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Vote for Your Favorite October 2013 “My Gutsy Story®”

October 31, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 1 Comment

VOTE BE GUTSY BADGE

It’s time to vote for your favorite one of four “My Gutsy Story®” submissions. You have from now until November 13th to vote on the sidebar, (only one vote per person) and the winner will be announced on November 14th, and will select a prize from our list of sponsors.

Our first story is by Joe Weddington “The Unseen Bullett.”

Joe Weddington iraqstud
Joe Weddington

Our second story is by Mayu  Molina Lehmann “Writing in a second language.”

Mayu Molina Lehmann
Mayu Molina Lehmann

The third story is by Cappy Hall “To Have and Have Not.”

Cappy Hall Rearick
Cappy Hall Rearick

The fourth story of the month is by Don Westenhaver “Team Building Is Not for the Faint of Heart.”

Don Westenhaver
Don Westenhaver

I hope you enjoy their stories and vote for your favorite one. Please check out their books as well. There are links to them at the bottom of each story.

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story®” you’d like to share?

NOW is the time to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” which may be included in our 2nd ANTHOLOGY.

Please view our 1st Published Anthology here.

MGS FINAL COVER Small
click on cover for Amazon link

You can find all the information, and our new sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story®” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here

“Granny Franny” is Super Gutsy at Age 82

October 24, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 2 Comments

Frances Wood
Frances Wood Photo Credit, click on photo.

Now if Frances Wood isn’t an inspiration to all of us, then I don’t know who is.

Frances Wood decided to take charge of her life and go back to school, two years after her husband passed away. They had been married for 59 years and she was heartbroken, and needed something that would bring her joy again. So Frances enrolled at MidAmerica Nazarene University, in Olathe, Kansas.

She was nicknamed, “Granny Franny” and students  said, “She’s kind of like a Grandma away from home.” They flocked around her and enjoyed her company.

Please watch her video interview on KCTV 5.com.

The students wanted to give something back to “Granny Franny,” so at Homecoming, three boys asked her out.  She told them they should be looking for “real girls, that are potential wives,” but as the most popular person on Campus, they crowned her “Home Coming Granny.”

After reading about Frances, I contacted the Producer of  KCTV5.com, Kansas, and asked if they could put in touch with the “Gutsy” Frances Wood. They are forwarding my e-mail to Frances Wood, and I hope to interview her and host her on my blog as well as receive her “My Gutsy Story®” in the near future. Please check back and I shall let you know.

 ***

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story®” you’d like to share?

NOW is the time to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” which may be included in our 2nd ANTHOLOGY.

Please view our 1st Published Anthology here.

You can find all the information, and our new sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story®” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here

Here are the stories we have in October: Joe Weddington’s was the first story this month, followed by Marcia Molina-Lehmann,  and Cappy Hall Rearick.

  • October 28th: Don Westenhaver

Voting for the favorite “My Gutsy Story” of the month will start on October 31st until November 13th. The winner will be announced on October 14th.

Thanks and please share if you enjoyed this post.

 

 

“My Gutsy Story®” Cappy Hall Rearick

October 21, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 12 Comments

Cappy Hall Rearick

To Have and Have Not

“You got to know when to hold ‘em, know when to fold ‘em,

 Know when to walk away and know when to run.” ~ Kenny Rogers

 Act One.

We walked around the block over and over, my best friend and I. She tried to talk me out of leaving my husband; I didn’t want to listen. I was stuck in emotional quicksand.

“Stop walking and stop talking, Lynn,” I said. “I have to do this because I don’t know who I am anymore.”

She heard the truth of my words. After only a moment of looking into my soul, she wrapped me in her arms. “Then go with God.”

I can’t say that it was God riding with me as I drove away from the small town where I had lived with my little family for a decade, but there was a force of some kind. It propelled me back to my other nest, the one built by my parents.

Leaving behind a stifling marriage that had stolen my identity consumed me with both relief and fear. While on the one hand I felt liberated, rock bottom grief for leaving my two young sons behind chewed up pieces of my heart and spit them out. I cried and cried and cried

As though my mind was in instant replay, I saw the eyes of my twelve-year-old boy holding himself together as though following instructions. Even at his age, he knew there was nothing he could do to stop me from going. Being the oldest, he must have told himself to be brave since his mother couldn’t show him how to behave. The longer and harder I hugged him, the more stoic he became. So like his father.

