Archive for ‘life’

April 9th, 2013

A Fond Farewell

by Holly Dodson

So, life, right? It’s kind-of an in-your-face thing every day. Blogs? Not so much.

For now, I’m suspending my blogging intent.  Quite honestly, I’m spending every ounce of free time I can squeeze out of the day on writing books.  Which is as it should be in reality.  I’m not going to say I’ll never blog again — because I might, but at this moment in time my heart isn’t in it. My heart is with Super Spawn at the t-ball field and the soccer field and the school circus and gymnastics and then it’s at the day job and on my current WIP.  There just isn’t enough left for blogging at the moment.

Of course, I’ll still be on Twitter, and I’ll keep the website up to date with any news…plus, there’s always email. Don’t get me wrong, I’m sure I’ll still be haunting the blogosphere and commenting on your posts — I just won’t be posting any of my own.

We’ll keep in touch.

And you can bet your buns I’ll be writing.

 

January 30th, 2013

Road Trip Wednesday – A Road to Anywhere

by Holly Dodson

Boy has it  been a while since I’ve done one of these!  You remember the idea, right?

Road Trip Wednesday is a ‘Blog Carnival,’ where YA Highway‘s contributors post a weekly writing- or reading-related question that begs to be answered. In the comments, you can hop from destination to destination and get everybody’s unique take on the topic.

This Week’s Topic is: In celebration of the release of Kristin Halbrook’s NOBODY BUT US (hooray!!) we’re asking: Zoe and Will set off on the road to seek a better life and encounter loads of drama on the way. What’s the most dramatic road trip you’ve ever been on?

I’ve been on a lot of road trips in my life.  In fact, until last year I had never even stepped foot on an airplane! So, you can imagine the number of road trip stories I have from my childhood.

All the best ones though — and, yes, the most dramatic — involve my grandmother.

Oh, Granny.

From being lost in Orlando to waiting three hours for a locksmith in the Florida heat at Gatorland while the key was in her pocket, trips with my Granny have always been an adventure.

But maybe none so much as the time we went to Winston-Salem, North Carolina and Martinsville, Virginia.

 

You see, we have learned over the years that anything that is going to go wrong while we’re on a road trip, it will happen in public.  There’s just no other option. So we arrive in one piece, despite my dad’s best efforts, to a little historical site with lots of neat costumes and whatnot for lunch.

This is the lunch that has lived on in infamy, because after my mother asked for “sweet tea” which is apparently not a thing that far north, she was adding sweetener when she flicked three (not one, THREE) sugar packets across the restaurant and into the back of a man’s head. As if that wasn’t show enough, when Granny’s salad was brought out she started eating, naturally.  And only when she nearly put the blasted thing in her mouth did she realize there was a GIANT MOTH in her salad.

I’ve never heard someone shriek so loudly in my life.  She bolted out of her seat and across the restaurant, retching the whole way.  We were such a scene.  I can only imagine what people must have thought of us!

S0 the next day we drove up to Virginia for a Nascar race.  My dad LOVED Nascar.  Along the way this black car kept nearly running us off the road, and my dad — the race car driver — decided it’d be wise to try and outrun the guy. Which turned out in our favor, ironically enough, as the jerk got pulled over and I got to color a fast sign to wave out the window at him that said, “You’ve been black flagged.”

Wouldn’t you know that day was destined to be the hottest one on record too?  We got to that racetrack and people were dropping like flies from the heat.  Mom wound up packed in ice.  Granny went to check on her and collapsed. It was a right catastrophe.

And then, in that epic moment at the end of every vacation, as we were fighting to get out of the parking lot of the race track so we could head south and get some proper sweet tea (Really, what’s so wrong with sweet tea, guys? Get on that already. ;) ), my mom said her signature line, “Well, good thing I never lost anything in Virginia since I’ll NEVER be coming back!” And it wasn’t even over yet.

(Side note: She has been back, but not to a race, and she rather enjoyed herself.)

You know how tensions tend to get super high at the end of a road trip?  Well, Dad is the champion of all things tension-related, so you can imagine his stress level as we crossed back over the FL line with five people in the car.  My little sister, who was maybe eight or nine at the time, had the impeccable timing of reading a bumper sticker that stated, “don’t be a dick,” right as Dad was going into full-on meltdown.

