I Love Chocolate for Breakfast!

I’ve been in a life filled with torrential winds for months. Sometimes I’ve hidden, other times I’ve had to step up front and center. I don’t know if it’s the little glimpses of sunshine I’ve gotten this week, or that I’m finally over this last cold/flu, but I’m ready to change things up and stop letting life toss me around.

A few months ago, a couple friends and I had a Twitter thread discussing the pleasures of having chocolate for breakfast. I like chocolate throughout the day, but especially a little taste for breakfast. Part of my change up is indulging that desire. General Mills has made it a little easier with their chocolate Cheerios and I’ve discovered a wonderful tea from Tisano that is chocolate…oh my!

Now don’t get me wrong. I’m not embarking on a decadent or unhealthy approach to life and work. On the contrary, I’ve been exercising and eating well. In fact I am only 3 pounds away from what the doctor said was a good target weight and I’ve lost 20 pounds over the past 2 years! What I am doing is more of the things I let go because so many other things seemed more important.

The biggest lesson I’ve learned in my time in the storm is that guilt and regret are terribly negative influences. And undeserved guilt and false regrets are insulting to who I am meant to be. I love  to read. I love to write even more. With everything spinning around and around, taking a few minutes (or even an afternoon) to indulge in reading a new book made me feel like I was surely letting someone down. All the events made great excuses to avoid the real work of writing, which I know is my true calling.

So no more accepting undeserved guilt…and I’m working on fulfilling dreams and ambitions without excuse. It is a beautifully sunny day. The snow is melting a bit. Life is good.

So here’s how I start narrowing my focus to keep this blog relevant and interesting to me and my friends: I’m probably going to read a new book this weekend, I’m going to finish my new short story by tomorrow, and I’m going to have chocolate for breakfast every day. Join me on Monday, February 14 for a new look and new ways of indulging in little pleasures that keep life fun, healthy, and guilt-free.

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The Office of Letters and Light–NaNoWriMo, The Blog

For the entire month of November the Weekly Blog Recommendation will be The Office of Letters and Light for two reasons:

  1. It’s a funny and informative blog for National Novel Writing Month participants.
  2. I will be too busy all month writing a novel in 30 days to evaluate any other blogs.

I don’t exactly understand it, but this writing thing is addictive…especially when you throw in a competition, albeit a prizeless one. The only real reward for participants is the warm fuzzies we get from meeting daily, weekly, and ultimately, the monthly goal.

We’re all really friendly about the whole thing. We have Writing Buddies to join us in the fun. Except when I checked my Writing Buddies’ stats and saw one of them had totally blown me away with her word count, I sorta had a red haze descend over my eyes. I said, “The heck with dinner!” Then I grabbed a glass of water and pecked out 800 more words.

Whew! Now I can sit calmly and edit my writing. Oh, by the way…do this before you take your writing to critique group. Pecking out words in a red-haze-covered frenzy may leave you with red flaming cheeks after the group gets done with you. (Yep…I took my pre-edited manuscript pages. Ouch!)

Write On, friends! Don’t forget to check frequently throughout November with The Office of Letters and Light for inspiration or just a few chuckles.

**50,000 words, here I come!!**

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Do You NaNoWriMo?

Do you have trouble making friends and family leave you alone to write? Well, NaNoWriMo is your perfect opportunity to be officially “under deadline.” National Novel Writing Month is November 1-30. I challenge you to sign up at NaNoWriMo.org. You will receive encouraging emails, have an opportunity to find other writers in your region, and be able to set aside time to write 1667 words a day. I’m signed up. Find me and add me as your Writing Buddy: patriciawarren22. It’s the ultimate writers’ social networking group! Here is the email I received from Lindsey Grant at NaNoWriMo this morning:

