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“My Gutsy Story®” Janet Givens

August 5, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 9 Comments

 

 Janet Givens

 Leaving A Life I Loved: When the Peace Corps Beckoned

 “I’d rather regret the things I’ve done than regret the things I haven’t done.”  Lucille Ball

 

I joined the Peace Corps June 10, 2004. I was 55 and my husband Woody was ten years older. The application process took us two years, as our commitment to Peace Corps would be.

I’d initially ignored my husband’s suggestion, two years earlier, that I “just check out their website.” But after two weeks of seeing him so excited by the idea, I finally did.

He’d sprung his “I think we should join Peace Corps” idea in late May of 2002. At that time we’d not yet been married three years and — critical piece here — he’d retired the year before. For nearly thirty years, he’d been a professor of Speech Science at Temple University in Philadelphia and had traveled and written widely in his chosen subfield, stuttering. He was looking for a new challenge. I was not.

I already had a life I loved, including a new career. After a lifetime in the non-profit world raising money and organizing volunteers, I’d completed an extensive three-year training in Gestalt psychotherapy and, five years early, had opened what came to be an inherently rewarding private practice in the living room of my three-story Italianate home on Philadelphia’s west side.

I also loved playing host parents with Woody to foreign students living on our third floor. They came generally from parts of Asia and South America, and were enrolled in the University of Pennsylvania’s ESL program. The students filled our home with youthful energy, new ways of seeing the world, and a very nice rental income.

It was a life I envisioned having into my eighties. But, the Peace Corps had been a dream of mine since I’d watched my college classmates join and go off to parts unknown nearly forty years before. I hadn’t applied in 1971 because I was sure the stuttering I’d struggled with since childhood would keep me out.

By 2002, my stuttering had been a non-issue for many years. Besides, Woody felt that if we were ever going to go, the time was then — he wasn’t getting any younger, after all. Browsing through their website, reading about the places we could go, people we could meet, work that was waiting for us, I was smitten. Within two weeks, we’d sent in our online applications. I could be a Peace Corps Volunteer (PCV) after all.

My memoir, At Home On the Kazakh Steppe, tells the story of this mid-life jump into the unknown. But it doesn’t tell much about what I left behind. Somehow, writing about it felt like whining. I did, after all, join voluntarily. I did sell my Philadelphia home with the six-foot-long tub and French bidet I’d added during renovations only a few years before. I’d sold my two-year old car for one-third what I’d paid for it. I’d parted with furniture I loved; hundreds of books, some of them mine since high school; closets full of clothes; stuff. It was all just stuff, I reminded myself. And it still feels like whining. Except for Merlin.

A rescued greyhound, Merlin came into our lives in August of 1999. Woody and I joke that we got married just so we could adopt him. Not my first dog by any means, but a different dog than any I’d had before. He carried himself with a graceful dignity that let us know that chasing a silly ball — never mind bringing it back just to do it again — was beneath him. He taught me patience (ever a challenge), and he was truly the world’s fastest couch potato. He and I bonded quickly, and life without him was unthinkable. Until the Peace Corps entered the picture.

During the final year that it took for our medical clearance to come through, we lined up a foster home for him. But in the weeks before our departure, the family’s circumstances changed and they had to renege. With two weeks to go before we were scheduled to leave, we found a second family who wanted him, but they would take him only if they could keep him. I was devastated. After forty-eight hours of angry, broken-hearted sobs, I signed him over to them permanently.
Such was the pull that becoming a PCV had on me.

Though I’d wanted to join Peace Corps for nearly forty years, by the spring of 2002, there was an even stronger pull on me to join. With the fall of the Twin Towers, Woody and I felt an unusual type of patriotism. Initially proud of the outpouring of public sympathy, even from longtime adversaries of our country, we were dismayed to find that support evaporating as our country drew closer and closer to war. We wanted to take a stand, make a statement, and be counted among those who preferred peace.

Janet Givens Photo  23
The Kara-Kengir river flowed into and through Zhezkazgan, where we lived. A bit upriver, and out of town, this was the scene of a great picnic one May afternoon.

I’ve only mentioned the permanent losses (or what I believed at the time were permanent; we actually did get Merlin back and enjoyed him for four more years). I haven’t talked about leaving behind my network of friends and colleagues, not being able to participate in two years of my grandchildren’s lives, or leaving the rest of my family: the part of my life I put on hold.

