Why I’m Highly Skeptical of Writing Courses (and Why I’m Offering One)

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So. This is awkward.

Ask just about any one of my close writer friends how I feel about online writing courses, and most of them will tell you I think online writing courses are rubbish. For the most part. Not all of them, of course: my friend Andi offers great writing courses with a foundation based on community. Ed Cyzewski’s books on writing and faith are on par with the highest quality books out there on the topic. My friend Tsh has offered incredible content, not focused solely on writing but on things that, directly and indirectly, have had an impact on my writing and my life.

There are good courses out there.

Not too long ago, a well-known writer friend of mine asked me, “Why don’t you do a writers’ course? You’ve actually written stuff! That puts you way ahead of most people offering courses.” We had a good laugh about it, but I filed his suggestion away in my brain.

Then, a few weeks ago, Bryan Allain asked me if I’d consider putting together a writers’ course with him. The video below explains our thought process as well as my answer.

So yeah, if you think Bryan is right and want to let him know that we should offer a course, do that here.

Or if you think he’s not right, or you think I’m handsome, or you just feel bad for me, click here.

Or if you just want to stay in the loop and be first to know when we announce the project, let us know where to send those updates by filling in the short form below:



The Two Things You Have to Stop Worrying About

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“You must once and for all give up being worried about success and failures. Don’t let that concern you. It’s your duty to go on working steadily day by day, quite quietly, to be prepared for mistakes, which are inevitable, and for failures.”  Anton Chekov

My friend Ed posted that quote on his Instagram account a few days ago, and I think it applies to any discipline, any practice, from writing to business to taking care of your children. Of course, it’s rather simple to give up worrying about success and failure momentarily, but to give it up once and for all? That, I suppose, is the real feat.

Why, though? Why must we give up worrying about success or failure? Failure’s always right there around the corner – shouldn’t we be on the watch for it? And success…that sounds like so much fun! So much better than living a life of anonymity.

Here’s why I think we need to give up worrying about those two things. It seems to me that the things we have been created to do are the things placed squarely in front of us. Sometimes these things seem rather far off, rather unattainable, but there they are. Straight ahead. When we worry about success or failure, I think it draws our vision to the right or the left, so that we’re no longer focused on what we should be focused on.

Straight ahead now, my friend, not glancing to the right or the left. The mountain of success rises like a cliff on the left. The canyon of failure drops off to the right. There is nothing but the thin thread of doing, and it’s one step after the other. It’s a dirt path, nothing more than that. But it’s worth following, all the way tot he end.

The next step. That’s all you have to take.

* * * * *

I sent out my twice-monthly newsletter last week (you can sign up for it HERE), and I asked people what they were hoping for. I read every response to those emails and try to reply to everyone. This idea of hope, wow! I got some moving replies (a few of which I’ll be sharing in the coming weeks).

Here is one that jumped out at me:

“This post resonated with me this morning. I hope and hope for writing success, but then I don’t even know what success means and if it’s even worth the struggle.”

How often do we feel that way? We want to be successful, but why? For the money? The fame? The appreciation? I actually think it’s something a little deeper, something we can’t quite put our finger on. And I don’t think what we truly want actually has anything to do with success. This is how I replied:

“Your kind words mean a lot to me. Success isn’t worth the struggle, but the writing itself is.”

I believe that. Success, the hope for success, the promise of success – I don’t think it’s worth all this effort. I don’t think it’s worth the 500,000 words I’ve blogged in the last six years. I don’t think the chance of success is worth the 15 books I’ve written for other people. I don’t think the chance of success is ever worth it. It’s just not.

But the writing is worth it. And if you’re doing what you love, you know what I’m talking about. If you’re growing a business or starting a church or taking care of your family or taking a risk, it’s worth doing, not because of the promise of some future day, but because today, it’s enough. Simply doing it is more than enough.

Is your target success? Are your eyes on failure, doing everything you can to avoid it? Tread carefully, my friend. The path of doing is a narrow one.

What are you hoping for?

Twice a month I send out bonus blog posts and updates on the books I’m writing. If you’d like to receive those emails, you can sign up HERE. Your information will never be given to anyone else. You can also sign up in the right hand column if you’d prefer to have every blog post emailed straight to your inbox as they’re posted. How’s that for convenience?

A Letter to the Books in My House that Are Falling Apart

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Photo by Joshua Earle via Unsplash

You are my oldest
friends, you with your ragged
covers, your split spines, your brittle
pages. I remember reading you in the secret round
flashlight glow, undercover, when
the crickets chirped. I remember
sitting on the front porch, swatting away
the flies, telling mom, “Just one more chapter!”
My name, written in a stumbling script, is on the inside
cover, along with the year we first
met.

1985. 1986. 1987.

So I apologize to you now
for the times that Leo has used you
as a teething toy, or when Sammy and Abra
toted you around by your tearing pages,
pretending they were in college. I am sorry
to those of you being read and re-
read by Cade and Lucy so many times,
your pages escaping,
your dog-ears breaking.
I hope you know how much we all
have loved you.
How much you have
meant to us.

