Not According To Plan

I’ve been in a reflective mood of late. No doubt triggered, in part, by my 50th high school reunion. I didn’t go, but the notice made me dig out my yearbooks to reread the autograph pages and pour over the senior pictures. We look so young–I guess half a century ago–we were!

I had a solid plan for my life. College where my dad went. Not marry until after med school. Then I’d save lives in between having three or four exceptionally gifted progeny. Yes, I was going steady but somehow everything would fit neatly into the plan. I was determined, unstoppable, positive, and headed for great things.

A month after graduation I broke up with my high school sweetheart. I went to college where my father did. I loved it–everything–except Chem 101. I hadn’t worried about the blood and guts part of medicine after assisting Daddy in small animal surgery. I’d done well in high school chemistry, one of only three girls in the class. It was a lot different sitting in a huge lecture hall with a miked up professor writing on a chalk board miles from you. Maybe I didn’t want to be a doctor…

I had a great roommate, also from a small town. We enjoyed all the social life college had to offer. The freedom of semi adulthood was overwhelming. After going three straight semesters, I was on academic probation. How could I tell my parents? No worries. The University saved me the trouble. Then, the person who paid the bill was entitled to know what was happening. Mother was livid I’d squandered the opportunity she’d never had. Daddy quietly confessed the same thing had happened to him. He found a way to turn things around and even go to veterinary school after getting married and starting a family. I had hope that my good genes would carry the day.

I needed a job. I did babysitting for one of the Animal Science professor’s kids and he had gotten me a student job keypunching feed records for graduate students. Armed with that skill I bravely applied for a keypunch position at one of the local hospitals. I got it! The hospital installed a new computer system with terminals on each unit and in each department. So I had another skill implementing systems and training people.

The day I was hired I stopped by the dorm to see my friend Susie. She wasn’t home but I ran into my future husband again. (Full details are in the August 2018 blog Meant for Me). Long story short, three years out of high school I married a man who planned to go to law school.

Suddenly, it was a big deal that I hadn’t finished my degree. I petitioned for special status to an understanding Dean who allowed me to work full time at the hospital and be a part time student–I carried a course load one credit short of full time. I had classes Monday, Wednesday, and Friday mornings; worked Monday and Friday afternoons, and all day Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday. Wednesday afternoons I went to the laundromat and grocery store. My husband was a full time student with part time work fall and winter and two jobs every summer. We graduated in the same year, me with an undergrad degree and him with a law degree.

My hospital systems experience got me a job implementing systems on the vendor side. I moved from data processing to information systems to information services to information technology working in Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Alabama. I enjoyed a forty-two year accidental career doing something I didn’t know anything about in high school..

Today, I’m sitting in the midst of all my creative tools: my spinning wheel; loom; tubs of unspun fiber; a computer and printer; and pens and paper. Rhett, the Basset hound, smiles down at me from the cover of Polly’s List high on a bookshelf. I’m pondering what the next decades will bring.

My life didn’t follow my carefully constructed plans…it has been infinitely better than anything I ever imagined! Wishing you better outcomes than you ever planned for! Enjoy!

The Wild Ride

The ride I’ve been on the last six weeks or so has provided its share of ups and downs. Some of the dips and rises have been minor and others beyond huge. Everything from a seasonal return of McRibs to our pizza place of twenty years losing their lease at the end of the year. From celebrating another year on this planet to concern about dear friends struggling with vaccine mandate and work/life balance choices and others with personal and family health issues. Even the weather was undecided from gorgeous blue sky fall days when long sleeves felt good even basking in the sun to dreary, damp, I can’t get warm, where is the sunshine days.

In the midst of it all – I lost a friend who also was the mother of a dear friend. She’d had a ride of ninety-five years, but that didn’t make the loss any easier to take. She was a very talented and prolific artist. I was fortunate that over the years she gifted me some of the beautiful paintings she had created. I can sit back and look around the room I write, spin, and weave in and see reminders of her on the walls and tucked away on the shelves of the bookcases. I’m thankful she shared a small part of her life with me. I hope her family’s pain (and my own) at losing her is soon replaced with the joy of remembering her.  

And after that sad free fall down – the ride rocketed up just as precipitously. As most of you know, I’ve been writing and putting my manuscripts out there for the past – almost – six years. I’ve gotten rejection letters, no responses, aborted contract negotiations, thanks but no thanks, and other negative answers to my publishing queries.

 Until now.

I have a signed contract with a traditional independent publisher. I have an incredible editor. I’m writing back cover book blurbs, tag lines and my bio. With my sweet husband, we designed our vision of the “ideal” book cover. There are dedications and acknowledgements drafted. All this while my editor is working with me busily editing my first novel for another review.

To say that I am excited would be a gross understatement. But I am also humbled and filled with gratitude to get to this place – to have this bittersweet turn of events transforming my dream into tangible reality. I’m not sure it will completely sink in until I can hold “Polly’s List” by Kim Janine Ligon in my hands.

Thank you for following my adventure. For all the encouraging words when I most needed to hear them. You have no idea how important they were in making me persist. And persistence is needed to get published. I so appreciate your support and your frequent gentle queries about how my journey to your bookshelf is going.

Please check out The Wild Rose Press – my publisher. I don’t have a publication date yet, but it’s early in the process. You know, I’ll tell you as soon as I know. “Polly’s List” is in the suspenseful, rated-G romance category or as my husband said “A good mystery spoiled by romance.”

I’m sure this wild ride will continue to have ups and downs – but as the plaque Angela gave me on my retirement says : The Joy of the Journey is in the Ride. To which I can only say AMEN!