Tag Archives: #blogger

Meet the Writer 2024- parts 1-5

Some of you may remember the Meet the Writer online challenge from 2023. When I saw Beth Kempton promoting this year’s challenge, I was excited to see what topics came up.

Here’s the first of 3 instalments.

Day 1/15- VIEW

Today is Day One of this year’s Meet The Writer event with 15 daily prompts from Beth Kempton.

View…. when I’m writing indoors this is the view of my desk. Cluttered but cosy. My desk is in the corner of the living room so there’s usually a cat or two for company. In summer I enjoy writing outdoors in the sun but it’s January and it’s cold and damp and dark so no view of that space today

Day 2/15 CATALYST

I can’t remember not writing. As soon as I could write a sentence, I was off and scribbling. I’ve mentioned before that writing has always been a coping mechanism for me. I wrote through high school to escape from persistent bullying. I’ve journaled extensively for the past 3/4 years as my key coping mechanism through first Lockdown then George’s illness. Writing fiction is like oxygen to me. I need to be lost in my book babies. Over the years they have proved to be a therapeutic escape from reality. Long may that continue…

Day 3/15….HANDWRITING

I write everything out longhand. I journal longhand. I write far quicker than I type. Do I like my own handwriting? Yes but a lot of folk struggle to read it. I love a nice pen, preferably with purple ink. I’m a sucker for pens… and notebooks. Yes I have several of those that are “too good to use”

Day 4/15 – RITUAL

Even although I am a complete creature of habit, I don’t really have any rituals associated with my writing. I have routines. Every night before I go to bed, I sit and write my diary entry for the day.

When I am buying notebooks to write future book babies in, I always buy 5 of each. Each novel so far has run to 4/5 notepads and I like them to match.

If my writing isn’t flowing as well as I’d like with my manuscripts, I will occasionally change to writing with a different pen in a different colour of ink to see if that flows better….it usually does.

Day 5/15 – COMPANIONS

My companions while I am writing tend to be feline rather than literary. I am the human slave to four spoiled furry boys. Let’s be honest- the cat has done an awesome job at domestication with their humans 😂

I do write near to my bookshelves so you could argue that all my favourite authors are just over my shoulder.

When I’m writing, the books I tend to dip into most often are usually my own as I search for particular scenes to ensure I maintain continuity.

Finding My Space

Over the past ten days or so, I have been attending an online Winter Writing Sanctuary hosted by the beautiful Beth Kempton. This is the second year I have brought the creative new year in within the sanctuary. For me, it’s a nice way to ease into the year ahead’s creative pursuits.

A few days into the course, the daily lesson centred around “building a space”. I thought I would share my short essay response to that lesson with you here-

Oh, where to begin! That’s a question I’ve asked myself many times over the past nine weeks since my husband passed away.

There are so many “spaces” in my life that need to be built or re-modelled. It’s a daunting prospect some days.

The whole dynamic of day-to-day life has shifted forever. Even though I’ve known for over three years that this shift was approaching, it still hit hard, bringing with it a veritable maelstrom of emotions that are still swirling around me.

The “space” that I feel I lost entirely in those early days of grief was my space in the world. I felt as though I didn’t know where I belonged anymore. Wearing this “Blue Peter” badge saying “widow”, I felt as though I had been cast into a void. I’ll be totally honest I still feel that way a lot of the time. I felt that I’d lost my very identity. Watching someone you love die changes a person forever. Who was I now? I’m still figuring that one out.

Friends would message in the first week or two after the funeral to say that they were thinking about the kids and I but were giving me “space” to get my head together. “Space” alone in my head was in fact the last thing that I needed! Left in my own mind, I kept mulling everything over and over, reliving every heartbreaking moment spent in the local hospice. I kept panicking about whether I was being strong enough for my kids. I was worrying about whether they are ok or not. I still am on that one. True they are both adults in their twenties, but their dad was the first person that they had ever lost. I fretted about whether I was really ok. Even on days where I felt more like myself for a few brief hours and felt I had my shit together, I’d panic that I wasn’t being honest with myself. It was in those early days that I really would have appreciated an invite to go for a coffee or a walk, but I accept that everyone else is busy with their lives too. The world keeps turning.

