Give Me Your Eyes

Screen Shot 2013-02-12 at 8.07.41 AM   “We don’t see things as they are, we see them as we are.” – Anais Nin

Sometimes I can be rather dense. You know, like a blockhead or a doorknob. I just don’t get things. One of the things I have always had trouble with is the commandment to see others as Jesus sees them. I’m like, “Huh? What in tarnation does that mean?

Did that mean having x-ray eyes like superman, or using a high powered scope to watch their every move? Did I have to have googly eyes that were constantly on the move to see everything a person did? pvBJ1FZ.jpg

Or did I have to lick a  poisonous toad to give me psychedelic visions that were either bizarre or terribly frightening. Screen Shot 2015-05-04 at 12.04.50 PM

 

And then I read “The Shack” by Paul Young and for a while I had been listening to “Give me your eyes” by Brandon Heath, and suddenly I just got it. The like shined in the darkness of thick head of mine, and I got it. I understood, and with the understanding came both forgiveness and an overwhelming sense of love for all the hurting people of this world.

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I finally understood that it meant to look past the surface appearance, to look deeper than the clothes, the makeup, the attitude, the dirt, the outside, and see inside the soul. That is what God sees. Jesus sees in the homeless vet a person shell-shocked, alone, frightened and in need of someone he can trust and love. Jesus sees in the shallow girl who wears a ton of makeup and always has the latest and most expensive clothes and who takes endless Instagram pictures of herself, a young woman who desperately wants to be loved for who she really is and is trying so hard to find that person. Jesus sees in the hardworking man who comes home too tired to play with his children, a father who wants to provide for  his children the best way he knows how, and doesn’t understand that his children need more than just a roof and three meals a day.

giphyHe sees in each and everyone of us the need to love and be loved. To be understood, accepted and forgiven for falling short in whatever areas we think we need to do more. His eyes see all of us as whole, worthy and acceptable. And to see with His eyes allows you to see others in the same way. When you see with His eyes you will accept people as the are, love them as they are, and forgive them for inadvertently hurting you.

It’s not always easy, but it brings  you a sense of peace because when you look at the real person you understand that whatever they are doing they are not doing it to hurt you. They are doing it only to relieve their own pain. There own sense of being unloved and/or unlovable. It also frees you to love others much more spontaneously and freely. Seeing others with His eyes sets you free from judging others, comparing yourself to others, and allows  you to accept yourself as you are because now you can also see yourself as He sees you. You are a child of God,  made  in His image and never let anyone tell you different.

Blond woman lying in field

“You are a child of the universe, no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here. And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should. – Max Ehrmann

 

What Are the REAL Odds of Success? Extreme Ownership & the Best-Selling Author

Discipline is freedom, the freedom to become part of the 5%

Author Kristen Lamb's avatarKristen Lamb's Blog

Original image via Lucy Downey from Flickr Creative Commons Original image via Lucy Downey from Flickr Creative Commons

Many of us are doing NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month). If you’ve been following this blog the last two weeks, then you probably know I’ve had a horrific case of the flu. While this does mean I’ve sidelined editing (have to have higher thinking skills) and teaching (kind of need a voice) this has not excused me from writing.

In fact, it’s been pretty good for my writing since Robotussin apparently chloroforms the internal editor and is like Skittles to the Lizard Brain who is now running around in my head with scissors.

Oh God! It has the glitter! Hold on! Back in a minute….

Where was I? Yes, Lizard Brain is great for creating, and if I keep my pace, I should finish my 50,000 words tomorrow. Right now I am at almost 41,000 words and have been averaging about…

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New Release – The Journey Home

Separated from their mother and lost in the woods, two runaway slave children travel the Underground Railroad in search of both freedom and a forever home with their missing mother.

