sketchers in the process. The minder explained how to use the gear shift, the stop button, the posts for turning right and left and other forgettable instruments. I had a helmet, a microphone, and headphones. I was ready to get moving.

Right from the start, I had trouble staying in the middle of the road. My minder yelled, “Left! Left! Left!” His tone grew more fervent as I veered towards the ditch. Sweat rolled down my face and arms. I just missed the ditch, but something worse appeared at the bottom of the hill: a river.

“Do we have to go through that?” I asked.

“Of course,” he replied. And so we did. Fortunately the river bed was shallow, and I continued driving over thickets of undergrowth and rain puddles.

My twenty- minute drive seemed like hours, and the minder said, “Good job.” After all, I did manage to stay out of the ditch.

The tanks were next on the agenda. The museum had rolling stairs to assist the climb up the tank. I got to the top of the tank, but I looked down at the distance from the tank turret to the tank seat and I said no.  You had to jump down about five feet. I was afraid for my crushed vertebra. But they took several pictures of me standing on the tank.

Next we had a tour of the museum. They have over 500 tanks. My favorite was ‘Little Willie’ a World War I tank with the tread over the top of the turret.   One display was a trolley car that was covered with camouflage to look like a tank. I’m not sure if that fooled the enemy or not.   By then it was almost 2:00 p.m. and time for tea, goodie bags and awards.

Barbara Charlene  Driving 09

When my name was called for the “best driver” certificate, I thought I’d misheard, and continued filling my plate with scones. Was my hearing getting worse?

The museum docent asked me to come forward and accept my award. I was shocked, especially after my minder told me I didn’t know my right from my left. Since I completed my journey, they said I was eligible for the award.

This adventure has given me a new, youthful outlook at 79 and ¼ years old, and perhaps one day, the local police will let me help them with their newly purchased tank.

I hope to motivate people my age to follow their heart and head straight towards their own “gutsy” adventure.

BARBARA CHARLENE BARKER:  As a volunteer, I have been driving a police car around the city for the past ten years . My assignments include checking homes of vacationers, hotel parking lot surveillance, and manufacturing safety.  In May, 2014, I was elected to the post of Assembly person for the California Senior Legislature.  I serve as vice chair for the Budget Oversight Committee for the Garden Grove School District. After I retired as a teacher and administrator, I worked as a part-time professor for Chapman University (13 years) and UCI ( 7 years.)

SONIA MARSH SAYS: Barbara, you look too young to be 79, and being active seems to be what makes you stay young. You are an inspiration to all of us. keep doing what you love. Perhaps you should join the Peace Corps next.

NOW ACCEPTING SUBMISSIONS

Get Published in our 3rd

“My Gutsy Story®”Anthology in 2015

 

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES HERE

 

MGS FINAL COVER Small
Click on cover to go to Amazon

Benjamin Franklin Digital Awards Solver

 2013 Benjamin Franklin Honoree Winner

International Book Awards Finalist 2014

2014 International Book Awards FINALIST

Paris bookfestival

2014 WINNER of the PARIS BOOK FESTIVAL

 We just won our 4th Award for the Anthology. 

CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT ABOUT OUR AWARDS.

IMG_20140702_070759918

 


Winner of the July 2014 “My Gutsy Story®” Contest

August 14, 2014 by Sonia Marsh 2 Comments

Inge Bird
Inge Bird

This July we had FOUR OUTSTANDING  “My Gutsy Story®” authors. Some of these stories will be included in our 3rd “My Gutsy Story®” Anthology, published in 2015.  Thank you to all four authors. Your stories are all WINNERS.

Our first place goes to Inge Bird who won 1st Place for her “My Gutsy Story®” about how “I Became the Man I Always Wanted to Marry”

Ingrid Bird
Inge Bird
Rita Gardner

2nd Place goes to Rita Gardner about, “Time to Bring Family Secrets and Stories to Life.”

Rita Gardner

Rita Gardner

 

 

3rd Place goes to Patrice Garrett about “Finding Heaven.”

Patrice Garrett
Patrice Garrett

 

Patrice Garrett

Patrice Garrett

4th Place goes to Java Davis about “A Life Changing Moment.”