Perhaps sometime soon, when the weather turns,
I will put you in a box and
the kids and I will take you camping,
out into the woods (from the woods you have been
made, and to the woods you shall return).
We’ll start a roaring fire, and I’ll tell them how
the first time I read you, you made
my world a bigger place. I’ll tell them
how you changed me, and in those dancing
shadows your stories will come alive
again, the monsters just outside the circle
of light, the heroes there among us. Then
we’ll gently place you in among the flames,
watching your pages blacken,
reminding ourselves that stories are things
that can never be burned
or done away with.

Maybe twenty years from now a child
playing in the woods will dig up a fragment,
a paragraph, the corner of a cover,
and the words will light something in them,
something like adventure,
something that cannot be easily quenched.

But, still.
I am sorry.

When There Are No Small Things

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Photo by Olia Gozha via Unsplash

I walked into the early morning cold, locking the door of our rowhouse behind me. The city is empty on weekend mornings: quiet and still. A thin layer of frost glazed the sidewalks, already melting where the sunrise fell between the buildings.

I felt a bit nervous. The walk from my house to the Young Women’s Christian Association was about six blocks, and I had never volunteered there before.

I recently wrote some reflections over at The High Calling. This first one examines how even the smallest things we do are important. You can read the rest of the post HERE.

On Turning 39 and Looking Up

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It’s always a bit of an ordeal, getting all six of us arranged in the small pew (Leo stays in the nursery during the service). Sam needs to be beside an adult and not beside Cade. Cade wants to sit at the inside edge so he can see. Lucy usually wants to sit beside Cade. Abra gets a little wiggly and needs an adult’s calming influence. It’s kind of like turning a Rubik’s cube. One that you have to shush every so often.

But yesterday Abra clambered into the pew with a big grin on her face. She scooched right up against me, as if was her favorite person in the world, and she handed me a birthday card she had made during her class. On the inside it said:

“Happy 49th Birthday, Daddy!”

Lest you think I am nearing the half-century mark, let’s halt this train right now. Because even though I went to bed last night with a hot water bottle under my lower back and an ice pack on my hip, and even though my beard is more white than brown, I assure you I am only 39. Not 49.

We had a good laugh about it, and later I took the card out of my pocket and stared at it again. Where will I be when I’m 49, I wondered? What will I be doing? My kids will be 22, 21, 17, 16, and 11, and this caused the most difficult realization fell into place.

Dear Lord.

Sammy will have his license.

* * * * *

Abra’s card makes me wonder, though. Ten years. The last ten went by in a blink. Ten years ago Maile and I were moving back from a four-year stint in England with only our oldest two children. The hard work of building a business overseas had worn us out. We had been married for only six years at that point and were like babies just learning to swim…paddle, paddle, paddle, mouth drops below the water’s edge, cough and sputter, paddle harder, rise up a bit, paddle, paddle paddle. Sink, rise, swim.

Sometimes it still feels that way. Sometimes we still take on a mouthful of water.

Also, we could never have imagined the heartache waiting for us in those next ten years. A failed business, near financial ruin, two miscarriages, leaving a community we loved. We could never have imagined the glorious things either: three more children, a cross-country trip, success at living a writing life, and finding another community we loved in the heart of a wonderful, small city.

If a lot can happen in a year, then ten years is like a lifetime. What can happen in ten years?

None of us have any idea what can happen in ten years. That’s the answer. We don’t really have a clue.

* * * * *

John Irving says that “If you are lucky enough to find a way of life you love, you have to find the courage to live it,” and for the last five years I thought for me that meant writing. I had found a way of life I loved. I realized I could help people tell their life stories, and I loved it. I still do. I’m working with three people right now, writing their stories, and when I hand them the book at the end, it’s more than a feeling of accomplishment. It’s like I’ve been able to bottle their story. When their kids read those books and send me emails thanking me for showing them sides of their parents they never knew…and then I think about how lucky I am to make a living doing this…wow.

So that’s what I’ve thought for quite some time now. That is the way of life I love: writing. During the last five years, I have had to find the courage to live that writing life.

But as I think about Abra’s card, and as I look ahead to the next ten years, I’m not so sure. Maybe I will keep writing people’s stories for the next ten years. But maybe, just maybe, the way of life I love isn’t specifically writing. Maybe the way of life I love is this constant upward and onward, like when the Pevensey kids in the Narnia Chronicles finally end up in Real Narnia, and Aslan keeps shouting, “Further up and further in!”

Maybe the way of life I love is this idea that something else is next, something even more adventurous, something even more exhilarating.

Something that will bring me even closer to the heart of God.

* * * * *

This Sunday after church, three wise and gracious people spent about thirty minutes of their time listening to me. We will continue to do this for three or four more weeks, and then, if we think it worth continuing,  we will keep on in some regular way for the foreseeable future. I call them generous because they are there for me, and me alone. They expect nothing from me, other than that I show up, am honest, and join them in this process of seeking.

