Monday, May 29, 2017

Writers Conference Notes Nuggets



Writers Conference Notes Nuggets          

I am basking in the afterglow of four days at the Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference held at Ridgecrest, in the beautiful mountains of North Carolina.


Even if you’re not a writer you’ll probably benefit from my Notes Nuggets. As I reviewed some of my many pages of handwritten notes I could see that much of this can be applied to life in general—not just writing. So writer or not, pick out any of these nuggets that might speak to you. Then think about why it speaks to you.

Michelle Cox said, “No one else can write your story.” Do you have a story you should write? –Perhaps for your children or grandchildren? You don’t need to be a publishing hopeful to write your own story for your loved ones. I like to talk about this when I speak to groups. 

Other Notes Nuggets:
- “When you put feet to the dream God has planted in your heart amazing things happen.”  -DiAnn Mills

“He who calls you is faithful, who also will do it” (1 Thessalonians 5:24 NKJV).                                                                                          

Davis Bunn inspires fellow writers
- “Take aim, knowing where you want to go. Establish a clear mental goal. As you take aim, be selective about who you share your dream with.” -Davis Bunn 

- “God calls us to be part of something big and eternal. ... What is your attitude toward your gift? ... Create an atmosphere that invites God into your writing craft. ... There are answers for me—waiting for me.” D. Bunn

- “Plot is conflict and resolution. ... If you don’t have a story worth telling then there’s no need to write it. ... As you develop and create your characters, they will begin talking to you and help you tell their story. ... Decide—will my character change or will my character grow?” –Eva Marie Everson

Eva Marie Everson teaches fiction writing.
- “Magazine writing can benefit you as a book writer. ... Write something that’s uniquely you.” – Jesse Florea

- “Obedience is a big deal to God. ... Read! If you’re not a reader, it’s hard to be a writer. ... What does it mean to be called? Define called: summoned, demanded, asked for the presence of. If you’re called to write, are you setting aside time for it? If you believe God has called you to write, this needs to be a priority. ... Learn your craft. ... Learn how to reach and hold on to your reader. Learn to edit and revise your work. Learn the rules and how to break them. ... Are you using social media as a ministry? ... It’s not about us. Someone somewhere needs the message you have. ... Don’t just entertain with your writing—you want to make a difference. Be great stewards of your words. Make every word you write bring glory and honor to God.” –Terri Kalfas 

- “Books change lives. Ray Bradbury said, ‘You don’t have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading.’ ... Some books that changed my life: Knowing God by J.I. Packer, Life Together, by Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Lectures to My Students, by Charles Spurgeon. ... Reading, thinking about, and discussing books can make a difference in a person’s life. Books have allowed me to remember. Books have allowed me to forget. ... We are in the business of changing the world through words you have been given by Almighty God. We are in the business of changing this world word by word.” – Steve Laube

- “When a Christian finishes a project and has not grown and been changed how can they expect readers to be changed.” –DiAnn Mills

- “To write is the fire inside of us—writing is our fire. Elijah gathered the tools to build an altar for the fire. We need tools for building the altar for our fire: 1- Be healed so we can offer hope to our readers. Deal with sin in our own lives—no excuses.  2- Read the Bible. ... 3- Pray. Learn deep, deep prayer. ... 4- Listen to God and others. ...  5- Have a divine viewpoint. Change your attitude and see things from God’s perspective. ... 6. Reinvent yourself. Get healthy, turn off the TV. ... Write as if you’ll never get a chance to write again.” –Karen Porter  

     
- “Fact check everything. ... Don’t not do your homework.” -Linda Gilden

- “Influence redefined: <>Represent Christ. Transform how people view God and connect with Him. <>Our time on earth is limited. Use it for God. <>Shape culture. <>Give ‘em what they want—not pushy, but intentional. <>Be Jesus in the flesh—incarnational ministry. ... Word crafting—some of my deepest times with God are when I’m writing.” –Brad Bloom

These quotes are just a few of my Note Nuggets from BRMCWC. Now I need to mull over all my notes more and begin to implement what I’ve learned. Please pray for me. I really do want every word I write to honor and glorify God.

In the comments below, please tell which, if any, of the above notes spoke to you in a special way. Also tell the title of a book or two that changed your life. I asked that question on my Facebook page and got lots of great responses.
For me, as a teenager, I would say Christy, by Catherine Marshall, To Kill A Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, and The Hiding Place, by Corrie TenBoom.

These fragments of my notes remind me that I have a lot to learn about the craft of writing and that I am blessed to have had the privilege of attending such a valuable writer's conference.


Thank you for stopping by my blog. Your comments are welcome. 

©Copyright 2017 Connie Wohlford

Thursday, May 18, 2017

Perfected By Cancer



Perfected By Cancer
On my blog today, I’m going to re-post “Perfected By Cancer,” one of my most popular posts since I started this blog a little over two years ago. 

It was my honor to be asked to accept an award for my younger brother, Tommy, who died of cancer 44 years ago, at the age of 22. He was being inducted into the sports hall of fame of our high school alma mater.
As the inductee fill-in I was expected to give an acceptance speech and I’d like to share it with you to honor Tommy and the God he loved.

RHS Sports Hall of Fame 2015 − Acceptance Speech for Tommy 
                                                                       −Delivered Sept. 5, 2015

I can’t tell you how honored I am to receive this award on behalf of my brother, Tommy.  All of our family is so pleased and proud. Our parents, Rudy and Edith Edwards, would be beyond thrilled for this occasion.  