Yeah, we feared for her life…until we all cracked up.

That was most definitely the most dramatic road trip in the history of EVER.

What do you think, can yours top mine?

January 14th, 2013

The Soccer Mom and the Novel

by Holly Dodson

Well it’s midnight and I can’t sleep, so I figure I may as well blog and get it all off my chest.  I’ll apologize now for anything that doesn’t make sense.

So I had an awesome chat with my amazing mentor for pitch wars Sunday morning.  I swear, I feel so lucky to have Danielle as my mentor.  Not only is she brilliant (and she is very brilliant), but she also likes Doctor Who and Merlin and all the right TV shows, and that’s just full of WIN in my book. But we’re here to talk writing, not TV.  Not today anyway.

I’m laying in bed trying to go to sleep running through all the things Danielle and I discussed today about my story and directions I can take to make it even better.  You know how that goes…every time you close your eyes a new idea pops in your head and you have to run through how that would play out and fit with the rest of the story.  Yeah.  No wonder writers tend to have sleepless nights.  Anyway, amidst that I got to thinking about soccer.

Yep, Super Spawn is playing soccer.  I am an official soccer mom and loving every bug-bitten, freezing cold, hard-bleacher-sitting minute of it.  (And that was not intended sarcastically.  I really am loving it.)

(And as a side note, I’m starting to feel like I could make a writing analogy out of any scenario.  Maybe I’ll make it a game.  We’ll see how many I can come up with this year.  Ha. Feel free to tell me to shut up already.)

So soccer and writing.  Fun stuff.  When you’re playing soccer (or watching, as I am) the ball gets passed around a lot.  It gets run up field and down field and out of bounds, all the while you’re trying to steer it in direction of your goal.  You have that target and you know how to get it there, but making that dumb round bit of bouncy leather GET there, well, that’s the challenge.  Then you’ve got people out there blocking and parrying your moves.  Trying to knock you off course or even steal the ball right out from under you.

Nobody is in the wrong here.  They have a goal too.  It’s how the game is played.  You kick to your teammate, they kick a bit off course, and before you know it the whistle is blowing and the ball is being thrown in the other direction.  You’re scrambling to catch up and redirect it back toward that silly little goal with the ever-so-competent goalie.

It’s exhausting just talking about soccer.  But really, how different is all that from writing a book?  You write it, you get it beta’d, you edit it, and you kick it out there, hoping for the best.  Then that defensive player smashes it halfway down the field and you’re backtracking, trying to scramble and pull the game together again.

The thing is, no matter how many times the goalie deflects you, no matter how many trips up field you have to make, as long as you’re playing, you’ve got a chance at bringing home the win.

As Super Spawn himself says, “Never, ever give up. If you keep trying then you’ll learn to do it.”

How did I raise such a wise little boy?

And as a treat for enduring yet another writing is like THIS post from me, here’s (rather cute) proof of my soccer mom status:

 

Super Spawn is the goalie here.

Super Spawn is the goalie here.

January 9th, 2013

A Year In Review

by Holly Dodson

I realize everyone has probably already done their posts reflecting on 2012, but as I’ve been buried in a revision cave for the last three weeks, I’m going to do it now.

In January of last year I made a list of goals to accomplish through the year.  They were:

  1. Make TATE’S HELL query worthy — check
  2. Query T.H. — I started anyway
  3. Read more — check
  4. Write another first draft — didn’t happen
  5. Live a healthier lifestyle — check

So when I look back at the goals I accomplished, 2012 doesn’t look like too bad of a year.  In reality though, 2012 was a struggle for me writing-wise.  I know most of us struggle with self-doubt, and I am definitely the rule and not the exception in that arena.  In fact, I’m fairly certain my personality default is set to “second guess”.

Much of my year was spent struggling against that urge to just give up.  That question of why do I try kept cropping up, and it has taken every ounce of determination I have to push through it.  Which is why I backed off from blogging and everything.

I am happy to say that pitch wars really helped me get past that mental block I had built up for myself.  I was chosen by an amazing mentor, who has been encouraging and helpful on so many levels.  Danielle has helped me to not only look at my story from a different perspective, but also the way I write as a whole.

