The Millennial Bitch Corner

February 10, 2013

Reblogged from Alaina Mabaso's Blog:

Click to visit the original post

“Narcissistic, broke, and 6 other ways to describe the Millennial generation,” reads the headline of a round-up on Millennials from The Week Magazine’s website, citing sources like The Fiscal Times, The Chronicle of Higher Education and The Gospel Coalition.

According to the article, other ways to describe us include “spendthrift”, entrepreneurial, stressed-out, and less religious than our forebears.

Read more… 1,355 more words

Hi, reader pals. Fun news. HuffPost Live discovered us and has invited me to join a panel discussion on whether Millennials (those born in the 80's and 90's) really are the most stressed-out generation of all, as a new study implies. It was this blog post that caught their notice. So feel free to check it out if you haven't before, and if you want to watch the live discussion, it'll be airing on the HuffPost Live website at 3pm Eastern Time this Monday, February 11th. Here's the link you can follow to watch: http://huff.lv/YjOwmZ If you catch the discussion and you've got something to say, definitely take to the HuffPost comments, and in the meantime, if you're a fan of this blog, share share share the news! The more the merrier. You guys are a great community of readers and I always look forward to hearing what you have to say.

Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off: The Case Against Weddings.

February 1, 2013
My own wedding reception, in July of 2007.

My own wedding reception, in July of 2007.

I’ve got an idea.

High school and college freshmen should all get a party. The night before their first classes, they should celebrate with a big cake, gifts and gift-cards, toasts and a dance party for all their friends. Their intention to finish their diploma or degree merits a big bash.

And why should anyone have to wait until they’re 65 to enjoy the professional accolades of all their friends and colleagues over a catered dinner and plenty of cocktails? If they intend to give a career their best shot, we should encourage them with a lavish celebration before their first day on the job.

If all that actually sounds foolish to you, then why don’t extravagant weddings seem equally unwise?

I don’t want to minimize the boundless suffering of badly-clad bridesmaids, slighted mothers-in-law, and the aftermath of champagne-induced sexual debaucheries.  But a recent New York Times article examines one of the true plagues engendered by our cultural wedding fetish. It’s called “Married to the Plan. Still Looking for a Possible Groom.” It’s about young American women who have their weddings planned all the way down the napkins – even though they don’t even have a boyfriend.

In a stroke of truly incisive and creative reporting, this NYT piece reveals that there are drawbacks to planning your wedding as if the groom is a last-minute prop stitched into a tux.

“First, what some single women imagine may not be feasible and may actually be a waste of effort,” writer Alyson Krueger explains.  She turns to the owner of a wedding trade show company, who says that brides, for example, might dream of guests sipping pumpkin soup. But then, if they get married in, say, Miami, in, say, February, the chef might announce, “I know you love pumpkin soup, but it’s not in season right now.”

Horrors.

“Another problem [as bad as the soup debacle, d’you think?] is the not-quite-bride is not taking into account a future partner and what his needs and considerations might be.”

The trade-show maven goes on.

“‘Even though you have all these ideas and you’ve done your homework and you are prepared as a single girl,’ she said, ‘you have to understand that marriage is a union and you have to take your other half into consideration.’”

But the single girls obsessed with their as-yet-unscheduled weddings weren’t worried.

As one woman explained, “if she met someone she wanted to marry, she doesn’t think his input would matter.”

Krueger does her homework and quotes a clinical psychologist:

“‘I think for anybody it’s much easier to plan a wedding than it is to form a meaningful relationship that is going to lead to a fulfilling marriage.’”

Stop the world, I want to get off.

Not only are women spending untold hours of their lives planning weddings to non-existent grooms. The New York Times finds it necessary to inform us that this one-sided, superficial obsession does not prepare anyone for a real partnership.

I’d like to shake the hand of whoever came up with that angle. I mean, really, thank God for clear-eyed psychologists.

Image from Postsecret.

Image from Postsecret.

It seems to me that lavish weddings are an irresistible incentive for people who have no business embarking on a lifelong emotional, sexual, reproductive, practical and financial partnership.

Imagine a world of marriages, but no weddings.

We would have been spared the whole Kim Kardashian/Kris Humphries fiasco: without the promise of a televised fairy-tale netting millions, these two probably would have forgotten the meaning of the word “marriage” altogether.

Picture it: no Katy Perry/Russell Brand shambles. The world was a grayer place when we all learned that two elephants on a red carpet at a luxe Indian resort does not a marriage make. No acres of tabloids speculating on the wedding of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, when they already have forty-two children together. No millions of pounds for security measures for the wedding of William and Kate when the rest of Europe is rioting over austerity measures.

True, if we abandoned big weddings, it’s not only the wedding industry that would suffer – advice columnists would see a 75% drop in their mail volume, as all those questions about bridesmaids who dare to get pregnant, guests who demand vegan dinners, and deplorably late thank-you cards would cease to exist.

But if, as the American Psychological Association says, 40-50% of all married couples in the US end up divorced, shouldn’t we consider de-incentivizing marriage itself?

My home church produces a pamphlet about the importance of marriage, and it irks me, because the picture on the cover is of a beautiful young couple in a wedding gown and a tux scampering away together on an idyllic beach.

To avoid giving the wrong impression to those who are selfish enough to believe that their future spouse should have no say in what his own wedding is like, I vote for a different wedding pamphlet image.

I could volunteer the image of my husband and me on the morning we had to get up together before dawn so that we could both go to the insurance-mandated mechanic to hand over our totaled car and sign for a supremely ugly rental before we had to be at work. Or the time my husband got raging tonsillitis while we were on our only vacation of the year. Or the time we bought a couch and then realized it wouldn’t fit in the narrow, angled stairwell to our second-floor apartment.

Sorry, you dewy-eyed lovers, but once the last dance is over, the last congealed canapé is scraped into the caterer’s trash bags, and that new Waterford crystal pitcher is stashed in the closet, that’s marriage.

Did I say I regret it? Of course not. I love my husband and we’ve had many good times. But as the years go by, from coping with grief together to disputes over household chores, marriage can be a mammoth challenge.

And I worry that legions of young people are getting duped into it because of lifelong bridal-gown fantasies.

from Postsecret.

from Postsecret.

I don’t want to you think that my own wedding wasn’t lovely. I argued with my mom about the live goldfish centerpieces, the outdoor July ceremony was wiltingly hot, and I didn’t have time to eat anything during the reception, but it was a wonderful day.

However, it seems that the only thing to match our culture’s divorce rate is our obsession with weddings. At what other time do we lavishly reward people for beginning what is meant to be a difficult lifelong endeavor? (Baby showers, maybe, but giving birth is an even bigger commitment than getting married – you can’t divorce your child and pick a new one.)

The problem with weddings is that they affirm the easiest part of your union (no, that consuming drama over what kind of shrimp you’ll serve or whose estranged aunt should be excluded from the list does not mark the most stressful time of your relationship). You’re young (for the most part – I do realize a greater number of folks are getting married later in life) and you may still be in the giddy infatuation phase of your relationship, when you just can’t get enough of each other. And this – when it all looks so simple and rosy – is when we launch websites to showcase our romance (and disseminate material wish-lists), and spend ourselves into oblivion so all our friends can bear witness to the fantasy.

Maybe we should clear away the sequined gowns, the cummerbunds, the towering cakes with their tasteless marzipan mortar, the lavish gift registries, and the rented parquet, and let marriage stand for what it truly is.

I know many folks from my own family’s church and maybe yours would protest that the beginning of a marriage should be marked with public celebrations, to uphold the value of marriage and help others aspire to it.

But it seems to me that the US at least is already rife with incentives to marry. In fact, countless government benefits bestowed on married couples are a major reason that American gays are still truly second-class citizens in a majority of states.

From taxes, immigration and insurance to inheritance and adoption proceedings, government, social and business policies often favor married couples and their children.

Do we really need fancy weddings, too?

I’m in my late twenties, so of course our fridge is dotted with save-the-date magnets, and I’m happy for my friends. But I’d love to go to a big party for a couple who married modestly and then successfully weathered ten, fifteen, or twenty-five years together. I’d like to toast their love, and, instead of listening to speeches about how much they will mean to each other all their lives (fingers crossed), applaud what the couple has actually achieved and the example they’ve set.

But the reality of marriage is not nearly as sexy and romantic as what we imagine over a new diamond ring. So I fear we’ll continue to wallow in weddings, and hope the rest works out.

Have you been to a wedding (or watched a marriage) that convinced you, one way or the other?

The Silent Airport: Base Camp, Shawarmas, and the Great Passport Freak-Out

January 21, 2013

Our flight from Johannesburg, South Africa to Doha, Qatar took off about an hour late.

“We’re going to miss our connection,” I announced to my husband, Lala, about six times between take-off and the fish and potato dinner.

He tells me every day that I need to stop stressing so much.

I did my best to sleep as we flew over Africa.

About an hour before we landed, the captain apologized to anyone who had a connecting flight in Doha.

I showed a flight attendant our connection’s boarding passes.

“I know it’s out of your control, but can you tell me if there’s any way we could possibly make this flight?”

In my experience, attendants on international flights have a polite and steely reserve born of the long hours and a certain invulnerability that comes with in-flight service. You know and they know that no matter how much of a ruckus you raise, at 30,000 feet, there’s nothing they can do.

“I’m sorry, I have no control over this,” she replied. “I really cannot help you.”