Dear NaNo-novelist, First of all, high-five for signing up to write a novel during NaNoWriMo. That was a wise choice, my friend. The world needs your novel, and now is the very best time to write it. We’re gonna have a great time doing it, too! To prepare you for the awesomeness ahead, here is a guide to the month: Today: Set your home region. Tomorrow: Set your time zone. This will alleviate massive end-of-event panic (and, potentially, unnecessary computer smashing) when it comes time to validate your novel. October 31: Kiss the dog, unplug your cable box, and email your family and friends to let them know that you’re about to enter the zone. The NaNoWriMo zone. November 1: Watch the first video pep talk on NaNoWriMo.org, and then write your first 1,667 words. You can also update your word count in the box in the top right-hand corner of the website (or, of course, in your Author Profile). November 3: Discover that what you’re writing so far wasn’t necessarily what you were planning to write. Realize that is okay—great, even—and keep writing in anticipation of what will come next. November 4: Receive the first guest pep talk from Mercedes Lackey. November 5: Go into the first weekend of November having written 8,335 words. If you’re not there yet, don’t worry! That’s what weekends are for. Aim for 11,669 words by Sunday night and you’ll be golden. November 8: Get ready for one super-inspirational week! You’ll be receiving three pep talks: one from me and two from guest pep talk authors. The pep talks will continue at this pace throughout the month, and will include words of wisdom from more of your favorite published authors. (If you miss a pep talk email, don’t worry! They’ll be posted on the Pep Talks page throughout the month.) November 11: Admit that you’ve grown attached to your characters and miss them when you’re not writing. November 13: Stop what you’re doing and back up your novel on a flash drive, email it to yourself, burn it onto a CD, or do all three! November 16: Take a moment to celebrate your accomplishments over the first half of NaNoWriMo, and give yourself a big treat before diving back in to writing the second half of your November novel. (Suggested rewards: Eating a cake, napping for 30 minutes, finally taking that shower, or washing your writing uniform!) November 17: Stay tuned for an all-day public-radio-style donations drive for NaNo and the Young Writer’s Program. If we hit our fundraising goals, we have a slew of irresistible offers including, but not limited to, humiliating ourselves on video. November 19: In addition to International Men’s Day, today is also Municipal Liaison (ML) Appreciation Day. (MLs are our volunteer chapter heads.) Be sure to thank your local ML and shower them when possible with coffee, candies, and breakfast cereals. November 21:  Fly (or take an armchair field trip with your mind) to San Francisco for the fourth annual Night of Writing Dangerously, and join 249 of your fellow Wrimos in writing the fastest and most dangerous fiction this side of the San Andreas Fault. November 25: Winning begins! Once you hit that 50,000-word mark, upload your novel and get whisked to the winner’s page for congratulations, downloadable treats, and your extra-spiffy 2010 Winner Certificate. November 26:  If you’re in the US, fix yourself a post-Thanksgiving turkey-cranberry-stuffing sandwich. It’s a little-known fact that this is prime novel-finishing writer fuel. If you’ve already won, no matter where you are, wear your Winner Shirt proudly to show the world, “Hey, I’m a Winner!” November 29: If you are still writing, know that I am too. I have never finished a NaNo-novel before 6 PM on November 30. We can do this! Write, write, write! November 30: At midnight wherever you are, NaNoWriMo will come to an end. You’ll have written the rough draft of a novel and earned the title of author. Make a note to yourself to RSVP to your local “Thank God It’s Over Party” (TGIO) after you wake up from your long and much-deserved slumber. As you fall into a deep, dreamless sleep, smile at the knowledge that you did it. You did it! December 1: RSVP to your local TGIO party and contemplate more sleep. No doubt, you need it. When you awake, the “I Wrote a Novel, Now What?” and “Winner’s Goodies” pages will be live, and you’ll be well-rested enough to think (maybe just a little bit) about what you want to do with your November novel. December 2: Welcome to the first day of the rest of your life as a writer. Hopefully that gives you an idea of how the next 30-plus days will go. In these final hours of pre-noveling prep, hug your loved ones, stock the pantry, and stretch those fingers. We’re about to write! Lindsey NaNoWriMo

See you Monday!! Write On, my Friends!

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Coming Full Circle: My Journey as a Marine Mom

Sixteen months ago we got a phone call from our son that changed my life. “I’m joining the Marines.” This wasn’t the first time I had heard those words from our boy. He had talked about it since he was in middle school. He signed up for the Delayed Enlistment Program in his junior year of high school but changed his mind. I was good with that…it seemed too soon to make life-changing decisions. This time the words rang true, especially when they were followed by the words, “I’m leaving in 30 days for boot camp.”