Then there’s the physical “space” around me. The house needs to change to become “my home” rather than “our home”. There are DIY projects that need to be organised that have gone ignored for years while we travelled the journey that was my husband’s illness. I wrote a list…well, three lists- big, medium and small DIY projects. Big projects need a professional. Medium ones need an extra pair of “handy” hands. Small ones I should be able to tackle alone or so the theory goes. Time will tell on that. It’s a lengthy list but in time I’ll get through it. First on the list is my leaking conservatory roof.

I’ll tell you a quick story. In the early days after my husband’s death, the house was transformed into a florist’s shop. The main issue with that was that most of my vases were lining the conservatory windowsills catching drips. The solution – all the bouquets of white flowers were put into those vases then placed back on the windowsill. Voila! Self-watering flowers that in actual fact lasted for weeks.

Other rooms in the house needed attention too. There were belongings to be packed away, thrown away or donated to charity. It was an emotional task … Maybe I’m nesting in a way, but I need to reclaim the physical “space” as my own, while not wiping out all of the past. It’s a delicate balance that needs to be struck.

I’m trying to look at my home for the past twenty years as though it were a new house and I’m just moving in. It’s hard, emotionally hard, but I accept that I need to go through the pain of these changes to heal from the loss.

I need to reclaim my creative “space” and my creative time. Working from home at the day job in the same space that I try to create my book babies in in the evenings is challenging. As time moved on from 2020’s Lockdown but I was still working from home full-time due largely to my husband’s illness, it became harder and harder to separate the two. Now that I’ve had a few weeks away from the day job, I’ve reclaimed the creative “space”. The creative fires are still small embers, but they are gradually burning brighter. I’m on the eve of returning to the day job as I write this, but I am also on the verge of relocating my “day job” space to the upstairs study. That “space” has been dominated by my late husband for the past few years. It was his “bat cave”. I still struggle to spend time in the room, but I know in my heart that I have to move beyond that. I’m slowly, piece by piece, endeavouring to make that “space” my own. The new curtains were a huge step forward. It’ll take time, lots of time, and there’s no rush but I will migrate upstairs for work and reserve my downstairs desk for creative purposes.

It’s a Leap Year. For a while I’ve said:

2023 was the year to be free.

2024 is the year to restore.

2025 will be the year to thrive.

So, the plan, the cunning plan, is to build these new “spaces” both internal and external over the coming year. It will be far from easy, but I will get there one small space at a time. I really don’t have any choice.

Happy 10th blogiversary to me!

It’s been 10 years since I started this blog… 10 years ago today. Some of you may even remember that first nervous post. Here’s a reminder for those of you who joined this creative journey along the way December | 2013 | Coral McCallum

Back in December 2013 I set myself the challenge to post once a week to my new blog page to try to overcome my fear of letting people read what I write. (Still not quite conquered that fear.) My 2014 personal challenge was to post at least once a week. I’ve posted every week since. (OK there have been a few very short “cheat” posts, but they still count as a post).

So how has the creative journey progressed since 29 December 2013?

Well, I’ve self-published seven novels. Seven! These seven include a five book series, the Silver Lake series. Who would ever have thought it- certainly not me! It still feels surreal to see my name on the cover of a book and to see my books on Amazon with all those beautiful twinkling stars beside them.

I’ve written numerous short stories for my blog, many acrostic poems and I’ve kept my Silently Watching dark vampire angel serialised fiction going for the majority of those 10 years ( sh…don’t tell anyone but she’ll be back in January). I’ve promoted my book babies via my blog.

I even upgraded and became a .co.uk! A small detail but a huge step for me.

Over those 10 years I’ve watched my personal world evolve and change too. Who would have thought back in 2013 that we would live through a global pandemic? I’ve watched my kids grow up (They still aren’t interested in anything mother writes so not everything has changed!) And over the past three years, I’ve watched “the Big Green Gummi Bear” battle with terminal illness and ultimately lose that battle at the end of October.

As I look back over the earlier blog posts, I can see them slowly evolving.

As I look back at myself now compared to the “me” of 2013, I’ve evolved too.

Change is good.

So, what is next for my blog? Who knows! Not me! LOL I’ve not written it yet.