“I understand that and I know you can’t make any guarantees,” I said. “I’m just asking whether, in your experience, Qatar Airways will ever hold a flight for a few moments so customers can make a connection.”

She was about to depart with a final murmured protestation of helplessness, but when the young Turkish gentleman to my husband’s right roused himself and realized that he was about to miss his own flight, she could not ignore all three of us.

She sighed. “If you arrive within an hour of your flight, yes, maybe, they will wait. If it is three, four hours, then no. They will not wait.” She hurried away.

We disembarked into a sunny, blustery, chilly morning on the Persian Gulf and clambered into a pair of large buses which disgorged us at the airport ten minutes later.

Lala and I rushed optimistically to the US departures area – our flight was scheduled for 8:05am, and we had entered the airport at 8:10am.

But the gate was deserted. A staffer shook her head and pointed to a counter, where a silent man took our boarding passes and pecked at a keyboard for about fifteen seconds.

“Eight oh five tomorrow,” he said, handing us a new pair of boarding passes. “Please follow me to the hotel desk.” He took off while we were still spluttering.

There were few things I didn’t know about Doha International Airport.

1)      Qatar Airways is the only airline there.

2)      They seem to have only one departure per city per day.

The speed and dexterity with which the airport delivered us and a large crew of disheveled internationals (including our Turkish pal) to a huge “Booked Hotel Accommodation for Transfer Passengers” desk should have worried us. Apparently, late flights and overnight delays are par for the course in Doha.

A well-oiled machine.

A well-oiled machine.

We were assigned an establishment known as the “Doha Grand Hotel” and given vouchers for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Perhaps I was tired from my flight, but for some reason the problem uppermost in my mind was that I had no deodorant for my upcoming day in Qatar.

Two information desks later and we were on a hotel shuttle.

Old Doha is a tan city. Businesses, offices, stores and hotels are all the same light, earthy shade. But the new Doha skyline, emerging on a small spit of land arching into the Persian Gulf, looks like a gaggle of vertiginous spaceships ready for lift-off. Most of the city is topped by a lattice of construction cranes.

Twenty minutes later, about fifteen of us trailed into the lobby of the Doha Grand Hotel, which was dotted with small leather chairs and smelled of cigarettes. We received a single key on a golden oval keychain, directions to take breakfast on the mezzanine, and notice of our 5:00am shuttle to the airport.

The notable features of our room were a perfectly egg-shaped toilet that sported a hanging nozzle (much like the one in your kitchen for rinsing large pots), an ancient box of a TV, an ashtray, springs poking aggressively beneath the thin mattress’s top, and a heavy smell of bath soap.

Mercifully, the Grand had wifi, so we immediately began to torture ourselves with scathing online reviews of the hotel from others who had been stranded by Qatar Airways.

There is nothing like a long flight to make you ravenous, so we stepped out of our room and wandered to the stairwell, where we met a shorts-wearing Afrikaner moving with unmistakable purpose.

“Breakfast?” he said.

“Yes.”

“Follow me.”

It was an eclectic buffet: pita and paratha, olives, masala, scrambled eggs and French toast, fried onion rings, yogurt and small brown items identified only as “chicken balls.”

The blogger in the Grand dining room.

The blogger in the Grand dining room.

After breakfast, Lala took a nap while I bitterly canceled my Thursday meetings, called our New York taxi service, and Googled Qatar.

Qatar is a chubby little peninsula jutting off of Saudi Arabia into the Persian Gulf. Its currency is the riyal, worth about a third of a dollar, and it’s an emirate currently enjoying a massive boom in oil and gas production as well as US military contracts.

Having argued avidly with my husband for several days about the pronunciation of “Qatar,” I learned that you simply slap a “q” instead of a “g” onto “guitar.”

That afternoon, we turned about 35 dollars into 105 riyals and clambered into the taxi of an Indian man named Simon.  We strolled along the turquoise Gulf on a graceful, palm-lined walkway knows as the Corniche.

High rollers.

High rollers.

Next, we explored the shopping center across the street from the hotel.

We appreciated the unfamiliar fruits and vegetables.

Ten points if you can tell me what the heck this is.

Ten points if you can tell me what the heck this is.

Looking for deodorant, I paused in the cosmetics section.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the world, white Americans are sun-burning themselves into fatal cancers for the sake of darker skin.

That night, we talked global politics with three beefy Afrikaners who agreed that our host should’ve been known simply as the Doha Hotel.

The next morning, we arrived back at Doha International Airport at about 5:40am. There was a brief but unpleasant scene in security, as the screeners refused to let us pass but didn’t have enough English to explain the problem.

“Cancel! Cancel!” a woman in a burqa kept shrieking. “I have not enough English! Cancel! Cancel!”

Finally, they confiscated a small keepsake of Lala’s: an empty bullet casing made into a keychain that he had saved from a boys’ trip to the shooting range.

We arrived outside security for American destinations by about 6:30am. The sun rose.

A round of recorded announcements played on the PA system in English and Arabic. No smoking outside the designated areas. Unattended baggage will be confiscated by airport security. Doha International Airport is a silent airport.

I wasn’t sure what that last one meant.

At about seven o’clock, a crowd began to shuffle into the US security line and we tried to join them.

No, this was the flight to Washington, DC. The New York flight? someone asked.

Oh, that one is delayed for one hour.

We fell back, and established base camp on the linoleum floor about twenty feet from the US security entrance.

Others bound for New York still clustered hopefully at the entrance. A Qatar Airways staffer stepped in among them and spoke quietly. Lala happened to be passing by on his way back from the restroom, and reported that the airline was offering us a free breakfast in the cafeteria because of the delay.

It sure was lucky at least one of us had been within natural earshot of the information about the delay and breakfast.

Is that what a “silent airport” means?

At about 7:30, our flight disappeared completely from every information board.

I sought solace from the lady guarding the security entrance. “There will be an announcement at eight o’clock,” she said.

“By ‘announcement,’ do you mean you will whisper the information to the four people who happen to be standing right here?” I asked.

“Yes, madam,” she smiled.

I returned to base camp in time to catch a volley of rage at the adjacent counter, for a flight that I believe was going to Vienna.

“That’s what you said yesterday!” an elderly Afrikaner screamed at the man behind the desk, followed by a string of profanities involving a missed flight and insufficient instructions. Someone convinced him to go to the cafeteria and wait for more information there.

“We will tell you, sir,” the staffer insisted.

I decided to have a look at the cafeteria myself, leaving Lala to listen for the eight o’clock announcement, but I was sidetracked as I passed another camp, taking no chances with a position ten feet from the US entrance.

A Mumbai-born American girl sat next to a white American man in a black felt fedora, black scarf, black sweater, shiny black denim pants, and pointy black shoes, orbited by a young Indian gentleman who was showing off his grasp of the English language by cursing with every other sentence.

“…technical difficulties,” Black Hat was saying.

“Do you know something about the New York flight that I don’t?” I interrupted.

“They said it was delayed because of technical difficulties,” he replied.

“But the flight’s not even on the board at all,” I said.

The whole thing was looking more ominous than the walled-off basement of a former funeral parlor.

In the next half hour, two more camps appeared on either side of us. On our left was a middle-aged man and woman with a teenage boy and girl. The girl was wearing pajama pants and Birkenstocks, and the boy was in a sweater that reminded me of my grandfather. They called the adults by their first names, and settled into a hyper-literate trivia game punctuated by a lot of happy laughter.

They had been touring India and Sri Lanka for six weeks. This delay was nothing. One of their trains in India had been delayed twelve hours.

On my left was a young Asian woman who offered to share her international plug converter with us, so we could charge our sputtering iPad.

I would rue her generosity in the hours to come.

Suddenly, the adjacent counter erupted in shouts once more. The Afrikaner was back.

“Then why the hell did you tell me to go over there?” he raged. “I tell you what, I have had nothing but lies and misinformation from you people since yesterday!” This time the swearing lasted a good five minutes.

When he disappeared once again, we were disappointed. While his plight did not bode well for us, he had enlivened the morning considerably and we were grateful.

Eight o’clock came and went. Then nine. The man at the gate stood in imperturbable silence.

A blessed silence.

“I have no information about that flight.”

I noticed Black Hat rise from the masses, and, now accompanied by a lovely young black woman with long dreadlocks, hitch up his luggage and stroll in the direction of the “Oryx Lounge” with a nonchalant finality that I envied intensely.

I wanted to follow, but I worried that I would miss pertinent announcements.

Then, in perhaps the worst development of the morning so far, the US security gate was completely abandoned by all staffers.

“Vienna boarding,” whispered a man at the nearby counter. Fifteen minutes later, he strolled about twenty feet in either direction of the counter.

“Vienna last call,” he murmured at a volume that would delight the strictest librarian. “Vienna last call.”

At about ten o’clock, when I could see a few attendants return to the counters beside the US flights entrance, I stood up and announced a scouting expedition.

“I’ll go with you,” the matriarch of the family on our left announced, leaving a discussion on the exploits of John Winthrop and invasive plants of eastern North America.

We learned that despite the total lack of any information about our flight, boarding was scheduled for 12pm.

I had a vague sense that one day in the future, I might find the ensuing conversation humorous, and I surreptitiously recorded it with my iPod. It went like this:

Alaina: Did you make any kind of announcement that it was changed until now?

Attendant: They feel that it is a silent airport. They don’t make any announcements.

