Gratitude is riches. Complaint is poverty.
Doris Day
The essence of all beautiful art, all great art, is gratitude.
Friedrich Nietzsche
Gratitude is riches. Complaint is poverty.
Doris Day
The essence of all beautiful art, all great art, is gratitude.
Friedrich Nietzsche
The more beauty I see.
~Mary Davis
For our readers in the US, Happy Thanksgiving! During this Thanksgiving week we like to reflect on the many things we're thankful for.
It's easy to pick out what's not going well or the failures that keep us from where we want to be. It takes an effort to look on the bright side. And while I believe it can be good to let yourself wallow for a bit, afterward it's even more important to take stock of the good things.
It doesn't have to be all big things either! I was thankful for my cup of coffee this morning and I'll be thankful for a glass of wine tonight. Right now I'm incredibly thankful for my friends who keep me going—even better than caffeine—and help build me up when I've been torn down.
Thank you my friends for being there. And thank you to our readers for giving us your time each day! I hope you all have a thankful weened!
I have one main thanksgiving-type quote, but it seemed kind of simple and not super weighty or thoughty, so I turned to Google and found some really good ones:
“When I started counting my blessings, my whole life turned around." —Willie Nelson
"Be thankful for what you have; you'll end up having more. If you concentrate on what you don't have, you will never, ever have enough." —Oprah Winfrey
"Piglet noticed that even though he had a Very Small Heart, it could hold a rather large amount of Gratitude." —A.A. Milne
“ ‘Thank you’ is the best prayer that anyone could say. I say that one a lot. Thank you expresses extreme gratitude, humility, understanding.” —Alice Walker
“The roots of all goodness lie in the soil of appreciation for goodness.” —Dalai Lama
“When eating fruit, remember the one who planted the tree.”—Vietnamese Proverb
“Silent gratitude isn’t very much to anyone.”—Gertrude Stein
Humans can be so wise. I'm human, but not always wise. My personal go-to quote is unattributed and unattributable, though I say it almost constantly. And not to put myself anything like on the level of these deep thinkers and talented folks, I'll just sneak it here at the end. Here goes:
"Thank you." --me
In this week of being consciously thankful and grateful, this quote by Henri Frederic Amiel reminds me that my thoughts and deeds are concentric circles creating ripples in the Universe. What flows out, flows back. Let kindness inform the intention and compassion shape the action.
Happy (Early) Thanksgiving
It's Thanksgiving time in the US. We are supposed to post about the most profound and simplest statement of gratitude that we can think of.
Thank you seems to cover that pretty well. It's amazing to me how many people have trouble with those two words. They're almost as rare as I'm Sorry. But it's easy to forget, isn't it? When the world is doing its best to me you lower your head and push past the inconveniences, the fights, the squabbles, and protests? The world does that. It gets us into trouble. Politically speaking I don't have to look any further than the current president of these United States to see an example of selfishness personified. I don't care what side of the political coin is yours, it's just pathetic to see.
We have a plague wiping out hundreds of thousands of people across the globe. We have had a season of truly epic hurricanes and tropical storms. We have seen millions of acres of land burned and destroyed this year, and heatwaves that are epic continue to hit the planet. In a time when we should be seeking unity, were have a virtual army of buffoons who can't wear a mask without throwing fits about their freedoms being taken away, and we have armies if, well, gun-happy clowns, running around carrying their weapons and doing their best to look intimidating.
It's easy to see the negatives, isn't it? It always is.
And yet, there are a million reasons to say thank you. I was silent here for over a year, because I woke up one morning with a growth on the side of my neck that turned out to be cancer of the tonsil. It was fast-acting and it could easily have killed me. I had doctors taking their own sweet time in making appointments for me to see specialist after specialist, while I struggled to continue breathing, while I found out the hard way that eating is damned near impossible when you can't swallow.
But I had one young man who listened when I said I couldn't;t wait two more weeks to see the next specialist. He took the time to called around and got me an appointment at 8 am the very next day. That appointment got me in the hospital the same day, and got the machinations started to aggressively treat my cancer. I had people outside of the hospital who got me financial help in the form of a GoFundMe site. I would have never even considered that option.
I got financial help when I needed it most. I got treatment for my cancer. I got help from literally hundreds of people, many of whom I never met, who had no reason to offer me help, aside from simply being kind-hearted. They helped me, when there was nothing in it for them.
How amazing is that?
Listen, it's not perfect. My health is not what it used to be. They mean it when they say the treatment for cancer is damned near as bad as the cancer itself. It's brutal, and it's nearly crippling. My heart is not the same. My body has suffered debilitating side effects. But you know what? I'm alive and currently cancer free. I've lost 70 plus pounds, had a few teeth pulled, and I spent six months with chemo brain stopping me from writing virtually anything at all.
But I'm still here.
I have a lot to be thankful for. More than I can express.
As I said last year, I have so much to be thankful for and truly I am blessed.
And all I can say is Thank You.
I can never repay the debts, but I'm trying to pay it forward.
And I hope I never find a reason to forget to say Thank You.