My mind saw my youngest son, my baby. How does one tell a nine-year-old that his life is about to change and will never be the same? I held him in my lap and rocked him like I did when he really was a baby. We both wept. I kissed his face and tasted his tears, not realizing that it might be the last time he would let me hold him close or cry with him.

The year was 1973. I lived in the Deep South where motherhood and apple pie was the benchmark to which young women aspired. Divorce that allowed a husband to raise the children was not in that equation. With the exception of my friend Lynn, who grasped my situation like only a good friend can, no one understood my decision.

My mother had suspected my unhappiness but it was hard for her to empathize. She gave me a safe harbor, but she could not own my broken heart or my shattered spirit.

I was thirty-three-years-old and as I look back all these years later, I am troubled by the serious errors in judgment I made. I was so tired, so lost that I didn’t consider the long-range emotional fallout destined to haunt both my children and me for the rest of our lives.

Strange as it may seem, Husband Number One and I parted on fairly good terms. We were civilized about things and he promised to keep me in the loop regarding the boys and he did.

Not long after we separated, he told me how they cried for me at night, and how valiantly they were coping in a world that had left them bereft. I so wished he had not told me. Even after all these years, I still hear my babies crying when I lay my own head on the pillow at night. I will hear them till the day I die.

I moved to where I had attended college because it was familiar territory even though I no longer knew anyone there. Because I lived alone, separation anxiety was my companion. The grief I felt for my children ached like a phantom limb; I missed being their mother and easily convinced myself that they would hate me. That thought brought me to my knees again and again.

At night I would grab the telephone to call them and then quickly change my mind, afraid that they would say they no longer wanted me in their lives. Emotionally, I never left my boys but I was scared to death that they believed I had abandoned them the day I left their father. I was also afraid of an opposite reaction. Would hearing my voice make it harder for them to adjust to the life they had not chosen? Did I dare risk heaping even more emotional stress onto my innocent children? I so wanted what was best for them.

In the end, I would call Dial a Prayer so that I could hear the sound of a human voice, albeit a recorded one.

Many years and a boatload of heartache and change would have to take place before I could begin to feel whole again, although a part of my sad heart would always remain broken. I was a mother who left her children, so my lifeboat was filled with guilt.

My sons grew up to be fine men and remarkably, my worry of not being loved by them materialized only in my fear-drenched mind. They have made me immeasurably proud by becoming better parents than I could ever have been. Their children are sweet and good and I am blessed that they, too, have allowed me to be part of their lives.

I had to leave the life I was living in 1973 because it no longer worked and I didn’t have a clue how to fix things. At the time, I didn’t know what my future held or if I deserved to have one. Driving out of town that day forty years ago, I wasn’t even sure I deserved a future.

As it turned out, Act Two was waiting in the wings.

 

CAPPY HALL REARICK:

Syndicated Humor columnist, Cappy Hall Rearick, has authored six columns: Alive And Well In Hollywood, Tidings, Simply Southern, Simply Senior, “Putin’ On The Gritz, and a monthly e-column, Simply Something.

Cappy Hall Rearick cover
Click on cover for Amazon link.

She has six published books in print: Simply Southern, Simply Southern Ease, Simply Christmas, Return to Rocky Bottom, The Road to Hell is Seldom Seen and I Do, I Do, I Do. A regular contributor to Not Your Mother’s Book series, her work can be found in anthologies throughout the country.

Cappy and husband Bill live on St. Simons Island, Georgia and Saluda, North Carolina. Please follow her website, Facebook and Twitter: @cappyrearick.

 

SONIA MARSH SAYS:
Your story is filled with such honesty and your comments say it all.

“I was scared to death that they believed I had abandoned them the day I left their father. I was a mother who left her children, so my lifeboat was filled with guilt.”

I am happy to hear your sons have made you feel part of their family as a grandmother today.

Please leave your comments for Cappy and share her inspiring story with your friends. Thank you.

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story®” you’d like to share?

NOW is the time to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” which may be included in our 2nd ANTHOLOGY.

You can find all the information, and our new sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story®” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here

Here are the stories we have in October: Joe Weddington’s was the first story this month, followed by Marcia Molina-Lehmann.

  • October 28th: Don Westenhaver

Voting for the favorite “My Gutsy Story” of the month will start on October 31st until November 13th. The winner will be announced on October 14th.

Thanks and please share if you enjoyed this post.

