Friday’s Quotes for the Chicks
Just do it. – Nike
What a week, what a week!
I managed to get two major articles out to my editors, along with blog posts, teaching classes, and transporting kids to soccer games. And I wrote an outline for a manuscript I’ll be working on during the Nanowrimo challenge. (I wrote it at a friend’s house last weekend where this little guy kept me company.)
I didn’t think I’d be doing Nanowrimo this year (it’s a challenge where you win if you write 50,000 words in one month) because, well life is busy. But you know what? Life is always busy. Here’s the story of why I decided to do it (originally posted on nhwn.wordpress.com)
Well who knew? Nanowrimo – here I come
I didn’t know I was going to do it until this past weekend. A friend of mine left town and asked me to house-sit until she came back.
I love house-sitting for her for several reasons:
• She keeps a fantastic stash of cookies (yup, I broke that ketogenic diet right in half this weekend)
• She’s got great pets that make me laugh
• I don’t know how to work her TV set (she has about a half dozen remotes that must be used in a highly specific sequence) so I can’t waste time watching shows
This all means that I get to read and write uninterrupted (expect for the occasional cookie run) the entire time I’m there. While munching on a handful of goldfish crackers, I was thinking about some friends of ours who had gotten into a horrific car accident (sending positive prayers to you guys constantly.) Their accident was so random, so out of the blue, so not their fault.
You just never know.
It got me thinking. What are the lessons I’ve learned that I want my kids to know and what if I never get around to telling them because I’m too busy?
I started listing bits of advice this mama hen has gathered throughout her life that she’d want to share with her chicks. When I looked at the list (it currently stands at over 200 items), I realized that I could match pretty much every lesson up with a story from our backyard chicken flock.
Ah-ha! That would make for a great book (if only to give my kids.)
But how on earth was I going to find the time on top of all of my other writing assignments to get this project done?
Enter Nanowrimo which starts when the clock strikes 12:00 a.m. on October 31.
I didn’t do Nanowrimo last year and I certainly didn’t *think* that I was going to do it this year (too occupied with other writing is my standard excuse), but in this case, Nano is the prefect kick in the butt for what I want to do. I have the stories, they all exist in my head – and because I hate to lose, the incentive is there to find the time to get them out and onto the screen.
Nanowrimo will be the gift of “getting it done no matter how busy I am.”
So while I wasn’t planning on participating in a writing challenge this year, you can count me in. Nanowrimo gives me the perfect opportunity to write all those stories of life lessons for my kids – because you just never know, right?
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So who knows what will come out of this project, but at the very least, I’ll be giving my kids the gift of lessons learned.
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Be safe and see you all next week.
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Wendy Thomas writes about the lessons learned while raising children and chickens in New Hampshire. Contact her at Wendy@SimpleThrift.com
Also, join me on Facebook to find out more about the flock (children and chickens) and see some pretty funny chicken jokes, photos of tiny houses, and even a recipe or two.
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