Sri Lanka vacationer: I saw that sign. I just thought that meant people had to be quiet talking.

[Attendant laughs.]

Alaina: What’s the reason for a silent airport?

Attendant: They don’t want any announcements, it seems.

Alaina: So how do you know if your flight is delayed or if there’s a change?

Attendant: They make one announcement, to let the passengers know that it’s a silent airport.

A blaring PA announcement about designated smoking areas and unattended baggage completely drowned out the rest of the conversation.

I asked Lala to hold the fort while I figured out how to make a phone call to our taxi service in New York, delaying our pick-up yet again (Skype calls via our iPad only resulted in an irate receptionist saying “Hello? HELLO?” and slamming down the phone because he could not hear me).

As I passed Black Hat’s former companion, I noticed the Indian man had moved in and was now sharing the girl’s earbuds.

This is what all the public phones looked like.

We're not in Kansas anymore.

We’re not in Kansas anymore.

I tried swiping my credit card to no avail.

I asked a man at the adjacent security desk how to use the phone.

He told me to buy a phone card for 30 riyals (about $10) at one of the upstairs cafeterias.

I spoke to three different cashiers before one told me to I must buy the phone card at the coffee shop downstairs.

I found an escalator and was immediately lost in a bright wasteland of toys and candy.

I found the coffee shop with the help of two different staffers.

The man at the counter told me that I must buy phone cards at the cafeteria upstairs.

“They sent me down to buy from you,” I said.

“Hmm,” he said. Then he told me that they were all out of phone cards, anyway. “Try back at the cafeteria upstairs in half an hour.”

“Well at least you got some exercise,” the man from the unflappable family on our left chuckled when I told the story.

The young woman on our right missed the epic telling completely – she had asked Lala to watch her baggage about an hour ago, and disappeared.

I suddenly realized that if Qatar Airways owed me anything, it was a free phone call to New York. I marched back to the US desk.

Could they give me a phone card? Could they direct me to a phone I could use?

“We cannot help you, madam,” two young women told me.

Being an American who was completely out of patience, I repeated all of my questions at a slightly higher volume.

They changed tactics: “We must wait for the senior,” they cried. Then, they asked me if I had tried the “Transfer Desk”: “it’s opposite Gate 11.”

Just then, a small African man dodged between us, heading for the nearest gate.

“Excuse me sir, where are you going?!” the attendants cried.

“Home!” he said.

“But where is your boarding pass?”

I suddenly remembered a short story by Stephen King that is about a ragged bunch of travelers in a mysterious train station they cannot seem to leave. They gradually realize that they are ghosts.

God, why do I read that stuff?

I walked away and followed a highly inauspicious sign announcing “Gates 9-11.”

I got in line at the Transfer Desk, and after waiting for about ten minutes with absolutely no movement, I began to feel that asking anyone else for help would transcend fruitlessness – surely it would be a kind of absurdity.

I realized that I had had nothing but a few handfuls of trail mix since yesterday. I ducked out of line and returned to camp. On the way, I got intelligence from a Qatari native flying back to his home in the US that our plane would be boarding in 30 minutes.

But God knows what that actually means in Doha.

Just to be safe, Lala and I agreed that we’d take turns at the cafeteria.

As I sat down by our bags with a couple of croissants and Lala departed, I wondered where our neighbor was. We must have looked trustworthy, because she’d left her bags at least ninety minutes ago.

As soon as I lost sight of Lala in the crowd, a man appeared at the US security gate.

“Boarding New York,” he muttered, like a fifth-grade boy who resents his role in the school recital.

But the result was electric – perhaps the hours of silent uncertainty had sharpened our ears. Everyone in a thirty-foot radius moved at once.

Lala had no way of knowing that our flight was boarding.

And what the hell was I going to do with this woman’s bags?

“Don’t worry, that line will take forever,” the family next door said contentedly. Then they celebrated with a plate of shawarmas and fries.

Perhaps after some type of divine warning, our free-spirited neighbor appeared in the crowd about five minutes after Lala did.

Have you ever been white-water rafting?

There might be calm stretches, but you never know what’s around the bend.

Such is US flight security in Doha. My nerves had settled by the time we reached the head of a long line and handed our passports to a security person. She separated us, sending Lala to a separate screening area for men.

And then, the rapids.

Baggage x-ray was staffed by about seven men who moved as if they were loading the last lifeboat of a sinking cruise-liner carrying every president on earth. One took my bag, sneakers, iPad, purse and jacket. Then he yanked my passport and boarding pass out of my hand, threw them into a plastic bucket and shoved it into the machine’s maw.

I stumbled through the metal detector and fell on the emerging buckets, which were flying into the crowd with the help of about four or five men. I snatched my belongings out of the chaos.

My heart fluttered with relief when I saw a US passport clasping a boarding pass. But when I opened it, it wasn’t my name. Another woman snatched it out of my hand. I scrambled among the nearby baskets like a mother grasping for a drowning child.

My passport was gone.

Perhaps it’s important to tell you that I have a bona fide anxiety disorder. I’m mostly free of visible compulsive behaviors, but if I have one, it’s that when traveling internationally, I check for my passport every two minutes.

I had never had an all-out public tantrum before.

Lala appeared at my elbow.

“Ready, babe?”

“My passport is gone,” I gasped.

“What?”

“My passport and my boarding pass are gone. Someone took them and put them in a fucking bucket and now they’re gone.”

“Gone?!”

We searched the buckets – others were grabbing their coats out of my hands as I picked them up to search for my passport underneath.

“My passport is gone!” I shouted at the men working the line. “Excuse me, my passport is gone! It went into the machine, and it didn’t come out!”

No-one replied. None of them even made eye contact. They just kept shoving buckets of stuff at the crowd surging around us.

I approached the woman working the metal detector.

“My passport disappeared,” I shrieked. She looked away, nodded, turned me around with her hands, and pushed me back towards the machine.

“Do you understand what I’m saying? My passport is gone!”

She turned her back and continued directing more people through the metal detector.

I ran back to the men at the machine.

“Excuse me. EXCUSE ME. HEY! Do you understand what I am saying? Hello! MY PASSPORT AND MY BOARDING PASS ARE GONE!”

They gave no sign that they heard me.

Finally, a uniformed man, still refusing to meet my eyes, took my purse out of my hand and began to search through all the pockets. Panic began to drown me as the plastic baskets continued to clatter around us.

I re-searched all of my bags’ pockets again. That’s when I realized that my iPad was also missing.

Suddenly, among the turmoil, I glimpsed a black leather case lying in a security bucket. I flew to it and picked up my iPad.

My passport was hidden under it.

I nearly collapsed. As Lala patted my arm and I put my belongings back together, a burly uniformed man clapped a hand on my shoulder.

“Go now,” he said.

“Thank you, I am,” I answered.

“No. Now. You go now,” he said, pointing at my face. “You. GO.”

What would you guess the purpose was of hustling us through security so fast that we couldn’t even keep track of our own passports?

Apparently, it was to wait for another forty minutes in this line.

See the line around the edge of the room.

See the line around the edge of the room.

Black Hat and his companion were there, but I was not surprised to see that he was too cool to wait with the rest of us – they were watching the line comfortably from the chairs.

Finally, we passed yet another counter (where some kind of badge-flashing marshal was having a serious tête-à-tête with a young man) and traveled a long, slanting passage…into another bus.

“Maybe they are driving us to Dubai,” the elderly gentleman beside me sighed during the packed and rattling fifteen-minute ride across the tarmac.

I shall not pretend to miss you, Doha.

I shall not pretend to miss you, Doha.

Seven or eight hours later, somewhere over Europe, I pulled up the window shade (the flight crew kept us in the dark, like canaries with a towel over our cage) and had absolutely no idea if I was looking at dusk or dawn.

In an hour-long US citizens’ line at passport control in New York, Black Hat was smiling to himself. His pants were a bit more baggy than they’d been in Qatar, but he was otherwise no worse for wear. The family who’d camped next to us in Doha was still laughing out loud. The girl had put socks on under her Birkenstocks.

At baggage claim, Black Hat wrote something down on a scrap of paper, which he handed to the woman with the dreadlocks.

After leaving our family’s Johannesburg home early Tuesday evening, we stumbled into our Philadelphia apartment at midnight on Friday.

“Nothing bad ever happens to writers,” read a Facebook placard I noticed a few months ago. “It’s all material.”

What do you think?

Best of Spam.

December 28, 2012

Spam speaks to me.

From whence does it come? And why? And why can’t I stop reading it?

Valued readers, new and old, I wish I had something heartfelt, educational or inspiring to leave you with at the end of the year, especially since I am going abroad for two weeks and may not be able to post a new essay until I get back.

But I need to get ready for my flight.

So for now, I will leave you with my thoughts on my favorite spam comments to hit the blog this year.

Keep functioning, terrific job!

Would that, on our worst days, there really was someone to tell us that putting one foot in front of the other qualifies as a fantastic effort. I read spam comments like this and pretend it’s a message from the universe.

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Some spam comments imply a story I’d like to hear more of. A barbecue enthusiast travels the earth sampling his favorite dishes, searching for a barbecue pal to share his journey. Maybe it’s me!

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I like to think that I am improving the internet one post at a time. Some spam is worth taking to heart.

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If there’s anything an office should be, it’s stuffed with fun. And I get an absurd kick out of the “not less than thrice in 7 days” part. Where the hell does this stuff come from?