 

Thomas and Cassie’s mother hadn’t included Old Red in her plans to meet the Underground Railroad conductor. At the planned meeting time, the master’s old hound dog ripped her plans to shreds as surely as he would her two children. Using herself as a decoy, the family separated. Her final words to Thomas and Cassie were to follow the river and stay in the water to hide their scent. They did as she instructed not knowing if this would be the last time they would see her, or that this night would be the beginning of a long, dangerous journey with an unknown future.

 

The perfect gift for the middle grade and tween reader.

 

The Journey Home – Pre-Order Here

FREE fiction and a cover reveal for Imitation & Alchemy.

Source: FREE fiction and a cover reveal for Imitation & Alchemy.

For Writers: The Audacity of Optimism

Source: For Writers: The Audacity of Optimism

For Writers: The Audacity of Optimism

Be Brave – walk through adversity with an open heart!

elizabethhunter's avatarELIZABETH HUNTER

There have been several articles lately about how complicated writing female protagonists can be. We want them strong but not too strong. Amazingly competent but not unrealistic. Gritty but not abrasive.

Blech.

By my count, I have now written thirteen female protagonists (maybe more depending on your definition of protagonist) in my novels and novellas. Here’s some of the reader and reviewer feedback I’ve gotten about my female protagonists:

“clever” “boring, plain, over-emotional, and kinda stupid” “kickass!” “pathetic” “spineless ninny” “awesome” “relatable” “no personality” “one-dimensional” “all-time favorite heroine” “weak” “brilliant”

And ladies and gentlemen, this is all feedback for the same character! I’ll leave you to guess for which because honestly, this could be for any and all of them. Reader perception ranges SO wildly (and always has) that I tend to stick with the philosophy that has guided me from the beginning of my writing career. It’s simple…

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Move Over Barnes & Noble, Hello Amazon Brick-and-Mortar—Bringing Back the Bookstore Only Better

But Amazon knows who is selling. It has the data. It also knows not all areas have the same tastes in books. What if you could strategically stock every store? Wait! Now, you can.

Source: Move Over Barnes & Noble, Hello Amazon Brick-and-Mortar—Bringing Back the Bookstore Only Better

Move Over Barnes & Noble, Hello Amazon Brick-and-Mortar—Bringing Back the Bookstore Only Better

Indies- The time has come Amazon has brick and mortar book stores!

Author Kristen Lamb's avatarKristen Lamb's Blog

Okay, THIS guy no longer is replacing B&N Okay, I have to close my bookstore. DANG IT!

Man, I SO love being right. Not to brag, but those who’ve followed me any amount of time know my tract record for predictions is pretty darn impressive. Back as early as 2006 I knew social media was going to be a game changer for novelists. Until social media, fiction authors had zero ability to build a platform of fans before the book was ever finished/published, unlike non-fiction authors (which probably explained our 96% failure rate).

The only way a novelist could build a platform or brand was through already published books. This was NOT the case for the non-fiction author.

Unlike novelists, NF authors weren’t trying to spin an audience from the ether and praying the stars aligned when their books hit shelves. Non-fiction writers exhibited some control—actually quite a lot of control—in creating a platform of fans who…

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How Writing Quickly Can Improve Your Storytelling

Get in the zone, or lick some strange frogs?

Author Kristen Lamb's avatarKristen Lamb's Blog

Screen Shot 2015-11-02 at 10.06.26 AM

Ah, it is National Novel Writing Month. Many of you are participating in NaNoWriMo (write 50,000 words in a month) and many are not. Either way is fine. Your call. I love doing Nano simply because I have to fast draft everything because I tend to nitpick stuff to death, especially fiction.

I fast draft all year, so November is the only time I have company and lots of immoral support.

Why do I love writing fast? So happy you asked!

Many new authors slog out that first book, editing every word to perfection, revising, reworking, redoing. When I used to be a part of critique groups, it was not at all uncommon to find writers who’d been working on the same book two, five, eight and even ten years. Still see them at conferences, shopping the same book, getting rejected, then rewriting, rewriting…..

Sigh.

Great, maybe Kathryn Stockett, the…

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