NEW EPISODE: To Self-Publish or not to Self-Publish: Maile Decides (Thanks to Bryan Allain)

Bryan Allain joins us today on the podcast and interrogates Maile. What are her hangups with self-publishing? Why does she care so much about what the traditional gatekeepers think? And what is she going to do with these novels she has spent so much time working on?

Bryan Allain left a 15-year career as a Chemical Engineer to pursue his passion of writing, speaking, and helping brands share their message. He’s since helped YouTube stars, platinum selling bands, book publishers, and golf clubs promote the things they are passionate about.

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As always, there are a few ways to listen: click the play button in the image above, go to the webpage to hear this and all of our other episodes, or head on over to Apple podcasts or Spotify!

Those in our Patreon community receive bonus material and have the opportunity to join in conversations about writing and creativity. This month’s book is Beate Not the Poore Desk by Walter Wangerin Jr. You can join our Patreon community at the $5 / month level HERE.

Finally, please leave a review wherever you listen! Reviews are so helpful.

Keep writing!

Postmarked: Dear Jen (36)

Dear Jen

I am currently over at my parents’ empty house doing laundry—our washer’s spin cycle sounds like a helicopter taking off, so until the repair person comes or we buy another one, we’re relying on my mom and dad’s machine. We have not spent time with my parents for over six weeks now, and it’s strange to be in their house when they’re not here. Spending our Sunday afternoons here seems like something we did in another life, or perhaps dreamed about.

You are so right about the monotony of days, the repetitions we find ourselves in, the new ways we mark the passing of time. Our days are relatively peaceful: mornings together over breakfast and The Purpose Driven Life; days spent working and writing; early afternoons involve something outside; dinner together; put the “littles’ to bed and watch Downton Abbey with our middles and our bigs.

Our kids have been finding some small measure of freedom by exploring the city, with its empty sidewalks and less busy streets. Our 10- and 12-year old went for a bike ride yesterday, winding their way a few miles to check out the middle school. Our son goes for long walks. Now that the sun has arrived, we spend more time on the front porch or racing around the back alley.

The topic of trust continues to settle in my mind–I think if I were to write a nonfiction book anytime soon, it would have to be on the topic of trust. If you don’t mind, I’ll put this Brennan Manning quote here again, for anyone who missed it when I included it two letters ago:

“The way of trust is a movement into obscurity, into the undefined, into ambiguity, not into some predetermined, clearly delineated plan for the future. The next step discloses itself only out of a discernment of God acting in the desert of the present moment. The reality of naked trust is the life of the pilgrim who leaves what is nailed down, obvious, and secure, and walks into the unknown without any rational explanation to justify the decision or guarantee the future. Why? Because God has signaled the movement and offered it his presence and his promise.”

And now as I write, I remember a story that Henri Nouwen once told, of his obsession with the work of trapeze artists. In a talk he gave (around the 24:30 mark), he reminisced about meeting the leader of a group of trapeze artists, and he was star struck. There were two catchers who never left the swings, simply hung upside-down and caught the other three, the flyers as they made their way through the air. Nouwen had such admiration for their courage and creativity. He asked the leader, one of the flyers, how he did it.

The man paused and then told him that what was most important, as you were coming out of a triple and preparing to connect with the catcher, was making sure you didn’t try to reach for the catcher. If you did, you would almost certainly miss them, or even break your wrists. No, he said the most important part of making that connection was simply putting your arms straight out and trusting the catcher would be there to grab onto you.

Trust the catcher.

That is a phrase Maile and I often say to each other when we find ourselves moving into obscurity, into ambiguity, into a place where there is no “clearly delineated plan for the future.”

Wondering where the next project will come from? Wondering how we’ll pay the bills? Wondering what to do with the decisions our children are making? Wondering what our future will look like?

Trust the catcher.

