New Life Brings Hope

“Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul – and sings the tunes without words – and never stops at all. ~ Emily Dickinson

“Hope is not the conviction that something will turn out well but the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out.” ~ Vaclav Havel

Our third grand-niece was born this week. She brought with her so much joy and hope. We also have two grand-nephews and as I see photos of how much each of them has grown, I feel great hope for the future. And after a year of the pandemic, I’m up for a large dose of hope.

Spring, which is just around the corner here in the Northern Hemisphere, is one of my favorite times of year. Plants and trees bud out, new babiy animals are born. I love all the new life and the gorgeous colors not to mention the warmer weather. It’s not too hot yet and that invites me to go outside. It just feels like hope and joy are in the air.

Since I love stories so much, I almost always connect the stories I watch or read with things that are going on in my life. This week, Barry and I watched a couple of films from outside the U.S. 

In the first, Automata, a Spanish/Bulgarian production, Antonio Banderas’ character, Jacq, finds himself in a dystopian future. Most of the human race has been killed off by aggressive solar flares and robots have been created to do the work humans can’t, or don’t want to do. It’s a bleak life, but his wife is about to have a baby. He’s not sure how he feels about that, but she desperately wanted a child and so he gave in to her wishes. I’m not going to go into more of the story except to say that even though it looks like the human race is dying out and the robots are poised to take over the planet, the birth of Jacq’s daughter brings him hope and indicates a better future for his family and maybe even the world. He has become an ally of the robots and in the end there is a possibility that perhaps both races can coexist.

The second movie, Black Book, from The Netherlands, is a WW II story based on true events about a Jewish woman who escapes a Nazi attack on her family and other Jews trying to escape their regime. She joins the resistance movement and ends up embedded in the local Nazi command. She and her fellow resistance warriors are in constant danger because there is a traitor among their ranks. But by the end of the movie it’s years later. She is living in Israel in a Kibbutz she established in honor of her murdered family. We see her with her husband and children. Even though warriors arrive in the last frames to help protect the Kibbutz from Palestinian attacks, there is a note of hope that no matter what they will survive. 

There are so many stories that show the continuation of the generations as a way of indicating that there is hope for the future no matter what has gone on before.

So, our family has expanded by one this week bringing happiness and hope with her. Thank you Little One!

Thank you for reading, liking and commenting. I appreciate your time. Have a happy and restful weekend. 

Blessings,

Lucinda Sage-Midgorden © 2021

Lucinda is the author of The Space Between Time, an award finalist in the “Fiction: Fantasy” category of the 2017 Best Book Awards.

Have you ever experienced life shattering events? Yeah, most of us have. In The Space Between Time, Jenna Holden gets slammed by her fiancé walking out, her mother’s untimely death, and losing her job all in one week. But she receives unexpected help when she finds her three-times great-grandmother’s journals and begins the adventure of a lifetime.

The Space Between Time is available in all ebook formats at Smashwords and for Kindle at Amazon, or you can find the ebook at iBooks or Barnes and Noble. If you prefer a physical copy, you can find a print-on-demand version at Amazon. Stay tuned for news when the audiobook version is published.

Lucinda is also the host of Story-Power a new podcast where she and her guests discuss the stories in all formats that have changed their lives. It’s available here on Sage Woman Chronicles and on Apple, Google, and Spotify podcast apps. Please rate and leave a review. It helps people find me.

Ken Doing Theatre and Reading the Classics

Ken was born and raised in a small town in California. He married and joined the Air Force after high school. The Air Force sent Ken to many far flung reaches of the planet, including Asia, South America, Europe, and the Middle-East. Ken has two children, both of whom are married and have made him a grandpa. He started writing short stories in high-school and just recently completed three one-act plays. He writes songs, performs in local theaters, and has a podcast called Ken Reads The Classics.

