On Writing

Erika for President

This is from my original blog, written in 2004.

After failing my first attempt at my Doctoral Language Exam (GASP!), I was unbelievably distraught.  Granted, health issues had affected my ability to concentrate and I had studied the wrong material, but nonetheless, I failed.

While most of my family does not understand my obsession with grades, my brother Ben listened patiently as I pouted, ranted, and raved.  A few days later, he happened upon one of those great little bookstores with the yummy musty smell and books piled to the ceiling (Book Nook in Prescott Arizona).  In browsing, he found a book with an interesting title that made him think of me.  He flipped inside to this passage:

image1“Mrs. Cooke’s face was a picture of shock and confusion.  ‘Why, Erika, you’ve never failed a subject in your life.  You’ve never gotten less than a B-minus for anything.'”

Too perfect.  He bought the book and gave it to me last Christmas.

Erica for President by Carol H. Behrman

Hence the name of this site (spelled correctly).  It will, of course, also come in handy should the need arise for me to force a Democrat from office.FullSizeRender


Ah, grad school. It’s funny how much perspective we gain with time and distance, isn’t it? Petty things like tests and grades seemed end-all-be-all important back then. When, in the course of my daily life today, will I ever need to be able to translate passages of literature into English? And if I did, why would’t I just use Google Translate?

I did love graduate school and I miss being a creative writing major… when I read 2 or 3 books every week and writing was my whole world. I loved the daily camaraderie with fellow students and professors and even though I stay in touch with many of them, it’s just not the same.

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So anyway… that’s where Erika for President came from and I love it. My brother (who is an amazingly talented artist and is also currently writing his own novel but needs to update his blog) still “gets” me. The other day he sent me a text at nearly midnight to alert me about a couple of typos on my blog that, of course, I had to fix right then and there.

Perfectionism is a bitch, ain’t it?

But, even though I still have to spell everything right (yes, even in texts I capitalize sentences and use punctuation), I have mellowed considerably when it comes to “perfection” … especially in writing. What I have come to realize since grad school is that there’s no such thing as perfect – often because of subjectivity. I know there will be people who love what I write and people who don’t. I’m okay with that. I know that I’ll look back at something I wrote, like the passage above, and think of all kinds of ways I could edit it that may, or may not, improve it… until more time passes and the eyes of an older me see even more ways to edit it. I think this realization has triggered my desire to write fiction again after so many years of writing non-fiction.

I am Erika for President – I represent the writers and my platform is that whatever you write can only ever be as “perfect” as it is in that moment – with what you know then and have experienced up to that time then. Whomever reads it will bring their own experiences and their interaction with what you wrote will be personal to them – and some will like it while some won’t. And guess what? With the perspective of time and distance, you won’t even care. It just won’t matter to your future self the way it churns your stomach up today, so just let go of it. All of it. Let go of all of your critics, especially the one inside your own head.

On Writing

TRUE STORY: Mean Girls and Revelations

TRUE STORY: Sometimes the mean girls help us see the David Bowie in ourselves.

Source: TRUE STORY: Mean Girls and Revelations

On Writing

Organising Chaos – Scrivener for the Scatterbrained

I love Scrivener – all I have to do is find a way for it to read the hand written notes I’m still so fond of and, maybe, scan my brain, as well. 🙂

Lisa Reiter's avatarLisa Reiter - Sharing the Story

I have notebooks everywhere. And loads of notes.

When I say everywhere, I mean car footwell, glove box, handbag, desk, rucksack, my other desk, bedside table, kitchen drawer

View original post 404 more words

On Writing, Random Thoughts

Back in the Saddle

After a many-year sabbatical, I’ve decided to start blogging again. I went back and forth for a while, but as useful as personal journaling is for a writer, there’s nothing better than an audience to help exercise skills and to keep learning and growing. It has been a really long time, though. Curious, I looked back and discovered I’ve had this ErikaForPresident URL longer than I even realized. Turns out I started my first “real” blog circa mid 2004. I kept it up pretty steady until 2007 when things like MySpace and Facebook had grown enough in functionality and popularity that I decided to give them a try. MySpace lasted 55562_1605416465512_2447708_oabout a week, and I enjoy keeping up with friends and family on Facebook, but Facebook is much more personal than a blog so I keep mine locked down.

So here I am again. I look back at some of my old blog posts and laugh, like I do about most of my old writing. I’m sure I’ll look at this blog someday and laugh then, too. Luckily, I have no problems laughing at myself. Life is too short.

What do I want this blog to be about, anyway? I think, like my last blog, it will evolve over time. I’m sure I’ll write a lot about writing, and because one of my current writing projects is a book about Project Management and Agile, I’ll write a lot about those topics, too. As a reader, I appreciates a good book review and always turn to reviews to help me choose between all the billions of books out there. One of my New Years’ Resolutions was to write more, including actually completing book reviews of my own.

That’s a start, anyway. I’ll have lots of random thoughts I’ll share, I’m sure. I already have a long list of blog topics. One of the things I look forward to most is conversing with fellow bloggers. I get some of that on Twitter, but the character limit often forces us to DM, and if you tweet, you know how many junk DMs you get – conversations often get overlooked for days.

I hope you enjoy the evolution of ErikaForPresident. One of the topics at the top of the list? Why is my blog called ErikaForPresident?

On Writing

Mark Twain “Writing Is Easy”

twainPhoto post by @jackmjack.

Source: Mark Twain “Writing Is Easy”

On Reading, On Writing, Reviews, Spiritual

Book Review: Whispers of Hope

Whispers of Hope: 10 Weeks of Devotional PrayerWhispers of Hope: 10 Weeks of Devotional Prayer by Beth Moore

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I recommend this so highly that I just bought another copy so I can do it again. Using the P.R.A.I.S.E. method, Beth gives tools to and structure to effectively combine journaling with prayer time (Praise, Repentance, Acknowledgement, Intercession, Supplication for Self, and Equipping). I think what I’ve enjoyed the most is looking back through my prayer journal all these months later and getting perspective by seeing what was “so important” to me at that time and how, with God and prayer, I was guided through an unfortunate and ugly situation unscathed.

View all my reviews