Some of this was mitigated by technology: the Internet was far more available than I ever imagined it could be in a Peace Corps country. But the pain of letting go of attachments — what had, according to the Buddhist teachings I am drawn to, created my misery — did not hit me until it was too late to grab any of them back.

Janet Givens Zhezkazgan
These ladies sold paper products at the bazaar in Kazakhstan. They wanted their faces to get to America.

People often comment on how brave we were. I can see how it might look that way: newly married, older couple abandons worldly possessions in pursuit of loftier goals. But I never felt it took any particular courage. In fact, I’ve come to believe that by leaving so much of what I valued behind, I was more committed to success — to “making a difference” — than I might have been otherwise, though I was never sure what that “difference” might be.
In writing my memoir, I’ve discovered the difference I really made was in me.

 ***

NOTE: The Peace Corps is a U.S. State Department program begun in 1961 by President John F Kennedy. Since it’s beginning, it has had three goals: To provide training and skills to countries that ask for our help, to bring aspects of our culture to the people in these foreign lands, and (when we return) to teach about these cultures to the people of the United States.

The Peace Corps has no upper age limit and requires only that their volunteers be US citizens and have either a college degree or “life experience that can be taught” (such as farming or fishing). There is a lengthy application process, background check, and a quite detailed medical clearance is required. For more information, their website is www.peacecorps.gov

JANET GIVENS BIO: Just when her life felt right — new home, new grandchildren, new career, new husband — Janet Givens left it all behind and, with her new husband, joined the Peace Corps.

The latest of many jumps into the unknown, her two years in Peace Corps were filled with struggles, surprises, and rewards, vividly recalled in her memoir, At Home on the Kazakh Steppe, out later this year.

Fascinated with the “Oh no” moments that make us gasp and curious about behaviors and beliefs we often take for granted, she blogs about negotiating boundaries, making connections, and embracing transitions at http://janetgivens.com/blog. Join her on Twitter @GivensJanet, and on her Facebook Page: Janet_Givens_Author, as well as her own FB Personal Profile: givensj48

 SONIA MARSH SAYS: Since I have a strong desire to join the Peace Corps, it was interesting for me to read how you felt prior to leaving. I look forward to reading your memoir and the adventures and misadventures you had while in Kazakhstan. The part that intrigued me was your personal discovery. “I’ve discovered the difference I really made was in me.” This is what happened to me after my year in Belize.

 ***
VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE JULY “My Gutsy Story®.”
(One Vote per person on the sidebar.)
The voting has started for your favorite July 2013 “My Gutsy Story®.” You have 2 weeks to vote. The winner will be announced on August 15th and gets to select a prize from our sponsors.

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

Would you like to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” and get  published in our 2nd anthology?

Please see guidelines below and contact Sonia Marsh at: sonia@soniamarsh.com for details.

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

Vote for your Favorite July 2013 “My Gutsy Story®”

August 1, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 1 Comment

VOTE BE GUTSY BADGE

The voting starts right now for your favorite July 2013 “My Gutsy Story®.” You have 2 weeks to vote. The winner will be announced on August 15th and gets to select a prize from our sponsors.

Vote on Sidebar. Only ONE vote each.

Our first moving story of the month was from Liz Burgess.

Liz Burgess Head
Liz Burgess

Liz reminds us that learning to be patient and to accept change is not easy, and her story about “letting go,” is inspiring.

Our second story this month is by Sharon Leaf.

Sharon Leaf
Sharon Leaf

Sharon’s story has two important messages: Are you going to let fear rule you?  You don’t need a lot of stuff to be happy—four gym lockers will do.

Our third story is by Patti Hall.

Patti Hall
Patti Hall

Patti has such an inspiring story about how she focused on her passion to write while overcoming the loss of her husband.

Our fourth story is by Destiny Allison.

Destiny Allison
Destiny Allison

Another inspiring story about how Destiny turned her love for sculpting into a profitable business, and how she found a way to juggle her business and home life with three kids, as a single mother.

Our fifth story is by Donald Dempsey.

Donald Dempsey and his son
Donald Dempsey and his son

Considering Donald’s own childhood, with an abusive mother, I found his story fascinating, especially how much he wanted to give his son everything he did not have as a child.