20140714_075716

 

  Thank you to all four authors. Your stories are all WINNERS.

 

NOW ACCEPTING SUBMISSIONS

Get Published in our 3rd

“My Gutsy Story®”Anthology in 2015

 

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES HERE

 

MGS FINAL COVER Small
Click on cover to go to Amazon

Benjamin Franklin Digital Awards Solver

 2013 Benjamin Franklin Honoree Winner

International Book Awards Finalist 2014

2014 International Book Awards FINALIST

Paris bookfestival

2014 WINNER of the PARIS BOOK FESTIVAL

 We just won our 4th Award for the Anthology. 

CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT ABOUT OUR AWARDS.

IMG_20140702_070759918

 


“Hang Gliding With My Son”- My Gutsy Story® by Maralys Wills

August 11, 2014 by Sonia Marsh 3 Comments

Maralys Wills 1

“High, Wide, and Terrified”  

“My Gutsy Story®”- Maralys Wills

 

IT WAS THE LAST thing in the world I ever expected to do–fly a hang glider off an eleven-hundred-foot cliff, even with my son Bobby as pilot.  A hundred times since then I’ve asked myself what came over me that morning in our rented living-room in Hawaii when I broke down and said, “Okay, Bobby–I guess I’ll do it.”

The idea had seemed ludicrous at first . . . Bobby hovering my husband and me and asking us to fly tandem with him, and Rob pointing out that even he and his brother Chris had only tried the cliff once. “Don’t be ridiculous,” Rob said, and I said, “I can’t possibly do this, Bobby. I was born scared. I’m a devout coward.”

“Well, think about it.”

I did think about it . . . and for reasons I’ll never understand I finally said I’d fly with him.

Bobby grinned and said, “You’ll be glad, Mom.”

Next morning we stood on the cliff side-by-side in the awful wind, Bobby and I, waiting . . . our senses assaulted by the insistent flapping of the sail.

We delayed until the right moment to walk toward the cliff, I quietly trembling inside. What in God’s name was I doing there?

Bobby gave me a sideways glance.  “Ready, Mom?”

I did not break down and laugh hysterically and ask if he was kidding.

Slowly we started forward. The tandem seat was one long metal piece, meaning when Bobby walked, I walked.  Together we gripped the aluminum control bar, together we moved our legs–in my case, wooden–together we faced Chris, who waited for us at cliff’s edge like a minister waits for a bridal couple. Chris reached out and grabbed our cables.

I looked over Chris’s head at the sky and my mind went blank. It was as though I were going into surgery and this was the final moment of consciousness before I surrendered to the anesthetic. A vast calm settled over me.  Fear vanished. From now on my fate was in another’s hands.  If I died, I died.

I heard Bobby’s voice say, “Now!” and my eyes focused momentarily just as Chris’s fingers released the wires.

Then everything was gone.

It happened so fast I didn’t react to our takeoff, didn’t feel anything except an acute awareness of Chris disappearing from the cliff.

Then my perceptions changed, and I realized we were rising, though nothing told me so, only that the world was dropping away and silence had taken over.

We’d been up only a minute or two when precariousness struck home. Besides my legs dangling in space, there was nothing to lean back against, nothing to rest my feet on, nowhere to put my hands. In fact there was nothing, anywhere, for security, just that narrow seat the width of a Kleenex box and the seat belt sitting across my lap. I tried not to dwell on how easy it would be to topple backwards into eternity.

My hands . . . what did one do with the hands? I dared not grip the control bar, because Bobby had to steer. There were only the yellow nylon ropes supporting the seat, very thin and not too handy. Tentatively I rested my hands on the control bar and sat as motionless as a picture.

The moments passed. Instead of growing calmer I grew  steadily more tense. The kite was now so high I could hardly find the cliff where we’d launched, much less see anybody. I felt cut off. Alone. Precarious. Barely supported. It was the ultimate insecurity.

A wave of terror swept over me, and I could feel myself going white. In a voice I could barely control I asked, “Bobby, can we go down now?”

He turned to me in surprise. “Why, Mom?  We just got here.”

I shrugged: one does not go into the subject of panic while dangling at two thousand feet.

