What it means to me to be an author (besides the obvious
parenthood of a block of written words):
For me, it started with one meaning: control. You see, my story, Renhala,
started as a single piece of paper littered with a hodgepodge of written fears
and tragic events from my life, with one very tragic event taking me the longest
to write down, the very one I wrote the smallest: the assault. These very small
words, which I thought had the biggest impact on who I was at that time, were
sitting there on the page, laughing at me, despite their puny size. I stared,
and stared at those words, often fighting with myself to roll the paper up and
toss it away, but I knew it really wouldn’t be gone. Those words were going to
haunt me forever, as well as the humiliation associated with them—the
humiliation inflicted by the hands of a total stranger on a very dark day of my
life.
But one day, out of the blue and in a moment of surprising
triumph, I gathered my strength and flipped that stupid piece of paper over and
began writing more words, different words.
These words began as a small story about a young woman who was assaulted who
loses her mother—her only support— to disease, which then morphed into another story of a young woman who suffered the
same fate, but befriended some new, supportive friends. As the magic began
flowing freely from my fingertips, this same young woman then mastered a new weapon and her destiny was changed forever. I
finally felt better about myself—felt better about life—for I was shaping future events. I
wrangled those ugly words and fought them down hard, wrestling and dodging
blows, until I took CONTROL. I took control, and took those
words and kneaded them, molding them into exactly what what I needed, into
something inspiring and uplifting: the mystical land known as Renhala.
*********
I know, that no matter who you are and where you’ve come
from, you’ve had some kind of tragic event, or maybe multiple moments of
tragedy, muddy your life. Perhaps it was the death of a loved one, or sickness,
or bullying, or an assault. Whatever it was, or even is, just know that you can gain the advantage. You can wash
yourself of the bad. Write the words down.
Write those words down as a poem, short story, epic novel, rap song, whatever,
but just write them down. This is how you’ll take the first step in control. This
will be your literary therapeutic jam session. This is how you’ll change the
future.
Change your life by changing the words…
If you’d like to take a journey into Renhala, you can find
it here: http://www.amazon.com/Renhala-ebook/dp/B009I3SO9E/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1356750829&sr=8-1&keywords=renhala
or here: http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/240460
a
nd fun stuff here: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/16050736-renhala
Links to me: www.renhala.com









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