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This makes the cut because of the “ideas of my fingers” bit. Who here sometimes feels as if, while you’re typing, the thoughts are in your fingertips and not your brain?

I was just seeking this information for a while. After six hours of continuous Googleing, finally I got it in your website. I wonder what is the lack of Google strategy that do not rank this type of informative websites in top of the list. Usually the top web sites are full of garbage.

Six hours of Googling? How grueling. This is an example of how the zaniest falsehoods can be made believable by the inclusion of one realistic tidbit. How many websites full of garbage have you seen this year? Well played, spam.

All that we do here is 100% legal. We are corporate citizens who are responsible for our operations and are viagra 100mg 

In my mind, a nice round-up of the Citizens United Supreme Court decision and erectile dysfunction.

Baby powder. I heard eating more tomatoes and drinking tomato juice helps reduce sweat too if you would like a more permanent solution.

Well, thanks.

You are so competent at writing, you may have been an English professor.

Again, the suggestion of irresistible narratives. How does one become an English professor by dint of mere competency at writing? And I like the interest of the implication that I may have been a professor at one time. Was I or wasn’t I? Why did I leave academia?

Let’s get together for lunch. My watch is faster than yours. We look forward to your visit. Have you ever driven a BMW? eventually i caved in. We are prohibited from smoking on school grounds. What’s your goal in life. Keep your temper under control. I guess I could come over

No thank you – whoever you are, you sound far too distractible. Stay where you are. And my temper is fine, dammit.

Yet it’s not a good idea to get carried away and make the blog about your family or outside interests. You have to find the right balance, and with practice you’ll discover it. You should not, however, blog about anything that you wouldn’t write in a business email.

My family would certainly agree that it’s not a good idea to blog about them. I have been strictly forbidden to write about several family occurrences, among them the bleu cheese nut-ball incident. And it’s obviously much too late for that last tip.

I’ll miss you guys while I’m away, but I hope you’ll stick around for the new year. In the meantime, if you want to read more about the joys of keeping a blog (I’m sure many of you can relate), check out last year’s piece on bizarre Google search terms

Bodhisattvas, the Burning Bush or My Ghanaian Cousin: what’s your image of God?

December 24, 2012

Especially at Christmastime, we do a lot of reflecting on the trappings of faith – and the appearance of God.

This essay is adapted from an earlier blog post.

“I’ve Got My Own Religion” read a small pamphlet I found on the bus. According to my best guess, it has a Greek Orthodox priest, a woman in a burqa, a Buddhist monk, and a lady with some kind of cross wrapped in twine (a Wiccan, perhaps?).  Their friendly smiles make the part about the lake of fire, inside the pamphlet, all that much more painful.

“It is not true that all religious beliefs are of equal value,” the booklet explains. “Jesus Christ claims to be the truth. He did not say ‘I am a way,’ but rather, ‘I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by Me’ (John 14:6).”

To me, expecting these tracts to convert devout non-Christians seems a bit like believing that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei would clamor for American citizenship if he picked up materials declaring that the US Constitution is the source of all truth.

I have a hobby of picking these tracts up when I find them around the city.

“Dear Soul,” says one, ominously titled “Where Are You Going To Spend Eternity?”

“If you have chosen not to admit your guilt and to trust Jesus Christ as your Saviour, please read what the Bible says ‘…he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.’ (John 3:18)”. The bizarre underlying assumption here is that even if you don’t believe in Jesus, you do believe in the authority of the Bible.

For devout non-Christians, agnostics and atheists, I’d venture a guess that biblically-based threats have a bit of a credibility problem.

But pointing out the intellectual fallacies of the faithful isn’t that productive (or original). Since my own upbringing in an insular Christian denomination, I stopped accepting sermons at face value a long time ago. The child of Sunday School lessons featuring Jesus as a young shepherd with soft brown hair, I used to sit in the pews and wonder how we knew what Jesus looked like. How do we know he was white?

For years, I secretly wondered what it was like for non-white Christians to have Jesus glorified as a member of another race. But I recently realized that I know exactly what it feels like to have your own image conspicuously separated from your image of God.

My parents’ church refuses to ordain women. The webpage for its theological school is couched in carefully gender-neutral terms, but any woman who attempted to apply to the program would quickly discover the males-only policy.

A procession of priests from the 1919 dedication of the cathedral in my parents' hometown. It would look the same today - no women.

A procession of priests from the 1919 dedication of the cathedral in my parents’ hometown. It would look the same today – no women.

Many strident opponents of female clergy in my family’s church declare that over all other doctrinal or cultural factors, priests should be men because maleness is essential to our understanding of God. Some ministers of my home church insist that the Bible does not have a single mention of God as a mother or a woman, and references to God’s power are couched in exclusively male terms. Therefore, a woman could never represent Him to the congregation.

Several years ago, I began to wonder why it was so important to systematically separate the image of my own body from the image of God. I began to wish I had a spiritual role model whom I could better relate to.

It may be the echoing drumbeat of my male-centric childhood faith that sometimes makes me fear that my seeking a female spiritual inspiration is like saying, “tell me when God looks like me, and I’ll tune in,” as if what I really want to worship is an image of myself.

I have no desire to deny God. And I don’t see proof that God exists. But I’m sure of the value of a moral foundation for my life.

I always thought that my home faith (dubbed “the New Church” or Swedenborgianism for Emanuel Swedenborg, the 18th-century philosopher whose theological writings inform its Bible-based doctrine) took a lenient view of my agnostic state. Swedenborg didn’t spout the lake-of-fire stuff. Rather, he wrote that anyone who lives a charitable life according to the faith he or she knows can go to heaven, regardless of denomination.

But apparently I’m on the wrong track.

My long-time friend and high-school classmate, Coleman, grew more certain of his faith as I got more confused. I published a book criticizing the dogma of the Swedenborgian clergy. Coleman enrolled in their theological school and become a pastor.

We have a lot of disagreements, but it doesn’t matter. We get together whenever he’s in town.

He’s a young, social media-savvy pastor. “I want this blog post to be a challenge,” he began an online offering about the importance of acknowledging God as Jesus Christ. He posits that Swedenborgians’ habitual tolerance should extend to people who have had no contact with Christianity, but for those who have had access to the Bible, and therefore the chance to know Christ, it’s a different story.

He presents a series of biblical and Swedenborgian passages that demonstrate the importance of envisioning and acknowledging Jesus Christ to gain entry to heaven.

When I needled him in the comments, he responded at length.

“I don’t think a person can ever really be transformed unless they allow the Lord in,” he said. “Although other religions do present some concept of God, I believe the picture of God as the Lord Jesus Christ is the fullest one. So, if a person rejects Jesus as God, he’s rejecting something in God.”

Coleman dealt kindly with me: “agnostic people can repent too.” He calls my attitude a “good starting point” since it’s not an outright rejection of Jesus Christ. I still have the choice to pray to God to “help my unbelief.” Coleman advised me to love the idea of Jesus, and to “want Him to be real.”

But I sense the same flaw that rankles me in the pamphlets I collect. Just as those Christian propagandists assume that excerpted passages of the Bible will be meaningful to non-Christians, my pastor pal assumes my doubts will be excavated by prayer to reveal a native, underlying certainty in the Lord Jesus Christ.

The guilty truth is that in the broader context of my life, my agnosticism isn’t a starting point. Rather, the solid faith in God’s form that Coleman enjoys now was actually my own starting point. But through a lot of study and thought and living, my perspective changed.

Coleman believes that even if people like me have moral principles, our spiritual insides are fatally unmoored as long as we don’t consciously pin our faith on Jesus Christ.

Coleman says that unless we view repentance this way, “we can and WILL justify living selfishly.” People like me might “MOSTLY not embrace evil”, but since we don’t have the right bedrock (i.e., the Lord Jesus Christ) for our convictions, we’ll always end up with “wiggle room” to excuse sin.

Ostensibly, Swedenborgians object to what they call “the doctrine of faith alone,” which is ably demonstrated by these words of the “Eternity” pamphlet: “Realize that you cannot do anything to earn or help earn your way into heaven. Jesus already completely paid for it when He died on the cross.”

And you thought going to the amusement park was expensive.

Swedenborgians claim to believe that, for salvation, good works are just as important as faith. But it seems the take-home point of my friend’s blog is that ultimately, it matters little that I’ve lived a good life if I haven’t based everything on the correct image of the biblical God Coleman emphasizes as a “Man”.

Which, frankly, reminds me of this passage of the “Eternity” pamphlet: “The question is not if you are a member of a church, but are you saved? It is not if you are leading a good life, but are you saved?” In my own case, my salvation lies in accepting the proper image of God.

Even the most literalistic of Bible-based faiths give a certain leeway when it comes to images of God. The back of the Jehovah’s Witness Watchtower magazine provides three images and asks, “How Do You View Jesus?” The choices are “newborn baby,” “dying man,” or “exalted King.”

 

The same publication carries another perspective on accepting Jesus that stopped me in my tracks. Some of Jesus’s contemporaries were “humble enough” to accept that he was God: “included among these were several of Jesus’ family members, who at first had not taken seriously the possibility that one of their relatives could be the Messiah.”

It’s hard enough to accept that a man (Man?) born 2,000 years ago was God or God’s son. But imagine the difficulties of believing that your own brother, cousin or uncle – he of the sly childhood pinches, promising singer/songwriter career or vaguely inappropriate wedding toasts – was the Messiah.

