Following My Passion

“My mission in life is not merely to survive, but to thrive; and to do so with some passion, some compassion, some humor, and some style.” ~ Maya Angelou

“It’s not about becoming rich and famous. It’s about dreaming a sacred destiny for yourself. It’s about becoming a luminous warrior in these dark times.” ~ Alberto Villoldo

This past week I’ve been recording segments for my upcoming special Christmas Story-Power podcast. I decided to interview family members. I asked them to share their favorite memories, traditions, and even Christmas movies. I recorded episode 11 with my niece Arielle, which airs December 9, in late July or early August. When the fall semester began, I was too busy to do any recording. However, now coming back to creating episode 12, I realize how much I LOVE every aspect of podcasting. It’s my ultimate passion.

There are other things I like very much, like writing this blog and my novel. But sometimes writing is hard. I get stuck, or life throws a curve ball and I have to stop and rethink my story. Don’t get me wrong, I have a passion for writing, but I don’t love EVERY aspect of it as I do creating my podcast episodes.

Resuming doing the podcast has made me reexamine my beliefs about my purpose in life. For so long I bought into the belief that I had to work at jobs that weren’t fully, or even partially, satisfying to bring in enough money to survive. And now that I have more days behind me than I do ahead, I’ve decided to jettison those ideas and follow my bliss, as Joseph Campbell used to say. I want to find as much joy in my relationships and activities as I can in the time I have left.

For many years I thought that it would be hard to follow my bliss. That the Universe wasn’t set up to support my dreams. I marveled at people who set a goal for their lives and eventually got to do what they loved. But I didn’t think that would happen for me. Then recently, or maybe it’s been coming on gradually, I understood. Having the life I want is all in MY mind and heart. I create it or not according to my beliefs. 

The question is am I determined enough to continue to follow my dreams and not let anything deter me? To be honest, I was a waverer, a fence sitter. I’d hold strong to my dreams for months and then doubts would creep in. I’d feel unworthy and allow myself to compromise. I’d allow only part of my dream to come true which meant there was always some aspect of what I was doing that I dreaded. For example, I loved working in the semi-professional theatre scene in Portland. But that meant that I rarely saw Barry and I missed lots of family events. There came a time when I had to make a choice. My relationship with Barry, or theatre. I mourned leaving acting behind but eventually I was able to teach theatre. It was rewarding to see the students blossom and I enjoyed directing plays, but I hated the paperwork and other obligations of being a teacher. 

I can’t complain though, because each choice to follow one little piece of my dream led to the next piece and the next until I finally decided to try podcasting and the miracle happened. As I wrote above, I love every aspect of doing the work. 

I’m now in transition. Sabotaging myself just won’t do any more. 2021 is the year I stop compromising. After all these years of thinking I wasn’t worthy, I must acknowledge that I’m the one who has been holding myself back. I can’t blame anyone else. However, I am happy that I kept working at discovering what it is I love to do most.

At the end of every Marie TV video Marie Forleo, a woman I love, says, “Stay on your game and keep going for your dreams because the world needs that special gift that only you have.” I think I’ve found my special gift. I’d be interested to hear what brings you joy because what brings you joy is what the world needs from you. I hope you will share your passion with us in the comments below.

Blessings to you all,

Lucinda Sage-Midgorden © 2020

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.

Thank You 2020!

It’s a Wonderful Life Village

“Did I offer peace today? Did I bring a smile to someone’s face? Did I say words of healing? Did I let go of my anger and resentment? Did I forgive? Did I love? These are the real questions. I must trust that the the little bit of love that I sow now will bear many fruits, here in this world and the life to come.” ~ Henri Nouwen

I know. You’re saying, “How can you say thank you for this horrible year!” Fortunately, I’ve learned something very important over the years, that it’s the tragedies, the betrayals, the heartbreaks that have the richest lessons for us. I don’t think anyone can deny that this year has had plenty of opportunities for us to learn and heal and I for one am grateful for the opportunity.

