I
woke up with a word bouncing gently in my mind. I didn’t hear it, I saw it, as
is often the case. Vicissitudes. Big word for such an early hour, but here at
the beginning of a new year, I’m thinking about life’s ups and down, that ol’ taking
our knocks, reeling with blows, but more often, just sliding along.
Bonnie Hobbs |
We
dance a kind of two-step. You know, one step forward, two steps back and slide,
slide, slide. The dance of writing goes that way for me. Advance, retreat, make
progress, delete whole scenes, and lately, with seven manuscripts in various
ways “completed,” I seem to be sliding sideways with most of them – rewriting,
revising, resubmitting. Yet some steps in this dance have been the
high-stepping kind. One book was released by Wild Rose Press last March, and
two more accepted by Five Star Publishing. (Can I say this without signed
contracts in hand? Or is that a sure way to invite the wrath of jealous writing
goddesses?)
So
maybe this coming year will bring less downs in work and life and more ups,
when words come swimming into my brain on awakening, as today. So, a new year,
filled with what is yet to come.
In
that light, let me leave with a story about life’s surprises, shall I? Throughout my childhood my rough-talking Texas
grandma filled me with stories of living on the plains. Born in 1896, married
at sixteen, her girl-hood and young wife’s memories stirred my
imagination—living in a “soddy,” fending off rattlers with a buggy whip,
cooking on a wood-stove for twenty men at round-up time, all with a toddler to
mind and a baby on her hip.
Often I now think she told the stories in an
attempt to tell us, when we were whiny little monsters, to “get over
ourselves.” I have even wondered lately if she made many of those stories up.
They’ve been sprinkled into much of my writing, that’s for sure. I wish I’d
pressured her for more before she died in 1976. Is it any wonder my stories are
Women’s Frontier fiction set in the American West?
Ah,
but the surprise I promised—Grandma always told us how her great-grandma was
Cherokee. I scoffed as a know-it-all college girl, telling her “everyone from
Texas claims Indian descent, Grandma.” Well, she’d only glare at me with
squinted eyes.
Last
year, feeling sentimental about Grandma, I spat in Ancestry.com’s handy tube to
find out just how much of this “Indian” blood I carried. Well—wait for it. My ancestors
are mostly from the British Isles. No surprise. And Grandma was right in a way.
I do indeed carry a small percentage of “Indian” DNA. Yep. From the Asian
subcontinent. Huh? One can only guess at the when and wherefore of the
co-mingling of such genetic material. (I, of course, plan to be putting this in
a short story.)
So
what would Grandma say to that? Something like “pshaw!” Again, she’d be glaring
at me. But I can only chuckle at life’s vicissitudes and say, “Namaste, Grandma, many blessings upon
you and thank you so very much for the stories.”
Learn more about Bonnie on her website.
Learn more about Bonnie on her website.
4 comments:
Welcome to Romancing The Genres, Bonnie. Love this post. I've promised myself to do the DNA testing this year. My cousin (mother's sister) and I want to compare notes. She was disappointed that we don't have more British Isles DNA but our western Europe DNA means our ancestors come from William the Conquer. And since some industrious soul traced the Rawsons back to Charlemagne, that makes sense.
Bonnie,
What a fun post. It is amazing when something pops into one of our stories and we realize the kernel of an idea or even an entire adventure comes from a family story.
Best as you move forward with new contracts - how exciting!
Deb N.
Bonnie, sounds like you had a spunky Grandma! My husband's great-grandma used to babysit him and his siblings on New Year's eve every year and would tell them stories of when she was young in the late 1800's. Her husband drove a mule team transporting goods from Or to California. I love old true stories. Makes one appreciate the time we live in. Congrats on the contracts, and I hope you have great success in sales.
Beautiful! Happy writing, Bonnie.
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