In our family, military service is not unusual. My husband spent 22 years in the US Air Force. Many of his family members served when drafted during World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. His dad’s brother retired from 20 years in the Navy, as did his son. That cousin’s daughter is currently serving. On my side of the family, my father served 30 years with the Marines. Both my sisters’ husbands have served: one retired with 20 years in the Marines, the other currently in the Marine Reserves. But somehow it is different now.

Four of our boys are United States Marines. And all of them enlisted voluntarily during war time under a Commander-in-Chief with questionable foreign policy experience. Three of those boys will be deployed to the war zones at different times during the next year. First to leave in less than a month is my middle sister’s son-in-law. His wife and little boy will be coming back from across the country to be with family while he is gone. Then my sister’s oldest son leaves shortly after the holidays. My son’s best friend leaves in early spring. My son will be heading to the bad place around this time next year. The youngest of our Marines, my baby sister’s boy, is starting MCT (Marine Corps Training–a shortened version of infantry training for non-infantry specialties) this week. He will then head to the mid-west for his specialty training. Since he is a reservist like his father, he will be attending college next fall and maybe not have to deploy before he finishes school.

We are very proud of our boys. They are our heroes.

On the outside, all this doesn’t seem to have made much difference. My life has progressed as usual. It’s funny how that happens. I still keep our grandson everyday. Things are moving along nicely toward our oldest daughter’s wedding in December. We chat or text with our girls daily, our son occasionally. Life has some very pleasurable moments. But sometimes I feel like I am standing outside my life watching it go by.

See once upon a time, I had a little boy who refused to go to bed until I was home. That meant after attending night classes, I had to help him get to sleep. And then when he was a bit older, I had to assure him that I would come and get him if he got too homesick at Boy Scout camp. When he was in high school I took him lunch almost every day. He would sneak and text me throughout the day. Just silly things usually starting with, “What’s up?”

I know kids grow up.  And I’m pretty good at letting go, at least I always thought I was. But the 10 second phone call the night he left for boot camp was hours too short. The time between the phone call from his Drill Instructor informing us that he was being sent to the medical platoon and the next letter we got was eons too long. And he celebrated his 20th birthday alone in the midst of strangers…when our family has always been known for celebrating each birthday twice: once on the day of and again when it was convenient to have guests. Then when boot camp graduation finally arrived, instead of a boy’s arms wrapping around me, it was a man who held me close and whispered, “I missed you so much.”

At home the whirlwind had just begun. Our Marine married his high school sweetheart on Veteran’s Day 2009. His wife and I drove him down to MCT a few days later. Because I keep our daughter’s little boy, he had to go as well. He had a hard time understanding why we had to pull over and sit a while: neither of the women in the car could see to drive after watching our Marine walk away once more. A month later he was home again, this time assigned to his recruiter’s office for a few weeks in December. January through April he was gone again to his specialty training. When he finished there and was finally at his duty station, he had to wait a month to bring his wife down to live with him. Finally I had a few months to get used to this new kind of normal.

Then a friend’s son was killed in Afghanistan on September 1, 2010. Heartbroken for their family, my own life screeched to a halt while I tried to find a balance between grieving for them and getting on with our own lives. But I was forever changed. Reality is now so very REAL. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan aren’t just something happening “out there.” For a while I couldn’t think of anything else. I got updates nearly daily in my email of young men who had to be met by their grieving families at Dover Air Force Base. I finally stopped my Marine parents support site from sending me emails. It became too much for me.

I am standing here trying once again to find my balance. If I don’t blog as often as I did, it’s because I want to be relevant and fun but not frivolous with my writing. Work on my novel has slowed to a crawl, not put away, just waiting inspiration again. If you see my Facebook profile page loaded with Farmville play time or a silly status update, don’t think too harshly of me. Sometimes I need to connect with people, especially other Marine families and that’s who a lot of my Farmville friends are. They understand better than most how the silence in the house can seem deafening; how the lack of texts or calls from my boy occasionally gives me a stomachache; how fear can creep up and crush my heart, leaving me breathless. And they understand how visiting face-to-face is sometimes too hard, too raw. So we comfort each other with typewritten words and silly games.