But Bobby was sensitive to my mood.  “You’ll be okay, Mom, relax. It’s smooth up here. Can’t you tell how smooth it is?”

Well, actually I couldn’t, as I’d never done this before. I hated to dash him by saying smooth meant nothing, that down was what I wanted. Instead I said, “There’s a plane, Bobby, and it’s below us!”

“Sure.” He grinned. “Lots of ’em are below us.”

“But that’s not safe!”

“It is if you’re not in their way.” He smiled. “I can see, you know.”

Funny, I couldn’t. I was blind to everything except my immediate, perilous environment. From the first I’d felt it necessary to sit absolutely still. If I took shallow breaths I might not weigh so much.

My face betrayed me; Bobby kept looking at me sideways. “Look at those big waves! There, Mom, over there, that’s the beach we’re looking for. Makapuu. Do you see Makapuu?”

I looked and said I thought so, though from two thousand feet all the waves and all the beaches looked alike. Anyway, I couldn’t forget where I was long enough to care. In an airplane, with seat, seat belt, backrest, floor, walls, and windows I can study the coastline. Dangling by a thread above the clouds, I am not concerned with landmarks, I’m concerned with reaching the ground.

I hated to bring up a tired subject.  “Can we come down, now?” and I heard my own voice and thought, Good heavens, I sound like a child! I glanced at him and thought, This is his world, and I am the child and it’s affected everything. How conversation changes when the roles are reversed!

“We’re already headed down,” Bobby said. “Look back, Mom. You’ll see we’re below the cliffs.”

I looked and it was true. The cliffs now loomed above us. Daring to glance below, I saw that houses, trees, cars, the beach had taken on near life-size proportions, and I felt better, as if I were once more part of the world.

Then even this changed and I felt more than better, in  fact, strangely euphoric. The feeling was joy, a wild, carefree kind of joy, and it burst forth like a living dream. I realized I was here, living those moments of breathless flying we’ve all known in dreams.

It was me!  And I was flying!

I couldn’t get enough of it . . . floating over tree and chimney, feeling all-powerful, all magical. I wanted to shout, Hey, everybody! Look up!  Look up, it’s me, I’m flying!

But it ended so quickly . . .

Suddenly we were over the beach and coming in fast.

In urgent tones Bobby said, “Listen, Mom, push the bar out when I tell you.”  A pause.  “Okay! Now!”

We moved into a large, graceful turn. Abruptly the kite stopped flying about four feet up and we hung momentarily, suspended as if by a giant hand.  Then we dropped on our bottoms in the sand.

“Sorry about that,” Bobby murmured, embarrassed.  “I stalled kinda high.”

From my sprawled position on the beach I looked at him and smiled. We were too high? Really? I hadn’t noticed.

We unbuckled our seat belts, and I picked myself off the sand and brushed at my clothes. Then, without knowing I was going to do it, I threw my arms around Bobby and hugged him, and words poured out, a whole flood of them.  “You were wonderful, Bobby, incredible, the best.”

He drew back and gave me a strange look.

“Thanks for taking me. You were right to talk me into it. I’m glad I went, it’s one of the best things I’ve ever done.” I was babbling out of control.

He stared at me, incredulous. All this coming from someone who moments before had been speechless with fear, begging to come down. Absently he patted my shoulder.  “Yeah, Mom,” he mumbled, “you’re welcome.” Then he began folding up the kite, but he kept stealing little puzzled looks.

The odd thing was, I meant every word.  He’d been terrific. The definitive pilot. A master. The experience had been a highlight of my life. Because of him I’d lived through unbearable panic and survived with most of my dignity intact. It was an experience few people like me would ever have, and I was insanely grateful to be one of the few.

One last thought lingered in my head, though, an idea I dared not express, which Bobby would never know as long as we both should live: I’d done it and I was glad. But now I never had to do it again!

