Blogging along… (or should I say slogging?)

Ever feel like you’re running out of ideas?

For stories? Never!

For blog posts? Uhmmm…

I’m beginning to think my streak of daily blogging is coming to a close. At the end of this month, I will have posted every single day for SIX MONTHS!

That’s a huge accomplishment for me, and considering I wasn’t sure I’d make it for a week, I’m really pleased. BUT I’m finding myself using my writing time to stew about what to post for the day… and that’s just not productive. So I’m giving myself permission to stop the madness at the end of January.

I’ll still be blogging, but I’ll be doing it when I have a specific reason to do so.

It’s been a fascinating experiment, but it’s coming to a close!

Happy Thursday, everyone!

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Plant-Based Meal Planning

We’ve been trying our luck with moving toward a healthier life-style. Eating more vegetables; reducing meals where the meat is the main protein… especially red meat. We’re nowhere near vegan or vegetarian, but we’re making incremental changes and finding it’s not as hard as we’d imagined.

Some resources have been really helpful.

One such resource is Forks Over Knives. Not only does the site have helpful articles, but it also has a database of great recipes! We’ve tried several, and have been pleased with all so far.

Take this one, for example, the No-Tuna Salad Sandwich. Absolutely yummy!

Another interesting resource has been a grocery delivery system our daughter introduced us to… Imperfect Foods. They specialize in providing sustainable, affordable groceries that are delivered right to your door… a definite convenience in this uncertain day and age.

Food. An absolute necessity. But sometimes figuring out the best options for optimum health and wellness can be tricky. Discovering new resources is always a plus!

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SMART Goals

2021 was an interesting year. I achieved some goals and failed spectacularly at others, but all in all, when the year ended I was pleased to find that I’d failed forward!

A large part of that forward motion is due to my yearly review in late December and the goals I put in place for the coming year. Stretch goals, not easy ones. Goals I’ll have to work to achieve, but goals that will carry me forward even if I fail to meet all of them. And I’m realistic enough to know that some of them won’t be met.

An important part of this process is recognizing what is and is not a goal. I’m not talking about resolutions. Everyone makes those in early January … and most people have forgotten what they were by February or March. I’m talking about really, truly GOALS.

I like to use S.M.A.R.T. goals, which are, by definition:

  • Specific: Goals need to be specific, not some loose, vague, impossible to quantify statement. “I will write better this year″ is not a specific goal. “I will write 2,000 words a day” qualifies.
  • Measurable: Goals need to be measurable. Again, a concrete goal is far better than an amorphous wish. You need to know whether or not you achieved it! “I will write for 45 minutes a day” is a measurable goal.
  • Achievable: Goals need to be reasonable and achievable. Don’t set yourself up for failure by shooting for the moon. “I will complete the first draft of my 90,000 word novel in 6 months″ is much more achievable than “I will write a 90,000 word novel in January.” Also, as I mentioned above, make sure your goals are within your control. “I will write the first draft of my novel” is achievable and within your control. “I will become a NY Times bestselling author” is not.
  • Realistic: Goals need to be realistic. Evaluate your time and your lifestyle. Be honest with yourself. Set goals that are specific, measurable, achievable, and realistic for who you are and how you live.
  • Time-Bound: Goals need to have a time frame. Lots of people dream of writing a novel…someday. But without a deadline, a time pressure, there’s no reason to do anything today. Put a date on your goal and then get started on it today. When you reach the specified date, you’ll know whether or not you accomplished your goal.

One of my goals for 2021 was to publish 18 new titles. I write under two names for two very different audiences: Debbie Mumford writes speculative fiction, often with romantic elements, for grown-ups, and Deb Logan writes contemporary fantasy and science fiction for middle grade and teen readers, so my actual goal read something like this: “During 2021 I will publish one title a month as Debbie Mumford and one title every other month as Deb Logan.“

That qualified as a SMART goal. It was specific – one title (short story, novella, novel, collection) for Debbie every single month and one for Deb every other month; it was measurable – at the end of the month, I knew whether or not I’d accomplished the task; it was achievable – I had a backlog of published stories where the rights had reverted to me plus a selection of new work that I was ready to release into the wild; it was realistic – I knew I could create the covers and run the manuscripts through Vellum (my formatting tool of choice) in a timely fashion; and it was time-bound – everything would happen during the 2021 calendar year.

I almost achieved that goal. The final breakdown for 2021 was 15 short stories (10 of Debbie’s + 5 of Deb’s), plus 2 anthology collections (both Debbie & Deb) which were also released in print and large print editions. Only a total of 17 titles, but I’m fine with that number!

Where I fell down, rather spectacularly, was in my production goals. I intended to write three novels and at least eleven short stories in 2021. This goal met all the SMART tests, but as I didn’t write any novels, the goal failed. I did write 14 short stories, and sold five to anthologies, so again, not a total loss.

One thing that I didn’t have a specific goal in mind for was to run a Kickstarter campaign. I did so with a goal of earning enough money to buy a batch of 100 ISBNs so that I could begin to move my major titles under my own publishing company (rather than continuing to use free ISBNs from distributors like KDP and D2D). My campaign funded! I bought the ISBNs and have begun the process of moving my titles to WDM Publishing. Goal accomplished!

So what’s in store for 2022? Recognizing that life happens (and boy, has Covid made that fact crystal clear!), I’m keeping my options open. But I will publish and I will write!

How about you? Have you mapped out your intended journey for 2022? I hope your destination will be grand and glorious. I’m sure I won’t end up exactly where I’m planning to go, but I’m positive the journey will be amazing!

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Remembered Lessons for Life

It may be the middle of winter, but I’m remembering a beautiful day in better weather…

Over a Labor Day weekend several years ago, I relaxed on my best friend’s back deck, savoring clam dip and seven-grain crackers while observing the antics of the many hummingbirds who grace her property. My friend had a hummingbird feeder suspended on her deck and it was a constant source of energetic activity, despite the fact we were seated close enough to reach out and touch it.

The dazzling little hummers darted back and forth between the feeder and a nearby cherry tree, perching among its leaves while they plotted their next foray to the syrupy fountain. I swear, the cherry leaves were larger than the tiny birds.

As I watched them flit and flutter, it occurred to me that the delightful afternoon on the deck provided sustenance for my muse as surely as the sugar-water nourished the high energy birds. I needed writing time over the long weekend, but I also needed the trip to the farmer’s market, the family barbecue, the pool party with the grandchildren, and the time to unwind with friends in the stillness of a garden abundant with hummingbirds.

That year it was all too easy to lose sight of the need to feed my muse while I was scurrying to write the day’s allotted words before rushing to my day-job. And too often when the weekend arrived, I would obsess pver the paucity of words I’d accumulated during the week—so driven to find uninterrupted time to create that I forgot my muse needed bright, shiny experiences to act as fodder for her imaginative process.

I desperately needed to relax… to breathe. Take a walk; enjoy the children; absorb scenic beauty. I remembered that I needed to feed my muse, because a starving muse produces impoverished work, and what good is it to write volumes of narrative lacking the spark necessary to ignite a reader’s imagination?

The moral of this story? Enjoy life! Make sure your muse is healthy and happy.

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Pretty Picture Sunday

I love this picture of the mountains outside Palm Springs, California. Not being a native of the area, and being unaware of the direction of this shot, I have no idea which mountain range this is part of… but it is gorgeous!

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