Spiritual: April 19, 2023 Issue [#11923] |
This week: 400 Edited by: Jeff More Newsletters By This Editor
1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
"Only a real risk tests the reality of a belief."
-- C.S. Lewis
About The Editor: Greetings! My name is Jeff and I'm one of your regular editors for the Noticing Newbies Official Newsletter! I've been a member of Writing.com since 2003, and have edited more than 350 newsletters across the site during that time. If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to contact me via email or the handy feedback field at the bottom of this newsletter! |
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400
This newsletter marks the 400th I've written for Writing.com, and I hope you'll allow me a little detour from my usual type of newsletter in favor of some self-reflection.
Years ago, when I was a Preferred Author, I took over the "Unofficial Erotica Newsletter Group" and wrote just over 100 newsletters on the topic of the erotica genre. I did a handful of other newsletters on topics like screenwriting, and superheroes, and activity-specific offerings on the site before being promoted to Moderator and starting to edit the official site newsletters. At this point, I've written at least one of every newsletter, the bulk of them being Mystery (120) and For Authors (77). I'm currently a regular newsletter editor for both Noticing Newbies and this Spiritual newsletter, and occasionally pick up a guest spot here and there for the other ones.
Over the years, I've found newsletters to be a really positive way to engage with the community, and to keep my own writing skills sharp. Whether it's research a topic I know very little about, or trying to put into words some advice or concept that's in my head, the act of writing regularly (usually about writing) has been really beneficial to my own process, and has had the added benefit of helping others from time to time.
Each of my stints as a newsletter editor has taught me something new. With the Unofficial Erotica Newsletter, I was learning how to write and think about a genre I really didn't have much experience with prior to taking over those editorial responsibilities. I knew a lot of writers who were extremely timid about including romance and/or eroticism in their work and I figured the best way to learn how to do it well was to immerse myself in the genre. In the years since, I've really come to appreciate those skills that I picked up during that time.
With the Mystery newsletters, that's a genre I do really like to read and write in, so the experience of frequently researching topics and writing about the genre was instrumental in gaining knowledge and experience that I could apply to my own work. And with the Spiritual newsletter for which I'm now a regular editor, it's a chance to think about and explore my faith in a very specific way every month.
Ultimately, writing newsletters is something that I've come to appreciate and value over the years. I know there are some people who find these newsletters not particularly useful or interesting, but for me they represent a way of learning new things, connecting with new people, and making a contribution to this community in a tangible way. I highly recommend it for anyone who values those same things ... and while official Writing.com newsletters are contributed to by Moderators+, there are plenty of other amazing newsletters available on the site. And if there's a topic you'd like to read about but can't already find available, you might just be the perfect person to write it!
Until next time,
Jeff
If you're interested in checking out my work:
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This month's official Writing.com writing contest is:
I also encourage you to check out the following items:
EXCERPT: Life can be very stressful. The pace of change is continually accelerating and the clash of cultural perspectives and conflicting viewpoints can be a source of confusion in the modern world. We may often feel that we lack the wisdom to cope with the challenges of the day. Many advocate meditation as a way to deal with such challenges. There are many different forms and their focus and technique can vary with the religious outlook that informs them. The Eastern forms of meditation based on Buddhism or rooted in the Hindu faith, for example, are very different from Christian understandings of it. This essay will focus on Christian forms of meditation because the author is a Christian and believes that there is little value to be gained from the alternative forms.
EXCERPT: Waking up to the clamorous chirp of his bird alarm sixty-two-year-old John Martins was thrilled to see that the harsh bitter days of winter were long behind him. Illuminating his room in a whitish yellow hue the sparkle of Spring’s long-awaited sunshine basked his skin a sign that more pleasant days were ahead finally after a tedious winter that left the tiny town of Harkins, Pennsylvania in a shut down status for most of the season. Stretching his arms sitting up he could not help but notice the space next to him in his bed once occupied by his wife Millie was empty. Only three months since her sudden passing from a major heart attack another catastrophe of treacherous conditions. If the roads were not iced up and closed off, she would still be here with him cackling and telling crazy jokes.
| | Temptation [E] #2293632 A swing tempts an old person to a last fling of youth. Winner of Personify Writing Contest by Beholden |
EXCERPT: I see the longing in your eye.
And don’t think that I cannot feel the same. We both have memories of motion, the wind blowing in our smiling faces, with only my ties to earth holding us within the arc of our travel toward the sky. Yes, there was that faint frisson of fear as your excitement drove us ever higher and higher, and that weightless moment as we hovered between ascent and the downward rush to embrace repeat.
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Feedback from "Spiritual Newsletter (March 22, 2023)" about ways to pray/meditate:
Thank you, Jeff, for writing the newsletter about praying in different ways. I do most of them, among a few others. I especially love the prayer walk. It gets Fable and me out of the house to enjoy the fresh air, and I take K-Love with us. I love to listen to my worship music and sing along the way. Fable loves getting outside, not sure about my singing though I think she ignores it sometimes. It keeps me grounded and helps me stay tuned in to my Papa! I give thanks to Him the whole time; it helps me tune out the world and its craziness. My soul feels so cleansed afterward. — Legendary❤️Mask
Hi Jeff, a lovely article. I like the varied ways you define ‘prayer’. It’s refreshing to see the possibilities beyond the bowed head and folded hands, and a reliance on words. Yes, we are so much more and there are a multitude of ways to communicate with the Divine. Thank you for this inspiring read. — Mia - craving colour
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