***

Be Inspired to ‘Bring Out the Gutsy in You’

Click here for Special Event News

Are you ready to take the next gutsy step in your life? I’m hosting an event in Orange County on Sept. 26 that will inspire you to act on that dream you’ve been holding inside.

This event is free, and you’re invited.

Click here to reserve your seat today.

Name and e-mail required.

 

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

Would you like to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” and get  published in our 2nd anthology?

Please see guidelines below and contact Sonia Marsh at: sonia@soniamarsh.com for details.

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

Visit us on Monday August 5th.  Janet Givens will be sharing her “My Gutsy Story®.”

“My Gutsy Story®” Donald Dempsey

July 29, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 10 Comments

 1-Donald Dempsey with son Gavin-001

Birth

“Listen, I need you to understand what we’re up against going in,” the Doctor said again.  His almost serene manner was infuriating.  He kept gazing at me like he was waiting for me to understand, or explode.  “There is a very real possibility the baby won’t make it.  You will need to be strong for your wife.”

My wife was a nineteen-year-old girl in a room down the hall.  She was currently hooked up to so many tubes and machines that it was hard to look at her without fainting.  She was pale and frightened, and in pain.  It was more than six weeks before the baby’s due date and she’d lost nearly twenty pounds, instead of gaining weight like a normal, healthy mother-to-be.  Her appearance was haunting and surreal.

I felt more helpless and scared than at any other time in my life.

“I understand.”

“We expect the baby to weigh somewhere between 2 and 2-1/2 pounds, and we’ve taken every precaution.  I have a specialist here who will take charge of the baby as soon as we deliver.  Your wife will probably require some special attention during and after delivery.”  He leaned forward and peered at me to stress his next point, his eyes widening a bit.  “If you can’t remain calm and supportive it would be best if you waited this out with her family.”

Afterward, I washed my face with water and caught my reflection in the mirror above the sink.  I was looking pretty haggard myself.  Little sleep, long hours in the factory, and the stress of my wife’s difficult pregnancy was taking a toll.  I noticed my hands trembling.  My breathing was irregular.  My heart was pumping so loudly I could hear it.

Without planning to I reached over and locked the door, then flicked off the light.  I could still see a shadow of myself in the mirror.  There was a hum of activity on the other side of the door.  I hated myself for feeling so weak.  I detested being afraid.  My normal response to these emotions was anger.  I could get downright hostile when pushed on.  Such a response would do me no good in my present situation.  In fact, such a response never did me any good.  I just hadn’t learned that valuable lesson yet.

I dropped my head and began to talk.  My hands gripped the cool porcelain of the sink.  My words were quiet, but earnest and sincere.  I wasn’t religious but I did believe in God.  I had learned a few things about churches and pastors, none of them pleasant.  But I found myself praying nonetheless, hoping that God would hear me and take pity on my wife and unborn son.  It didn’t take long until I was on my knees and begging.

I promised I would be a better father than the man I had never known had been to me.  I beseeched God for the chance to break the cycle of pain and despair I’d been born into.  My troubled childhood and a stint in the Marine Corps had transformed me into a young man who was hard to get close to.  Dropping my pride wasn’t easy.  I had always counted on myself during tough times.  It would be years before life would teach me how important humility truly was.

As I composed myself I felt the familiar anger rising, but squelched it.  I knew I was at a crossroads.  I had come so far, overcome so much.  I’d worked hard to put the past behind me.  But I knew if something happened to my wife or son I was going to suffer terribly.  I didn’t think I’d be able to get past such a tragedy.  I wasn’t sure I had the capacity to deal with anymore pain.

A few grueling hours later I was peering through a glass window at my infant son.  My wife was resting comfortably.  It hadn’t been easy, but she’d done it.  I was certain it was going to be many years before I recovered from the harrowing experience we’d just survived.  As low as I’d been before the delivery, I now found myself surging with hope and promise.  I couldn’t stop smiling.  I kept touching the glass and leaning toward my son, straining to get a better look.  I had never been happier than at that moment.

A man next to me chuckled.  “Your first?”  I barely glanced at him but nodded.  “Yeah, I can tell.”  He didn’t sound nearly as excited as I was.  “Which one’s yours?”

