Join me this summer on board my magic carpet in Greece for a personalized Writer's Workshop. Limited spaces are available.
https://barbaramolin.blogspot.com/p/writers-retreat.html?m=1
https://barbaramolin.blogspot.com/p/writers-retreat.html?m=1
Great news! At last, I managed to organize the Kindle version of my newest book. It is now available. You can read a sample from my print version until then. Enjoy!
I am in the middle of writing my newest book about what I wish I had learned when I was young and stupid and what I had to learn the hard way on my won over the years. Here is the introduction.
Introduction
Oh, if I only knew at 18 what I know now, my life would have been so much better! This is what many of us, older people wish for. We would trade in an instant everything we have, to be young once again, but with the wisdom we've gathered over a lifetime.
Yet, when we try to advise our children and grandchildren, so that they don't make the same mistakes, they don't want to listen. "Stop giving advice," they say. "Our world is so much different from yours."
There's a full moon called The Wolf Moon outside in the clear sky and 10°C inside my boat this morning. But only for a moment. The heater is on now, a hot water bottle against my back and a mug of hot ginger tea in my hands. It's not even 4am, but I am wide awake. 🥱 I should stop going to bed at 8:00.🙂
It's time to get back to my work in progress after a break for the holidays.
My father was always asking me what my goals were and so for a few years now, I have been doing just that. Making plans for the next five years, the next year, the next month, and then writing down the milestones for each week.
I don't always reach my goals, but it's like going on a hike. It's good to have a map and the destination circled, but you don't always have to follow the trail and sometimes you even have to adjust your destination.
For several years, I wanted to buy a house and have a garden. But I've now changed my mind. I love living on my boat and being able to move whenever I wish. And so I've adapted my long-term goal and the steps along the way. I'll be staying on board Eidos for the forseeable future. I will continue to write, and I am happy to report that I published two books last year.
So what are your dreams, plans, and goals for the next few years?
But I haven't been idle. The solar panel provides me with enough power to charge my laptop. And so, my latest book is nearly finished. More stories of sailing. These are a few chapters to whet your appetite: How I happened to find and buy Eidos, what can go wrong when trying to get boat insurance, and a story of some problems faced as an older sailor.
I just sent the final draft to Lizzie Bolan, my editor. Meanwhile, I'm searching for a photo for the cover. Keeping my fingers crossed to have it published in time for Christmas.
Noticing how important it has become for me to play a Sudoku game each day, I realized that the game includes a calendar where I get a star for each day I play. Over time, I have become reluctant to miss a day, and if I do, I end up playing two games the next day to make up for the missing one. This way, the calendar becomes filled with stars. That is my only reward, yet very compelling. The game takes 5 or 10 minutes, and it varies in difficulty. I justify playing because it improves my brain skills.
And so I decided to try to use the same system for my writing.
I now have a wall calendar, and every day that I write, even if it is only for 5 minutes, I give myself a star for that day. At the end of a week, I get a small reward - for example coffee out and a desert, and at the end of a month full of stars a bigger one, perhaps a lunch out.
What I found is that I am now 'addicted' to getting those stars. They are very visible on the calendar, that I pass by all the time, and I would not want to miss a day and see a blank spot. If, for some reason, I do miss a day, I make it up with two separate sessions the next day.
So, after three months of successfully following this system, I hope to continue, while my next book grows a page or two at a time.
When I was a child, my parents and my grandmother told me stories of their childhood and youth. I loved to hear those stories in the evening before bed even though some of them were very sad - their experiences during the Second World War. I now regret that I didn't listen more carefully or ask more questions.
I also regret that I didn't do the same thing with my own children. Instead, I read them stories from books of fiction.
It is much more important for children to learn their family history than stories of some fictional characters. I want to correct this now, so the idea of a memoir was born.