September 03, 2025

A Big Picture View of My Writing by Sandi Somers

 


 On a mission trip to northern Haiti in 2006, some of our group hiked up to the mountain fortress of La Citadelle Henri Christophe. What a 360 ยบ view of Northern Haiti! I was especially surprised by the small area near the Caribbean coast in which we had travelled. It had seemed like a distance as we drove on rutted roads from one point to another past villages, into Cap-Haitien, and to the pastor’s house where we helped with construction. Yet in my view from the fortress, those distances were only a few kilometres. (Unfortunately, with the haze, my photo didn’t turn out).

Just as the Citadelle offered an amazing overview of my earlier contact points, so at this time of year we reflect on the big picture of our writing—where we have come from, where we are now, and what our plans are for the rest of the year.

My big picture planning began in late December. I realized that I was working on several different projects. Besides writing monthly for our InScribe Writers Online blog and quarterly for FellowScript, I was writing weekly devotions for my cousin and great-niece and finishing a book-in-progress. I was also adding chapters to several future books.

But how could I organize and co-ordinate writing for all these interrelated projects? Initially, I listed the next steps of each possible work-in-progress—a publishing plan. This gave me the clarity I so needed.

How has my work progressed? And how is God leading and guiding me?

In late June, I finished studying through the Bible and began again in Genesis. This time, I resolved to write faith-based devotions based on the chapters I’m reading. My day usually begins early, spending valuable time with the Lord in in-depth Bible studies. As He illuminates insights and understanding, He gives me story ideas and a devotional slant to help my readers recognize the great treasure they have in the Lord and in their Christian faith.

The Lord has impressed on me the need for concerted prayer and planning each morning as to which article to draft and/or polish. (Sometimes I forget to pray—and my writing doesn’t go so well.)

Normally late spring through summer is my least productive writing season, as it’s filled with outdoor activities, gardening, travel, get-togethers, etc. This year, however, with clarity, I’ve been able to continue with more writing than usual. It helps when on sunny days on my walks, I take my cell phone, sit at a picnic table and draft an idea, to be polished later.

What does my writing life look like in the months ahead?

As late summer turns into autumn and then winter, I hope to give more time to write:

Hopefully (and prayerfully) completing my first book: Divine Encounters: 21 Stories of God’s Miraculous Ways. It is ready to be formatted.

Continued writing on future books, primarily the next one.

Experimenting with Flash Nonfiction articles. In her July blog post, Sharon Heagy described different types of flash fiction, with some as short as six words. Her ideas prompted me to experiment with flash nonfiction of 100 words or fewer, capturing one moment without background and context, and completing it with a universal and perhaps surprising principle.

*

In Genesis 13, God told Abraham to walk through the whole land to get a big-picture view of what God was promising him, and to claim it as his own. God is giving me the privilege of walking through those future books to clearly define them, visualizing them as completed works.

He’s also calling me to work diligently. “Therefore…be steadfast…always excelling in the Lord’s work, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain” (1 Corinthians 15:58 CSB).



Sandi Somers writes from Calgary, Alberta, the delightful city between the Rocky Mountains and the Prairies, where she enjoys God’s beauty when walking and driving in nature, reading, gardening in season, and connecting with extended family and friends.




September 02, 2025

Ready for September? by Brenda J. Wood

 


The question for bloggers this month is: Are you ready for September? Are you ready to move ahead with your writing. I ponder the question and wonder if I'm even ready for it.

I have a book in limbo. it needs one or two small adjustments and it can go to the publisher. It has needed those one or two small adjustments for several weeks now and I dither over them. It's not a big job and yet I linger in Lala Land. No one else is going to do the small stuff if I want the book published. I have to send it to the publisher and yet I linger. Is that you? Is today's life kind of sticking you to the page of unfinished.

My neighbour, a hoarder, just moved and threw out tons of unfinished projects. There were probably 15 quilts all cut out, labelled, and ready to put together, yet nothing was sewn. There were probably 15 bags of yarn purchased with a fine thought of beautiful socks, sweaters, and hats for the family. All not done. Oh, she started all right. Things were cut out and the cuff of a sweater was done and on its needles, but nothing was finished.