I pointed.  A nurse was still attending my son, taking blood from the sole of one of his feet.  He was squirming and giving her hell.  “The good looking one,” I told him needlessly.

“A boy,” he muttered.  “Good for you.  That’s my third girl over there.”  I glanced in the direction he indicated and smiled just to be polite.  “You won’t be nearly so excited the second or third time around.”

I wasn’t listening to him any longer.  What did he know?  My son was going to change my life.  He was going to prove to the world that I was worth something.  He was going to be everything I felt I was never given the chance to be.  Everyone would see.  All that I never had would be his.  I’d see to that.  No matter how many hours I had to work, there would be no sacrifice I wouldn’t make.  He was going to want for nothing and have everything.

My life changed drastically that day.  Almost every decision I made from that point on was focused on that boy.  He became my reason for living.  I pushed for the best grades and accepted nothing less.  I demanded success from him in every athletic endeavor, and there were many.  And I never forgot my promise to God.  I gave him everything I never had, and I never walked away.

The poor kid.

 

Click on cover to order book
Click on cover to order book

About the Author:

Don Dempsey experienced childhood abuse and neglect first hand, but went on to have a fulfilling family life as an adult and to own his own business. “If you’re lucky, you make it to adulthood in one piece,” says Don. “But there’s no guarantee the rest of your life is going to be any better. Abused kids are often plagued by fear and insecurity. They battle depression and have trouble with relationships. In the worst cases, abused children perpetuate the cycle.” But Don is living proof that you can overcome a childhood of abuse and neglect. “You start by letting go of as much of the guilt (yes, abused kids feel guilty) and as many of the bad memories as possible. At the same time, you hold on to the things that helped you survive. For me, it was the belief that you can make life better by working at it and earning it. It helps to have a sense of humor, too.”
Find out more about the author by visiting him online:

  • Betty’s Child website: www.BettysChild.com
  • Donald Dempsey Facebook: www.facebook.com/donald.dempsey.3
  • Twitter hashtag: #BCDempsey
  • You can order Betty’s Child on Amazon

SONIA MARSH SAYS: Thank you Donald for sharing your life-changing moment, when your son was born. I found it so moving when you said,

“My son was going to change my life.  He was going to prove to the world that I was worth something.  He was going to be everything I felt I was never given the chance to be.  Everyone would see.” 

After reading this, I realized how much you wanted to give your son everything you did not have as a child, but then I thought about the pressure on your son to become your “reason for living.” Also to get “the best grades” and how you “accepted nothing less.” I love the way you ended with “The poor kid.”

(Donald Dempsey is on a blog tour with WOW! Women on Writing. I requested he write a “My Gutsy Story®” which he accepted.)

 ***

Be Inspired to ‘Bring Out the Gutsy in You’

Click here for Special Event News

Are you ready to take the next gutsy step in your life? I’m hosting an event in Orange County on Sept. 26 that will inspire you to act on that dream you’ve been holding inside.

This event is free, and you’re invited.

Click here to reserve your seat today.

Name and e-mail required.

 

***

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

Would you like to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” and get published 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

Our July stories have started with Liz Burgess and Sharon Leaf, Patti Hall all sharing her “My Gutsy Story®.”

VOTING for your favorite July “My Gutsy Story®” starts on August 1st-14th. The WINNER will be announced on August 15th.

“Bring Out the Gutsy in You” with Marybeth Bond

July 18, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 18 Comments

Marybeth BBondwglobe2
Marybeth Bond, “Gutsy Traveler.”

Be Inspired to ‘Bring Out the Gutsy in You’

Are you ready to take the next gutsy step in your life? I’m hosting an event in Orange County on Sept. 26 that will inspire you to act on that dream you’ve been holding inside.

I’m thrilled that author and intrepid traveler Marybeth Bond has agreed to be my keynote speaker for this launch party, which will introduce the My Gutsy Story® Anthology – the first book in the “Gutsy Anthology” series.

Marybeth Bond is a National Geographic author, contributor to LA Times, USA Today, PBS, CNN and guest on Oprah.

This event is free, and you’re invited.

Click here to reserve your seat today.

Name and e-mail required.

When: September 26, 2013.