Yes, I am a proud, flag-waving, hand-over-my heart, pledge-saying Marine mom. Sometimes I feel like shouting OORAH! Other times it’s all I can do to whisper, “Dear God please keep him safe.” But know this: you can sleep soundly tonight because my Marine has your back.

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3 Reasons You Should Enter Book Giveaway Contests

I got a Writer’s Digest Facebook update today featuring a giveaway by Chuck Sambuchino, editor of the Guide to Literary Agents. Now really the giveaway is a shameless self-promotion for his books, but guess what? That’s reason number one you should enter giveaway contests:

  1. Following the giveaway contest rules helps other writers promote their work. Because when you post about the giveaway to receive extra chances in the drawing, your friends who may not have otherwise heard of Chuck Sambuchino and his new book, How to Survive a Garden Gnome Attack, get to learn about it. Case in point for me: Yesterday I featured Terry Odell’s blog as my Weekly Blog Recommendation (WBR). Today she posted a link back to Typing One-Handed on her blog. I use the WBR to share the places I like to visit in the blogosphere. Bonus for me, thanks to Terry, is that her readers will now know that I am also out here.
  2. Entering a contest where you have the opportunity to write a brief blurb about said contest will help you learn some basic marketing techniques, either to promote your work, or just your blog. This is really a great bonus — one of the hardest things for me is to state briefly what my book is about without going into too much detail. Training in brevity is important to the elevator pitch as well as synopsis writing.
  3. There is free stuff! In this case, Chuck is giving away a copy of Gnome Attack along with his two other books specifically for writers: 2011 Guide to Literary Agents and Formatting and Submitting Your Manuscript. Did I mention FREE?!? This giveaway is worth $68 retail. Considering the amount of money I personally spend on books, both in print and digitally, free is good!

By the way, if you are now intrigued by Chuck’s giveaway, you can find out more about it at the Guide to Literary Agents Editor’s Blog.

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To Plot or Not To Plot…Is That the Question?

I really want to be organized when I write. I want to have a neat outline from which I can start typing and, by the time I finish, have a wonderful manuscript ready for submission. Alas, that just doesn’t fit in with my spontaneous personality. I spend a lot of time visiting my WIP world in my brain. I scratch down some scene ideas, which I may or may not use. Then I sit at the computer and let fly whatever will come out of that hodge-podge. It sorta works for me…

Until I get to that sagging middle part. Some scenes are necessary for the story progression but aren’t as much fun as the action or love scenes. I don’t want to bore my

readers, so I struggle to make the flow smooth.

I was relieved to read several posts by author Terry Odell that address this subject. In Don’t Ask Me for Blueprints, Terry says, “Plot points come and go.” In another post,

Read more of this post at KYOWA Writers

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Writing a Page Turner: Cliffhanger Practice via Flash Fiction

We’ve all done it. We start reading a book that is so good we can’t put it down. Next thing we know it’s morning, the dishes are still in the sink, we can barely see, and all day we stifle yawns to keep our friends, families, and co-workers from knowing we stayed up all night. Then, at the first chance we get, we scour Borders’ bookshelves looking for the author’s next book.

Writing a cliffhanger is not easy. One of the greatest challenges with my work-in-progress (WIP) is keeping the chapters from trailing off into boring. Figuring out the right combination of scenes to make the reader want to turn the page rather than grab a bookmark and go to bed is a talent that takes practice.

I may have discovered a secret to helping develop that talent in the serial blog posts of Simon C. Larter at Constant Revision and Mercedes M. Yardley at A Broken Laptop. Stilettos & Shirley Temples has kept me eager for new episodes for five weeks so far. I wrote a post on the importance of accountability based on their collaboration here. I’ve been updating it each week with links to the new installments. After reading today’s installment, I had to address what makes this my favorite one so far: it left me groaning that I have to wait a week to find out what Mercedes is about to reveal to Simon. It is the ideal example of what makes a good cliffhanger ending.