Ken Davis

Stories Discussed

Twelfth Night and Measure for Measure, William Shakespeare 

“Peace on Earth”, David Bowie and Bing Crosby

See How They Run, Philip King, playing at Sierra Vista Community Theatre through March 7, 2021

Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, (2015 – 2019) Rachel Bloom, Creator

Our Town, Thornton Wilder at Buena High School in Sierra Vista, AZ

Sierra Vista Community Theatre

  Lend Me A Tenor, Ken Ludwig

Open Stage Night at Bisbee Central School Project

Ken’s Wanda play cycle

  Littleton Gets A Hero: a play in one act (Wanda A. Round Series Book 1)

  College Bound: a play in one act (Wanda A. Round Series Book 2)

  Apparitions in Graves Theater: a play in one act (Wanda A. Round Series Book 3)

Samuel French Play Service

Three’s Company (1976 – 1984) Don Nicholl, Creator

Tombstone, Arizona

Cochise Creative Writing Celebration Open Mic Night

Broxton Coffee, Sierra Vista, Arizona

Play in a Day

Bateau D’ Mort, I was unable to find the play and playwright in any of the usual play service catalogues.

Ken Reads the Classics Podcast, Anchor.FM, Apple, Google

  Moby Dick, Herman Melville

  Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson

  Alice in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll

Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008 – 2020) George Lucas, Creator, Dave Filoni, and multiple directors

Joseph CampbellThe Hero’s Journey

The Mandalorian (2019 – ) Jon Favreau, Creator, multiple directors and screenwriters

Toy Story (1995) John Lasseter, Director, John Lasseter, Pete Docter, Andrew Stanton, Original story

Dune (1984, 2021) Frank Herbert, Novel, David Lynch, Director and Screenwriter, Denis Villeneuve, Director, Jon Spaihts, Denis Villeneuve, Eric Roth, Screenwriters

Star Trek, Gene Roddenberry, Creator, multiple spin-offs and movies

The Lottery, Most possible version, Shirley Jackson

The Left Hand of Darkness, Ursula Le Guin

Clive Cussler, Author, Dirk Pitt series, The NUMA Files series, Sam and Rami Fargo series.

  Sahara, (2005) Breck Eisner, Director, Clive Cussler, Novel, Thomas Dean Donnelly, Joshua Oppenheimer, John C. Richards, James V. Hart, Screenwriters

She, King Solomon’s Mines, H. Rider Haggard

James Michener, Author

Misery, The Stand, Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile, Stephen King

“Humans are not ideally set up to understand logic; they are ideally set up to understand stories.” ~ Roger C. Schank, Cognitive Scientist

We’re Like Icebergs

Photo by Harrison Haines on Pexels.com

“Each of us has an inner room where we can visit to be cleansed of fear-based thoughts and feelings. This room, the holy of holies, is a sanctuary of light.” ~ Marianne Williamson 

“We know what we are, but know not what we may be.” ~ William Shakespeare

I’ve been thinking a great deal lately about what I’m planning for my third act in life. I’ve never wanted to retire and sit in a rocking chair on our non-existent porch. 

Pursuant to that, wow I’m getting very technical here, the other day I decided to put on some music and just let my mind drift. This was something I’d been feeling the need to do for several days. So, I stopped and just did it.

I wasn’t really meditating. I was thinking about something Amanda Ellis said on her YouTube channel about the dying patriarchy and the rise of the divine feminine and how what she said helped me come up with some new directions for my long awaited second novel, when an image came into my head, an iceberg.

What I felt when I saw this iceberg was that we’re all like icebergs. There is the part of us that we display to ourselves and the world. We think that’s all we are. We accept that what we see on the surface is all there is. 

But then there is the submerged part of us that we’re most likely not very aware exists. Everyone has hidden talents and gifts that lay submerged until we decide to look for them, or until we’re called upon to use them. The best stories, in my opinion, are the ones where the characters must delve deep and find the strength to meet the challenges in front of them.

For most of my life, I’ve tried to fly below the radar. I wanted to do my work relatively unnoticed. I think I developed that practice because when I was younger, I stirred up controversy at church, and then in college. But because of that, I sabotaged myself. There were times when a little recognition for my accomplishments would have been nice, but I didn’t get it. It was like I was invisible, or that my contributions were not appreciated. 

Here are two examples. When I was about to graduate from high school, my mother became enraged when the annual church celebration for graduating seniors was cancelled. The reason they gave for cancelling the event was because I was the only person graduating that year. Mom, of course, thought I should be celebrated just like all the other graduates before and after me. I must admit it would have been nice. I was a little sad about it, but on the other hand, I was not very surprised or even upset. In a way I could see their point. Why spend all that time and effort for just one person? And besides, our family was rather controversial and even considered eccentric. And people who try to institute new ways of doing things are often ostracized.