Where: Regency South Coast Village 3, 1561 W. Sunflower Avenue, Santa Ana, Calif. (MAP)

Time: 6 to 9 p.m. (Photos of where we shall be here.)

There is no charge for the event, whose theme is “Bring Out the Gutsy in You.” I hope attendees will be inspired to step out of their comfort zone, take risks and follow their passion.

Marybeth, known as “The Gutsy Traveler,” is the author of 12 National Geographic travel books, including two Gutsy Women books. She’s traveled to more than 100 countries. Two summers ago, she biked 3,115 miles across the United States with her 22-year-old daughter and raised $52,000 for women’s osteoporosis research. Marybeth’s goal is to encourage women to step out of their comfort zones and travel beyond the group tour.

You’ll also hear from a panel of authors featured in the My Gutsy Story® Anthology.

Moderator: Marla Miller, Author and founder of The Marketing Muse workshops             

  • Sonia Marsh: Award-winning author and founder of the My Gutsy Story® series.
  • Linda Joy Myers: President of the National Association of Memoir Writers and co-president of the Women’s National Book Association, SF.
  • Jason Matthews: Hosts a weekly Indie Authors Google+ Hangout, and is an e-publishing expert.

Marla Miller, will serve as moderator, asking questions about how to make “gutsy” happen. I’ll be one of the panelists, along with Linda Joy Myers, and Jason Matthews.

A percentage of the proceeds from book sales will go to WomanSage, which provides opportunities, experience and education to enhance and empower all women.

Please contribute to the PUBSLUSH Campaign to help support the event, and OFFER YOU REWARDS in exchange.

Click on Book Cover to Reserve Your Seat Today

(Name and e-mail required)

My Gutsy Story Anthology
Click on book and fill out name to reserve your seat.

The goal of the My Gutsy Story® Anthology series is to build a safe community aimed at helping one another overcome life’s challenges, encourage adventure and grow stronger with the knowledge that there are always options in life.

  • Do you live in Orange County, Los Angeles or San Diego area?
  • Do you know someone “Gutsy” in your community that  you’d like to nominate?

If so, please e-mail us at: gutsyanthology@gmail.com and write “MY NOMINATION” in the subject line. Please write no more than 100 words as to why you nominate this person, what they’ve done that’s Gutsy and why you believe they deserve to win.

We shall select 3 people based on your nominations, and mention them at the “Bring Out the Gutsy in You” event on 9-26-13.

Look forward to seeing you on September 26th. Please share with all your friends on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and in person.

Comments and questions ARE ALWAYS appreciated.

 

“My Gutsy Story®” Patti Hall

July 15, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 41 Comments

1-patti hall

Runaway Writer Found on Beach, Heart Broken, but Alive!

One of the best moves I’ve ever made was to run away from home when I was almost fifty-one years-old. Once I made the move, my life changed. I did meet a small new circle of friends, but the biggest change was in my writing life.

It had been over 10 years since I was actively writing online. Back then I was writing for online magazines, a weekly column on the now defunct “She’s Got” network, and I ran a site for young writers. I wrote children’s stories, poetry, and a novel, while plotting my moves to publish them all. Then life took another swing at me and my writing life was back to just me and my journal, which satisfied me for a time.

In 2008 a personal tragedy brought writing back into my life; I wrote online updates to friends and family about my husband’s fight with leukemia. I wrote from Paul’s hospital bedside and from the desk at our temporary housing near the hospital and clinic. I wrote about our thoughts and feelings, about the latest medicines, and their cruel side effects. I tried to keep positive and I tried to make our weird humor an ingredient of my updates. Amazingly to me, I kept getting comments on my updates like, “I hope you’re saving this for a book,” and “This is going in the book isn’t it,” and “You have to write a book to help others through what you and Paul have been through.”

Patti Hall and Paul
Patti Hall and Paul

Almost a year from the day he was diagnosed, Paul passed away at home in our bed. Even stunned by his death though, I missed writing those updates. A few weeks later I began an email journal of my painful progress through nightmare estate issues and my stunted grief process. My email journal went out (and still does) to our same circle from the leukemia updates, with pictures, poetry, and reader comments. My audience continues to laugh, cry and cheer for me.

