Diana Nyad chased her dream until at age sixty-four she swam
from the Cuban shore to Key West, Florida. After an amazing fifty-three hours
in shark and jellyfish infested waters, she emerged from the water, fulfilling
her motto for the year: “Find a Way.” She told a waiting world about the
lessons she learned during her life long journey. “One is we should never, ever
give up. Two is you’re never too old to chase your dreams. Three, it looks like
a solitary sport, but it’s a team.”

Terry Burns, our keynote speaker, reminded me that the
writer’s life is not about selling thousands of books, but about reaching that
one person who needs to hear my words. That should be enough motivation to “…never, ever give up.” Rejections
by agents and editors come all too often for me —like stinging jellyfish—
but that is no reason to quit casting my message into the sea.
Publicist ReAnn Ring taught classes about using social
media to promote my writing. She
explained that Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram, and
Hootesuite are waiting for me to grasp and employ to reach a wider audience. I
learned to type on a manual typewriter, but that doesn’t mean I am too old to
learn new tricks. It may take me longer
than some, but “I can do this.”
It took a team effort for our conference to be a success.
Writing has its lonesome moments and sometimes I feel like I am floundering,
but it's not a solitary sport. Whenever we gather at a conference, or at our
regular Christian Authors Guild meetings, I learn from my fellow writers. It may be during
a critique group or around refreshments as we talk about our latest writing
exploits.
If you want to break a world record, swim from Cuba to the
US. If I want to cast a wave upon a
secular sea, I must follow the advice of Martin Luther, “… change the world,
pick up my pen and write.”