The other example is when I decided to retire from teaching public school. Again, I was the only person leaving that year and at the end of the year gathering, no one even mentioned that I was not returning the following school year. I got no thank you for my five years of service. Yet, the year before, there was a big fuss made over the young band teacher who had only taught at the school district for one year. That one did hurt a bit, but I got over it as I started writing my first novel and began teaching at the college.

I told those stories to make the point that I have rarely felt “seen” for who I really am, at least in my working life. I have just enough family and friends who appreciate and love me to not let the others bother me. But there have been times when I wonder if I’m frightened by what I sense I’m capable of doing and being. Maybe it’s just easier to not stand out. I guess I was burned by the early controversies in my life. But now I feel like I need to finish healing those old wounds.

I’ve recently been feeling like my life is too small. Like it doesn’t fit any longer. So, I have begun to examine my long held beliefs about everything I thought to be true. Slowly, over time, some inner voice has urged me to consider that I might become more than I ever thought possible. I’ve gone back to those old questions we ask ourselves when we’re young. “Who am I? Why am I here? And what do I really want out of life?” The answers are not what I expected. 

A person who follows this blog post wrote a comment last week. She was responding to my post, “Human Connections”. What she said was something like, “It’s amazing how much we don’t know about people, especially those in our families.” And isn’t that the truth. Most of us live secret lives and even die with our stories still inside us. I don’t want to do that anymore. I want people to see the real me. I guess that’s why I started writing this blog so many years ago, to peel back the protective layers and allow myself to be open and honest about who I really am.

And I want to know more about the people around me. That’s why I created Story~Power. My hope is that the conversations with my guests will reveal things about them. Like what is it that motivates them? How do they see themselves in the stories they are drawn to? How do they share their passions, their love, their hope with the world? What do they learn about themselves from the stories, the music, and the art they consume or tell? And, maybe the most important question of all, how do stories connect us to each other?

I guess I’m an eternal optimist. I think if we can see into someone’s heart and soul, even a little bit, then maybe we can see that we are much more alike than we are different. And then we will honor each other instead of see each other as enemies. I have tried to do that in all my interactions with people. I’m not always successful, but I’d much rather try to connect with someone than to assume they are an enemy. 

I’m rambling. My mind goes off and makes connections that are sometimes hard to follow. Mostly I’ve just been thinking about what untapped potential I might have that I can develop and share. And if I can help others do the same thing through all my creative endeavors. Maybe these changing times are affecting you in similar ways. I’d love to hear your stories.

Enjoy the full moon. Take care of yourselves. Welcome to my new followers. Thanks for reading, liking, and commenting. 

Blessings.

Lucinda Sage-Midgorden © 2021

Lucinda is the author of The Space Between Time, an award finalist in the “Fiction: Fantasy” category of the 2017 Best Book Awards.

Have you ever experienced life shattering events? Yeah, most of us have. In The Space Between Time, Jenna Holden gets slammed by her fiancé walking out, her mother’s untimely death, and losing her job all in one week. But she receives unexpected help when she finds her three-times great-grandmother’s journals and begins the adventure of a lifetime.

The Space Between Time is available in all ebook formats at Smashwords and for Kindle at Amazon, or you can find the ebook at iBooks or Barnes and Noble. If you prefer a physical copy, you can find a print-on-demand version at Amazon. Stay tuned for news when the audiobook version is published.

Lucinda is also the host of Story-Power a new podcast where she and her guests discuss the stories in all formats that have changed their lives. It’s available here on Sage Woman Chronicles and on Apple, Google, and Spotify podcast apps. Please rate and leave a review. It helps people find me.

Daydreaming Into A New Life

Red Shadow Sky
Red Shadow Sky Magic Wand Sunset Cloud Girl

“I’m often daydreaming, and it’s because I’ve always liked the idea of there being something more than the normal world.” ~ Samantha Shannon

“Visualization is daydreaming with a purpose.” ~ Bo Bennett

You don’t have to look very far to find stories of doom and gloom. Stories that share all kinds of bad news. I’m not going to enumerate them here because, well, that’s always been the case. Disasters make news. I’m not going to talk about those stories because I’m committed to sharing hope, joy, and love. So, I’m going to share a hopeful story I heard on NPR while driving home from teaching my class on Friday.