“My Gutsy Story®” Mayu Molina Lehmann

October 14, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 10 Comments

Mayu Molina Lehmann

Writing in a second language

I recently read a piece in the New York Times by Mr. Corstica Bradatan, a Bulgarian writer. Having moved from Bulgaria to the US, he talks about the difficulty of finding a voice in a new language:

“ When you become a writer, you don’t do so in abstract, but in relation to a certain language. To practice writing is to grow roots into that language; the better writer you become, the deeper the roots. Literary virtuosity almost always betrays a sense of deep, comfortable immersion into familiar soil. As such, if for any reason the writer has to change languages, the experience is nothing short of life-threatening”.

I understand this feeling completely: Growing up in Mexico, I was passionate about the Spanish language. I loved reading ever since I can remember, and I started writing short stories when I was 7-years-old.

One of the best traditions of my childhood was that every year, my dad would take me to the International Book Fair in Mexico City. We would spend the whole day combing the aisles, exchanging books, excited at our findings. We would then emerge from the fair carrying a heavy box of books, exhausted but happy, satisfied with our treasures. It is one of the happiest memories of my childhood.

My love for books continued all my life, and when the time came to choose a Bachelor’s degree, I had no doubt to choose Spanish Literature. Then, for 4 glorious years, I immersed myself in the richness of the language, from the works of the Middle Ages to the classics of the Spanish Golden Age to the most recent emergence of Latin-American writers. I loved every part of it.

I pride myself for knowing to write well, knowing by heart the intricacies of the accentuation and conjugation, based of the Royal Academy of the Spanish Language. During those years I took an elective course, Latin, and was filled with delight when I learned the origin of a word. It was like polishing a word as if a gem, and discovering what it was made of.

Since I loved writing, I thought I could make a name for myself as a writer. I wrote a novel, a couple of scripts for theater and short stories. I never thought of living outside the Spanish world that I so loved. It never occurred to me to be separated from my beloved linguistic universe.

But fate had other plans, and ironically, I somehow ended up living in the capital of the United States, where my literary references were put out of context. Even though I spoke English, I was not fully comfortable with it. I was, as Bradatan explains, devoid of a language:

            “When changing languages you descend to a zero-point of your existence. There must be even a moment, however brief, when you cease to be. You’ve quit the old language and the new one hasn’t received you yet; you are now in limbo, between worlds, hanging over the abyss”.

And hanging over the abyss I was, in the middle of an English-speaking country, equipped with a deep knowledge of a language that amounted to little here. Other than Shakespeare and Hemingway, I had no reference of writers of the English language. I was in a void. I was in limbo.

Then, two or three years after I had moved to the US, my brother Alfonso, who is a musician, approached me with the idea of writing a musical. He would write the music, I would write the script. I jumped enthusiastically at the idea and we started working right away. We both agreed it should be in English. I was intimidated at first but eventually I jumped into the unknown… writing in English for the first time.

Although scary at first, the experience proved to be incredibly liberating. Writing in Spanish had carried a lot of gravitas, to the point of being paralyzing. I had such respect for the language that I feared disappointing the great masters. What would Cervantes think of this? I would anguish.  By contrast, my lack of knowledge of English literature allowed me to write more freely, without imagining anyone looking over my shoulder. I found out that writing in English gave me the bliss of ignorance.

I finished the script and went on to write short stories and memoir pieces for my two girls. I surprised myself by choosing English to do so. Again as the Bulgarian writer says: “To abandon your native tongue and to adopt another is to dismantle yourself, piece by piece, and then put yourself together again, in a different form.”

That was exactly me, forced to look at what I knew, dissect it, discard some things, hold on to some and and put everything back together in a way that was still me, but a little different. For example, literary embellishments and excessive adjectives don’t go well in English, so writing in this language forced me to see the world through different eyes, in a more objective and matter-of-fact way. The result was a new way of writing, made of bits and pieces of the old me, plus elements of my new environment.

As Bradatan observes:

 

            “In the end, you don’t really change languages;

            the language changes you”.

 

In my case, it did.

MAYU MOLINA LEHMANN was born and raised in Sonora, Mexico. Developing an early love for literature, she wrote her first story at age seven. The anthology De Niños Para Niños (Ediciones del Plumicornio) includes some of her earlier works. She authored an unpublished novel La Hija del Candidato, and is writing the script for a musical about Latino immigration.