So God can come in at least a few different forms. My home church emphasized Jesus as a grown-up shepherd or a shining bearded man in a white-and-gold robe, but come to think of it, sometimes God was a lamb. I also remember a burning bush, a pillar of cloud and a pillar of fire. At Christmas, of course, we all took a time-out to worship Jesus as an infant. Our annual pageant always needed a local newborn.

(Last year my cousin married a Ghanaian woman and their baby appeared in the manger – you may not be surprised to hear that a tiny black girl was an unusual choice for the role of Jesus at my church.)

Hark, the herald angels sing, Glory to the newborn king!

Hark, the herald angels sing, Glory to the newborn king!

But acceptable images of God in the Christian tradition are a drop in the bucket compared to the altars of a Buddhist temple.

Earlier this year, I made a friend who’s been a Buddhist nun for almost thirty years. We discussed life and death and faith over bowls of Pho, and then she took me to visit her temple. There, surrounded by a kaleidoscope of stunning images – people, animals and trees, demigods, bodhisattvas and the Buddha – I got a lesson from Geshe Sonam, a Buddhist teacher who studied in Tibet for 20 years.

He seemed so nice that I didn’t feel it would be appropriate to bring up the lake of fire.

I lingered in front of one image in particular. Tara, a bright greenish-blue female Bodhisattva, was perched in the lotus position on a cushion with one foot touching the ground. My friend explained that this goddess was portrayed this way because just soon as you call for her, she’s there, like a mother who hears her child cry in the night.

Comparing Tara to Mary in the Christian tradition, my friend explained that whether or not Tara is visible to you, she protects against evil and danger, and is always there whenever you need her. Tara has many images and colors – up to twenty-one, depending on what branch of Buddhism you’re in – all representing different aspects of her presence.

If God does exist and does love the human race, somehow that goddess’s poised foot tells me everything I need to know.

I’m prepared to admit that the religious scholars may be right. Perhaps, if I can’t force myself to accept the Lord Jesus Christ (shepherd/king/baby/lamb/burning bush/crucified Man), there really is a lake burning merrily in hell for me, Geshe Sonam, and everyone else who didn’t repent in time. Even without violent images of damnation, I am prepared to admit that the world may in fact have an objective spiritual foundation of right and wrong.

But I still ask why people insist on pressing certain images of God upon others. (I think that in the case of my home church, lessons on God’s image reflect patriarchal tradition.) There are probably as many reasons to promote a certain image of God as there are congregations in the world. But I’d never presume to declare who God is inside of you. What qualifies one human being to define God for another human being? Gender? A theological degree? Ordination? Meditation? Revelation?

“Man’s confused religions stand in opposition to God’s simple way of life,” the lake of fire pamphlet insists, explaining that man’s views are “wide” and “tolerant”, while God’s view is narrow. Does the idea that God takes a constricted view while we take a larger view seem backward to anyone else? Insisting on one image of God for everyone probably has more do with the smallness of the human mind than with absolute truth. At the risk of lingering forever outside heaven’s gates, I will say that such a homogeneous world would bore me to death.

If concepts of God are so innate and widely varied, and yet are as crucial to our souls as every denomination keeps insisting, it seems to me that promoting the same image of God for everyone – whether with threats of eternal torture or with gentle scriptural analysis – is like expecting that everyone should be able to adopt the same internal identity. In that case, you aren’t really saying “it is not true that all religious beliefs are of equal value.” It seems to me you’re saying, “it is not true that all people are of equal value.”

And nothing about that reminds me of God.

Happy holidays, readers worldwide – whatever you’re celebrating!

Here I am, Christmas morning 2011. My mom knows how to pick a bathrobe ensemble.

Here I am, Christmas morning 2011. My mom knows how to pick a bathrobe ensemble.

Six Tips for Strong Writing That Have Nothing to Do With Word Choice

December 21, 2012
Some of my notebooks from the last few years.

Some of my notebooks from the last few years.

You’ve heard them all, right? Ban adverbs. Show, don’t tell. Be concise. Avoid the passive voice.

After last week’s Freshly Pressed bonanza on my tips for building your freelance writing career, I thought I should follow up with some practical, non-threadbare tips on the actual writing – without telling you how you should put your words together.

(A warm welcome, by the way, to all the new subscribers. I loved your comments. It’s great to have you on board.)

1)   Mingle with the Mortals.

Enjoying life up there in your ivory tower?

I didn’t think so. Because real writers are collaborators.

Of course writing will always require a lot of focused solo work: my long-suffering husband knows I’m checking out for a few hours whenever I say, “Babe, I have to write.”

The writer protagonists in Stephen King novels are always departing for deserted cabins in Maine or secluded hotels to pen their works with no distractions – but look what happens to them.

Good writing needs good cooperation.

A quality editor is not trouncing all over your toils when he or she requests changes. They are working with you to bring your piece in line with the publication’s needs.

Collaboration over ego is also essential when you’re working as a copywriter – not only must you tailor the content to the client’s often unpredictable feedback, you are just one member of a team that may include other writers, designers, and creative directors.

As an added bonus, you can enjoy controversies like the one that came up last month, while I was writing copy about a ritzy farmers market and became embroiled in a discussion with a designer and an account executive about the correct spelling of “pierogi.”

Whenever you see your words as the sole province of your own mind, you’re not working as well as you could be. Don’t see others’ suggestions as infringements. See it as playtime for the brain and an opportunity for you to strengthen your work.

It’s not criticism. It’s a brain park.

Holier-than-thou Example:

Last spring, I wrote about a production of “The Island,” an Athol Fugard play. Because my in-laws are from South Africa, I added a hint of their experience to my perspective on the production, but not too much – a review shouldn’t be about the critic.  However, when I turned the piece in, my editor made an unusual request.  He wanted me to increase the personal perspective.  So I re-worked the piece, adding in some of my in-laws’ experiences to demonstrate real life under Apartheid. The final article was much better for my editor’s suggestion.

2)  Get good at gab.

You might think putting together a first-class story or profile is all about your writing skills.

Wrong.

If you want to write a good story, you need to do a good interview.

This is especially true if you’re dealing with someone who’s already a public figure, or who is used to giving media interviews. Be prepared to get past responses that have been vetted or canned by PR handlers, or just ossified in lots of other interviews – unless you want to write a story with the same stuff that every other writer got.

But your interpersonal skills also apply to the other end of the spectrum – ordinary folks who are not accustomed to talking to press. It’s nerve-wracking, giving your words to a stranger and trusting her to understand your story and tell it with accuracy and professionalism.

When I have time, I start with small talk in the interest of tuning into my subjects and mirroring their mood and demeanor. If they’re effervescent and friendly, I match their energy. If they razz me, I zing them right back. If they’re formal and serious, I take a similar tone. When the subject feels comfortable with me, they’re more likely to share.

If you can’t strike up an engaging conversation with a stranger, how can you get the information that will make a great story?  And the beauty of this skill is that you don’t have to wait until you have an assignment to practice it. Go out of your way to speak with strangers at parties or events, because everyone has a story. Practice asking questions and listening in a way that draws others out.

I don’t care what kind of writer you are. Any time life gives you an opportunity to practice interacting effectively with other people, you are building the skills that make you a good communicator on the page as well as off.

Holier-than-thou Example:

It might sound strange, but a lot of my interview skills were actually built during my years at my former day job, as a tour guide at a large historic site. Interacting with hundreds of people every day, and giving tours with the goal of having an hour-long conversation with tour groups, instead of talking at them, was the best possible practice for building quick and effective rapport with strangers, and encouraging them to speak up.

If you want an example of an interview that I particularly enjoyed doing and that I think turned out well, check out my chat with Christopher Ryan, author of the controversial bestseller Sex at Dawn.

3)  Bury “yes” and “no.”

Part of giving a good interview (and therefore writing a good story) is adequate research and preparation of your questions in advance.

But don’t just bombard your subject with concrete questions. In most interviews I do, just as the person thinks we’re finishing, I make a completely open-ended inquiry.

I ask if there is anything important we haven’t talked about, or anything extra they want to tell me. For people accustomed to speaking with the press, I ask if there’s something reporters never ask about.

Be patient and don’t be afraid of a few moments of dead air while your subjects think. You wouldn’t believe the stuff you can get when you open the floor like that, including great anecdotes for your lede.

Holier-than-thou Example:

Earlier this year, I worked on a feature about the growth of entrepreneurship in my home state of Pennsylvania. I went into my interviews assuming that a lot of that growth has to do with the visibility of icons like Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos or Steve Jobs, but a flexible approach in my questions let one expert give me a whole other perspective on the topic that turned out to be the uniting theme of the whole piece.

4)  Quit Writing.

You heard me. Knock it off.

How many times have I been slogging through a complicated feature telling myself that the world is going to end if I don’t finish this @#$%er today?

When you can’t seem to tap those ideas, tell a good story or integrate your research with your interviews, and you’re considering telling your editor that you were insane to accept this assignment, walk away for awhile. Preferably overnight.

Often, the key to writing a good piece is knowing when to give yourself a break.

Holier-than-thou Example:

Last winter I sat down to write a magazine feature about Canadian innovations in helicopter safety. But it was all too much. I couldn’t tell the pilots’ stories, describe my flights, incorporate the statistics and explain the regulations. No writer alive could do it. It was ridiculous.

So I put the horrible thing aside and messed around for the rest of the day, cooking and blogging.