 

MARALYS WILLS, named as Teacher of the Year, Maralys Wills has been teaching novel-writing for 25 years. Publications include 14 books in a variety of genres. Among her fictions: four romance novels (Harlequin and Silhouette), and SCATTERPATH, a techno-thriller about airplane sabotage. Eight nonfictions include, Manbirds (Prentice-Hall), four memoirs, a treatise on addiction, and two books on writing: Damn The Rejections, Full Speed Ahead, and Buy a Trumpet and Blow Your Own Horn: Turning Books Into Buck. Memoir, Higher Than Eagles gathered 5 movie options, (including from Disney), while two memoirs earned national awards. “Damn” won its category in two national competitions.

SONIA MARSH SAYS: I know Maralys Wills from a writers’ group I attend, and can attest that she fits the “Gutsy” woman award in every way.

Please check out her books on her site: Maralys.com and on Amazon.

Maralys Wills Book Cover
Click on cover to purchase on Amazon

 

 


VOTE BE GUTSY BADGE
VOTE for your favorite JULY 2014 “My Gutsy Story®” ON THE RIGHT SIDEBAR.

You have from now until  August 13th to vote on the sidebar, (only one vote per person) and the winner will be announced on August 14th, and will select a prize from our generous sponsors. 

READ ALL STORIES HERE

NOW ACCEPTING SUBMISSIONS

Get Published in our 3rd

“My Gutsy Story®”Anthology in 2015

 

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES HERE

 

MGS FINAL COVER Small
Click on cover to go to Amazon

Benjamin Franklin Digital Awards Solver

 2013 Benjamin Franklin Honoree Winner

International Book Awards Finalist 2014

2014 International Book Awards FINALIST

Paris bookfestival

2014 WINNER of the PARIS BOOK FESTIVAL

 We just won our 4th Award for the Anthology. 

CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT ABOUT OUR AWARDS.

IMG_20140702_070759918

 


My “Gutsy” Journey to the Dalai Lama’s Potala Palace-Lhasa Tibet

August 4, 2014 by Sonia Marsh 3 Comments

 


amazon whiter

 

The Guts to Travel to the Roof of the World

  “My Gutsy Story®” by Gisela Hausmann

At the age of thirteen I met Heinrich Harrer, confidant and tutor to the Dalai Lama, and author of “Seven Years in Tibet.” After a fascinating slide presentation Harrer signed my copy of his book. Deeply impressed with what I had seen I decided that I would visit the then-forbidden city of Lhasa.

Eleven years later I saw an opportunity to do so. In 1986 I was working in the Austrian movie industry. No movie would be made over the Christmas holidays. Granted it was an icy winter but I had a six-week break and $2,500 stashed away. As they say, “You have to work with what you’ve got.” I decided to cross Russia with the Trans-Siberian Railroad and try to make it into Tibet. There was no telling if I would succeed, alone, without a tourist group.

Since the Chinese invasion of Tibet, the Chinese often banned foreigners. Icy weather conditions also determined whether planes could land in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, located at 12,000 feet in elevation. But I was determined and started my trip on December 21, 1986.

On January 13, 1987 I arrived in Lhasa. I was fortunate, as everything worked out, including the weather. Very few tourists were in town and I really felt like I was visiting a Tibet not much different from Harrer’s Tibet.

Buddhism was omnipresent. Even the rocky cliffs were painted, depicting Buddha on a lotus flower. Prayer flags were flying everywhere. Tibetan pilgrims were visiting the Jokhang Temple, renowned center for Buddhist pilgrimage. Potala Palace, iconic symbol of Tibet and sacred place to Tibetans, towered over the city. During Winter Lhasa was a mesmerizing city in a barren landscape full of breathtaking spiritual energy.

Nothing could take away from that. Flying into Lhasa I overcame about 10,000 feet of elevation in only two hours. Lhasa’s airport was about 50 miles outside of town, and passengers had to take an old bus to get to the city. The roads were bad, and I was shaken around for three hours. Many of the locals traveled with their screeching chickens cooped up in cages. After one hour on the bus, altitude sickness set in. My knees felt like pudding, and my head like a beehive. When I finally arrived in town I could barely take one step. There were no taxis or buses; everybody walked.

I was forced to carry my forty pounds of luggage, and after numerous stops to catch my breath, I finally reached a hotel. The first thing I noticed in my room was a gaping half inch hole under the window sill. There was no heating despite a night time temperature of 16 degrees Fahrenheit. I decided to sleep fully dressed and used the second mattress as an additional cover.