Mayu has a BA in Spanish Literature from Tec de Monterrey (ITESM). After moving to the US she worked at the Organization for American States in Washington, D.C., where she currently lives with her husband and two young daughters.

Please visit Mayu’s Website

SONIA MARSH SAYS: I know everyone reading your story will admire your writing skills. I can relate in a different way as I grew up speaking three languages: English, French and Danish, and struggled with my vocabulary and reading skills in those three languages. What struck me as interesting was your mention of:

“My lack of knowledge of English literature allowed me to write more freely, without imagining anyone looking over my shoulder. I found out that writing in English gave me the bliss of ignorance.”

Please leave your comments for Mayu and share her inspiring story with your friends. Thank you.

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story®” you’d like to share?

NOW is the time to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” which may be included in our 2nd ANTHOLOGY.

You can find all the information, and our new sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story®” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here

Here are the stories we have in October: Joe Weddington’s was the first story this month.

  • October 14th: Marcia Molina-Lehmann
  • October 21st: Cappy Hall
  • October 28th: Don Westenhaver

Voting for the favorite “My Gutsy Story” of the month will start on October 31st until November 13th. The winner will be announced on October 14th.

Thanks and please share if you enjoyed this post.

 

How to Become a Successful Gutsy Indie Publisher

October 11, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 5 Comments

purchased from i-Stock
purchased from i-Stock

Becoming a successful “Gutsy Indie Publisher” is like being a circus juggler on a unicycle, throwing flames and spinning plates; all at the same time.

So what is the secret to juggling?

  • It’s to think like a pro.

If you want to sell commercially, you need to become a professional publisher.

  • To sell your book you have to suit the book buyers not you.

Yes, it does cost money, and you need to figure out:

  • What am I good at?
  • What am I not so good at?
  • What do I need help with.

There are 6 steps towards becoming a successful “Gutsy Indie Publisher” and I shall be presenting these at the Digital Author and Self-publishing conference on 10-12-13, in Los Angeles.

Digital Author and SP-Conference-BannerClick here to see the entire program.

Each phase of becoming a “Gutsy Indie Publisher” requires specific tasks and skills you need to be aware of before moving onto the next one.

Some of the steps are ongoing, and require adapting to where you are in the publication process before moving on. The 6 steps I shall cover are:

  1. writing
  2. pre-publication
  3. publishing
  4. marketing
  5. promotion
  6. what next?

Within each step, I shall cover the following topics:

Topics covered in those areas

  • Writing-Professional editing, story structure, copy editing, proof reading
  • Blogging-Building your platform through contests, videos, podcasts, Google+ hangout interviews
  • Branding yourself
  • Become a leader; not a follower
  • How to grow your platform through contests, creating your own groups
  • How to set up your own publishing company: Dba, Bowker, PCIP
  • Printing POD with LSI, CS
  • The importance of a professional cover Design and interior formatting
  • How to design a book cover that sells
  • How to get endorsements from bestselling authors
  • How long will it take to get my book out?
  • Get reviews on publication day book
  • Networking: Giving more than receiving
  • What volunteering can do for you
  • Get local journalists to interview you
  • How to set up your own Virtual Blog Tour
  • How to create a successful Book launch, media, sponsors
  • How to get book signings, book club events and think outside the box (international book events.)
  • How to get your book into Costco
  • How to get book signings
  • Mistakes to avoid when booking indie bookstore events
  • How and when to submit your book for Awards
  • How to create your own event and get sponsors
  • Crowfunding with Pubslush: How to make it work
  • What next? Create an event.

Many have asked me, “So Sonia, what’s next?”

Well apart from helping people with my new business, “Gutsy Book Coaching”, speaking and continuing with the “My Gutsy Story®” second Anthology, (please keep submitting your stories) contest guidelines here, I also plan to volunteer in Spain in May 2014, with a group called Vaughan Volunteers. I’ve always wanted to volunteer and meet people from different cultures. If you want to have a week in Spain, speaking English to Spanish business people, Vaughan pays for your hotel, food and sight-seeing. It’s a great opportunity to help, while learning more about the Spanish culture.

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story®” you’d like to share?

NOW is the time to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” which may be included in our 2nd ANTHOLOGY.

You can find all the information, and our new sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story®” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here

Here are the stories we have in October:

  • October 14th: Marcia Molina-Lehmann
  • October 21st: Cappy Hall
  • October 28th: Don Westenhaver

Thanks and please share if you enjoyed this post.

 

 

 

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