Then I got up the next morning and wrote it easily.

That’s why I almost always work at least one day ahead of my deadlines on major features. I am amazed at the number of times a story has seemed impossible to finish one day, and a breeze the next.

5)  Listen to what you’ve written.

If you want to see if you’ve written a good piece, make sure to experience it with your ears instead of just your eyes.

Some of my writer pals love to work in coffee shops. I can’t do it, because before I send a piece in to an editor, any editor, I read it aloud to myself beforehand, and damned if I’m going to do that in a crowded Starbucks.

Hearing the words, instead of simply reading them, will do wonders for catching repetitive phrases, choppy transitions and awkward sentences that slide right past your brain when you don’t try your work out on your vocal cords.

Holier-than-thou Example:

Since I do this to every single piece I publish, I have nothing for you except the assurance that reading my pieces out loud to myself has caught truckloads of groan-inducing missteps. Of course the work still isn’t perfect. But it’s a hell of a lot better.

6)  Polish Your Armor.

Keep your attitude strong and your writing will follow suit.

Did you think being a published writer would be all warm fuzzies for your genius? If so, feel free to leave something snippy in the comments and bounce.

Put on your thick skin.

I’m not just talking about the inevitable rejection slips from literary magazines (maybe your work has been accepted – if so, you have my grudging congratulations).

I’ve had a cornucopia of criticisms from my editors. My lede doesn’t make sense. My argument is unoriginal. There’s no compelling narrative. My stuff is boring.

Editors are not always correct because they’re editors. Sometimes you brush off the criticism and try a different market.  Other times, you admit they’re right and get to work. Either way, you can’t let the negative comments sap your inspiration.

And that’s even before you get to your audience.

Through online comments, letters to the editor and social media, I’ve heard from readers who think that pieces I’ve written are foolish, pointless or outright lies. Others are simply out to insult me personally.

After I wrote a blog post about the question of restaurant bans on young children, I got this:

“You can’t draw. Your drawings are awful. Either try harder or stop trying. Actually, your writing is also terrible, your attitude is so self-congratulatory and smug it almost defies belief. Get off the internet and as far away from the rest of the human race as you can manage. We don’t want you and we sure as hell don’t need you.”

Hm.

Holier-than-thou Example:

During last year’s Philadelphia Fringe Festival, I gave a positive review to an unconventional art/theater mash-up called the Art Anti-Gallery that questioned the genesis and ownership of art itself. The piece garnered two letters to the editor.

One said “Gosh, this was fun to read! And provocative: ‘whose art is it, anyway?’ What is it we writers/artists need to protect?”

Another wrote, “The trouble with Modernism’s free license for any or everything is that it appeals to the lowest possible denoms.” He went on to call me a “mindless” critic encouraging “inanities.”

Who is right?

I have no idea. I will be over here, writing some more.

What are your tips for strong writing?

10 Non-Fatalistic, Real-Life Tips for Freelance Writers

December 12, 2012
This is what my cubicle looks like at the beginning of a day of writing copy at the office.

This is what my cubicle looks like at the beginning of a day of writing copy at the office.

I may look back on this blog post in a few years and cringe that I was callow enough to compose an advice article about writing professionally when I have been doing it for only five years. But a growing number of people have asked me for advice.

While this is aimed primarily at writers, I have an inkling that the same principles apply to current or aspiring professionals in graphic design, fine arts, photography, or any number of fields.

FYI, this ain’t a tutorial on the Art of Writing. It’s not about the pros and cons or financials of freelancing. And I am not a fiction writer. This is about finding and keeping freelance writing gigs in journalism, PR, marketing, copywriting and related fields. And each of the ten tips is accompanied by a holier-than-thou example from my own life – I am not foisting ideas upon you that I wouldn’t try myself.

Just so you know, I have no degree or formal training in writing, besides a Bachelor of Arts degree in Theater Arts and English (I know, I know, I practically have to beat the high-paying employers off wherever I go).  This is all stuff I learned on the job.

Also, nobody start salivating about using my tips to make tons of money. I am not rich. What we’re talking about here is paying the bills with enough left for an occasional movie or dinner out.

1)  Be a spider.

Ew, spiders.

Are you done?

Each person you build a good relationship with is a thread in your web. Each gig they hear about and each job list they subscribe to is like a bug flying into your sticky trap. (Like my stellar analogy? You’re welcome.)

Some people will advise aspiring writers to endlessly thumb the Writer’s Market and pitch, pitch, pitch (sell editors on a story) if they want to get published. I think your energy is just as well spent in building a network that will give you a shot at the assignments editors already have in mind.

Make lists. Set contact goals. Be friendly and bold. The worst someone can do is say no or ignore you. Do not be afraid to reach out to people of a different age, race, or sex. Don’t just stalk your idols on Twitter. Write to them. Swallow your shyness and brashly introduce yourself to the VIP at the party. If I can waltz up and introduce myself to Dr. Mehmet Oz that time we wound up at the same church service, you can too.

Unfortunately, he does not glow like this in person.

Unfortunately, he does not glow like this in person.

Ask people out for breakfast, lunch, dinner or coffee – even if you’ve never met. Spark friendships and pick their brains for opportunities or resume tips. Maintain the relationship with occasional friendly e-mails and invitations and always thank others for their time.

Holier-than-thou Example:

In the last five years, I’ve written for at least twenty different editors. Out of those, how many did I approach out of the blue with a pitch?

Only one.

The rest became interested in giving me an assignment when I contacted them via tips from my network, or because I had already worked with an editor or a writer they knew.

Maybe I’m a just a good networker and a bad pitcher. But if you’re pitching nonstop and getting nowhere, maybe you should work your way in with a different approach.

If any of my current editors are reading this, feel free to try and figure out which stick figure you are. If any future editors are reading this, please be assured that I am extremely respectful.

If any of my current editors are reading this, feel free to try and figure out which stick figure you are. If any future editors are reading this, please be assured that I am extremely respectful.

2)  The Networking Sandwich

And now you’re saying, “OK. Crap. It’s not what you know, but who you know.”

This is only partly true.

Finding gigs is a networking sandwich:

Quality work earns you admiring contacts. Network among those contacts to find new jobs. Then prove yourself to your new contacts with more quality work.

Holier-than-thou Example:

Even with a strong recommendation, those editors I mentioned in the first example began by asking me if I could provide some clips as a test of my skill and style.

If my work was lousy, those connections would be useless.

3)  Marshal the Troops

Once you’ve had some practice building your own network, position yourself as a leader. Think of ways you can bring people together to share the resources in your fields, and be an affirmative facilitator of the conversation.

Holier-than-thou Example: I joined a writers’ networking group that was about to fizzle because the original organizers didn’t want to continue the effort. I saw an opportunity and stepped up to take charge of it, organizing meetings and maintaining and expanding the contact and RSVP lists. It takes a lot of time of and effort, but the friends I’ve made and the work opportunities we’ve all shared have been worth it. I helped other members find new markets for their essays, and other members helped me find new work as a copywriter.

4)  Get in Their Faces

It can be easy for a freelance writer to slump behind a computer and a phone to meet the day’s deadlines. Nowadays, it’s possible to work with an editor – or your fellow writers – for months or even years without meeting face to face.

But don’t be that writer.

Invite your editors and colleagues out for lunch. Take advantage of local industry events. Be more than an e-mail address or another byline to the people you work with. Making that effort will give you one more way to stand out in a competitive field.

Holier-than-thou Example: I had written for a publication for about two years without meeting my editor in person, so when the publication began to host events for its readers and contributors, I made a point of going and introducing myself. Now, the relationship with that editor, plus my continued work, has grown into an Associate Editor job offer. I start next week.

5)  Think Hyper-Local.

Your career will never start until Psychology Today accepts your pitch, right?

Wrong.

Major newspapers and magazines aren’t hiring. Thanks, Internet. But the flip side of online media is that there are lots of new, highly-targeted local markets that are probably looking for good freelancers.

Is there a local news site in your town or a locally-focused magazine in your city? Research the site or publication and pitch that editor with your hometown knowledge, or leverage your network to get in touch.

Holier-than-thou example: About two years ago, the branch of NPR media in Philadelphia was launching a new series of websites targeted to specific neighborhoods. A former co-worker of mine was a former co-worker of one of the new editors, and I asked for an introduction. I now write a wide range of stories and essays for several editors there. Riches and glory? No. A paycheck and entertaining work? Yes.

6)  Work for free. (For awhile.)

You thought you could start your career with a big, fat contract? I admit, it’s not unheard of (I am beginning to suspect my downfall is my disinterest in young adult paranormal romance).

But get real. You need to get your foot in the door somewhere, and build up a body of bylines. It’s ok to volunteer your time and skills when you’re just starting out, if the experience is relevant to the career you want to build.

But be careful. You will run into people – even editors – who claim to think that the privilege of a byline in a competitive market should be more than enough compensation to you. Or they might tell you that the entry you get to shows or events as a writer should be enough of an incentive for you to provide your work for free. They are wrong.

You decide the line between unpaid experience that benefits you in the long run, and an editor or publication that tries to exploit your skills.  Once you’ve made the transition to paid work (unless you choose to volunteer for a good cause), stick to it.