Hopefully this means 2013 will be an amazing year for writing.  I’ve got some incredible ideas that have been percolating for a long time that need to get written, and I’m hoping 2013 is going to be the year for them.  But I’m not making goals this year.  I’m taking it a day at a time and remembering to enjoy life.

Most of all the wonderful trips and adventures we took in 2012 reminded me to enjoy Super Spawn, because he’s growing up way too fast. My little soccer playing gymnast (who swears he’s going to the Olympics) is the light at the end of my day.

September 21st, 2012

I’m All Out of Control

by Holly Dodson

I hate feeling helpless.  It’s the absolute worst feeling in the world to me.  That sinking in your gut when you know your personal fate lies in the hands of others — it’s something I avoid as much as I can, if I’m honest.

Recently things in my life have been snatched out of my tight control, and I’ve had a bit of a hard time adjusting.  (Who am I kidding, I’m still not adjusted.)  I was sitting at my desk today thinking: Maybe I was a turtle in a past life.  Because when I feel like I’m being attacked by the universe, all I want to do is close my eyes and put my hands over my ears and pretend like none of it exists.  If I had a handy shell, I’d totally disappear into it.

That probably just means I need therapy though.  lol

Super Spawn started Kindergarten at the end of August.  He’s a full-blown big kid now!  And Mom over here is learning that once they hit that level, any ounce of control you retained at the pre-k level flies out the window like a dirty kleenex.  Forget those lovely evening chats about school, because by the end of the day he’s so over-stimulated all he can manage is to cry or stare at the TV and drool.  (Okay, he doesn’t drool, but it paints an appropriate picture for you.)

Then I totaled my car.  (And now it’s my turn to only manage crying.)  Which, everything is fine — well, except the car — but STRESS, OMG STRESS.

I swear I had a point when I started this post.

Oh well.  That’s where I’ve disappeared to.  Life.  Watching Doctor Who.  Attempting to breathe.  But I miss you guys.  I miss writing.  Haven’t been doing much of that either.  Well, I have, but I haven’t.  I’ve got a new sorta-kinda-almost-done-but-not-really draft.  I need to force myself to get back to it, it’s the only way to relieve some of this life anxiety – to just write through it.  :)

So brace yourselves, my dear lovelies, because you never know what I’ll say next.

June 19th, 2012

Happy Birthday

by Holly Dodson

Happy 5th Birthday to my precious Super Spawn!

 

Me and Super Spawn on his first 4th of July.

 

Five years goes so fast.

You know how in high school and job interviews people always seem to ask where you see yourself in five years?  Well, I can honestly say that five years ago, I’d have never seen today coming.

I knew having a baby would change my life forever, but I had no idea how much.  In my wildest guess I’d never have pictured us where we are today, and maybe that’s for the better.  In the last five years I’ve had to make some very tough decisions, and have gone through some serious rough patches, but all of that has led us to a far greater future than I’d have thought possible.

And it’s all because of my sweet little boy who inspired me beyond measure.

So, I want to wish a very happy birthday to my bubby!  Mommy loves you more than anything.

Nut-free cupcakes for all!  ;)

June 11th, 2012

by Holly Dodson

I swear the days just fly by and before I realize it I’ve lost a whole week on the blog!  To make up for it, I’ll share some of the fun events that have been keeping me away.

 

First, my precious little Super Spawn graduated from Pre-K…

Super Spawn makes a pretty cute graduate.

 

We’ve done birthday parties for friends…

 

 

And I had my 10 year high school reunion!  Nothing like being shoved back in a room full of people you went to high school with to put some fuel in the YA inspiration fire.  ;)

 

Me (in the middle) and two of my best friends from high school.

 

So what have you guys been up to?

May 23rd, 2012

The Constant Battle

by Holly Dodson

This post could start out a lot of ways:  “As a writer” would be one.  “As a mother” would be another.  Or “As a woman” could be yet another option for an appropriate beginning.  Actually, there are probably a thousand ways you could start this post, because it’s something we all think about, and we all struggle with forever and ever no matter what:

Insecurity.

I think writers as a whole are a notoriously insecure group of people.  Perhaps it comes with the territory.  Which, if that means anything, it’s that we’re not alone in the way we feel.

A couple of perfect examples of how NOT alone we are would be this post from Rachelle Gardner (a literary agent) on the 7 Bad Habits of Successful Writers, and Shannon Messenger’s video blog on Friday the Thirteeners about giving up.

