Monthly Archives: October 2012

You don’t have to try so hard

Recently I had a strange encounter with another writer.  It began with a blush-inducing string of compliments and ended with “That’s why you scare people.”

BLAM!

I’m eleven years old and in sixth grade.  I’m staring in the mirror thinking, “I’m smart.  I’m nice.  And I’m a little bit pretty. So why don’t boys like me?”

Back then, I would have changed to get the boys to like me if I had known how.  But I didn’t know how so I stayed me–shy, awkward around kids my own age, happiest in a book or with adults, and lonely a lot of the time.

I grew up.  I worked hard, striving for competence, excellence.  Maybe I thought that if I were smart enough, successful enough, helpful enough I would be enough.  By thirty, I felt like I was finally becoming the woman I wanted to be.  Then tragedy demolished me and it took nearly ten years to put myself back together again.

Only to be told that I’m scary.

But then this writer said, “You don’t have to try so hard.”

You don’t have to try so hard.

This refrain bounced around my head, snuggling up with a few lines from Mary Oliver that seem to be in my every intake of breath these days:

You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
For a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves.

It won’t matter if I try harder or make pilgrimage through the desert.  It won’t be enough to make all the boys like me or  to make me un-scary.  And that is a thought full of freedom.

I don’t have to try so hard.

I can love what I love.

And suddenly, I’m singing a song from Rent and feeling light on my feet:

Take me for what I am, what I was meant to be.

 

 

 

Feel the love! Writing kid lit means school visits and that means fun!

 

One of the great joys of writing for children is being a visiting author at schools.  I spent all day last Thursday at Highland Elementary School, and let me tell you, I was feeling the love!

The teachers and librarian had done an amazing job of preparing the kids for my visit.  They knew my books and they knew me.  As soon as I entered the building, the whispers began.

“There she is!”
“That’s Amber Keyser!”
“She’s the author!” 

I did a presentation about wilderness canoeing based on PADDLE MY OWN CANOE for the K-3 classes.  With the 4-5s, I gave my talk on writing comics: TELLING STORIES IN WORDS AND PICTURES.  This was in preparation for Family Write Night.  About 20 kids came back with their families to make 8-page mini comics with me.

I had such a great time.

It is easy to get bogged down as a writer.  We are alone a lot and thus able to fret in isolation about deadlines, how well our books are selling (or not selling), whether we’ll ever write another, bad reviews (good reviews), whether we will ever make a living doing this…  (Feel free to add to this happy list.)

But the great thing about school visits is that to these kids I might as well be J.K. Rowling.  They were so excited to meet a “real” author.  They chanted the refrain of my book as I read.  They gave me hugs.  They wrote me fan mail. They lined up to ask for my autograph.  In other words, they made me feel great.

I know the kids at Highland had a good time when I was there, but they probably don’t know how much being with them meant to me.  Thank you, Highland Elementary Students, for reminding me why writing for children is the best job in the world!