Holier-than-thou Example:

I wanted to become an arts writer, so when I heard about a website that needed theater critics when I was a year or so out of college, I jumped. They didn’t pay their writers, but over two or three years, I amassed hundreds of bylines and took in hundreds of professional shows – a better education than four years of college. But I slowly quit writing for the site when my growing experience allowed me to pick up paying gigs. The editor tried to coax me back earlier this year, still without compensation, and I said no. I am grateful for the start I got, but right now I have too many assignments to spend time on work that doesn’t benefit my bank account or my own platform.

7)  Volunteer, Altruistic or Not.

If you think you have writing skills but need practice in a real-world setting, don’t have a professional network, or have yet to build your resume, you can kill all those birds with one stone.

Find a small, hard-pressed office of people nearby who are trying to do some good in this world and ask them if they need someone to write their blog posts, website or press releases or handle social media or PR.

Voila: experience, skill-building, and the start of your network.

Holier-than-thou example:

When my former playwriting teacher connected me to a nascent dance company that needed help developing original librettos, I met with the young and socially-conscious artistic director. I ended up joining the board and working on several librettos as well as managing PR campaigns for the company’s shows. It was like a second job for zero pay, but the experience was priceless, I felt good about the cause, and I don’t even know how many gigs I’ve landed over the years that were the result of networking among the esteemed friends and mentors I met through that company.

8)  Be Versatile.

A former editor once told me over Pad Thai that the key to a viable writing career was getting in good with one high-paying magazine.

Wrong.

I know because I did it. I began writing for an international trade journal that sometimes paid me upwards of two thousand dollars per piece. My whole month’s budget was made with one article. I was in heaven.

Then the mag ran into financial trouble and my apologetic editor told me they’d been forced to axe their freelancer budget. Good thing I had cultivated work in several other markets, just in case.

There are no guarantees for the freelance writer: even the sweetest gig could evaporate next month. Be willing to tackle a variety of fields and topics. A big reason I am able to pay the bills by writing is that I don’t let new arenas intimidate me. Arts, science, medicine, aviation, farming, business, architecture: whatever it is, I track down some experts to tell me all about it, and write that piece.

From an earlier post titled "What It Is Like to Be a Freelance Writer"

From an earlier post titled “What It Is Like to Be a Freelance Writer”

Holier-than-thou Example:

Often, to make ends meet, you must be willing to transition between different realms of work. I had been a blogger, essayist and journalist for years when an opportunity to become an agency copywriter came my way (thanks, networking). I didn’t say, “Oh dear, I have no advertising experience.” I showed up, scared witless, and began learning.

9)   Prostrate Yourself on the Altar of the Blogosphere

Yeah, yeah, the whole reason writers’ careers are crumbling everywhere is that witless scribblers are giving their stuff away for free on blogs.

Ahem.

That’s one way of looking at it. But I think that’s a pessimistic, no-fun view.

There are tons of reasons to maintain a blog, as long as you can commit to posts of consistent quality. Yes, any 21st-century writing manual can tell you that you need to build your own platform and audience as a writer – no big ol’ publisher is going to do it for you anymore (hence the difference between writing that builds your own presence and brand, and writing for free for a random publication that’s willing to exploit you).

But reasons for blogging go beyond this. I find that the more you write, the more you write. Blogs keep you sharp between assignments. They’re also an outlet for what’s personally important to you, keeping your drive and ambitions fresh. They can be your editor-free playground (believe me, tailoring your stuff to several different editors every week can get tiring). And on the other hand, I have landed work with new editors or employers because they checked out the blog, or even purchased pieces from it. I’ve also developed pieces on the blog that I later worked into paid, published essays.

And once you’ve built up a modest audience, a blog is a fantastic excuse to hit up other writers you admire for interviews.

Holier-than-thou Example:

I have been a huge fan of bestselling author Mary Roach for years. I got up my courage one day and contacted her through her website. She kindly agreed to an interview for this blog.

I found out that her early career was very similar to what I’m doing now. Later, she e-mailed me to say she had enjoyed the interview, and added “Keep at it. I expect to be saying, ‘I knew her back when…’”

Awesome.

10)  Be Big-Minded

If you want to be a writer, you’ll hear a lot about how competitive the field is. You will feel the impulse to hoard your leads, keep good markets to yourself, and shrug when others ask you for specific advice, lest they threaten your piece of the pie.

People have romantic notions about writing careers, and if you have some measure of success, others will come out of the woodwork to poach you for THEIR networks.

Remember, networking is a two-way street. If your editors are looking for new talent, share that with people who have the right skills. Don’t be stingy with useful tips to people who ask for them.

I had lunch with a contact once who happily took my advice on local editors to approach. But when I asked if my new colleague could offer any contacts to me, the person expressly refused to reciprocate, saying I would be too much competition (yes, I never said it wasn’t a jungle out there).

That is one way of doing business.

But to me, sharing valuable contacts is just one more incentive for me to stay at the top of my game. I don’t mind if editors add my colleagues to the team. I want work because my skills merit it, not because I froze out other people who might also be eligible.

And if you help someone today, who’s to say the tables won’t be turned tomorrow?

Let your confidence in your own skills translate into a helping hand for others, and watch your friendships increase as fast as your work opportunities.

Holier-than-thou Example:

This blog post.

Also of interest to bloggers, book-lovers and linguaphiles:

Pandora’s Inbox: One Blogger’s Favorite E-Mails from Would-Be Advertisers

Literary Lies: The Five Things You Really Mean When You Say, “It’s On My List”

The Linguist’s Comeuppance

Respect the Husband, Love the Wife: Methods of Ending Marital Strife

December 7, 2012

Because I am a solitary wife this month, with he of the dreadlocks away for awhile in Johannesburg, I thought I’d dedicate this week’s post to the vagaries of marriage – or rather, marriage advice.

A recent Huffpost article titled “It’s the Intimacy, Stupid: 6 Steps for Women to Stamp Out Divorce” cropped up in my Facebook feed last week. In it, marriage help empire-builder Laura Doyle has good tips like adequate self-care, relinquishing controlling tendencies, being vulnerable and practicing gratitude. Unfortunately, she also tills that bizarre ground of so-called “submissive wives” who advocate Bible-based obedience to their 21st-century husbands.

From an earlier post called “How To Stop Your Wife from Having Tantrums at Costco, and Other Christian Marriage Tips.”

“Lack of respect causes more divorces than cheating does because for men, respect is like oxygen. They need it more than sex,” Doyle announces.

This is right in line with “submissive” wives and their pastors who claim that women need love, but men need respect.

Here’s a novel idea. Quit looking at your spouse as another species. Some things I read about man/woman differences make me feel like I’m watching an over-produced Animal Planet special about monkeys of the world.

In my opinion, manuals telling us how to navigate the differences between men and woman have everything to do with what society trains us to think and do, and little to do with the messy work of being humans who share the same duvet.

I think many of my friends are happy  with the view that catering to, or, as my friend put it, “leverag[ing]” gender differences is key to happy marriages.

They posted comments on the Doyle article link like “chances are good that husbands will be better served by ‘I’m proud/impressed at how you dealt with…’ and wives will be better served by ‘you make my world go round.’” Another friend, the author of the worthwhile book Marriage Moats, added that studies have proven 80% of women value love over respect, while 80% of men value respect over love.

For my part, beyond the questionable wisdom of stereotyping people by gender, I wonder what use there could possibly be in separating the practice of love from the practice of respect in a marriage. And how do you quantify such emotional terms into gender-defining statistics? And how do you know that two individuals wouldn’t view the same act, and one call it a gesture of love, and other call it a sign of respect? And even if most men do value respect over love, and most women would do without an equal measure of respect if they could just get some love, does that mean this preference is innate to men and women, or is it a pressure of cultural expectation?

And, as Doyle suggests, can most husbands really shrug off infidelity by thinking “well, at least she’s respectful”?

To me, the dogma that says respect your man but love your woman is just another way to reinforce active roles for men and passive roles for women: men get acclaim for what they do, while women are valued for their lovey-dovey state of being.

Don’t respect your husband because men need respect. Respect him because your husband is a person, and people need respect. Of course the same goes for respecting your wife. Try listening carefully to her opinion or complimenting her work ethic, and see if she doesn’t appreciate it as much as a kiss.

Or deride her expertise and ignore her hard work, and then get her to believe it when you say you love her.

Maybe if my marriage matched the stereotypes, I’d enjoy waving man/woman distinctions like 16th-century peace treaties sealed by royal betrothals.

But between my husband and I, one of us loves shopping and babies and the unrestrained verbal airing of daily events. The other is an emotionally bottled workaholic who can sit for hours in silence and abhors the mall. Guess who is who?

Devotees of Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus would probably guess wrong.

Whatever self-help books and seminar leaders would have you believe, there’s no doctrine, statistic or gender-gap road map that ensures marital bliss, and one marriage should never be used as the metric for another. That might be the kind of secular millennial relativism that makes older generations’ hair stand on end, but with a grand total of five years of married life, and zero New York Times Bestselling relationship books to my name, my advice on marriage is this:

Think about what makes you feel loved and respected as a human being. Then, every day, imagine your spouse as a human being, too.

 

Until You Are Gray.

November 29, 2012

This is a special guest post by my high-school classmate, Denielle, a mom of three. About two years ago, she lost her husband to suicide. A few weeks ago, her husband’s brother also took his own life.

Denielle is not a blogger or an author; she’s a beautiful person with some vital things to say about life. The following is a note she shared last week with grieving friends and family on Facebook. In some small way, I wanted to bring what she said to a larger audience, and she agreed that I could publish her words here.