But when you’re in the throes of an oh my gracious I suck and will always suck and nobody has ever sucked as much as I suck in the world of suckdom moment…well, sometimes company isn’t enough.

So this post — this whole thought process, I suppose — has been a long time coming.  Over the last few weeks (or, you know, forever, but just more so in the last few weeks) I’ve been struggling with my own insecurities.  That ever-constant plaguing thought: I’m not good enough.

And well, fact is, maybe I’m not.  Before you go lashing me for that statement, let me finish.

What I’m talking about is this dream — this goal of publication.  This continuous effort to reach out and blog and network and build a platform and write book after book…

Writing in itself is incredibly hard, as I’ve talked about before.  Add on all the extra pressure of trying to get published or building a name for yourself online, and you’ve got a pot ready to boil over.  And that’s okay.
Something I’ve come to terms with in the last couple of weeks is that maybe this feeling is something that needs to be embraced instead of pushed away.  I think a right lot of us are constantly battling that fear, pushing it off, trying to move forward without it.
But the fact is, it’s that fear — that worry that we really aren’t good enough — that keeps us pressing forward in the first place.  That’s what helps us grow.  What helps us reach heights we never dreamed were possible.
And you know I’m right.
Count this as me embracing my insecurity, saying, “Yeah, maybe I’m not good enough, but I will be one day.”
Then I want you to say it too.  Because no matter how badly you feel about your writing, your life, your anything today, the thing is: you can change it for tomorrow.  All it is is a choice.
And that, my friends, is my deep thought for the week.  lol  I always seem to come back from my little blog breaks full of these ponderings, don’t I?

February 15th, 2012

My New Toy

by Holly Dodson

So for the last three years  I’ve been writing on a teeny tiny 10.1 inch netbook (and that’s ridiculous).  THREE YEARS and three novels on the smallest keyboard known to man.

But not any more!  I have a new best friend:

Isn’t it just lovely?!  The keyboard is so nice to type on, it’s like my fingers are in hyper drive.  Full. Of. Awesome.  It’s fast, and shiny, and FAST.

If I were a better poet, I’d write it a love poem.  But I’ll save you that experience.  ;)

My revisions are going quite smoothly on the new toy.  I’m not sure if it’s the inspiration and ease of the new computer or just that things are clicking, but either way I am a HAPPY GIRL.  (Not to mention that I have some of the most awesome beta readers ever helping the revising along!)

Funny story.  (Not really, but I like to tell stories even if they aren’t funny, so humor me.)  In 2009 I wrote my first novel…well, the first whole novel I ever wrote.  And I thought, hey, I need a laptop so I can transcribe all of these notebooks (yes, a handwritten novel) into a word doc and figure out what to do next!  So I bought a netbook and told myself that if I kept at it, one day I’d buy myself a nice laptop.

It’s pretty obvious three years later that I’m keeping at it.  In fact, I’ll never give up the joy I’ve found in writing these silly books (that aren’t silly at all, it’s just a fun word).

You tell me, have you promised yourself anything like this?  Have you followed through on that promise?

February 8th, 2012

Again and Again

by Holly Dodson

I was just sitting here staring at my planner, which looks something like this:

Work stuff, work stuff, work stuff, and yes, more work stuff.  Revisions, revisions, revisions, revisions, revisions. BEACH.

 

This beach, actually.  For real.

 

There is a light at the end of the tunnel, folks.  ;)

So, yeah, as if all my revision and beta talk hasn’t been clue enough, I have officially taken the dive back into TATE’S HELL.  That sounds…horrible.  I dove into Hell?  Nah, it’s not that bad.  Though sometimes I do feel like beating my head against a wall.  I think we all reach that point at times.

I did a LOT of reading over the past few weeks while I waited for feedback and then allowed it to percolate, and I’m refreshed.  I’m ready to get my hands dirty again.

Plus, guys, I get to go to the beach this weekend which is going to be full of awesome.   The weather is lovely here in good ole’ Florida, and the ocean is calling my name.  Maybe I can take some pages with me to work on…I may just find the answer to all my troubles buried in the sugary sand.

I can’t wait.

 

 One of my new favorite quotes for revisions.

 

Have you guys got any fun and inspiring adventures planned for this weekend?