As my 11th year as a blogger and indie author commences, there will be more short stories, more delving into the Measly Jar of Motivation, more poems and more dark vampire angel tales.

I don’t wish to dwell on it, but the last three years have been rough, and they have taken their toll physically and emotionally, so I’m keen not to set too stretching a goal for 2024. I’ll keep it simple- the creative goal for 2024 is to finish and publish “Book Baby 8”. I’ve been working on it for more than year but it’s been a stop/start effort over the past six months or so. There are 366 days of 2024 to achieve it in, so I have that one extra day up my sleeve to get it over the line.

If you’ve travelled this journey with me from the very start- thank you for sticking with me.

If you joined along the way – thank you for sticking with me.

If this is the first blog post you’ve seen – welcome and I hope you stick with me.

None of this creative progress would be possible without the love and support of each and every one of you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for reading my blogs, liking and sharing the content, buying and reading my books and for having faith in me. I really do appreciate it.

All that’s left to say is to wish you a very Happy New Year when it comes. May 2024 be kinder to us all.

Love n hugs

Coral

xx

Who knew you could get so emotionally attached to a Christmas tree…

Who knew you could get so emotionally attached to a Christmas tree….

I bought our/my first Christmas tree in 1993 when the Big Green Gummi Bear and I moved into our first flat. I spent a small fortune at the time on it, but it proved to be money well spent as the tree has come out of the box looking as fresh as ever every year until last year. (I can’t say the box aged as well.)

I swear that tree knew that last Christmas would be our last as a family of four. In my heart I knew it was our last Christmas as a family of four. When I brought the tree out of the box my emotions were already running high. Following my traditional routine, I fought the base into submission, started to assemble the tree which was in three sections then disaster struck. The plastic peg around the top section that should insert into the middle section crumbled into pieces leaving me with a metal spike instead that was too small for the hole.

I lost it. Floods of tears and a fair amount of sobbing that the tree couldn’t dare break now just when I needed it for our last Christmas together. (Ok I may have been a tad irrational, but life has been stressful around here for a long time and that was actually our third time of preparing for “last” Christmas.)

The duct tape duly came to the rescue and the top section was rammed into the hole. It held.

The vintage tree survived another Christmas, but I knew that it had been its last Christmas too. Unwilling to part with it, I put it back in the box and returned it to the loft.

Move on to this Christmas and we’re preparing for our first Christmas as a family of three. I’ll park the emotions associated with that for another tale. A few weeks ago, Boy Child and I were in the local garden centre, and they had their display of trees out. Taking a deep breath, I checked them out and listening to Boy Child’s pleas of “you need a tree that’s bigger than me” (He’s 6’1”) I chose a beautiful 7’ tree. Before common sense took over, I bought it. It was still only mid-November so way too early to put the tree up.

Last week the day came when I knew I had to put the decorations up or they may never go up. All the boxes and bags were duly hauled down from the loft including both the old and the new trees. Could I really part with my old faithful Christmas tree that held so many memories in its branches?

I knew I had to, but I realised I couldn’t part with all of it.

I opened the box and pulled it all out for one last time, running my hands over its branches then I painstakingly removed each of the small pinecones that were wired onto the branches and wound them round the branches of my new tree. Each pinecone that I secured onto its new home reminded me that I was intertwining Christmas past with Christmas present and that sat easier with my heart.

Christmas will feel different this year. How it works out remains to be seen but hopefully my new tree will enjoy its first of many Christmases to come as it stands twinkling in the corner of the room.

Labyrinth – an acrostic poem

Life itself is a labyrinth

Always moving along a continuous path

Be mindful as you take each step

Your heart leading the way over your head

Reflecting on your innermost thoughts

Imagining the way your world could be

Noting and acknowledging thoughts that disturb your balance and setting them free

Trust the path before you

Happiness awaits….

I recently got the opportunity to walk the blueprint (whiteprint in this case) of a labyrinth that is to be laid out locally to me. In fact, it’s the one in the photo above and details of the project can be found on Facebook ( Inverclyde Labyrinth ( Walking as one) | Facebook )

Let’s dispel a myth, labyrinths are not mazes.

