Harika

by rosedeniz

Last night I interrupted the making of roasted pumpkin and carrot soup (with coconut milk, onions and garlic, in case you are interested…) to check my email and found my very first official rejection letter for a story I wrote. These days things happen so quickly that I have little time to actually react before I jump to the next thing, like making sure the navy beans in the pressure cooker didn’t explode while Topi and Lina take turns putting tiny balls of play-doh under everything, but I did actually think a few things that came rapidly: oh, okay, and wow, they actually sent a response instead of letting it disappear in the void (or spam). And then, I felt it was official. I’ve finally joined the ranks of other writers because I’ve officially been rejected. This is great! Now I only need like ten more rejections and then I’ll start to think I’m getting somewhere.

 
Turkish fabric – edgy florals

So far has been a week of some doors closing and others opening (though I’m still kind of waiting for the green light somewhere) in many ways, and just when I think I can get away from some kind of shift in the universe making each and every hour a taxing test of my patience, I find little reminders that it’s not over yet. So bodes this week. In the meantime I’m reading French Women Don’t Get Fat thanks to Tara who lent it to me after a wonderful Sunday brunch at her house and employing all my best procrastination techniques to avoid doing whatever it is I’m supposed to be doing this week. Getting Things Done was not in the weekly forecast.

Over at IC, I wrote last week about the editing process for artists and designers. While writing it, it gave me an opportunity to see just how I work and why. I’d say I’m in step 8 of my own list, going back to work and examining all the possibilities of what could be new projects. In my opinion, this is the most uncomfortable stage. All the previous projects are done, the clean up is finished and now it’s time to focus on something new. Like my toddler’s birthday bash in an hour… 20 toddlers and cake, oh my.

*Harika means amazing, fabulous, splendid…

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