Saturday, November 1, 2014

My Good Friend ING


Introducing ING has become my editor’s nightmare.
“Kat,” she says to me. “If you start sentences with an ING, it’s all wrong.” (I think she said it’s a modifier with no subject. As I recall, that is when she mentioned the dreaded words, participle gerund--that is if I remember right.)
She smiled. I figure this isn’t the end of the world.
“Dear lady,” she adds, gesturing toward my manuscript, “I suggest you enroll at the local community college. Now, back to your editing,” She sent me on my way without elaborating further.
“Community College?” I choke on the idea as I drive home.
That’s when I spy ING on my shoulder, challenging and invigorating me in re-creating, and re-arranging my modifying phrases.



“Ah, ha,” I exclaim. “ING and I are the best of friends. After all, my days are filled with ING.”
Walking, cooking, cleaning, dusting and bed making.
My work station welcomes ING early each morning.
Answering the phone, breaking with co-workers, and mastering the constant paper shuffling.
I wrestle with ING in the night.
Dreaming, snoring, and yes, tossing and turning.
When I’m hurting, ING is right there.
Crying, caring, comforting, and shoulder patting.
I found ING is musically talented. Singing, fiddling, and harp strumming.
That’s when a horrifying realization hits me. ING was present in the Garden of Eden. Satan sat around crafting his tricking ways and then set to tempting Eve.
Right away Adam and Eve acquainted themselves with ING by breaking God’s commandments.
Now some folk think ING did the changing thing by deciding to hang out with the best of people. Like good guy Noah building the Ark; Samson by avoiding Delilah’s nagging; and Job in his suffering.
What about the Old Testament prophets? Jeremiah is known as the weeping prophet, and Nathan a speaking prophet.
Don’t forget those Proverbs, the ‘Sayings of the Wise’.
And Jesus, anointing, healing, and preaching about the elements of living by trusting and believing.
Paul used admonishing techniques, encouraging us in keeping on keeping on.
I smile, thinking about my Grandma Dee starting her day. She spent time praying, praising, and memorizing scriptures, compelling many to do likewise.
Children are enjoying ING with their laughing, joking, pretending and game playing.
Embarrassingly enough, even gossips are users of ING, whispering, hurting, and destroying with shocking words.
Unfortunately, Satan is still forcing ING into family life. Maybe bullying is a better word? But then, he does his best at sneaking in, destroying whole families with arguing, fuming, and sadly divorcing. Yet there are some families embracing ING by resolving issues--kissing, hugging and making up.
It doesn’t surprise us to know that the police are acquainted with ING. They find people carousing, maiming, killing, drinking and driving.
My husband also knows ING. Humoring me, accepting me, teasing me, loving me, and yes romancing me over three weeks of vacationing through twelve states.
Yet ING isn’t just a controlling co-dependent. The good and the bad alike can go chumming with an effervescing, dazzling ING friend.
There are those editing folks who are not appreciating ING’s finer qualities, preferring ED instead.
Don’t get me wrong, ED is a fine extension.
However, me, I’m opting for Mother’s teachings. She spent hours instructing me “Be careful in choosing your friends,” she would say, elaborating on not playing favorites and all that.
Maybe I’m quoting Mother out of context. I’m well known for blaming others for my silly quirking. Quirking? Oh yes, I’m creating a new word for a special ending to my best friend ING.    
Kat, Still Lionhearted©2002 

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Stronger Verbs

Years ago I joined ACFW –American Christian Fiction Writers where I met Nancy Williams. In one of her posts she commented on using stronger verbs—those ending in ED. I emailed her. She emailed back. A few weeks later Nancy sent a list of verbs she’d compiled—over 700 or so.

Today I found a part of that list. No, I’m not posting them all, but here’s a few to add to your next writing assignment. 

Approximated, ambled, acceded, acquiesced, adlibbed; blanched, blinked, blathered; , crackled, coveted, cloistered, clipped, cornered; , delineated, desecrated, despised,  escaped, evaded, elicited, excited, flattered, flattened, flustered, fragmented, glimmered, grimaced, groused; hacked, hefted, hiked; and I skipped to Z Zipped, zippered, zoomed.


When I reviewed the longer list I treasured all those years ago, I see these are common words, words we use daily so why the list? 

Have you ever started an article or a new chapter and that “one word” won’t come to you? It’s happened to me—more than once. 

Still Lionhearted, Kat

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

My New Best Friend ED

          My New Best Friend Ed

Ed, it’s said is a stronger verb than “ing.”
For me, those “ing” things stand up and sing
Try as I might, Ed leaves me befuddled.
My mind scrambles those ends. Oh my mind is jumbled.

I jumped and bounced and compiled words.
I dabbled and drizzled till all those words seemed jumbled.
I hurled and furled and agonized, too.
I bristled and blundered and bandied my way through.

I’ve skipped over the participle and modified too many.
I’ve danced on the nouned and pronound. That’s the skinny.
I realized very early on that “ing” words are easier for me.
I quieted my inner spirit and said, “Get with it, baby.”

Than my flustered editor lady grimaced. She got involved.
She expounded, identified my problem, and prodded me to evolve.
She leveled me. “Kat dear, these are things you need to know.”
I searched my mind and shouted, “I can strongly tell-not show.”

I abbreviated, approximated, adjusted and angled.
I clenched my jaw, squinted my eyes and slashed words from my jungle.
I found the desecrated, the duplicated and determined to dwindle.
I’m embarrassed to say, I almost cheated, but I confessed before I swindled.

I showed yon Editor my word count thinned by half, “Are you proud?”
“Oh yes,” she effervesced till she found my fractured word, her head bowed. “Yikes,” I groaned. “That’s not expired. It’s perspired. At least it’s not an “ing.”

I shrugged my shoulders, determined once more to let my writing spirit sing.