Grief.

The bending of this life after someone loved is plucked from it. The aching of a vulnerable heart, which is in disagreement with what has befallen it.

I decided to care about my brother, and now he has vanished, and his body left to fade in the ground. Adjusting to a reality that has been changed by someone’s actions: it is difficult to bear, but not impossible. I am humbled before the fact that I can be affected so deeply by another, and that I am not the only one who influences life around me. I’m empowered by the fact that it is only me who chooses how I react and what I do now. Another’s behavior, chosen in whatever fog of blindness, is something I must not own.

I will not ask the departed why; I have tried that. You can shout as loud as you want, and there will be no return. But I glean insight from what has been. And I tell the living that I would prefer that they all stay, stay and live, take care, until you are gray. And love them. And if they don’t feel the love, ask them how they might.

Learn together, and share together. Be together, growing in a deepening understanding. Love and understanding are one and the same.

Right now life’s not lookin fair. But don’t let the man get you down. Negativity is not welcome in my home, even more now. Nonjudgmental honesty is observed and planted around us like a garden of vegetables.

What brings relief?

For me, sitting close, remembering that life is always changing. Singing and music, movement, walking, talking, choosing times to be alone. Knowing I don’t have to know it all, and letting go. Hugs and kisses. Asking for what I need, without pushing it. Letting you be you, and me be me. Letting go a lot, especially to fears that keep me from loving and moving forward. Acceptance, and keeping pace, like playing drums with the moment. Staying present, and when I wander kindly return to it. Forgiveness.

I didn’t even know how to properly spell the word “grief” two years ago, or what it meant. Now it is only too familiar.

My daughter said, “So Daddy died and then Owen. Who will die next?”

Sorry, I know that’s really sad, but it is part of her reality. And I wonder how she will grow though it. It is part of our shared reality. And the sharing is the part that helps us though it, I believe. Like we can do it together. Well, I told her “Hopefully no one, not for a long time, not till we are all very old.”

But I wonder the same thing she does, and dread. I live with it, and cope though it.

I breathe. Breath is completely reliable, maybe the thing I rely most on right now. When I breathe, it keeps the blood flowing to my brain and all my parts; breath centers me. I believe God is in that breath, and then in me, and you are all breathing, so you have it too.

Process. This is how I will sum it up right now. This is a changing process, life here. What is your process?

There is growth to be had in the ashes; compost turns to rich nutrient soil. I say this because it is what I have experienced. Shit is some of the richest fertilizer to use, if you learn how to turn it and mix it in with the ground. I think I have had enough for now, ok life.

I love you, take care.

I’m especially grateful to Denielle for sharing this, because a few days after I asked her if she’d be willing to let us read it here, my mother-in-law passed away unexpectedly. She was a lovely woman, and you can read about her here. So this goes out to her and the people who are grieving for her, and anyone else who’s lost a loved one. Special thanks to Denielle for these words.

The White Girl’s Guide to African Dreadlocks

November 14, 2012

Let’s spend a little more time getting in each other’s hair.

One night a few weeks ago, my husband and I succumbed to the International House of Pancakes down the road. There were two people in the restaurant waiting area: a young black woman with a pierced nasal septum and dirty pajama pants grooming her black male companion’s luxuriant head of hair.

They weren’t waiting for a table. They were just doing some hair in the IHOP lobby at seven in the evening.

“Why are you guys doing that here?” My husband Lala asked them. They shrugged.

“Nice dreadlocks,” the man said to Lala.

“Thanks man,” Lala replied. From behind him, I pointed to myself. “I did them,” I gloated.

The man’s mouth fell open. “You? No!” he said.

Because a white girl who does a black man’s dreadlocks is way more strange than doing your hair in a suburban restaurant during dinner hours.

But whatever anyone thinks, I’m a very lucky woman. Everyone’s got their “type.” For my mom, it was 90′s-era Ricky Schroder, with his blond hair and blue eyes. But I went the opposite direction.

Ever since I was a teenager, black men with dreadlocks turned my head. It may have started with Harold Perrineau in Baz Luhrmann’s 1996 Romeo and Juliet.  Who needed Leonardo DiCaprio?

“A plague on both your houses!”

Let’s just say that my future husband, a South Africa native, fit the bill. We met when I was barely nineteen and his hair, from the soccer field to the dining hall, was glorious.

My grandmother said it looked like worms were growing out of his head. For years, my mother would gently ask me if Lala had any plans to cut them. Even Lala considered chopping them off occasionally, and shortly after we were married, he actually went a year or so with his hair shaved smooth and close – a sad era for me, but valuable in that I discovered once and for all that I loved my husband with or without the locks.

I find that a lot of white people are a bit mystified by dreadlocks. Many years ago, I, too did not have the slightest idea how anyone got them. The closest I’d come to any dreadlocks-in-progress was in Christian boarding school during my junior year, when a Caucasian classmate down the hall decided she wanted dreadlocks and simply stopped brushing her hair.

As her hair matted into dreadful clumps over the subsequent weeks, school officials noticed and forced her to comb it out, citing a dress-code violation. She was furious. All that not-brushing for nothing.

Some people seem to think that dreadlocks like my husband’s grow naturally, like some people of African descent are born with the style (though, to be fair, we’re all of African descent), or perhaps will their hair to grow that way. “How do you do those?” people ask my husband. Then they are surprised to learn that dreadlocks, like any chosen hairstyle, require meticulous maintenance.

I was surprised when I was pressed into service. Despite having my own head of thick, shiny, naturally golden hair, I was never interested in styling it. The first thing I always tell hairdressers is to do something that I don’t have to mousse, spray, blow-dry or clip. I never learned how to braid my hair or anyone else’s.

But those dreadlocks called my name.

Since so many people seem to be shyly curious about dreadlocks, and I believe my country could do with a little interracial harmony right now, I’m going to tell you the secrets of my husband’s hair, and show you how I take care of it.

The early, gravity-defying phase.

In this photo, Lala’s locks are perhaps a year or two old. I didn’t start them, because my skills aren’t quite there yet. I think it was his younger sister who did the honors. She divided his hair, only about an inch or so long, into dozens of small, roughly square segments, marching in approximately horizontal lines from the nape of his neck to his hairline. She fastened each segment with a tiny rubber band. Then Lala used the crochet-hook method to build his new, short dreadlocks. You take the tiniest crochet-hook head on the market, and pass it quickly back and forth, over and over, through the section of hair. The crochet’s hook tangles the hair so carefully that it becomes a small lock, right in your hand.  It’s time-consuming, but effective when done right.

The next phase, perhaps a year or so after the beach picture above. Even the very top locks are now subject to gravity.

Another year or so later – they’re coming along nicely by our fourth wedding anniversary.

And another year later, this is what the locks look like now.

Once they’ve gotten started, well-groomed dreadlocks need to be twisted every so often. We try to do it every few weeks (occasionally, Lala’s sister does the honors). There are a thousand products you can use for dreadlocks and we’ve tried many over the years, but we prefer natural products. First, Lala soaks his hair briefly in a big bowl of diluted apple cider vinegar and salt. He rinses it, and then washes it first with tea tree shampoo, and then unscented castile soup. The hair, so brown it’s nearly black, is springy and glistening clean at the puffy roots of the locks – the hair that will be incorporated into today’s twists.

Here’s what the dreadlocks look like when they’re ready to be twisted.

We prefer starting with the very back row of hair, and working toward the hairline.

Getting started.

Instead of using a purchased hair product, Lala mixes his own fragrant locking solution of olive oil, jojoba oil, castor oil, sweet almond oil, avocado oil and Vitamin E shaken up with a bit of warm water in a spray bottle. The oils are expensive, but they last a long time and keep the hair in good shape without unwanted scents or residues.

I deal with about three locks at a time, spraying their roots well with the oil solution, and then twisting them so they’re tight enough to keep their twist when they’re dry, but not so tight that they hurt Lala’s scalp.

I shift the hair around freely to reach the section I’m working on.

I used to use metal hair clips to pin the finished locks down, keeping them from untwisting before the hair could dry, which takes several hours without a dryer. But now we use a simpler method where the twists are given a little up-and-over finish, so the root of the lock loops tightly back on itself in a little spiral, like this:

Here’s what the freshly twisted locks should look like.

As I twist, I’m maintaining not only the growing length of the locks, but their tidy shape as well by refreshing the boundaries between each segment of hair.

It’s good to laugh about something along the way.

The locks at the hairline are the trickiest – I have to be extra careful not to pull too hard, and the look of the hair segments in this row should be as tight, clean and even as possible, because they frame the face.

The process used to take me hours. Sometimes we’d have to undo whole sections or even the whole head and start over because my lackluster twists unraveled or didn’t lie in the right direction. But with years of practice, I can now do Lala’s whole head in about thirty minutes.

I’m sure not many husbands wake up on Saturday mornings and say to their wives, “will you do my hair?”

Finished.

Dreadlocks still turn my head wherever I go – but partly because I like to judge if they’re as nice as my husband’s. Sometimes Lala wonders if it’s time to cut them. I say that of course, it’s his head, but please please don’t.

This is certainly not an expert’s guide, or the end-all, be-all in dreadlocks instruction. There’s so much more to learn about the culture, method and styles of this art form, but for those who may have been curious about how this gorgeous hairstyle is created, I hope this has been a fun glimpse.

Do you do something special for your own partner that you never expected you’d learn how to do?


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