CONLEE RICKETTS-Author, Educator & Awkward
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My 1-Star Review!

8/25/2019

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Well, it hasn’t happened yet, but the point is…it will.

To venture through life unscathed is one of the most defeating expectations there could possibly be.  Not only is it ridiculously unrealistic, it just sets you up for disappointment over and over again.  The way I tend to prepare for most things in my wacky brain is “worst case scenario thinking.” I admit that is NOT the healthiest way to handle situations, but in this case it will ease my mind and soften the blow.

In preparation of my inevitable future 1-Star Review of my debut book, I took a gander at some 1-star reviews of people that have influenced me, write what I've read, and are people I respect.

Here’s what I learned:
  • Some are correct.  I don't necessarily mean that the comments warranted giving the book 1 star, but in that reviewer's opinion, that’s what it earned.  The types of comments I read that might actually pertain to my own book revolved around word choice. The writing is either overly simple, too flowery, too wordy, or juvenile.  So what?  I chose the words I chose.  And to quote my own book here, “You can’t unpoop it.”
  • Others were about the book quality.  Cheap-looking, small print, or poorly designed.  Well, I have a small thin book that can be read in under two hours.  I imagine some folks could see it as cheap or amateurish.  Again, so what? Yes, my book is a very quick read, but it isn’t supposed to be.  It’s supposed to support you across twenty-six days. My dream is that somewhere out there, there will be a tattered and well-used copy of my book that wears the scars of holding someone’s emotions for them for an entire month.
  • Some are just mean-spirited.  So what? These are fairly easy to spot, and in my trying-to-be-kind and easy-going way I have to just hope that typing those mean words gave someone some sort of emotional relief they needed in the ten minutes it took them to type it out.  As I try to remind my students, someone else's reaction toward you is 99 percent never about you. From my experiences it’s usually about something else in their life that is none of my damn business anyway.
  • And finally, it’s actually a great thing! It means that my book is being read beyond the friends and family circle! It means that somewhere out there, people I haven’t met have been able to find my book and read it. For some it’s a good and helpful book, and for others it isn’t.  So what?

For my first book, the entire process holds a mountain of learning opportunities. In the days after I finally approved the work and edits I found mistakes, had edits I wish I hadn't approved, and I made of list of things I will do differently for book number two. So I already have my list of things readers could pick apart and determine it a 1-star book.  That's okay.  It has to be okay because that is the whole point of learning through challenges.

What I do know is regardless of how many people I come into contact with through this experience, it has helped me start writing again, helped me step out of my cozy hermit lifestyle, and helped me connect with some pretty amazing people!  And if you’re reading this, then by default you are one of my amazing people! Thank you!

If after reading my own 1-star reviews of my work, you want to pick up your own copy of 26 Days to Practice Peace, click HERE.  Sign up for my Newsletter for inspiring random fun notes in your Inbox too!
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Parenting=Fake Courage

8/10/2019

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 by Conlee Ricketts
​I'm not sure if it is fake, false, pretend, or just plain award-winning acting, but I have appeared far more courageous when my child is watching than I really am. I have kept my shit together so my child would feel calm and safe while on the inside I was screaming or crying.  Each illness, bloody knee & nose, or broken bone (mine), I plastered a calm “everything is going to be just fine” smile on my face. I'm certain this has helped me grow as a person, but at the time it was exhausting.

I can pinpoint two events where my courage was 100 percent fabricated! One event was a temporary kind of “hold it together” and the other was more of an ongoing “holding it together.”

Short term holding it together: Eleven-year-old daughter
Walt Disney World: Animal Kingdom; Expedition Everest ride:  (Spoiler Alert; read at your own risk). 

I had never been to Disney World before and I had done all that I possibly could to save for this trip.  I wanted my daughter to enjoy a last hurrah before "stay at home mom" became "working mom" again.  We decided to be brave and ride the roller coaster Expedition Everest.  We waited in line, read all about the Yeti, finally got buckled in and we were off!

The roller coaster was chugging up to get ready for its first big hill. I’m laughing and enjoying my daughter’s screams of enjoyment. Then all the cars came to a slow stop as we reach the peak.  I’m cool, sometimes reaching the top of that first big hill a coaster slows as it clicks its way up, so I give my daughter a confident smile.

Something is wrong, we have stopped for way too long. Suddenly the cars chug and slip and we begin to start flying backward down the track.  My daughter grabs me and screams. I look down at her with a giant smile glued to my face while trying to memorize her face in the last few moments of our life together on Earth. I was certain we were going to die and I wanted to remain calm for her.  Inside I was scared shitless. Period. Convinced we were going to die on this %#*ing roller coaster. 

It took me a few moments to notice that the scenery was different; we were no longer outside in the sunshine but inside the Yeti's cave. The damn ride was supposed to go backward!  I was unaware.  Not being a “Disney Pro” I had no clue what this ride was about. 

I never told my daughter I thought we were going to die that day until last month and her "high schooler" response, “Oh my god! Really Mom? That’s hilarious and so sad!”
 
Long-term holding it together: Six-year-old daughter

The year my marriage ended and I lost our house was all about fake courage and putting on a brave face—for my child and basically for the entire outside world. 

I had to schedule time to cry.  Hiding my sobs and screams locked in my car alone in a parking lot, or on the front porch at 1 A.M. while my daughter slept. She was so young, and while I have no problem letting my daughter know that emotions are healthy and that crying is okay, this type of raw emotion from me was not something a six-year-old would understand.

I am the “Mom” and moms take care of shit, moms are protectors and problem solvers, and moms, dare I say it, are magic. We can kiss it and make it better. 

All the details of my life at that time were all very grown-up problems that had absolutely nothing to do with my child's health and happiness. I refused to burden her with my grown-up problems and emotions. All she needed to know was that we were going to move into a very cool new apartment, life was still going to be great, and that I would take care of anything and everything. Nothing to worry about.

Looking back that’s exactly the way it turned out and everything was fine.  I survived it all, and for the most part, I did an okay job at keeping my shit together.  I wasn’t perfect and I’m sure there are a few scars that remain for my daughter from that period, but I was as courageous as I could possibly be.

I think trying to help our kids feel safe and protected creates many opportunities for this “courageous parenting” which feels like a giant game of pretend. I'm not sure if others will agree with my choice to schedule time to cry or putting a brave face on things to get through them, but it’s how I have chosen to help my daughter enjoy childhood.  I don’t want her to feel responsible for me, or my problems, or my happiness.  She is the child and I am the parent, and I’m supposed to be able to handle all the bullshit tossed my way.  How I choose to handle the rough stuff helps her see how to deal with her own future struggles.  

Right now, she just needs to enjoy her childhood. And truth be told, after twenty-seven years in a classroom, I could re-write this entire essay for teachers.  Teaching=Fake Courage.  Years of illnesses, bloody knees & noses, fire drills, tornado drills, and every lock down, my face must display the similar “everything is going to be just fine” face that I’ve mustered for my own child because I’m protecting someone else’s child.  This is one of those rare skills that actually translates very well to the classroom.

So, as our kids head back to school we put on that all-knowing face of courage for our kids to let them know everything is going to be just fine.  And if it isn’t? Well, as the grown-ups in charge, we need to work to support our children through the “not fine” in a calm, all-knowing, and courageous way—whether we feel that way or not.


If you enjoyed this please share and leave a comment! And you may also like:
​My Morning Coffee or Understanding Longfellow


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    Conlee Ricketts

    I write to steady myself, discover myself, and forgive myself.  Writing reaches into those places that need love and attention in my inner world in order to balance my outer world.  I hope you enjoy. 

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  • 26 Days to Practice Peace
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