Thanks to J.A. for asking me to guest post on her blog! I’m so excited for her and her family with their newest member and all the fun (and sleeplessness) that goes along with it. I don’t miss much about the baby stage with my girls, but I do remember with great fondness that initial getting-to-know-you part where you finally get to experience the baby as an individual with a developing personality rather than just “person inside me who kicks all the time and keeps me trekking to the bathroom five times a night.”
Joy, who is five, wanders about from side to side, spends more time looking at the clouds and trees and checking out all the creatures on the trail then in actually walking, stumbles over every rock and root in her path, and yet still manages to stay on her feet almost the entire time.
Grace, age three, keeps her eyes sternly on the path in front of her, occasionally looking up to look at something particularly interesting her sister has found, but mostly just watches her feet and hikes like this is her business. Hiking is, for Grace, serious work.
Carl takes huge long strides that eat up the ground, covers any kind of terrain without difficulty. Given the choice between a short, rocky burst or a long (long, long, long) smoother stretch, he takes the long way, because it doesn’t take him that much time at all.
I have weak ankles and I have learned over the years the best way to accommodate them. Oddly enough, I do
I think the journey to publishing is kind of like that. We all have different ways we approach the goal. For some people, self-publishing is going to match their style the best. For some, sticking with the long stretch to traditional publishing works. Some might choose small presses, some might decide to forgo novels and turn instead to short stories (or blogging!) or screenwriting.
Some might even find that life causes us to take a break along the way, or take it more slowly, or wander along a different path for a time. In the end, we all are going toward the same goal, and the very best way to get there is not to worry about how everyone else is doing it, but trust to our own instincts about what works for us and stick with that. However much I wish Grace might look like she’s enjoying herself more, or that Joy would pay more attention to her feet and less to her dreams, it doesn’t work to try to force them to walk their sister’s path (and yes, I’ve tried).
And at the end, if we’re persistent and help each other along the way, we all get to share in the same spectacular view. And that is what makes it all worth it!
E. Louise Bates is a writer, wife, and mother living in upstate NY. She juggles parenting and writing and the occasional attempt at keeping house. She is currently unpublished, but hopes to change that soon. You can find her blogging at E Louise Bates, on Twitter @ElouiseBates, or check out her Facebook page at E.L. Bates.
11 comments:
Good to meet you, E. This is an excellent post. Now I'm motivated to hit the writing trails this week! :)
I love this post! So glad you posted it E Louise!
How fun. We used to hike when our kids were younger. That's how we found out one of the boys has a real issue with heights. lol
Yep, there's nothing like hiking. It's our favorite family past time, too. I loved the comparison to writing! So true, so true ...
What an excellent post! And I LOVE your last line!
Love this post! So true. On the literal, my daughter is also the one looking around at every little thing, never going straight ahead. My son eats up the terrain. Diversity is wonderful, whether in hiking or writing/publication. It keeps life from being boring. Great reminder that just because something works for someone else doesn't mean you doing it different means you'll fail.
Great post, Louise! I could even relate to that even though I don't write books.
I like taking the small steps to a dream. I'm blogging and it gives me some experience.
This is so true! Thanks, J.A. for having Louise over here...I enjoyed reading it! :)
What a beautiful nature analogy regarding the various paths to publication. Who would have thunk it?
I LOVE this comparison! It is so true that we all have to walk our own path and do what works best for us. Thanks for sharing!
Nice to read your post. Hiking is exhilarating .
Hey,
Oh for shure it is a rocky road, but would we appreciate the journey as much if all went smoothly?
Post a Comment