Labyrinths are a single continuous path that leads to the centre or heart of the labyrinth itself. There’s one way in and one way out. These are peaceful places to be used for walking meditation or a moment of self-reflection and have been proven to calm anxieties and help restore balance to your wellbeing.

Don’t believe me – find one local to you and try it for yourself. I look forward to walking this one on a regular basis once its been completed.

Home – Labyrinths in Britain

World-Wide Labyrinth Locator – Welcome

(Credits to the owner of the image- photo is tagged)

Allow me to introduce you to King Ragnar Lothbrok

There’s been a “Viking” invasion around here. The three existing locals were less than impressed!

Allow me to introduce you to King Ragnar Lothbrok, Ragnar for short. Well, it is an awfully big name for a little kitten. (OK, he’s not so little …..)

Is that name sounding vaguely familiar? If you watched the Amazon Prime series Vikings, it should do.

Yes, I named my new addition after the central character.

My Ragnar is a 16-week-old ball of mischievous fluff who is half-Maine Coon and half-Siberian by descent.

The historical King Ragnar, who features in Norse legends, was a Viking hero who raided the British Isles circa 790 AD. He is also famous for his sons, who included Ivar the Boneless, Bjorn Ironside and Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye. (My Ragnar won’t be having any sons!) King Ragnar was Swedish/Danish by descent.

(credits to the owner- sourced via Google)

The Norse King Ragnar’s full name was Ragnar Hairy-Breeches Lothbrok. I drew the line at adding “Hairy Breeches” to the cat’s name although he is growing a fine pair!

When Ragnar Hairy Breeches raided Lindisfarne according to the TV show, he took one of the young monks hostage, and took him back to Kattegat as his slave and, in time, his friend. The fictional priest was called Althelstan.

(credits to the owner- sourced via Google)

I suspect in time young Ragnar may also find his Athelstan.

He has already found his friend Floki, although his Floki is a cuddly elephant and not a psychotic Viking boat builder.

(Credits to the owner -sourced via Google)

Have you seen The Little Shop of Horrors? Remember Audrey? …..

(credits to the owner via Google)

Who remembers Audrey from The Little Shop of Horrors?

That was a plant once seen, never forgotten!

Last year, I bought my father an exotic orchid for his 80th birthday and set him the challenge to get it to flower. For over a year, the plant just sat there and stubbornly refused to flower. Then my parents went on holiday. With a couple of weeks peace and quiet to itself, it began to grow….

At first it looked as if it was just growing 2 new leaves then the flower bud began to swell…..

As soon as I saw it, it reminded me of Audrey!

Over a few days, the bud grew and grew then began to open out. Had Audrey been reincarnated here?

FEED ME! …. remember the song?

Feed me, feed me, feed me
Feed me, Seymour, feed me all night long
That’s right, boy, you can do it
Feed me, Seymour, feed me all night long
‘Cause if you feed me, Seymour
I can grow up big and strong

I did begin to wonder if I should be concerned for my parents’ safety with “Audrey” sprouting merrily in their kitchen!

But lo and behold, the bud opened to reveal the most unusual flower!

The flower itself continued to grow…….

At the time of writing this blog it hasn’t consumed anyone…..yet!

There will now be a short intermission

Normal blog service will resume shortly. In the meantime, rather than the scary 1970’s test card image from the TV, here’s some cute kittens.

Images sourced via Google – credit to the owners

Parenting… how do we know if we’ve done it right?

Parenting… one of the most challenging and rewarding roles but how do we know we’ve done or are doing it right? Million-dollar question right there!

Don’t panic, this isn’t going to turn into a self-help parenting guide blog. Humour me a moment.

I shared a short story on here recently (The Measly Jar of Motivation – Inside Out | Coral McCallum ) and there were echoes in it of the night my son was born.

There was a moment in time that has lived with me for more than twenty-five years and it came a few short hours after he was born. It was late, after midnight, and I was totally exhausted after giving birth. It had been a very long day! In the plastic crib at the end of the bed, my newborn son began to cry. Instinctively, I got out of bed, lifted him into my arms and tried to console him. He’d had a rough day too. As I gazed out the window into the dark night and at the streetlights twinkling below, the weight of responsibility of being a parent hit me. It hit me like a ton of bricks!