I don’t know the program because I came into he middle of it, but the reporter was talking with a psychologist about how daydreaming about something we want to experience can help lift our mood and help us get through these difficult times. They told the story of three people who had made small purchases of things that they can’t use right now. They bought those things in anticipation of better times ahead. 

The first story was about a woman who had purchased hair extensions even though she can’t go to the hair dresser right now. She bought them to help her visualize the day when she, and her hair extensions would be able to go out with friends to dinner and then a night club to dance and have fun. She takes great pleasure in looking at the the extensions adding details of the food she’ll eat, the music she and her friends will dance to. And she daydreams about what her future will be like when we’re all able to be in public places again enjoying ourselves.

The second story was about a man who purchased a bicycle that can be folded up into a small carrying case. He and his wife live in Alaska, but their children and grandchildren live in London. They haven’t seen each other in person in over a year. Their granddaughter is learning to ride a bike and the grandfather dreams of the day when he and his wife can travel to London to see their family and he and his granddaughter can go bike riding together. He too adds details to his daydream, like watching his granddaughter zooming off in front of him and then circling back to him so they can ride side by side.

The third story was about a couple who are planning to take a trip when they are able. They put a small amount of money into savings every month so they will have the funds to take the trip at the end of this nightmare. They talk often about where they want to go and how they will spend the money on dining, visits to sites, and souvenirs. Again they add as many details to their dreaming as they can to make it feel as if they really will be able to take this trip.

Each of these people said it lifts their spirits to daydream about what they’ll do with their purchases. Just daydreaming every detail helps them feel better. They enjoy the anticipation of the fun they will have and the connections they will make.

What are your dreams for the future? The psychologist on the radio said that daydreaming can bring us pleasure now, even though we’re dreaming about things we hope to do in the future. It might be a great way to help us get over some of our cabin fever, or even mild depression. It’s so easy to go into our dark feelings. I want to use daydreaming to try turning away from those and fantasize about happy events in my future.

My dreams are pretty simple. I visualize staying home most of the time doing my creative projects, getting more readers for my books and blog, and more listeners for my podcast. I dream of what life will be like when Barry retires and all the creative projects he’ll do. I dream of traveling to visit friends and family. 

I guess I’d better get the picture of the new car we want to buy and use it as a desktop photo, or print it out and put it up on my wall and dream of all the places we’ll travel to in it.

Have a magical weekend. Thanks for reading, liking and commenting. It’s nice to know someone is enjoying my blog and podcast posts. I’d love to hear what you’re daydreaming about.

Blessings.

Lucinda Sage-MIdgorden © 2021

Lucinda is the author of The Space Between Time, an award finalist in the “Fiction: Fantasy” category of the 2017 Best Book Awards.

Have you ever experienced life shattering events? Yeah, most of us have. In The Space Between Time, Jenna Holden gets slammed by her fiancé walking out, her mother’s untimely death, and losing her job all in one week. But she receives unexpected help when she finds her three-times great-grandmother’s journals and begins the adventure of a lifetime.

The Space Between Time is available in all ebook formats at Smashwords and for Kindle at Amazon, or you can find the ebook at iBooks or Barnes and Noble. If you prefer a physical copy, you can find a print-on-demand version at Amazon. Stay tuned for news when the audiobook version is published.

Lucinda is also the host of Story-Power a new podcast where she and her guests discuss the stories in all formats that have changed their lives. It’s available here on Sage Woman Chronicles and on Apple, Google, and Spotify podcast apps. Please rate and leave a review. It helps people find me.

Support Your Local Indy Bookstore

My name is Roxanna McGinnis.  I am a lifelong lover of stories, reader of anything, and current owner of Get Lit Books in Sierra Vista, AZ.  

I was born and raised in a small town in Montana.  My dream was to become a writer, but I got writer’s block in college so instead I got a degree in English Literature from the University of Montana.  After college I went to work as a 9-1-1 dispatcher for 13 years, then eventually left that for a second career designing and delivering training programs for corporate America.  Owning a bookstore is my third career, and the one that makes me happiest!

I am married to David and we have raised three avid readers of our own who are now between the ages of 17 and 23. 

