April 17, 2005

Post-retreat

Returned home this afternoon from my first writer’s retreat–it certainly won’t be my last. What a great experience!! Did I churn out a record number of pages this week-end? No. What I did accomplish was far more valuable. I worked through two book ideas, with some impromptu brainstorming with my room-mate, which had been going painfully slow for me. Perhaps even more important, I spent some important time really getting to know my fellow sister writers. I knew all of the other writers there from our GRW meetings. But, this week-end, I really got to know these women. Although we all write romance, our books are vastly different and we’re all at different stages in our careers, but I feel sure we all went away having learned something new about the business of writing and each other.

Jen

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jennifer @ 4:00 pm

April 15, 2005

The mountains, the lake and writing

The retreat is wonderful! I’m blogging from a business center computer as there are no internet connections in the rooms. Makes me painfully aware of how much time I spend surfing the net during the day. Arrived Thursday afternoon and after a nice long nap wrote several pages, went for a nice long walk and then our group met as a whole in the Lodge to talk about writing and careers. I think I may have to do this more often. :)

Jen

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jennifer @ 8:33 am

April 14, 2005

Writing Retreat

I feel wickedly self-indulgent. I’m leaving this morning for a writer’s retreat in the North Georgia mountains. I’ve been to numerous conferences, but I’ve never been to a retreat like this. For three days I’ll get up and spend the day writing and then at night we’ll all get together for dinner to discuss our progress for the day and kick around ideas. Doesn’t that sound heavenly? Even though I’m going to work, and I expect to get a lot done, I feel guilty. I think it’s because I’m playing hooky from my real world and all my responsibilities. Guilty or not, I’m ready to go. :rolleyes:

Jen

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jennifer @ 4:18 am

April 13, 2005

The Kitchen Timer and the Phone Company

Okay, I was on vacation last week–a full week off of reading, eating out, hanging out. This week, I’ve had continuing education classes–no, not for writing :confused:, for the pest control business my husband and I own. If I don’t have a certain number of continuing ed classes, I have to sit the state exam again. No thanks. So, Monday was essentially shot. Yesterday, I found myself seriously distracted by the internet and more bug business stuff. Today, however, I’m going to pull out the big writing guns–I’m tracking down my kitchen timer. Seriously. I’ll sit at the computer and set the timer for thirty minutes. I can’t get up to let a cat or dog in or out. No bathroom breaks. No refilling my water glass. No answering the phone. No checking email or web surfing. For half an hour I owe the screen and keyboard my undivided attention. For thirty minutes I have to write without regard to grammar and punctuation. I can revise anything except a blank page. By the end of the day, with enough of those thirty minutes in there, I should have my proposal ready so that I can move on to my new book tomorrow.

In a totally unrelated topic switch, :hehe: why is it that the simplest things become a snafu? I finally joined the 21st century and went with a broadband connection. My husband called the phone company and cancelled the second line that I used for my dial-up connection. The phone company disconnected my home number. I was out of town all last week and my husband’s never at home so I only called him on his cell. Finally, my mother called me on my cell phone on Monday morning to ask me, very tentatively, if I knew my home number was disconnected. It took about two seconds to figure out what had happened.

Of course, it tied up about an hour with the phone company to have them say that the wrong number had been disconnected and they’d restore our service WEDNESDAY by midnight. When I testily asked the dh why it would take them 2 1/2 days to restore our service, he testily replied that I could call them up and ask that question if I wanted to sit through an hour of being transferred from one person to another. I graciously declined that generous offer. In the interim, anyone that calls my house gets a message that this number has been disconnected and is no longer in use. Great! We look like deadbeats who haven’t paid our bill.

Monday afternoon I get a call from the vice principle at my daughter’s school regarding a committe meeting. She calls on my cell and very politely dances around my disconnected number. “Uhm, Mrs. LaBrecque, your home number has been disconnected. Is this a note that we should make on your daughter’s record and would you like to give us an alternate number other than your cell?” I laugh and tell her about the wrong number disconnect. She laughs in return and you can just hear her thinking, “Yeah, sister. I bet you’ll pay that bill on time, next time around.” There’s been a similar call from my dentist’s office and God knows how many other calls that don’t have my cell number…like maybe the coach for the select soccer team that my daughter just made. Their first practice is Friday night and I’ll guarantee he’s called and got that disconnected message. :crazy: I think the phone company should have to replace their standard recording with one that says “We screwed up. These people did pay their bill on time. Please call them back Thursday morning because that’s when we’ll get around to hooking them back up, unless you’re a telemarketer, in which case, you should never call back.”

Jen

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jennifer @ 6:45 am

April 12, 2005

Back from Spring Break

I’m back from a really great Spring Break. I won’t bore you with all the details, but I’d like to share some of the things I came away with last week.

1. Ten seems to be the perfect age to road trip with your kid. At least it worked out this way for me. I put the girl in charge of navigation. It was her job to keep up with and read the directions from Mapquest and Yahoomaps. She was also tracking the mileage from one point to the next and subtracting it from our total which nicely took care of all the “Are we there yet” questions since she knew exactly where we were and how much further we needed to go. Ten’s also a good age because I haven’t yet reached the total idiot status in her opinion. We talked about anything and everything.

2. Leave the men behind when you road trip. We pretty much stopped once an hour at rest areas for potty breaks. Men just can’t handle that. Much as I love my stepfather, we had to limit our beverage intake so that we were only stopping every 3 to 4 hours. It would have driven him mad to stop that many times and my husband would’ve complained, but, hey, it worked for us!

3. North Carolina is crawling with state troopers. We saw more state troopers in North Carolina than in Georgia, South Carolina and Virginia combined. They take their speed limit very seriously. So did I since I was in no frame of mind to contribute to the coffers of that great state. This is not the state to discover just how fast your car will go. :O

4. Speed detection devices are illegal in Virginia. You don’t want to speed here either.

5. Life is good blowing down the highway on a sunny day with the sunroof open, the wind whipping through your hair and Stevie Ray Vaughn working out the kinks on Texas Flood.

Jen

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jennifer @ 10:45 am

April 1, 2005

Gearin’ up to Road Trip

Spring Break begins this afternoon when school releases and my girl and I are gearing up for a road trip. We’re driving up to Willimsburg and Jamestown for a couple of days and then on up to Maryland to see family and then back home via Monitcello. My daughter is studying the American Revolution and is so excited she’s almost beside herself.

We went shopping this week and bought matching outfits (only two), complete with matching shoes. What can I say? We’re geek girls and proud of it! We’ve already started going through picking out cd’s to take and planning our snacks. I love airports and I love flying but there’s just something about a road trip…. The weather’s supposed to be great and we’ll cruise down the highway with the sunroof open and the cd player blasting.

The downside to gearing up is I have to buy a bathing suit. Double ACK!! :crazy:Ya know, normal clothes shopping isn’t all that painful, but bathing suit shopping…Too bad I can’t be unconscious for it. Think of me today and feel my pain!

I’m starting a new book when I get back and I’ll have to move double time on it, so I’m looking to come back refreshed and ready to roll.

Jen

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jennifer @ 9:10 am
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