I haven’t written the
blurb for the book yet because one challenge at a time, you know? Here’s the
series blurb: Genetically engineered
soldiers of the far future, the Badari were created by alien enemies to fight
humans. But then the scientists kidnapped an entire human colony from the
Sectors to use as subjects in twisted experiments…the Badari and the humans
made common cause, rebelled and escaped the labs. Now they live side by side in
a sanctuary valley protected by a powerful Artificial Intelligence, and wage
unceasing war on the aliens. Some overarching issues do remain unresolved in
each book since this is an ongoing series but romance always wins the day in my
novels!
Jamokan is the Alpha of
one of the packs and feeling frustrated with his role in the rebellion and in
the sanctuary valley. In this unedited scene from near the beginning of the novel, he’s asking Aydarr, the ruling
Alpha for permission to take his men to the mountains for a hunt.
EXCERPT:
Two days later he sat with Aydarr in the other Alpha’s office, drinking Badari
herbal tea and discussing a training issue. It was a rare meeting with neither
Jill nor Daegan in attendance and Jamokan knew this was his opportunity to make
the proposal he’d been mulling over. “There is one more thing,” he said once
they agreed on the resolution of the training curriculum.
Eyebrows raised, Aydarr watched him. “Yes? I know
you’ve had something weighing on your mind for a while now. I know you too well
after all those years of rivalry in the lab. I used to have to watch you like
the alien cat in my DNA would stalk small winged prey. I never knew what you’d
pull next and I always had to be prepared.”
The Alpha’s tone was complimentary, admiring even
and Jamokan was mollified to some extent. Yes, before Jill came onto the scene there had
been strong competition between them and Jamokan won his share of the contests.
He stopped himself before wondering for the thousandth time what would have
happened if the Khagrish had given Jill to him instead of Aydarr. She isn’t my fated mate, which is the will
of the goddess, so we’ll never truly know. “I need to pull my pack together
and take the men out of this damn valley for a bit. The pack bond is… fraying.”
He searched for the right words. “Not to the point where it would ever break of
course.” A flare of dominance prickled through his nerve endings at the mere
idea of his pack dissolving. “I wouldn’t permit that. I can hold a pack
together. But maybe it’s our special canid mix of DNA – we need to run as a
pack. Just us. Take a breather from all this forced togetherness in the valley
and undertake a task or mission on our own.”
“I think the Khagrish unfortunately had some sense
built into their so-called science,” Aydarr said, unperturbed. “I think all
three of our packs needed that time loose in the Preserve which we were given
between experiments. To just be ourselves, as much as we could be under the
circumstances. To not interact with the other two packs for an extended period.”
Thinking back to the time in the labs, Jamokan said,
“I wonder how the Tzibir are faring these days? Collaborating with the Khagrish
even to a limited extent seems like a slippery slope to extinction.”
“You hear the same reports I do from MARL,” Aydarr
said with a shrug. “Nothing about them on any of the intercepts. As long as the
damn lizards aren’t taking the field against us, I have other worries to deal
with than a group who chose not to join us. What kind of sortie do you have in
mind for your pack? Now isn’t a bad time actually.”
Jamokan had come prepared. “I understand the kitchen
is running low on protein stocks, since we added the last group of people. I
was thinking the pack and I could go up north, to where the giant horned
faleker roam, and do a few weeks of serious hunting. Maybe bag game birds as
well. Darik said when he was on his solo mission to the north he saw flocks of
thousands of birds on the lakes near the falekers’ habitat. My enforcers and I
could design a few simulated maneuvers to run as well, sharpen everyone’s
senses. Maybe offer a prize to the winning team or soldier. I have to think
through the details, once I know for sure where we’re going.” He tilted his
head ever so slightly, knowing he needed to signal his willingness to accept
Aydarr’s decision. The other Alpha’s strength pushed against his own and of
course Aydarr would win. Jamokan always had to be mindful to steer clear of
confrontation with the man, which chafed. In the old days, in captivity, he and
Aydarr squared off fairly often. “Assuming you give permission.”
The supreme Alpha lounged in his chair, considering…
******************************************
I hope to get the book finished, edited and released
in December….till then feel free to catch up on the rest of the series, if you haven't already! At all major ebook sellers...
This book doesn't have a title yet. It'll be Enemy something or the other. I just haven't gotten to the something or other yet. The story is resisting pulling together and you know how happy that makes me. But. Like Dad has always liked to say, anything worth doing -- no. That's not the one. You know what? He doesn't have a saying for this. I do. Sometime writing is hard. It'll be worth it. Someday. Today's not that day. Tomorrow doesn't look so great, either.
We're on an alien planet. Bad things are happening. While this is for book four, it the whole 'alien planet, bad things happening, pretty much describes all the openings of the books in my SFR series. Welcome.
Perimeter guards on Anqorre had a distressing tendency to turn up dead, their body parts strewn all over the jungle. When they could be found at all. Since she hadn’t had the good grace to die in her first several firefights, putting her on sentry duty presented the brass with the next best opportunity for getting her killed without having to put a gun to her head themselves.
Though, to be fair, that was likely next.
Lightning flashed.
Ildri stopped walking. She glanced at the dark hulk of jungle. Rain swept the tops of the trees flat. The low roar did nothing to mask bone-shaking thunder. The squall had to be the outer bands of the incoming storm.
No one would sleep in the muddy, misery-plagued camp tonight. Good time to head for the supply ship.
A man’s voice pinged her auditory sensors as if carried on the last rumble of
thunder. "Godsdammit, I should have gills.”