I appreciate all the intense work done by the committee to make this possible. And thank you Doug and Kenny for your introduction of Tommy. As you already heard, Tommy excelled as an athlete and accomplished much in Bobcat sports.

But I want to tell you about another side of Tommy. In fact, this side of him didn’t shine through much until he left RHS and was diagnosed with cancer.
Tommy’s dream was to play football for VA Tech and Coach Jerry Claiborne wanted Tommy on his team. But, needing to pull up his GPA, Tommy took a detour to Massanutten Military Academy and then to Ferrum Junior College, playing football at both places. 
Tommy Edwards - Radford High School - 1968
                 
But Tommy’s dream of becoming a Hokie football player never came about. He was 19 years old when doctors at Duke University Hospital diagnosed him with cancer.

This athletic, popular, talented, handsome, and seemingly healthy young man was stopped in his tracks that day. The doctors told us that the lump beside his eye was malignant and his eye would have to be removed. To add insult to injury, they also said there was no hope of him using a prosthetic eye because some tissue and bone also need to go. Therefore he would have to wear a patch for the rest of his life.   

ll this, Tommy played football at Ferrum the next season (1972).  He did get ticked off at his coach for not putting him in the games due to pain he was having in his neck. We soon learned that cancer had damaged his vertebrae, thus causing pain.

Did God give Tommy cancer in order to stop him in his tracks?  No.
God does not put cancer on people. But God does use bad circumstances to bring about His ultimate good.
Back in the first century when Stephen was stoned to death because he was a Christian, the believers in Jerusalem scattered, and the Gospel was spread throughout the known world. God got lots of mileage out of the tragedy of Stephen—thus turning it for good.

So for Tommy, on that sunny September day, his path suddenly changed in two very powerful ways. Instead of playing college football, attending classes, and enjoying campus life, he experienced surgeries, pain, affliction, and fear. And instead of living the life of a self-indulgent college student, he turned back to the God of his childhood and the Savior he knew he could trust. 

My precious brother battled cancer for 2½ years before he went to Heaven on Good Friday of 1973.  As we attended the Easter sunrise service two days later I knew my dear brother was alive and well, and even better yet−he was with our risen Lord.

In Tommy’s situation, there was bad news and there was good news. He had cancer and died at the young age of 22−terrible news.                                                                                 


Tommy Edwards - Ferrum Jr. College -1970
But that affliction put him on his knees at the foot of the Cross. He turned back to God and encouraged his friends to follow Christ as well. Again, as God does so well, He took a bad situation, and turned it for good, building up His Kingdom in the process.

In a newspaper article, written by Charles Fretwell, a few days after Tommy died, he wrote:

“As outstanding as his accomplishments were in High School athletics, earning many letters in three major sports as well as area wide recognition for his athletic ability, all this fades into the background compared to the last two and a half years of his life. Years in which he demonstrated to his friends, his family, and his associates what it means to be a Christian and how a Christian should react to whatever life has in store for him. As all of us who knew him well realized, he never complained. He made the burden for his family and his friends easier by his acceptance of fate.”

“The last months of his life were spent, not in self-pity nor giving in to pain but in talking to, and writing to, his friends telling them how Christ had strengthened his life and had helped him to bear up under the burdens. He urged them to look anew at their own lives and to allow Christ to be a part of their lives too. He gave to many of them a copy of his favorite book−a Bible.” 

“What have we learned from the experience and the example of this fine young man? Courage has taken on a new meaning for each of us.    We all face life with its uncertainties and grope for the means to deal with these uncertainties as they appear on the scene. Courage is not easy to come by nor is it easy to maintain once adversity sets in, but Tommy demonstrated that Christian courage can overcome the cruelest blow and Webster’s dictionary now has a new meaning to add under that word – Tommy Edwards.”     

SO− all the honors and accolades a person can accumulate in a lifetime are nothing in light of Eternity. But they can give a person a platform from which to proclaim the Good News of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, which is what Tommy did in the last days of his life.

The writer of Ecclesiastes said, God has made everything beautiful in its time. Also He has put eternity in their hearts.

As I said earlier, cancer knocked Tommy to his knees and he chose to land at the foot of the cross. When he looked up he saw Jesus and came face to face with Eternity.

We’ll all come face to face with Eternity one day. And I so look forward to the glorious reunion with Tommy and other loved ones who’ve chosen to follow Jesus.   
                                                           
We usually think of cancer as a curse, but cancer perfected Tommy.
It brought out the very best in him and was the catalyst that ultimately brought him to total wellness and wholeness in Eternity. 
So now, with great joy, I accept this award for Tommy.  And on behalf of our family, thank you.

---- We all go through trials of some kind from time to time. Some have cancer or other dreaded afflictions, many have debilitating financial problems, and lots of people seem to have one family crisis after another. We even know folks who have trials in all of the above areas.
Like Tommy, we can turn to Jesus in these tough times. It’s our choice. The Hebrew word for Jesus is Yeshua. I recently read that the root word for Yeshua means safety

We can find safety in Jesus no matter what our trial. There are lots of scary things that happen to people and today’s world has lots of scary things going on in it. No matter what befalls us, let’s look to Jesus for safety and take comfort in His words: “These things I have spoken to you, that in Me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world” (John 16:33). 

If you’d like, please comment on how God has helped you through adversity at some time in your life. God bless you and thanks for sharing.
©Connie Wohlford 2015