So, what are we if we don't finish? What happens in our whole life if we never finish things. What if we decide to stop raising our children when they reach the awkward 12-year-old stage? What if we handed off that responsibility? Or what if we were making a casserole and decided to leave out the meat or the cheese or the vegetables? Unfinished is more than unfinished.

Unfinished can be a lifestyle that drains us into nothingness, and when our end comes, all the unfinished projects will be thrown out because nobody else knows how to finish them except us. I could linger over this article, but the point is that I really have a book to send to my publisher. I have a few small things to deal with and I've decided to do them now.

My question for you is: How is your September going? True, some people make January their New Year's Resolution time. But we have a chance to change halfway or three-quarters of the way through the year. So, I am publishing my book, called Words for the Spiritually Disenchanted. Will we be disenchanted when we get to the end of our time and think of all the projects that we never finished? That last piece of trim where we ran out of paint, the letter to Aunt Bessie that we never sent, or the dinner we ate a bite or two of and left to rot on the table.

My friend, how is your September going? Mine is about to pick up right this minute.


Brenda J Wood -

Author, speaker and Hopestreamradio.com contributor, Brenda J Wood has been an author and motivational speaker for more years than she cares to admit. She is known for her common sense wisdom, sense of humour and quirky comments. She calls herself the ‘ABC girl’ because she’s survived and written about the ‘ABC’s of abuse, bulimia, cancer, death, entertainment, food, gluttony and humour. Since she’s written books on each of these topics, she hopes the ‘E’ word of her next book stands for something like Energy or Entertainment, but definitely not Exams or Epsom salts!

A few of her favourite things include grandchildren, guest speaking, writing, sewing, a warm fire, a good book, and pounding the pavement on early morning walks. Brenda has authored many books but is very excited about the upcoming - My Affair with Cancer, a fundraiser for the Georgian Bay Cancer Centre in Penetanguishene. Her other books include:

The Food Lover’s Devotional, food for both body and soul
Gentle Humour with Jesus, devotions for the light-hearted
The Pregnant Pause of Grief, the first trimester of widowhood
Meeting Myself, snippets from a binging and bulging mind.
Heartfelt Devotionals, 366 devotions for common sense living.
God, Gluttony & You
Brenda’s Children’s books include:
The Big Red Chair –a book for grieving children
Mother Peebles Problem Pebbles
The Plate Family Dishes Up

Brenda J Wood, author and motivational speaker
http://heartfeltdevotionals.com
http://www.twitter.com/size10hopefil
https://www.facebook.com/brendawoodspeaker




September 01, 2025

Looking Back, Looking Ahead by Lorrie Orr

 

September's Prompt...

Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.” Lamentations 3:22-23

It is a wonderful promise of God that each day is a new beginning to experience his faithfulness. As autumn activities start afresh in churches and schools, September can be a time to reflect on how the previous months have gone and to set new intentions for the months ahead. How has your writing life progressed thus far in 2025? Are you encouraged to move ahead?




The sun has moved from winter to spring, followed by summer. Now the sun sinks lower on the horizon and summer turns slowly into autumn. A new energy fills the air. In many ways, September seems more like the start of a new year than January. We grow up beginning the next grade in school, with new clothes, freshly sharpened pencils, and a stack of clean notebooks. It’s a good time to reflect on the past months and to set new intentions for the season ahead.

One of my assignments for a class taken at Briercrest Bible College in the 1970s was to set goals. We began with a lifetime goal, then five-year, one-year, and monthly goals, if I remember correctly. I thought the assignment rather useless at the time, because who knew where I would be in five years? However, I thought long and hard about my lifetime goal, wanting something short and succinct. In the end I settled on adapting a portion of the Westminster Shorter Catechism - "Man's chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy Him forever." To glorify God with my life became my motto. More recently I've begun thinking about the other part of the catechism - the part about enjoying God.

In Zephaniah 3:17 I read
 
The Lord your God is with you,
he is mighty to save.
He will take great delight in you,
he will quiet you with his love,
he will rejoice over you with singing.

How wonderful it is to know that God delights in me. I can walk through my days knowing that He loves me because I am his child. But to turn the tables, how do I enjoy God?