Specifically, they are there to help me grasp for a greater discernment of where God is leading me. Might God, at the end of a few months, help us to see that I am exactly where I should be, that storytelling and story-gathering is what I have been created to continue doing? That’s a possibility.

But might God also reveal something about me that has, until now, been murky? Might God bring additional clarity to the cloudy corners of my existence?

That’s also likely. More than likely, I’d think, as it always is for those of us who stop and listen.

* * * * *

I’ll end this rather long and rambling post with a question, for you.

Yes, you.

If you opened yourself up, if you honestly set everything else aside and sat quietly in the presence of God, would God say, “Keep going. Keep doing what you’re doing. Stay the course”?

Or would God say, “Okay now. Time to move. Onward and upward! Further up and further in!”

Please don’t let something like expected career path determine your answer. For heaven’s sake, don’t let your age define whether you should stay put or hike further on. Don’t let critical voices or the perceived expectations of others provide you with the answer. Lack of schooling, lack of resources, lack of experience…these things should never have the final word.

Which is it for you? “Keep doing what you’re doing,” or “Further up and further in?”

You can only know the answer to this question if you stop, if you listen.

Why We Need You to NOT Unfriend, Unfollow, or Block Those You Disagree With On Social Media

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Photo by Martin Knize via Unsplash

Recently someone in my Facebook timeline posted a particularly strong opinion regarding gun control, then went to bed. By the time he woke up the next morning, he discovered that two people he knew had traded arguments and insults in a thread of over 100 comments.

“Well,” he wrote. “You guys have been busy.”

It often seems that we as a world population are more sharply divided than ever. Post an opinion you have on Facebook, anything from the best burger joint to the reason there are so many shootings in this country, and within moments you’ll probably have people vehemently arguing for and against. Some will support you silently with a “like” while others block the post. Some will sing your praises and others will compare you to dog feces.

This is especially true with the hot-button issues of the day: Donald Trump, Syrian refugees, shootings, ISIS, abortion, gay marriage, politics. Never before have we had the forum, and felt so free, to disagree, insult, or take issue with the opinions of people we don’t know and will never meet.

The fractures between us seem to be widening.

* * * * *

About a month ago I started getting involved with a refugee organization here in the city of Lancaster called Church World Service. They help refugees arriving in central PA get acclimated to life in a new country. I asked them if I could help tell the stories of the individuals they were helping, they said yes, and off we went.

A few weeks later, the shooting took place in Paris. Suddenly I realized that many of my friends were against the continued reception of Syrian refugees. I had spent the previous few weeks hearing stories and meeting these hardworking refugees, and my friends didn’t want more of them to come to the US.

I was devastated.

I couldn’t imagine why someone would have the position. I got into a few back-and-forths on Facebook regarding why Christians, of all people, should be helping refugees, no matter the eventual outcome. I felt my insides getting more and more agitated, sort of the way you feel when you start walking across the beach and realize after ten steps that the sand is actually burning your feet.

My initial reaction? Unfollow. Unfriend. Block. I was struggling with the proposition of reading opinions that were diametrically opposed to the things I cared so much about. I wanted to eliminate the source of anxiety.

If anything, this is where social media has become so destructive. It gives us the forum to share our beliefs and opinions without apology, and then it offers us the option of erasing those we disagree with. Before we know it, our online world is nothing more than a group of people affirming our deeply held beliefs and opinions, something that only serves to more deeply entrench us in our positions and alienate us from those who think differently.

Conversations on Facebook start to look like this:

“I believe …”

“Yeah, you’re right!”

“Yeah, thanks!”

“Yeah!”

“Yeah!”

*like*

*like*

* * * * *

Look, I know it’s stressful/annoying/tedious to realize people you know and love are ignorant/stupid/misinformed (or maybe smarter than you).

But we need you to stop alienating yourself from people who disagree with you. Here’s why:

1 – If you are right, if the opinion you have is so correct and righteous and true, then why are you getting upset? You need to stay friends with the idiots, if only in the hope that at some point they will start to see the sense you are making. This will probably not happen on Facebook, but it might. I’ve changed my mind on a lot of things in the last five years, mostly because I became friends with people online and started to recognize the validity of their beliefs.

2 – If you are wrong (and I know that is probably impossible to imagine at this point), then you are the idiot, and hopefully something they say someday will click with you.

3 – If you are both right and wrong in different ways (and I suspect this to be the usual case), then perhaps your opinions and beliefs, by getting together and hanging out a little with the opinions and beliefs of others, can procreate into some third, new, transformative way of viewing the world. Wouldn’t that be impressive? Wouldn’t that be fun?

* * * * *

Next time we’ll talk about why it’s important to share your opinions and beliefs regarding important matters in a tone of kindness. I know – that’s a hard one to grasp. For now, consider keeping the lines of communication open between you and people who think differently. Dialogue with (and about) each other in respectful ways.

The future of humanity might depend on our ability to talk to each other across the wide open spaces created by disagreement.