I think lots of people use the last weeks of the year to reflect and evaluate what they’ve experienced, and hopefully learned in the previous months. I’ve been doing that a lot lately and here is what I’ve learned.

No matter how much I think I’ve cleared out unhealed wounds, there is always more work to do. I don’t know about you, but I tend to deal with the most painful part of my wounds, and then think I’m finished for all time. But, of course, that’s not how healing works. We have to circle around again and again to heal different aspects of whatever it is we’ve suffered. Everyone is different. Maybe you stuffed down the most painful stuff and only healed the periphery parts of the wound and thought you were good to go. There is no one right way to heal and each person has a choice whether or not to do the work. For me, I’ve chosen to dig a bit deeper to see if there is anything I ignored that needs to be dealt with.  

The healing I’ve been working on these last months has not been deeply traumatic. I’ve already done most of the hard work, but still there is another round of mop up to do. What this has done for me it to allow me to see new possibilities for my life that I didn’t even know were available to experience because part of me was still holding on to all the old perceptions of myself. It’s very exciting to let those go and realize that maybe, even at my age, I have untapped talents that I can use to create a whole knew life for myself. 

I’d be interested to know what you’ve learned and what you are grateful for as we finish this most unusual year. Or maybe you’re traumatized and in need of some support. We may be separated physically, but prayers and love travel through time and space. I’m willing to send up prayers of support for you if you need them. All you have to do is ask.

I’m going to keep this post short because I’m working on a special Family Christmas podcast to be posted on December 16th. I hope you have a wonderful beginning to your holiday season no matter what spiritual holiday you celebrate this time of year. 

It feels to me as if this is an auspicious time. Hopefully we can heal our deep personal, societal, and cultural wounds so that we can begin to come together as one human family. In any case, I plan to take advantage of our suggested separation to be quiet and go within.

Blessings to you all. Stay safe and healthy. Thanks for your likes and comments. 

Lucinda Sage-Midgorden © 2020

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.

The Dark Side Of Musicals

Personally, I would describe myself with a bunch of “m’s” … mom, musical, marketing, minister, with many sisters (4). I have two grown, married sons, one of whom will welcome my first grandchild into the family this November! I am engaged to Tim Stuber, and I know I’m incredibly lucky to have found the depth of love and devotion that we have for one another at this point in our lives. I’ve owned my consulting business since 1989, and I’ve owned a total of 6 businesses over the years (usually running at least two concurrently).  As a consultant, I assist small nonprofit companies as they seek to increase their ability to provide services by developing their fund development, strategic planning, organizational structure, and brand management efforts.

Since I recorded this episode back in early July, Marjie and Tim set their wedding date for November 28, just a few days after this episode airs. Her new name is Marjie Siegfried Stuber. Congratulations to them both.

Marjie Siegfried Stuber’s business: Forte Marketing and Public Relations, Inc. LinkedIn Profile at Marjie Siegfried Foster.

Dolly Levi from Hello Dolly, (1969) Book for stage play, Michael Stewart based on the play, The Matchmaker, Thornton Wilder. Screenwriter, Ernest Lehman,  Composers, Lennie Hayton and Lionel Newman, Movie Director, Gene Kelly

Nancy Drew Mysteries, Carolyn Keene

Beaker Street Radio Show with Clyde Clifford

Phantom of the Opera, Book, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Richard Stilgoe, Screenplay, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Joel Schumacher, based on the novel, Le Fantôme de L’Opéra, Gaston Leroux, Composer, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Lyrics by Charles Hart

Love Never Dies, (2009) Composer, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Lyrics by Glenn Slater, Book by Andrew Lloyd Webber, Ben Elton, Frederick Forsyth and Glenn Slater

South Pacific, (1958, movie) Stage play by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, Screenwriter, Paul Osborn, Movie Director, Joshua Logan

My Fair Lady, (Book for play and screenplay), Alan Jay Lerner based on the play Pygmalion, by George Bernard Shaw, Music, Frederick Loewe, Movie Director, George Cukor

