Thursday, May 31, 2012

Validation for writers?

From Mike Duran: 

"A writer’s self-worth, motivation, professionalism, work ethic, and craft, should not require recognition from peers or professionals.

"I am not saying we shouldn’t seek professional validation and celebrate its acquisition. I’m saying, If you require professional validation in order to continue writing, then you should stop right now.
"Writers can be extremely insecure people. Having your book published only compounds that insecurity. Readers will now begin to scrutinize you, your story, and your talent in ways you never imagined. Are you really ready for this? If a writer lacks confidence and personal self-worth, traditional publishing will only intensify their insecurities. Just wait till your editor requests rewrites and the bad reviews start rolling in. It’s the equivalent of a literary strip search. No amount of external validity can make up for internal fragility. The writer with self-esteem, inferiority issues, cannot be cured by traditional publishing."
by Mike Duran
mikeduran.com

Thursday, May 24, 2012


Some of the reasons I love Utah State University-

Plain and simple, people who have been to Utah State University love it. Just ask them. No other place provides the complete package quite like USU: top-notch academics, nationally recognized research, Division I athletics, and more than 200 student clubs and organizations, all on the oldest residential campus in the state.
And the mountains. USU is just 15 minutes from two mountain ranges and within a half day's drive of six national parks, including Yellowstone. It's big-school opportunities with a small-school feel, and it's all for a great value.
In fact, USU is the #1 public university in the West (and top five in the nation) for lowest tuition on Forbes' list of America's Best College Buys (2011).
Fast Facts

Did You Know?

SpaceUSU has sent more student experiments into space than any other university in the world.
heartUSU students are admitted to medical and dental schools at a rate of nearly 30 percent above the national average each year.
10 ski resortsTen major ski resorts, many of which hosted sites for the 2002 Winter Olympics, lie within a two-hour drive of campus.
Undergraduate ResearchUSU's undergraduate researchprogram is the second oldest in the nation, behind only MIT.
Caine College of the ArtsUSU's brand-new Caine College of the Arts is headed by Craig Jessop, longtime director of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
Statewide LocationsUSU has provided distance education for more than 110 years. Now, the program offers nearly 50 degrees statewide, including the only distance-delivered doctorate.
Prominent USU AlumniProminent USU alumni include U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Football Hall of Famer Merlin Olsen, Nike Brand president Charlie Denson, and more.
Huntsman School of BusinessThe Huntsman School of Business is the West's oldest continuously operating business college.
Study AbroadUSU students study abroad in more than 140 partner institutionsaround the globe.
USU LibraryDedicated in 2006, USU's Merrill-Cazier Library ranked #1 in the nation in the “Smart Classroom Category,” just above Harvard's.
USU BasketballDuring Stew Morrill's tenure as men's basketball coach, the Aggies have the fourth highest winning percentage in the nation.
Aggie Blue BikesThe student-run program Aggie Blue Bikes lends bikes to students free of charge. The program helped decrease commuter traffic by more than half from previous years.




Thursday, May 17, 2012

itstruimlrng2txtdontgeturhopesup




I am learning to text. It’s true.

Somehow, learning to text seemed more intimidating than learning to drive. My good driving record over the years speaks for itself. Mostly.

I’ve watched people text with great speed, back and forth, with great admiration, and I've felt . . . somehow lacking. Left behind. Incomplete. 

It’s a little disconcerting to be with others when all this texting is going on, though. It tends to make me feel insignificant. After all, I’m there in person while they’re communicating with invisible others. I guess it’s all about multitasking, but I’d rather focus on one person at a time, in person. One friend texts so frequently when we’re together, I’ve often wondered if I could get her attention by pulling out my phone and texting her, too, rather than initiating a conversation. I’m still considering it. But then that would mean I'd have to charge my phone and remember to carry it with me. And turn it on. All things I don't do too often. 

But here’s the thing: I'd found it aggravating, just trying to enter contact information into my cell phone. The process was slow and cumbersome and error-filled. It was easier if for some reason someone called me; I could at least save their number. Still, I had to key in the person's name or the number was useless.

However, my newer phone (still quite basic, no android or smart features, and did I mention it doesn't work outside of the USA?) is a little more efficient and user friendly than the old one.

So - - - last week I girded up my loins and composed a text:

“howarekidslovemommmmmmmmm” (The extra “m” at the end is my trademark email signature. He’d know it was from Mom if he didn't already know it was from Mom.)