The following morning I awoke to murmurs outside my door. I figured something special had to be going on out there. I jumped out of bed, grabbed my camera and opened the door. There it was; the picture which would be ingrained in my mind forever.

I saw the white Potala Palace on the hill. The magnificent symbol of Buddhist religion and spirituality towered over the needy buildings in the foreground. The early morning sun’s rays transformed Potala’s white walls into a glowing red, making it look as though it were engulfed in red flames. A dark gray cloud loomed behind it, as though painted on a backdrop of beautiful blue morning sky. I lifted my camera just in time and clicked. I had captured the symbol for religion and culture in Tibet, while a dark cloud hovered over its intense burning, yet peaceful beauty.

Gisela gutsy GH pic 1
Potala Palace

I was determined to make the most out of my three-day stay. Like most tourists I downed aspirins as a blood thinner to fight altitude sickness. I lived off dough-cakes baked on a street vendor’s red glowing cast iron oven and Yak-butter tea. On my last day I found the strength to climb the thirteen storey walk up to the Potala Palace.The Dalai Lama’s former quarters were the most serene rooms I had ever encountered. Real time no longer seemed real, but measured by the clacker of metallic prayer mills.

Gisela monks gutsy GH pic 2

When I left Tibet, I traveled through China to Hong-Kong. The difference between Tibet’s bare vulnerability and Hong Kong’s pulsating life was surreal. Still, I did not realize what I had managed to do by chance.

The years passed. In 2006 China opened the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, a previously unthinkable engineering feat. Nobody knew that this was even possible. Over 80% of the 709-mile-long section between Golmud and Lhasa lies at an elevation of over 13,000 feet. This railway eliminated all the difficulties of travel to Tibet. The Chinese turned Tibet into a business opportunity. There are now souvenir shops and a four lane boulevard right in front of the Potala Palace where I had walked by foot, on a dirt road.

There is no perfect time to do what we feel we must. All we can do is line everything up, do our best, then capture the moment. I am forever grateful for that picture etched in my mind that foresaw Tibet’s changing.

©2014 by Gisela Hausmann, abridged version of story IS TIMING OF THE ESSENCE?, published in “Naked Determination, 41 Stories About Overcoming Fear”

GISELA HAUSMANN BIO: Born to be an adventurer, Gisela Hausmann, is a globe trotter, former movie producer, aerial photo specialist, vintage house renovation, and award-winning author. A unique mixture out of wild risk-taker and careful planner, she has globe-trotted almost 100,000 kilometers on three continents, including to the locations of her favorite books: Doctor Zhivago’s Russia, Heinrich Harrer’s Tibet, and Genghis Khan’s Mongolia. Gisela Hausmann graduated with a master’s degree from the University of Vienna. She now lives with her cats Artemis and Yin-Yang in Greenville, SC. Please find more information and pictures about her work on her website: www.giselahausmann.com

SONIA MARSH SAYS: Thank you for taking us on a spiritual and historical journey through your Gutsy adventure to Tibet.

 

Follow Gisela on:

Twitter: at @Naked_Determina

Facebook: 

Blog: http://nakeddetermination.blogspot.com/

Google+: http://plus.google.com/103171286110985123907/posts

 Gisela Hausmann’s book on Amazon:

Gisela Book Cover
Click on cover to go to Amazon

VOTE BE GUTSY BADGE
VOTE for your favorite JULY 2014 “My Gutsy Story®” ON THE RIGHT SIDEBAR. 

You have from now until  August 13th to vote on the sidebar, (only one vote per person) and the winner will be announced on August 14th, and will select a prize from our generous sponsors. 

READ ALL STORIES HERE


 

NOW ACCEPTING SUBMISSIONS

Get Published in our 3rd

“My Gutsy Story®”Anthology in 2015

 

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES HERE

 

MGS FINAL COVER Small
Click on cover to go to Amazon

Benjamin Franklin Digital Awards Solver

 2013 Benjamin Franklin Honoree Winner

International Book Awards Finalist 2014

2014 International Book Awards FINALIST

Paris bookfestival

2014 WINNER of the PARIS BOOK FESTIVAL

 We just won our 4th Award for the Anthology. 

CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT ABOUT OUR AWARDS.

IMG_20140702_070759918

 


Vote Now For Your Favorite July 2014 “My Gutsy Story®”

July 31, 2014 by Sonia Marsh Leave a Comment

 

VOTE BE GUTSY BADGE
VOTE for your favorite JULY 2014 “My Gutsy Story®” ON THE RIGHT SIDEBAR. 

You have from now until  August 13th to vote on the sidebar, (only one vote per person) and the winner will be announced on August 14th, and will select a prize from our generous sponsors.

Our 1st “My Gutsy Story®” is by Patrice Garrett “Finding Heaven.”

SONIA MARSH SAYS: 

I have always had a fear of horses, mainly because I am not used to being around them. Your “My Gutsy Story®,” showed me that:

“Horses mirror the fears, thoughts and resolve of their riders; they decipher nuance and interpret body language. Mine have taught me patience, honesty, leadership, and conscious riding. My acquired saddle skills also inform how I walk life’s road. I’ve learned there’s no faking it. I live with intention.”

Patrice Garrett

Our 2nd “My Gutsy Story®” is by Ingrid Bird, “I Became the Man I Always Wanted to Marry.”

SONIA MARSH SAYS: 

You are one “gutsy” woman Inge, and I love your style, and proactive approach to life. The statement you made says it all:

“ I became the man I always wanted to marry.”

You are amazing, and I admire what you have done with your life.

Ingrid Bird

 

Our 3rd “My Gutsy Story®” is by Java Davis “A Life Changing Moment.”

SONIA MARSH SAYS:  “What a terrible tragedy and this must have been a life-changing moment for you.”

 

20140714_075716

 

 

Our 4th “My Gutsy Story®” is by Rita Gardner, ” Time to Bring Family Secrets and Stories to Light.”

SONIA MARSH SAYS: I had the pleasure of reading Rita’s memoir and was intrigued by her island life and how she captured the vivid details of her childhood in a remote part of the Dominican Republic.

Rita Gardner

 

NOW ACCEPTING SUBMISSIONS

Get Published in our 3rd

“My Gutsy Story®”Anthology in 2015

 

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES HERE

 

MGS FINAL COVER Small
Click on cover to go to Amazon

Benjamin Franklin Digital Awards Solver

 2013 Benjamin Franklin Honoree Winner

International Book Awards Finalist 2014

2014 International Book Awards FINALIST

Paris bookfestival

2014 WINNER of the PARIS BOOK FESTIVAL

 We just won our 4th Award for the Anthology. 

CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT ABOUT OUR AWARDS.

IMG_20140702_070759918

 


« Previous Page
Next Page »
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Sign up for my Gutsy Updates

Sign up to receive awesome content in your inbox, every month.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Welcome to My New Life

Welcome to My New Life

Do you feel trapped?
Let me Help You Rediscover Your Freedom.
I divorced at 58, and now belong to myself.
If I can do it, so can you!
Let me help you find your purpose and become your own best friend.

Click the cover to buy on Amazon

Recent Posts

  • Do You Really Want to Live to 120? The Truth About Healthspan vs. Lifespan
  • I’ve Forgotten How to Drive — My Tesla’s Drives Better Than Me
  • Why I Quit Dating Apps at 68—And My 35-Year-Old Son Has the Same Problem

Also Available At:

Latest from the blog

  • Do You Really Want to Live to 120? The Truth About Healthspan vs. Lifespan
  • I’ve Forgotten How to Drive — My Tesla’s Drives Better Than Me
  • Why I Quit Dating Apps at 68—And My 35-Year-Old Son Has the Same Problem
  • Solo Cruising Doesn’t Mean You’re Alone
  • Single Woman Cruising Solo

Top Posts

  • From Rice and Lentils to Salmon and Champagne
  • "My Gutsy Story" by Rebecca Hall
  • My Road to Becoming an Author by Jonathan Yanez
  • My First Basotho Funeral
  • I Leave for Africa with the Peace Corps on October 4th
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2026 · Beautiful Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

Loading Comments...