Pygmalion, (1912)George Bernard Shaw

Cinderella, (1957, TV movie) Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II

The Equalizer (2014) Based on the TV series created by Michael Sloan and Richard Lindheim, Screenplay by Richard Wenk, Director, Antoine Fugua

Fiddler On The Roof (1971) Based on stories by Sholem Aleichem, Stage Play and screenplay, Joseph Stein, Movie director, Norman Jewison

Oklahoma, (1955, movie) Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, 

“You’ve Got to Be Carefully Taught”, song from South Pacific

“The Sadder But Wiser Girl for Me”, song from The Music Man

1776 ( 1969 Broadway, 1972, Movie) Book, Peter Stone, Music and Lyrics, Sherman Edwards, Movie Director, Peter H. Hunt, Songs discussed, “Cool, Cool, Considerate Men”, “Molasses to Rum”

The Hate U Give, Angie Thomas

Rifles for Waite, Harold Keith

Little House on The Prairie series, Laura Ingalls Wilder

Dave’s Song, Robert McKay

The Secret Life of Bees, Sue Monk Kidd

Cold Sassy Tree, Olive Ann Burns

LaVyrle Spencer books, e.g. Morning Glory, Fulfillment, Bitter Sweet

Children of Blood and Bone, Tomi Adeyemi

Jane Austen, author

Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë

Middlemarch, George Eliot

Cloud Atlas, David Mitchell

Blowout, Rachel Maddow

Becoming, Michelle Obama

Hamilton, (Play first performance 2013, Movie, 2020 available on Disney +) Book, Lin-Manuel Miranda, inspired by the book of the same title by Ron Chernow, Music and Lyrics, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Movie Director, Thomas Kail

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

Story-Power is available on Apple, Google, and Spotify podcast apps. If you listen to episodes there, please consider subscribing, leaving a review or sharing with a friend. It will help people find me.

When Life Thows Curve Balls

Oregon Trail Wagon Wheel Ruts, by Doug Letterman

“Mistakes are a part of being human. Appreciate your mistakes for what they are: precious life lessons that can only be learned the hard way. Unless it’s a fatal mistake, which, at least, others can learn from.” ~ Al Franken

Someone once said, “Life is difficult and then you die,” and I have to admit I used to subscribe to that idea. But not any more. My new mantra is, “There are no mistakes, only lessons.” Three or four times in the last months various groups that I belong to on social media have asked some version of the question, if you could give your younger self, or the younger generation, or your children, friends or family one bit of advice what would it be? The first time I wrote there are no mistakes, only lessons, I got lots of likes and loves back and that’s when I realized that I was giving that advice to myself in real time. 

As Albert Einstein said and I’m paraphrasing, we can live as if nothing is a miracle, or we can live as if everything is a miracle. I prefer to live as if everything is a miracle because living the other way is too bleak.

This week my dramatic structure class watched and discussed the movie Sliding Doors (1998). It’s about a woman named Helen, played by Gwyneth Paltrow, who lives two different timelines depending on whether she was able to get on the underground train or not. And as the movie progresses we see the consequences of this one seemingly insignificant event. If she gets on the train she comes home to find her boyfriend in bed with another woman. In that timeline she leaves him and begins a relationship with the man she was talking to on the train. In the other, she’s nearly mugged and arrives home after a trip to the emergency room. By that time the other woman has left. Of course, one of the timelines must go away at the climax of the movie. One of my students said, (No spoilers here) “I wish she’d been able to continue on with the timeline where she was happy.” To which I replied, “Yes, but she ends up in the same place in the end.” And then we had a discussion about choices. If we’re faced with two or more paths, we can’t see into the future to know the consequences of our choice. But I said that I believe in the end it doesn’t really matter, because we often arrive where we were meant to be anyway. Maybe that was the message of the movie. If we choose to do the work, we can learn the lessons no matter what paths we choose.  