Then I held my breath and hit ‘send.’

The news shot around the globe. From the middle brother in Finland, the recipient of the text, to the big brother in El Paso, to the little brother in Berkeley.

“Mom txtng!”

Not quite as startling as when Mom jumped off the cliff into the underground swimming hole in Mexico, or tried the rope swing across a stream. Both on the same family trip.The boys were truly rattled. At that point, I decided all I needed to do was get a tattoo and they'd come unhinged. Just a little butterfly on the ankle would do. Alas, there were no rub-on temporary tattoos to be found when I decided to do it. Well, two out of three isn’t a bad success rate when it comes to rattling the kids.

With my second text I learned how to insert spaces between words. I already knew where I wanted them; I just couldn’t  figure out how to do it. “Try zero,” a friend suggested. “There aren’t any alphabet letters on the zero key.” She was right.

No, my phone doesn’t have a keyboard. Just a number pad. You can imagine the hardship. Still, I am tenacious. Even if it takes me five minutes to compose and send a three line text, I’m doing it, if I have to send a text, which won't be often. 

“Nobody communicates by voicemail anymore, Mom,” #1 son says. Maybe that’s why he rarely returns mine. “People say, ‘I don’t listen to my voicemail. If you want to contact me, text me.’” It’s more efficient," he says. I’ll take his word for it. I’m all for efficiency.

Still, I’d rather talk to someone, a BFF, in person. You know, with eye contact, facial expressions, body language, real laughs instead of LOL - - - all the nonverbal cues you don’t get from letters on a screen.

Two caveats as I enter this brave new world:

  1. I don't use my cell very often. We still have what is known as a land line. So lower your expectations accordingly, if you had any.
  2. I won't text and drive. 

im jst sayn

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Mother's Day

TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2008


Thinking of Mom



In memory of Lorene Ethel Miller Craner

One of my earliest memories is sitting in my mother’s lap while she read to me. A favorite poem of mine was “Father William” by Lewis Carroll. My mother had a lovely voice and was very expressive. She always said it made me laugh when she read:

“You are old, father William,” the young man said,
“And your hair has become very white.
And yet you incessantly stand on your head;
Do you think, at your age, it is right?”

“In my youth,” father William replied to his son,
“I feared it might injure the brain;
But, now that I'm perfectly sure I have none,
Why, I do it again and again.”

My mother became a librarian and was an insatiable reader all of her life. She worked at the old Salt Lake City Public Library when I was in junior high school, and I would often go to work with her in the evenings. On the top floor of the library was a room where you could choose a record (yes, a vinyl 33 rpm record), sit at a desk, put on earphones, and a member of the library staff would play the record just for you. I completed a lot of homework there, listening to great music and gazing out over the historic old City County Building.

Education was very important to my parents, and they eventually made great sacrifices to finish their college degrees. Before Pearl Harbor and marriage, they each completed about a year and a half of college at Lewis and Clark State Normal school in Lewiston, Idaho, my mother’s hometown. Then my father enlisted in the Navy and became a pilot, stationed in the Pacific. The remainder of their courtship took place through letters and telegrams, and they decided to marry when my father could arrange a leave.

My mother traveled on a bus all the way from Lewiston, Idaho to Jacksonville, Florida, to marry my father. She later admitted to me that when she arrived in Jacksonville, she couldn’t quite remember what her fiance looked like, as she hadn’t seen him for months, so she made sure to be the last one off the bus, and there he was, a young man with blond hair, blue eyes and a dazzling smile, looking splendid in his Navy uniform. And, yes, she did remember him after all.

They found a Mormon bishop and were married that afternoon. When the local Mutual Improvement Association (MIA) leaders heard about the wedding, they turned that evening’s activity into an impromptu party for the newlyweds. That was my parents’ wedding reception, celebrated among kind strangers.

My father bought a box of chocolates for his new bride, and it was on her honeymoon that she discovered she was allergic to chocolate. Then he had to find a drugstore and buy a bottle of Calamine lotion to dab on her angry red hives.

When my father returned home from the war, a lovely baby girl, my oldest sister, was waiting to meet him. Then two more daughters were born, and my parents joined the ranks of Baby Boomer Parents.

When my oldest sister enrolled in college, my parents decided to go back to school, too. They each held down full time jobs while they attended the University of Utah and finished their Bachelor’s degrees. Our family life changed dramatically at that time, as the next daughter also began her studies at BYU, and I was the only child living at home. The dining room table was covered with books and papers, and someone was always studying or typing a paper on our trusty manual typewriter.