We live in Sierra Vista with two of our children and a small menagerie of cats and dogs.

Support Your Local Indy Bookstore

Works Discussed

You’ve Got Mail (1998) Nora Ephron, Director, Nikolaus Laszio, Parfumerie, Play, Nora Ephron and Delia Ephron, Screenwriters

The Shop Around the Corner (1940) Ernst Lubitsch, Director, Nilolaus Laszio, Parfumerie, Play, Samson Raphaelson, Screenwriter

Lucky Partners (1940) I think this is the movie I was referring to about the Aunt reading on the stool. Lewis Milestone, Director, Sacha Guitry, Adapted from the story “Bonne Chance”, Allan Scott, John Van Cruten, George Haight, Edwin Justus Mayer, Lewis Milestone, Franz Schulz, Screenwriters

The Temeraire Series, Naomi Novik

The Cadfael Series, Ellis Peters

The Circle of Ceridwen Series, Octavia Randolph

Outlander Series, Diana Gabaldon

Game of Thrones Series, George R.R. Martin

The Hate U Give, Angie Thompson, Novel

The Children of Blood and Bone, Children of virtue and Vengeance, Tomi Adeyemi, Novels

Eleanor, David Michaelis, Biography

How the South Won the Civil War, Heather Cox Richardson, Historical Non-Fiction

The Little Golden Books

  Old Mother Hubbard, Aurelius Battaglia

  The Pokey Little Puppy, Janette Sebring Lowrey and Gustaf Tenggren

  The Little Mommy, Sharon Kane

Raggedy Ann and Andy Series, Johnny Gruelle 

Little House on the Prairie Series, Little House in the Big Woods, Laura Ingalls Wilder and Garth Williams

Seven Alone, original title, On to Oregon, Honore Morrow, Novel, (1974) Earl Bellamy, Director, Douglas C. Stewart, Eleanor Lamb, Screenwriters

Nancy Drew Book Series,  Carolyn Keene

Agatha Christie Mysteries

Louis L’Amour, Last of the Breed, The Walking Drum

James Michener, Author

Hondo, Louis L’Amour, Novel, (1953) John Farrow, Director, James Edward Grant, Screenwriter

Still Life, Louise Penny, Novel

What Should I Read Next with Anne Bogel, Link to her website, Modern Mrs. Darcy

Anne Perry, Author of mysteries most notably the Charlotte and Thomas Pitt, and William Monk Series

Tana French, Author of mysteries most notably the Dublin Murder Squad Series

Story-Power episode 13 with Beth Orozco, “Celebration of Writing and Reading”

The Witch Elm, Tana French, Novel 

Story-Power episodes 4 & 5 with Randy Murray, “Myths, Legends, and Complicated Writers, pt. 1”

The Space Between Time, Lucinda Sage-Midgorden, Novel @smashwords, iBooks, Amazon

Bridge to Terabithia Katherine Paterson, Novel, (1985) Eric Till, Director, Nancy Sackett, Screenwriter

Judy Bloom, Author of Are You There God? among others

Beverly Cleary, Author of the Ramona Series

The Wizard of Earthsea, Ursula Le Guin, Novel

The Hobbit, J.R.R. Tolkien, Novel

The Name of the Rose, Umberto Eco, Novel

Pillars of the Earth, World Without End, A Column of Fire, Ken Follett, Novels

Pope Joan, Donna Woolfolk Cross, Novel

The Tea Girl of Hummingbird Lane, Lisa See, also by her, Shanghai Girls, The Island of Sea Women, Novels

The Extraordinary Life of Sam Hell, Robert Dugoni, Novel

Audio books to support your local Indy Bookstore, libro.fm

Ebooks to support your local Indy Bookstore, Hummingbird Digital Media

Physical books, bookshop.org to support your local Indy Bookstore

Get Lit Bookstore, Sierra Vista, Arizona @ www.getlitbooks.com

Audiobooks mentioned: The Christmas Carol, The Time Machine, Pride & Prejudice

Story-Power episode 15 with Celeste Sage-Tate and Arielle Tate, “Bridgerton and Beyond”

“Humans are not ideally set up to understand logic; they are ideally set up to understand stories.” ~ Roger C. Schank, Congnitive Scientist.