Simon tells us on his blog that he is a flash fiction specialist. Wikipedia defines flash fiction like this:

Flash fiction differs from a vignette in that the flash-fiction might contain the classic story elements: protagonist, conflict, obstacles or complications, and resolution. However, unlike the case with a traditional short story, the limited word length often forces some of these elements to remain unwritten, that is, hinted at or implied in the written storyline. This principle, taken to the extreme, is illustrated in a possibly apocryphal story about a six-word flash reportedly penned by Ernest Hemingway: “For sale: baby shoes, never worn.”

Writing a novel, no matter the genre, requires putting together a collection of scenes that show the story. Each of these scenes must resolve, while leading into the set up of the next scene. The basic elements of fiction are defined as:

1) Protagonist: Each scene must be important to our protagonist (or heroine/hero aka main character), even if that protagonist doesn’t have dialog in that scene.

2) Conflict: Conflict is the vehicle through which our protagonist gains experience or insight to get to resolution.

3) Obstacles: Each scene must present an obstacle that our protagonist must overcome. Because of these obstacles, our protagonist must make a decision that will determine the direction of the story.

4) Resolution: At the end of the story, our readers must feel that the story is resolved. With a thriller, the protagonist must survive to fight another day. With a romance, there must be a happily ever after or a happily for now. Some contemporary literature doesn’t resolve as satisfactorily as we might like (ala, Nicholas Sparks), but the protagonist grows through the story, and thus it is resolved.

Flash fiction is a study in judicious editing. There is no room for extraneous facts. The story must be complete in under 1000 words. While a fiction story may contain chapters with more than 1000 words, the story line may begin to drag if the individual scenes exceed 1000 words by very much. With flash fiction, some of the main story may only be hinted at, but the main idea of the story is completely revealed.

Look at the Hemingway example again: “For sale: baby shoes, never worn.” What is the story implied by these cryptic words? It could be a pregnancy unrealized, either through miscarriage or infertility. Personally, I think it likely was not a for sale ad placed by the mother, because I myself would be unable to part with whatever little I had left of the hopes of a child. Someone else might disagree, thinking this step enabled the woman to move on with her life. Regardless, the story of loss is plain while never explicitly written.

Flash fiction is concise with only the most important details spelled out. The skill of writing short, rich stories is evident in Simon’s and Mercedes’ collaboration. Each week, we want to “turn the page” and see what comes next. This is a skill I really want to learn to make my writing more appealing. What about you?

Writing Challenge: Pick a topic and try to write a complete story using the elements of flash fiction, staying strictly within the limits of 55 to 1000 words. Share your story on your blog and post a link in the comments or just put your whole story here if you like. I will write another post listing all the links, promoting your writing here, on Facebook, and on Twitter.

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Bad Boys vs Heroes: Why Our Readers Need to Love Them Both

SYFY's New Original TV series, Haven

SYFY's New Original TV series, Haven (photo from SYFY website)

As a fan of weird stuff, I am really liking the new SYFY series Haven. And, as a writer in the middle of writing the first of a paranormal romance trilogy, I love it! The storyline is fairly typical: smart and beautiful heroine gets a choice between straight arrow and good-looking hero or smokin’ hot bad boy with redeeming qualities. To keep this storyline from being boring, SYFY has based their new series on The Colorado Kid, a novella by the always weird, but amazingly talented Stephen King. I doubt if either SYFY or Stephen King intended their works to be romance stories, but every good story has a romance element in it.

FBI Agent Audrey Parker, played by Emily Rose (photo from SYFY website)

Our heroine in Haven is FBI agent Audrey Parker, played by Emily Rose. Agent Parker already has a reputation for seeing the paranormal in her cases. She is sent to Haven to catch an escaped prisoner and stays after being caught up in the unusual circumstances of his death. Each episode sees Audrey thrown into the company of two of Haven’s most handsome residents.

Nathan Wournos, played by Lucas Bryant

Nathan Wournos, played by Lucas Bryant (photo from SYFY website)

Agent Parker first encounters local cop and story hero Nathan Wournos, played by Lucas Bryant,within minutes of the opening of the first episode. Nathan has all the trappings of the perfect hero. He is the strong silent type with a secret he tries to hide, but has revealed quickly in the first episode. His perceived weakness doesn’t make him any less attractive. In fact, it makes him a bit more fascinating than he would be if he were a too-perfect hero type.

