A Valid Opinion or A Rant? Censorship?

SOMETHING ABOUT NOTHING
by Julie Seedorf  published in the Albert Lea Tribune May 16, 2017
CensoredI am at a crossroads in my life when it comes to my writing. I feel something moving me forward to not only write the funny and fluffy but to write words that matter — to write words that might make a difference in someone’s life.

I am at a crossroads in my life when it comes to opinions. I am always very careful to not cause controversy. I don’t want to deal with it. I don’t want to offend. I don’t want people to dislike me. I never used to be this careful. I used to speak without thinking and go off on a tangent. And I became tired of fighting for a cause or being at odds with the majority. It was easier to be silent and be fluffy than to speak out.

This week I felt the tangent starting again when I observed something I felt was wrong. I felt the tweaks of the tangent months ago somewhere else, where I felt I couldn’t support decisions being made and I chose to walk away instead of continuing to cause strife with what I felt was a losing battle. I was the minority in thought so I must be wrong. I walked away not because I was a quitter, but because I felt I would cause problems if I kept voicing my opinion because I felt strongly about an issue and it would hurt the good things that were happening.
Someone that I respect recently sent me a note that said, “Writers can change the world.” I felt the pull to write more than fluff. I felt the pull to actually have an opinion. And usually I try and be fair when I state that opinion.

This week — and it was not the Albert Lea Tribune where my column appears— I had a column turned down because I wrote my opinion on something I observed. I also let someone else read it before submitting it, and since I mentioned my books and used the fictional community of Fuchsia as an analogy — this person felt I should not promote my books in my columns even though the intention was an example but they were not upset about the content of the column. That was strike two, and I scratched the column.

They might have been right, and they might have stopped me from making a big mistake in my career. So I am a crossroads in my writing career. I have to ask myself when I write a column or a blog if what I write will makes things better for anyone. Will it make someone question their life or question what is happening in their communities and their world? Will someone pause and make an informed decision? Will something change in the way things are done for the better because of my words? And, because my viewpoint is different from the majority will it be perceived as whining or valid?

I do not know if what I wrote was out of line. I don’t think it was, but I will defer to those who thought perhaps I went too far and let it go for the sake of not upsetting anyone. But, yet, in a way I feel censored. It was my opinion independent of who was publishing it. Yet it would have had repercussions because that is small town politics. I respect them for protecting their business.

Now I am not sure anything I wrote in that column and my opinion was anything but venting about what I observed. You can be sure I will ask myself that the next time I have something with which I have a concern — am I venting or am I making a valid point?

I suspect each and every one of us reads something every day online or in the newspapers that is someone’s opinion about something. We can choose to agree with it or disagree with it. While you are reading the opinion, do a little research to see if what the writer is expressing is valid or a rant, no matter if it is a respected columnist. Is there enough criteria to back up the opinion?

Or does the columnist have a vendetta against the subject?

I want to make a difference whether I write seriously or whether my words turn into lightness and fluff, but I want to do it responsibly. Having my column turned down was perhaps a good intervention if it indeed was a rant. I will put it away for a few days and then take it out and read it and ponder whether it will see the light of day. If I feel it does have merit — well then perhaps I will post it on my blog where everyone will know it is my opinion only.

“The greatest deception men suffer is from their own opinions.” — Leonardo Da Vinci

Rain, Reading and A Giveaway!

NON WISDOMIt’s raining today in Minnesota. We need the rain. It’s May and I love the flowers popping up through the soil and the seeing blossoms on the trees. Yes, it truly feels as if spring is finally here.

I am in organization mode. I am normally not an organized person. I seem to find things better in messy desks and cluttered tabletops but I realize to be productive I might have to do a little organizational work. That is hard for a creative mind because our mind is always spinning with new ideas and it is hard to stay focused on one thing. Today I am trying to not and I repeat—not—multi-task. Do any of you have the multi-task problem?

So far today I have been able to stick to one thing at a time. My bones seemed to creak more when I got up so I put on my Rodney Yee AM Yoga and practiced stretching my bones. I took time for writing in my prayer and gratitude journal, and now I have decided it is the perfect day to give away a few Audio Copies of The Penderghast Puzzle Protectors. Wherever you live, if it’s raining and cloudy and you have the time, pick up a book or hook up your headphones and relax by letting an author take you into another world.