When I look back at my life, I can pin point times when I made bad choices because I believed I didn’t deserve miracles. I made myself miserable. Like the time right out of college when I took a job that made my stomach sink when they offered it to me. My body knew this was not a good choice and I should wait for something better, but I was worried about money. Barry and I needed jobs so we could survive. So, instead of trusting that I would be taken care of and find a position that I would love, I tortured myself for two years in a job with a toxic environment that I hated and made me sick, literally.

But since there are no mistakes, only lessons, that hated job propelled me into a Masters program in theatre. And that led from one thing to the next until I arrived here, teaching theatre classes, writing my novels, this blog and podcasting about stories that I love because of the things they’ve taught me.

After years of practice, when the mistakes or unexpected curve balls come, I allow myself to have those inevitable negative feelings, but then I breathe and take a step back. “Okay,” I say to myself. “What am I supposed to be learning from this?” Sometimes the answers come flooding in right a way, and sometimes I get the answers little by little. But either way, I now trust that the Universe has my back and eventually, I’ll be able to understand the bigger plan.

Case in point, I’ve been saying and even writing that I’m working on the audiobook for my first novel. Well, just a few weeks ago, as I was attempting to start that project anew, it came to me that I didn’t want to do the audiobook myself. I didn’t feel I had the talent or the passion for it. So I’ve decided to hire someone to do it. I’m weighing my options and waiting for guidance on how to accomplish that goal. This is one of those times when I need to wait for the right time to make it happen.

Little by little my life is expanding. I recently started doing short videos on Instagram and on my writer’s page on Facebook. They’re little musings about a story that has made me come to a new realization, or heal some aspect of myself that I didn’t even know I needed to heal.  It feels good to have a reason to get up every morning. It’s good to have creative projects that I’m passionate about doing that might connect me with people who need what I have to say. Nothing I do is very earth shattering, but I believe that if I can help one person, I’m fulfilling my purpose. I’m excited to see what comes next!

Welcome new followers. Thanks for reading, liking and commenting. Have a glorious weekend and stay safe.

Blessings.

Lucinda Sage-Midgorden © 2020

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.

Looking For Joy

Unbridled Joy

“Taking joy in living is a woman’s best cosmetic.” ~ Rosalind Russell

“The Universe loves a grateful person. The more you thank Life, the more Life will give you to be thankful for.” ~ Louise Hay

If you’ve listened to my podcast, Story~Power, you know I’m a big classic movie nerd. In times when I’m stressed, I’ll go find a movie, often one I’ve seen dozens of times to help me unplug from the craziness for awhile. This election season has been one of those times when I’ve needed to unplug from the drama of real life and sink into a fictional world where in the end all the loose ends are tied up giving me a deep sense of satisfaction.

Here are a few movies, some old, some newer, that have brought me joy these last weeks. The first is Now, Voyager with Bette Davis, Paul Henried, and Claude Rains. Bette Davis’ character Charlotte goes on a journey of self-discovery. Along the way she falls in love, learns to love herself, and she finds purpose, and joy in living. Those seem to be themes for me because another movie I love is, Easy Virtue with Jessica Biel, Ben Barnes, Kristin Scott Thomas, and Colin Firth in which Jessica Biel’s character marries a young British man of the landed gentry and suddenly finds herself at war with his mother who wants him to marry the girl on the estate next door. Biel’s character is recovering from harrowing experiences, something that her new young husband can’t comprehend. In the end she bonds with his father who lost all his men in WW I. They help each other begin to heal old wounds.

The night of the election Barry, who has a rule about not watching Christmas movies before Thanksgiving, suggested we watch Sleepless In Seattle with Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan. This is a movie that affirms, miracles can happen. I think we all want to believe in miracles, but we get bogged down and forget to dream, or even ask for them. 