In all of life, my writing included, I desire to please God, to let his grace and love shine through. And when I do, I enjoy his presence and guidance. So as I reflect and set goals, he is right there alongside me, pointing out my accomplishments and encouraging me to keep on when I haven't met the goals I've set. Sometimes he takes me in a very different direction, such as this blog post which is not what I first intended to write.

Delighting in this year's writing accomplishments:

1. My memoir, Life is Short but Wide, is finished, and is currently being evaluated by a hybrid publishing company. Scary, but joyous.

2. Nine InScribe blog posts published.

3. Forty-one posts written on my person blog Fabric Paper Thread.

4. Uncounted words handwritten in my journal or typed on my laptop.


Trusting God with my intentions for the next four months:

1. Edit memoir as needed.

2. Begin a Substack newsletter. Have 10 posts written in draft by the end of September.

3. Tackle the unknown world of publishing with the help of Siretona Creative.

4. Begin another writing project. I have ideas, but am uncertain about which to pursue.

As I plan for the months ahead, I am resting on God’s promise in James 1 – “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him/her ask of God who gives to all generously and without reproach.” Isn't wisdom something we all need. How gracious of God to share his knowledge and wisdom with us. I know that my plans may change and that God is the one who plans my future. As I set my intentions, I rely on his grace and strength to complete them, or to go in another direction.

 


Lorrie lives on Vancouver Island with her husband with whom she enjoys
hiking, boating, road trips, and staying at home. Life is an adventure.


August 29, 2025

Seasons and Change by Mary Folkerts

 


There is a change in the air, the morning feels a bit crisper, the smells of the ripening harvest warm in the lingering golden sun. The calendar tells me that summer is wrapping up and fall is taking its place. It doesn't ask if I am ready; it just comes when it comes.

Seasons are like that. They don't wait for our permission to shift from one to the next. They slide past whether we have had our fill or not. Where I live, seasons are usually quite recognizable when we're smack dab in the middle of them, with their snowy winters and hot summers, shy springs and colourful autumns. It's the transitions from one season to the next that can sometimes be tricky to gauge.

Life, too, has its many seasons, some soft and easy like spring, new with possibilities. Others, like winter, we resist for their harsh, unforgiving ways. But always, they come as sure as the rising sun. Some we see coming from a distance, gently, and expected. Others come in swiftly like a too-early snowstorm.

My parents received a phone call the other week, which threw them into a new season without much forewarning. They are now trying to wrap their minds around assisted living after a lifetime of independence. And oh, how we struggle with change, even in the twilight of our years! Though we have experienced change at every stage of life, it never seems to get easier!

We love what we know, even if it's difficult, because the difficult we know feels safer than the unknown. As I write, I gaze out on the corn field standing tall in the evening sun. The season of planting is long gone, and the season of growing is coming to an end. Soon, the harvest will be upon us, and lastly, the season where the soil rests. Each season for a purpose, as God has ordained it to be good.

Can we recognize each season of life as for our good? Can we see the season of waiting as beneficial to growing our reliance on God's timing? Can we view the desert season as a time when we trust God's presence, even when we can't feel it? Can we trust the God of the seasons to give us all we need in our seasons of change?

Seasons and change
like the falling leaves
and the spent flower
leave a sadness
with their
fading
beauty.

Change is hard
unfamiliar and
uncertain--
with a dirge of
lament we resist
the becoming.
“Let’s just always stay
The same!”
But without change
comes
deadness.

And what if it’s not
the end
but the beginning
of a new story,
unwritten and
unscripted?
A new season
with beauty
unexpected?

I can be sad
that it’s over
or I can smile that it happened.
I can dig in my heels
or march bravely on
into change.
Either way
it will
come.

And as the God of
the seasons
designs spring to
follow winter,
so he allows the
seasons of change
in our lives
for our growing
and becoming.

For change is the medium
in which a seed of faith
has the opportunity
to grow and
flourish
into something
beautiful.







Mary Folkerts is mom to four kids and wife to a farmer, living on the southern prairies of Alberta, where the skies are large and the sunsets stunning. She is a member of Proverbs 31 Ministries' COMPEL Writers Training, involved in church ministries and music. Mary’s blog aims to encourage and inspire women and advocate for those with Down Syndrome, as their youngest child introduced them to this extraordinary new world. For more inspiration, check out Joy in the Small Things https://maryfolkerts.com/ or connect on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/maryfolkerts/