I am giving away five audio copies of The Penderghast Puzzle Protectors. Make a comment about the weather, multi-tasking, or leave me an organizational tip I can pass on and you will be signed up for the the drawing. Drawing will be on Monday. And if you are not signed up for my newsletter on my website julieseedorf.com, hop on over there because some time next week I will be updating my website and I will also give away five audio copies of one of my Fuchsia Books or The Penderghast Puzzle Protectors to someone on my mailing list.

Have a beautiful day and remember one task at at time. Try it you might like it. I will let you know how that works out for me today.

A Mother’s Hands


imageI have my mother’s hands. When I look at my hands today I see my mother’s hands. How did it happen? Where did the time go? My hands have aged into my mother’s aged hands that I remember.

My mother’s hands were not the hands of many women of her day or of today. In her older years her hands were gnarled with arthritis and bumpy from broken fingers and broken bones and wear earned during her years of hard work. My mother had a worker’s hands. She wasn’t afraid to use her hands to dig in her garden, help take care of the farm animals and scrub floors or do other tasks. She often wore gloves and she used lotion religiously, but still her hands were dry and cracked, and her skin as she got older thinned out and bruised easily. I remember looking at her hands and listening to her explanation that nothing she did to take care of them made a difference.

I don’t have worker hands or at least I don’t work as hard as my mother did at manual labor. I too use lotion and try and do the best I can to take care of my hands, but they are my mother’s hands. The skin has thinned with age and they bruise easily. My knuckles show the signs of aging and creaky bones. It doesn’t matter how much lotion I use, if I skip a day my hands become dry and bleed easily. When I look at my hands and see my mother’s hands, it brings me comfort and the blessing of memories.

I was an only child. My mother and I didn’t always see eye to eye. I didn’t understand her and she didn’t understand me. I didn’t always treat her the way she should have been treated but there is one thing we both knew through all our trials and that is our love bound us together through the good and bad.

Mother’s Day is this week, and I miss my mother on Mother’s Day. I don’t think I ever missed a Mother’s Day with my mother. I might not always have spent the entire day with her, but we did see each other on Mother’s Day. And even through my busy life and move, we talked every week — a couple times a week.

My mom didn’t really care about gifts. What she cherished the most was seeing and hearing from her grandchildren on her special days and during the week. To her those were her gifts.

As I ponder Mother’s Day in 2016 I want to offer a little advice for those younger whose busy lives lead them in other directions away from home. I have heard the words in conversations with others, “Oh, my kids are busy. They don’t have time to call. I understand that because they are busy with work and family. They have their life. It’s OK because I want them to be happy and they are so stressed I don’t want to add to it.”

Those words are words of love from a mother’s heart because that is what mothers do, they sacrifice for their children even after their children have left home. Mothers put aside their feelings because they love their family. Until you become a parent and reach older age you might not understand the love it takes for an older parent to put aside feelings on special days because they want their children to have it easier.

As a daughter I would give anything to be able to pick up the phone each week and talk to my mother. I would give anything to be able to ask her about her day and her week. I would give anything to be able to tell her I love her and I am sorry for all the times I didn’t take time to listen to her if only for a few minutes.

The best gift you can give your mother on Mother’s Day is the gift of a call and the promise you will take time to call regularly throughout the year. Ask her about her life and what she is doing. Show an interest in her day-to-day activities. Even in our older age we need someone to be interested in what we are doing. That’s all a mother wants is to be shown a little love and given a little time, even if it is a few minutes on the phone. The next time you think about telling your mom you haven’t called because you are too busy, remember that time waits for no one and there will come a day when you call, and she is no longer able to answer.

Happy Mother’s Day to all the mothers out there. I wish you the gift of feeling loved and cherished because you had and have the most important job in the world, that is raising up children in the way they should go.

As I look at my hands and remember my mother’s hands I still feel the love of a touch, the hands on my brow when I was sick, the feel of her hug and the squeeze of her hand giving me assurance. Happy Mother’s Day in heaven, Mom. I love you, and I love the heaven line to talk to you. It is never busy.