Finally, I highly recommend November Christmas, a 2010 Hallmark Hall of Fame offering staring Sam Elliott, John Corbett, Karen Allen and Sarah Paulson. It’s a story about a family new to a small Massachusetts town. They don’t know many people yet so when their daughter develops cancer, they keep it to themselves. A kind neighbor begins to put things together. He and his wife offer their help. Eventually the news gets out and the people of the town wrap the family in support and love. It’s a quiet movie that sneaks in and touches your heart. 

You probably have your own list of favorite feel good stories. I suggest, if you’re feeling frazzled, to take time out to watch or read an old favorite this weekend. 

Movies are not the only ways I unplug from the daily drama. I look for other little things that help bring me joy. Some of these are, the quail and other birds and wildlife in our yard, a good conversation with a friend, my morning cup of hot chocolate, my meditation time.

I’m also a collector of great quotes to turn to when I need to do a thinking reset. Here are a few of my favorites.

“Everything is figureoutable” by Marie Forleo. In fact, I read Marie’s book by the same title earlier this year mostly because I was trying to figure out how to better promote all my creative projects. Fortunately the book is filled with stories about her single mom, who coined the phrase, and how she figured out how to fix a sink, a radio, and many other things around their home. Marie’s students are mostly women. She teaches them how to build a business using the skills we already have.  She assures her students when we’re not sure what or how to do something we need to build our business, that everything is figureoutable. There are lots of options about how to figure stuff out. She’s right! 

During the summer I read Glennon Doyle’s book, Untamed. It’s a memoir, so it’s filled with stories of things she’s learning while living her life. One thing she says in that book that stuck with me is that “We can do hard things”. I love that because it implies that even though the task ahead might seem daunting, we are capable of accomplishing it. It also implies that we are each responsible for doing the work with great rewards to be gained if we commit to doing the work.

I just finished reading Anne Bogel’s book Don’t Overthink It: Make Easier Decisions, Stop Second-Guessing, and Bring More Joy to Your Life. One of her tips that has stuck with me is that when you’re tempted to overthink a situation, turn the problem into an experiment. She says that with an experiment, instead of trying to do something perfectly, you are trying to see what the outcome might be. It’s an opportunity to learn something new even if it fails.

And finally, in Pam Grout’s book, The Course in Miracles Experiment: A Starter Kit For Rewiring Your Mind, she reiterates the idea that comes up again and again in A Course in Miracles, that love is all there is. Love is the only thing that’s real. Everything else, all the drama that we tend to get caught up in, is illusion. It turns out Shakespeare was right, all the world IS a stage and all the men and women merely players.

Finally, contrary to what the Vulcan’s in Star Trek believe, “Humans are not ideally set up to understand logic; they are ideally set up to understand stories.” ~ Roger C. Schank, Cognitive Scientist. In the first Star Trek movie with the original cast, that’s what Spock discovers. It’s our emotional connection to others that makes life meaningful. A society might function if everyone rejects emotion and uses logic, but there will be little to no joy in it.

I guess that’s one of the reasons I’m so passionate about mining stories, to find my connection to the storytellers and the characters they create. Stories help me find answers to my questions about the meaning of life, and how to deal with difficult situations, and to understand why humans do what they do. They show me the consequences of certain actions without having to experience them personally. I think that’s the great blessing of stories. I can learn important lessons from someone else’s experience.

This is the final thing I want to encourage you to think about. Humanity is learning and progressing no matter what events look like in the world right now. I use this analogy all the time, but when you’re cleaning out your closets, you create chaos for awhile. That’s all humanity is going through right now, we’re doing cosmic closet cleaning. We’re deciding what values we want to keep and which ones to get rid of. We’re examining our old ways of conducting business, government, religion, educational and financial institutions, and we’re deciding which is more important, money or people. Change can be scary, but it’s necessary. I would not want to be the same person I was at 20, or 30, or even 40 because as a result of all the personal work I’ve done, I’m finally feeling comfortable about who I am.

Thank you for following, reading, and commenting. I’m hoping we humans learn to appreciate each other.

Lucinda Sage-Midgorden © 2020

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.