While I am so ready for these restrictions to be lifted, I do have to say that when I think of the future and going back to our old life, I feel a small twinge of anxiety. I have found gifts in this strange time that I am afraid we will lose when normal returns, whenever that is. This, I think, might be the great challenge of our time–to emerge from this unprecedented uncertainty able to resist the current that would pull us back into any of the destructive practices we used to engage in during “normal” times.

Well, I suppose I’ll have to simply put out my arms, when the time comes, and trust the catcher.

Kind Regards

Shawn

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What began as a Twitter conversation between two writers on creative work and family life has become an exchange of letters. Here is where Postmarked began:

Postmarked: Dear Shawn (1)

NEW EPISODE: Writing as a “Revolutionary Patience”: Our Thoughts on Anne Lamott’s Bird By Bird

Shawn talks about his favorite book on writing and how it first came into his possession. Maile talks about, in Anne Lamott’s words, at first believing minor repairs are needed on her novel, looking out the window, and realizing that actually the wrecking ball had arrived.

They both discuss how, at the end of the day, the actual creating is the thing–not the publishing or the reviews or the awards. Not the rejection or the critics or the disappointments. The writing is what we always come back to.

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As always, there are a few ways to listen: click the play button in the image above, go to the webpage to hear this and all of our other episodes, or head on over to Apple podcasts or Spotify!

Those in our Patreon community receive bonus material and have the opportunity to join in conversations about writing and creativity. This month’s book is Beate Not the Poore Desk by Walter Wangerin Jr. You can join our Patreon community at the $5 / month level HERE.

Finally, please leave a review wherever you listen! Reviews are so helpful.

Keep writing!

NEW EPISODE: Mitali Perkins and Why You Should Keep Going

If you listened to the previous episode, you know that Maile has been struggling with discouragement–this episode, which was actually recorded a few months ago, is the perfect follow up. Mitali Perkins offers the perfect encouragement, the perfect answer to, “Why keep writing?”

Mitali (mitaliperkins.com) has written many books for young readers, including Between Us and Abuela (2020 Charlotte Huck Honor Book), Forward Me Back To You (SLJ and Kirkus Best YA Books of 2019), You Bring the Distant Near (nominated for a National Book Award, six starred reviews), and Rickshaw Girl (adapted into a film by Sleeperwave Productions), all of which explore crossing different kinds of borders.

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As always, there are a few ways to listen: click the play button in the image above, go to the webpage to hear this and all of our other episodes, or head on over to Apple podcasts or Spotify!

Those in our Patreon community receive bonus material and have the opportunity to join in conversations about writing and creativity. This month’s book is Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott. You can join our Patreon community at the $5 / month level HERE.

Finally, please leave a review wherever you listen! Reviews are so helpful.

Keep writing!

To Where Am I Hurrying?

Another wonderful letter from Jen Pollack Michel:

“I remember thinking, when I first heard this prayer, how often my life feels like “slow progress” and “seemingly endless delays.” For so many of us now, those phrases perfectly characterize this moment. We’re getting nowhere, running endlessly in place. It’s had me wondering recently: why am I in such a hurry, and where do I hope to arrive? Maybe those are some of life’s biggest questions.”

To read it in its entirety, you can head HERE.

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What began as a Twitter conversation between two writers on creative work and family life has become an exchange of letters. Here is where Postmarked began:

Postmarked: Dear Shawn (1)

NEW EPISODE: In Which Maile Gets Really, Really Honest

“If I’m honest, I feel like…okay, now we’re going to get really deep. Are we ready for this? I feel like the clock is ticking for me.”

Today Maile and Shawn talk about the gut-wrenching part of creativity (rejection), the problem with tying your success to things you have no control over, and what to do when the discouragement seems like too much.

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As always, there are a few ways to listen: click the play button in the image above, go to the webpage to hear this and all of our other episodes, or head on over to Apple podcasts or Spotify!

Those in our Patreon community receive bonus material and have the opportunity to join in conversations about writing and creativity. This month’s book is Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott. You can join our Patreon community at the $5 / month level HERE.

Finally, please leave a review wherever you listen! Reviews are so helpful.

Keep writing!