Once my parents took a class together. When the professor read their names on the roll, he asked if they were related. “Only by marriage,” quipped my mother.

My father took me aside a few weeks later and informed me that in class, my mother was an “apple polisher” (teacher’s pet), and he found that rather irritating. A few days later my mother took me aside and told me that if my father would only follow the instructions in the syllabus and complete the assignments as directed, he would do better in the class. As you might guess, she got an A at the end of the term, and he got a B. I was relieved when they didn’t take any more classes together.

I’m sure everyone remembers the momentous day when their parents sat them down and told them “the facts of life.” I was the third daughter but my mother, a shy person who could never bring herself to talk about intimacy between husbands and wives, handed me a library book on the subject instead. She did say that I could ask her questions after I read it, but I didn’t have the courage to follow up on her offer. I knew she would be mortified.

Then my parents each completed a master’s degree—my father’s in History and Political Science at the University of Utah and my mother’s in Library Science at Brigham Young University. This involved significant commitment and frequent commuting for both of them.

By that time I was in college, too, breaking with tradition to attend Utah State University in Logan, about ninety miles away from home. I married my college sweetheart the day after I finished my Bachelor’s Degree, and we honeymooned in Chicago, where he earned his law degree and I obtained my Master’s Degree in Speech-Language Pathology. I worked for many years with people of all ages who had disabilities, to improve their speech and language skills. It was a rewarding career.

My mother always wanted to write a book about her ancestors. The title was going to be The Cardwells of Virginia. An avid genealogist, she acquired boxes of photocopied documents, pictures, and handwritten notes in preparation to write the book. Those boxes live in my basement now; cancer ended her life at age 66, and her book was never written. My father passed away eight years later from a stroke.

I began to pursue a writing career as my husband and I became empty-nesters and our own three sons all left home to attend college. My first book came about when I met writer Shaunda Wenger of Nibley, Utah. She had a splendid proposal for a book: we would pair selections from great literature with original recipes, and then organize the material like a traditional cookbook.

The work was intense and challenging, and I often wished I could call my mother for help. She had been a reference librarian, and when I was searching for copyright information, great books that might have passages we could use, or a good recipe, I would close my eyes and think, “Mom, help!” And I did feel her support. I believe both of my parents were cheering me on from the other side.

The Book Lover’s Cookbook: Recipes Inspired by Celebrated Works of Literature, and the Passages that Feature Them
, was published in 2003 by Ballantine, a division of Random House. I know my parents would have been proud, as they introduced me to great literature at a young age, proofed every paper I wrote for school assignments, and always encouraged me to discover the joy of reading. Many of the selections in our literary cookbook came from literature I was exposed to while I was growing up. Unknowingly, all my life I was being prepared to write a book about books.

Then I finally completed Don't You Marry the Mormon Boys, a novel published by Cedar Fort in 2007. The title comes from an old folk song my father used to play on the record player. Writing a book demands many different skills, and I am grateful that the seeds of my writing career were planted early by my parents.

As I wrote, I drew from my rich pioneer heritage on my father’s side, weaving family tales and lore I had heard all my life into my story. Many of my characters’ names were significant, as I borrowed them from our ancestors.

I’m sure that wherever my parents are, they took a moment to smile when they learned that in my book a clever border collie is named Eliza R. Snow (not an ancestor), after a famous Utah pioneer poet. As I reflected on my heritage, the solid values my parents taught me, and the careers I followed based on the gifts and talents I inherited from them, I wrote the following dedication in my book:
“To my mother, who married a Mormon boy.”

Saturday, May 12, 2012



Jason F. Wright’s column is always thought-provoking. In this one he describes overhearing a conversation between father and daughter in the next aisle at the grocery store. Intrigued, he finally pushes his cart around the corner to see who’s been talking. The outcome was the subject of his column.

I’ve experienced that, only I’ve been on the other side. I was shopping with my youngest son one day, and when he saw the latest Lego offering, he said, “Mother, that is absolutely maaaagnificent.” A curious shopper came around the corner and did a double-take when she saw the child who had uttered such big words. He was 2 ½ at the time. 


Friday, May 4, 2012

When I grow up I want to be a Tupperware Lady Part ll


Last week I bared my soul about Tupperware. I've done a little research since. 
Today's post takes on a historical and even an academic perspective, 
one I had lacked until logging on to pbs.org.

