A few weeks ago, I shared my focus word for this year, along with a bit about why I chose it and how it connected to previous focus words. I don't know if it's because we're still in January so I'm still thinking heavily on the topic, or if it's just that I tend to be more introspective during the enforced stillness of winter and snow days, but this week I wanted to dig a little deeper into the imagery of locusts and the symbolism of a damaging swarm.
Every year, I choose a Bible verse to go along with my focus word, something to hold onto, meditate on, learn about, study, and pray over. This year's verse is a perfect metaphor for what I feel about my life and the path I've been on in recent years as a writer, a mother, and a woman still learning to thrive after trauma:
All my life, I’ve been a writer; even as a child, I loved books and stories of all kinds. In many ways, the stories I loved were the hope of adventures I never believed I could experience, people I never thought I would meet, and loyal friends who could be accessed as easily as turning a page. I covered the trauma of those early years with a wallpaper collage—pages and pages of unfinished tales, undeveloped characters, stories with infinite potential because they never ended. But it wasn’t until 2012 that I completed my first novel as a way to cope while my mother went through a cancer scare. My daughters were three and eight at the time, and every time I glanced up from the computer to watch them play, I thought about how to mother them differently, how to offer them more than I had. How to leave something tangible behind if the cancer running through our genetic makeup should find me before they were ready.
That book birthed a new career for me, and a chance to mold a lifelong passion into a legacy I hoped my little girls would be proud of. Proof that the dreams of our hearts don't have to be passing fancies only applicable to other people. Proof that when you go for it, when you muster the courage to give it all you've got, when you're willing to sacrifice and put in the effort...a dream can become so much more than the secret longing of a heart.
What's funny about dreamers like me is that we often find ourselves surrounded by people enraged by a dreamer's audacity. As a young writer, family and friends would happily pat my shoulder and smile indulgently and praise my efforts. They'd read my writing, discuss my poems, brainstorm characters and plot twists. They were happy to talk about fantasies of fat wallets and big houses—until I published my first novel. It felt like a dream; I cried the first time I held one of my own books in my hands, my name on the cover blurring behind a film of tears. By the end of 2013, I had written and published five novels. If my writing was a crop field, I would have needed a team to help me manage the coming harvest.
There are a few people who have been with me since the beginning, people who held me up when I wanted to quit, who believed in me when I didn't, and who reminded me of the bigger goals when I listened too hard or too long to people trying to tear it all down. Those people would have showed up for the harvest...but to keep with the metaphor, locusts are often an unpredictable and devasting plague.
Setting boundaries around my writing as it gained momentum nearly cost me everything in the beginning. I lost relationships with people who wanted access, credit, and control. I saw people I had previously trusted turn on me and begin to actively sabotage what I was trying to grow. I went into therapy, got diagnosed with complex PTSD, and had to step away from writing to focus on my children as the turmoil in our private lives left them both with chronic mental and physical health problems.
In the years that followed, as my daughters and I rebuilt our lives, I often questioned my calling as a writer. I believed in my writing as a gift from God, and believed that my stories were meant to minister to others and provide beyond the needs of my family—but as everything fell apart in my hands, I wondered why God seemed to be holding back. Was I doing something wrong? Was I missing the point?
Looking back, I see how God was teaching me about stewardship—and discernment. I began to focus more deeply on the present blessings even as I hoped and planned for a greater future. I also became more discerning about who I am, who I want to be, and the people I allowed into my life. I learned to recognize more quickly the difference between those who would help me grow something meaningful and those who would destroy it out of jealousy or greed. I learned the hard way that if I wasn't careful, my deepest mission as a writer could be devoured from within, as quickly and completely as a field consumed by locusts.
Sometimes, protecting my calling has meant stepping away from people or places I previously loved, and though it left me feeling isolated, I’ve also learned that these periods of loss were seasons of growth. Lessons gleaned in the darkness of those painful years planted seeds only now beginning to sprout in the everyday moments of my life; the time I spent away from writing to focus on healing and raising my daughters was like a seed lying dormant in soil, hidden but not forgotten.
In the darkness, unseen, those lessons rooted my faith—not just in God’s purpose for my writing, but in myself as someone capable of stewarding this calling well. The landscape of my life, though scarred, turned over, and fertilized by the pain of the past, finally feels fertile again, and every new sprout, every new reader or follower, is a reminder of hope.
There are still setbacks, of course; beginning this year with illness threw off my schedule, and STILL FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM isn’t as far along as I’d hoped. I wanted to be finished with the writing and on to the editing by now...and yet three scenes remain incomplete.
Hopefully next week's post will be an announcement that STILL FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM is on to the next phase, because I've never been a quitter (not for long, anyway), and locusts aside, every word I write still feels like water on the field. The locust years didn’t destroy my calling. They prepared it. The land is ready, the seeds are growing, and I fully intend to...