Duke Crocker, played by Eric Balfour

Duke Crocker, played by Eric Balfour (photo from SYFY website)

The bad boy of Haven is Duke Crocker, played by smokin’ hot Eric Balfour. Supposedly a black marketeer, Duke is seriously disliked by Nathan and really doesn’t like to talk to cops–until Audrey falls at his feet…well sort of. She is knocked unconscious by an electrical box explosion and falls into the water near his boat. She wakes up naked in his bed. When she finds him reading a newspaper on the deck of his boat, she is dressed only in his chambray shirt and her service revolver. He responds to her accusation, “You took my clothes,” with a knockout grin and, “Good morning.” This is the delicious beginning to a series full of sexual tension.

As romance writers, sexual tension is what we are looking for. We want our readers to be drawn into the relationships of our heroine and her male counterparts. Usually readers pull for the hero to “get the girl.” With the addition of a bad boy with redeeming qualities, readers find themselves rooting for him too, particularly if the interaction between them heats up and makes us want to be in her shoes. (And with Eric’s killer smile, how can we not want that?!)  A storyline where the choice is unclear till the very end will bring readers back to the next book, or in this case, episode.

Our task is to write characters as appealing as Nathan and Duke, making them work as hero and bad boy as well as Lucas and Eric play them. Writing Challenge: Watch a few episodes of Haven…you can see them on SYFY.com. Take notes on what makes these characters so attractive (other than the obvious) and tell what makes their scenes with Audrey work so well. Let me know what you come up with, if you like.

PS: I almost always pull for the smokin’ hot bad boy! ;p

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Writers Write Day is Today!

I received this email from author Rita Gerlach with the ACFW. I’m game, are you? I’ll be writing from 10:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., then 8:30 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. (or so).

Writers Write Day ~ Wednesday, August 11

Writers, there is a tug-o-war going on for your attention. It mostly comes in the guise of the Internet. Next Wednesday, August 11 is Writers Write Day. The goal of this all day event is to immerse writers in their manuscripts without the distractions of blogs, Facebook, social networking sites, news sources, etc.. Let’s admit it, they do pull us away, and sometimes hours go by and we have lost valuable writing time.

Here is what to do.

1. Put a ‘do not disturb’ sign on your door.
2. Write for at least three hours in the morning. If you start at 9am that will bring you up to the noon hour.
3. Take a lunch break.
4. Write for four hours in the afternoon.
5. That evening post on your blog, Facebook, etc. how it went. How much work did you get done?

Here is what you CANNOT do.

1. Do not peruse the Internet. That includes Facebook and other social networking sites.
2. Do not make phone calls unless absolutely necessary, and make them during your break.
3. No text messaging.
4. No television or radio, but by all means listen to inspirational music that helps the creative juices flow.

Let your family and friends know that you will be going into a day of seclusion to work on your manuscript. Hope you have an incredible time writing.

Rita

Homepage: http://ritagerlach.com/

Blog: InSpire: http://inspire-writer.blogspot.com/

Stepping Stones for Readers: http://steppingstones4readers.blogspot.com/

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3 Simple Steps to Being a Good Facebook Friend

Occasionally I like to play games on Facebook. Most games give you more stuff (coins, etc.) if you update your Facebook status automatically. If you are a frequent player, you can blow up your friends’ news feed with your fun. It is simple to be a considerate friend while still playing your games. If you see an update from a friend that indicates her annoyance with game updates, follow these simple steps to stop your game updates from showing up on her news feed.

1) Click the down arrow on Account in the upper right of your Facebook bar. Scroll to Privacy Settings. Click it.

2) Look all the way to the bottom left of the screen. You will see Applications and Websites. Click Edit Your Settings.

3) Click Edit Settings to the right of Game and application activity. Scroll to Custom and click. You have two options: Make this visible to and Hide this from. Add your friend’s name to the Hide box. Save your settings.

Your friend may never notice that you have done this, but she will appreciate your status updates all the more because she is interested in what you say, not what you play.

This post is dedicated to my sparkly and energetic friend, Linda!

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