It was six months after Paul’s death that I ran away from home. Our home was home no more; it was a torn shell that had once been the comfortable shelter of our love. Home was now held hostage in a gripping tug-of-war between lawyers and heirs. All I could focus on during those first six months was Paul and my driving need to be near the ocean; a need that pulled me like the moon tugs at the tides. Some of our most fun and soothing times had been spent walking sandy shores.

During those six months before I ran away, I thought of other times that I had found sanctuary on the beach. As a young divorced mother, I had often bundled up my nursing son and my toddler-daughter and made excursions to a friend’s beach cottage, or to the sands of Ocean Shores Washington. I recalled treasured memories of Huntington Beach California, with my beautiful red-headed sister and our young families.

As beach memories crowded my thoughts, automatic pilot (that self-protective part of me) managed the details of the next episode of my life. Without that autopilot, I could never have abandoned our home; that sacred place of “us.” Autopilot shielded me from sinking into fear and served up a pair of wings for my flight to the beach.

Maggie’s as safe as the closet that our dog, Jake, snuggled into during fireworks or storms (and she’s not much bigger than that closet!). Maggie is a travel trailer who beats her chest with happiness when salty winds batter her metal skin. She sings along with the chimes I hang, and apologizes unceasingly when her plumbing proves imperfect. Maggie is home, and only a short walk to the beach.

Once settled into my new life, the addiction began. I dug out old work. I produced new work. I started writing under my maiden name, which I had not used since 1977. The solitary writer’s life I led now had little resemblance to any of the former lives I’d led the past 36 years, so a new (old) name made perfect sense to me.

I polished a children’s book written for my children when they were young, and then I wrote a 4000-word story based on my granddaughters. I pulled out a series of poem-stories that I wrote years ago; I had drawn little booklet covers and attached the poem-stories to whimsical creatures that my girlfriend made for sale.

I spent hours researching and educating myself on writing and publishing in this new modern world. I joined a local writer’s class in the arts center and an online memoir class. I began attending a local writing group at my library. There, I presented a new story I was writing based on the superhero flights of fancy of one of my grandsons, but written for all three of them.

More research. I followed a course online on building a writer’s platform. I made my website to blog my future readers. I joined Twitter and Facebook. I passed the initiation and became a member of several online writing groups. I was writing new material every day and blogging most of it. The feedback was encouraging, more than encouraging, as several professional and/or published writers were insisting I publish my work. I was on a roll.

I’m still on that roll. I’ve had two other very close deaths recently that almost stopped me in my tracks again. The grief is overwhelming, but what I can do is write. I can write of the cold dark hours and long, never-ending days of my grief. I can even write and photograph the joyful minutes that I allow myself to see and feel the miracles of nature; the raging waves reaching for the shore, the dancing birds on the sand who rejoice in flight, the moss-covered shack I capture being swallowed by vegetation. I’m at my beach and I’m writing a memoir. I’m alive and I’m hopeful.

PATTI HALL is currently working on her memoir series, Souvenirs from My Heart, about love, illness and loss.

During the 90’s Patti wrote online articles and a weekly column for a now defunct network. Her site, Rising Writers, for aspiring young writers was voted Top 101 Writers Web Site in Writer’s Digest for 2000. She wrote poetry and essays, an anthology of women’s writing, newsletters, and edited her college newspaper.

Patti lives near the beach and enjoys her solitude. She spends her time walking on the beach, writing, reading, taking photos, gardening, traveling and genealogy.  Visit Patti at www.1writeplace.com

Follow Patti on  Twitter @PattiHallWrite, and on Facebook.

SONIA MARSH SAYS: Your story is so beautiful, and I felt such strength within you to focus on your passion to write while overcoming the loss of your husband.

 

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

Would you like to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” and get  published in our 2nd anthology?

Please see guidelines below and contact Sonia Marsh at: sonia@soniamarsh.com for details.

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

Our July stories have started with Liz Burgess  and Sharon Leaf, both sharing her “My Gutsy Story®.”

Don’t miss Thursday’s post on SURPRISE KEYNOTE SPEAKER for “My Gutsy Story® event on September 26th, 2013.

 ***

Anthology Book Cover High Res. FINAL

Click here for latest news

ANTHOLOGY PRESS RELEASE

Next Monday, come back to read Destiny Allison’s My Gutsy Story®.

 

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