Tupperware is even the subject of a PBS Documentary aired on The American Experience series. From an article by University of Minnesota Historian Elaine Tyler May, on the subject of women and business following World War ll: 


 "Another way women extended their homemaker role was in enterprises, like Tupperware. It was one of several occupations that homemakers could do at home, in their spare time, that became careers. They could sell products to women through their homes or friendship networks, and they could make money; they could become part of a business operation. There were other businesses -- Mary Kay, cosmetic companies -- that enabled women to sell to other women, in ways that didn't really conflict with their homemaker role. 


"Getting together mid-morning while your kids were at school, having coffee -- the Tupperware enterprise grows out of the professionalization of homemaking, and the business expertise that went into running a home. It was an extension -- almost a natural extension -- of being a homemaker."


 Also on the PBS website is an article about the documentary, which notes:


 "Tupperware seemed to be custom-made for a post-war America in love with modern conveniences. But it wasn't an instant success. Its creator, Earl Tupper, spent years tinkering with his machines in the heart of Massachusetts' plastics industry. Eventually, he figured out how to mold raw polyethelene, developed for use in weapons, into food containers. Inspired by a paint can, in 1945 he developed the watertight, airtight Tupper seal. But his Wonderbowl languished on store shelves.


"In 1947 a young mother and divorcĂ© named Brownie Wise was living in Detroit when she stumbled across Tupper's product. Wise was a self-taught saleswoman who never got past eighth grade growing up in rural Georgia, but she had an intuitive gift for marketing. In 1951, she traveled to Massachusetts to meet with Tupper. She argued that his products should be sold not in stores, but at home parties, where women would demonstrate the revolutionary, unbreakable bowls to their friends and neighbors. Tupper not only bought her reasoning, he hired her on the spot to head up his entire sales operation, Tupperware Home Parties. 




 "From the company's lush new headquarters just outside Orlando, Florida, Wise began to train an army of Tupperware ladies to put on parties and recruit new women into the business. She inspired and motivated her sales force, rewarding them with minks, appliances, and European vacations. Wise developed exuberant annual Jubilees -- filmed by the company, and excerpted in this documentary -- that were equal parts costume party, business training, cheerleading, and Hollywood glitz." 


 A moment for a confession: Before visiting the PBS website and learning more about life in post-World War ll, I had not considered Tupperware in the context of empowering women to achieve success in the business world while raising their families. After World War ll, many jobs women had performed were claimed by veterans and the new generation of young men seeking employment. I'm a baby boomer, and these women who became very savvy while working out of their homes (and supporting their families) paved the way for me to do something I was more suited to do: go to college. That's the route I took, and I had a satisfying career. I worked hard, but the opportunities were there, too, and I have always been grateful for my education. Truly, I'm a lousy sales person. I couldn't have made it as a Tupperware Lady, not if my life depended on it. 


 I mentioned that my mother never owned a piece of Tupperware, at least not to my knowledge. If she did, it was probably a gift. World War ll, marriage and motherhood interrupted her college education, and my father's, too, for a number of years. I'm the youngest of three, and by the time I was in 9th grade my sisters were in college. Then both of my parents went back to college. There I was, still in Junior High. Sometimes home was a lonely place. It seemed like everyone was always studying, writing a paper at the dining room table, or away at class. I saw how hard they all worked and how much our family sacrificed in order to earn those college degrees. That was always my perspective, and it's what I was taught by their example: do well in school, get accepted to a good college (and earn a scholarship), do well in college, go to graduate school, and pursue a worthwhile career. It was the path I was more or less groomed to follow, and, as I have said, was more suited to follow. 


 So, in all seriousness, my hat is off to Tupperware Ladies all over the world. You accomplish great things, all kidding aside. We really share a sisterhood, no matter how we feel about plastic bowls and parties. Women who have succeeded in business by using their talents and their courage, without the benefit of a formal college education, are even greater achievers in my book. I hope you understand that I still think people are funny, though, no matter what hat they may wear. Life is funny. That's my story and I'm stickin' to it. 


 You can log onto PBS and share your Tupperware Story. Really. And you can answer the question: “Has Tupperware affected you?” Viewers are invited to respond. There’s a Teacher’s Guide and you can even watch the bonus Jubilee Fashion Show video. 


From the PBS article: "It was like a fairy tale," remembers dealer Li Walker. "Like you're in a wonderland."  


It just doesn’t get any better than that, folks.