This tiny crying bundle of joy was depending on me. Was I up to the job? Could I nurture and care for and teach this child the life skills he would need to reach adulthood? I’ll not lie…at that moment I felt totally overwhelmed and SO underprepared for motherhood.

I’ve never classed myself as a natural mother but whether my now adult children agree or not, I’ve done my best. They both made it safely to adulthood. Whew!

Fast forward eleven years or so from the cold dark night that my son was worn. Over the years I had among other things introduced him to music and tried to nurture his tastes. The day had finally come when I was taking him to his first concert. Unsure as to how he would be in a crowd of rock fans, I’d erred on the side of caution and opted for seated tickets. (See I could be a sensible mother sometimes). He was beyond excited to be at his first “gig”.

The support act that night were a young up-and-coming Southern rock band from Kentucky called Black Stone Cherry. The first song they played was a song called Rain Wizard… and so began a lifelong love of live music for my son.

A few weeks ago, having queued outside in the pouring rain for over an hour, my son and I took up our spots just off the rail for the night and for the umpteenth time prepared to watch Black Stone Cherry play live. Rain Wizard was on the set and as the thundering drum intro began, I was transported for a moment back to that night from 2009 in Glasgow’s SEC.

Fourteen years  and countless gigs from numerous bands later, my baby boy was still happily beside me at a gig. I smiled to myself and realised that maybe I hadn’t done so bad a job of being a parent after all.

Oh and if you’re curious about the song, here’s the video from the other week

Rain Wizard – Black Stone Cherry @ St Luke’s Glasgow 06/10/23 – YouTube

(image sourced via Google – credits to the owner)

Continue the Story – When Enough Is Enough (warning- references domestic abuse)

As the police clipped on the handcuffs, I knew that the nightmare was over. From the safety of the police car, I watched as the officers bundled him into the back of the second police car that had arrived all lights and sirens in our quiet cul-de-sac.

The neat little street in the “nice” neighbourhood was the last place anyone would expect any form of crime to take place.

But what really goes on behind closed doors?

I knew in my heart that I had finally done the right thing. In all honesty, I know I should have found the strength to do it years ago. If only I’d been stronger. If only I’d had more self-belief… but that had been slowly and steadily eroded away. If only I had acted sooner, then my kids might have been spared all that they have endured and not been exposed to it.

My son was the one who convinced me that I could set up cloud storage that his dad couldn’t access. He even helped me set it all up and password protect it. It was our secret. I used the “secret cloud” to store every email, every text message, every What’s App. If only I’d figured out how to record and save conversations…. Slowly over the weeks and months, I built up my body of evidence and my courage.

The final straw had been when he’d tried the same tactics with our daughter. She was barely a teenager! His vicious comments had almost broken her. Reading them had torn my heart to pieces and fuelled my anger. How could he do this to his own daughter? It hadn’t taken much to persuade her to share the screenshots she had shown me. What I wasn’t prepared for was the sad fact that she had been hiding his cruel messages for months, scared that she would be blamed for the behaviour.

I waited until the kids were at school and he was working from home for the day before confronting him. They didn’t need to witness that. They had already seen and heard more than enough. He kicked off as I’d expected he would when I told him I knew about the messages he’d sent to our daughter. For the first and last time, the abuse became physical. I was going to have a beauty of a black eye in the morning. I took the blows without fighting back then submissively crept from the room while he returned to his conference calls and emails. From the sanctuary of the bathroom, I dialled 999 and reported the assault.

As I watched the police car leave, I breathed a sigh of relief.

“That was a brave thing you did today,” praised the female officer who was sitting beside me.

I forced a smile. It hurt to smile.

I saw the curtains twitch in the house across the street. If only they knew what had gone on behind closed doors but enough is enough….

October is Domestic Abuse Awareness month.

Domestic abuse doesn’t need to be physical to be classed as a crime. Emotional abuse is a crime punishable under the Serious Crime Bill 2015 in the UK and can carry a prison sentence of up to 5 years.

If you’ve been affected by domestic abuse including emotional abuse, you can find help and support in the links below.  

Emotional abuse | Relate

Getting help for domestic violence and abuse – NHS (www.nhs.uk)

What Is Emotional Abuse & Things You Should Know | NSPCC

Guide to support options for abuse – Mind