Hollee Chadwick


    Age: 50

    Location:
    Batavia, Ohio (that's east of Cincinnati)
    Relationship Status In a Relationship
    Children: Proud Parent
    Occupation: Freelance Writer, Editor
    Interested In: Fiction, Non Fiction
    About Me: I am a widely published author and editor. I work from my home office near Cincinnati, Ohio editing textbooks, fiction, and non-fiction books, and writing humor columns for various publishers and publications.
    What I Write: This is where I am supposed to say, "I write what I feel."
    The truth is I write humor columns, newspaper articles, blogs for various online publications.
    Credits & Accomplishments: Staff writer - Gibson Getting Cards (at age 17)
    Newspaper editor - The News Democrat, The Ripley Bee
    Acquisitions Editor, Substantive Editor - Bridge-Logos Publishers
    Editor - Gallopade International, Bridge-Logos Publishers, Living Waters Publications
    Proofreader - Sagamore Publishing, LLC.
    Columnist - Examiner.com, Prevention.com

    Hobbies Gardening, reading mystery novels, dogs
    Music: Classical, opera, jazz, swing.
    Favorite Movies: Secondhand Lions, Mrs. Minerva, Fried Green Tomatoes, Steel Magnolias, Nanny McPhee, Enchanted, Driving Miss Daisy, Walk the Line, Braveheart. Anything with Hugh Jackman, Anthony Hopkins, Sean Connery, Tommy Lee Jones, Harrison Ford, Emma Thompson
    Favorite Television Shows: Bones, Fringe, The Closer, Mad Men, House
    Favorite Books & Authors: Jane Austen, Robert B. Parker
    Heroes: My dad, my mom, my brothers (Steve and Thomas), my sweetheart, Ken.
    Education: Self-Taught
    Income From Writing: How I Make My Living
    Companies www.bridge-logos.com
    www.sagamorepub.com
    www.gallopade.com
    www.livingwaterspc.com
    www.examiner.com
    www.prevention.com
    www.holleedazeink.net
    Years Writing: 20+ Years
    Website/Blog www.holleedazeink.net

    Viva la Resolución

    Friday, January 2, 2009, 07:30 PM EST [General]

     The times, they are a'changin' and in just a few hours, the New Year-2009-will drop in via the giant, Waterford Crystal ball on Times Square. This event signals the watchers around the world that it is now time to kiss and make up a list of resolutions-things they will do in the coming year to better themselves or change their lives.

    It has been dog's years since I have gone anywhere on New Year's Eve besides my living room, or to bed early, but every year I do make my own resolutions.

    Therefore, I, the over-signed, in the year 2009, do hereby resolve:

    • To quit smoking. I started smoking in mid-1999, at age 40. Stupid? Yes, I concede your point. I won't go into the why's or wherefore's of my decision to do so. It is a long-winded story and I am short of breath. It has been almost 10 years now since I took up the nasty habit-and I am determined not to make it to 11 years. I would rather quit than die before that 11th year arrives.
    • To say "I love you" every day-to my parents, to my children, to my brothers and sisters, to my darling man. I want there to be no doubt in the minds and hearts of these people that they are absolutely loved by me. I may say it lightly at times or at the close of a conversation, but, on my honor, it is felt deeply.
    • To write. I spend 85 percent of my time editing or proofreading other writer's work, which is my vocation-what pays the bills. I have written news articles, magazine articles, chapters in books, blogs, suicide notes (that's a hormonal thing), and ad copy. I am published everywhere. I have been paid to write since I was 17-however, ever since I was 16, I have wanted to write a novel. I am now 50. I think it's about time.
    • To stop sweating the small stuff. I have got small stuff enough for ten people. I am a collector of small stuff to sweat. This is a hard resolution for me. I am not a big picture sort of person-I am detail oriented. It has been said that God is in the details. Eh, not so much, I think. I am paid to be a detail person, and for what I do, it is a marvelous trait. But in the larger scheme of things-well, I can't see the larger scheme of things as I am too busy picking apart the details of every single thing that occurs every single day of my life. I have Dewey Decimal-ed all the details and the card library in my head is overflowing. It is time to choose what is important, what is vital, what I absolutely need to be detailed about, and let the rest just, well, be.
    • To be me. I am going to be whom God intended me to be, the person He created in His image. God does not make mistakes-He is God, after all. Omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent-and He chose to create me as I am. Just as I am. I will make Him proud of His handiwork.

     

    I think that is enough resolving for one year. I am going to rest up now, then I'll probably have to carb load and stretch in preparation for the year ahead.

    One more thing:

    Have a blessed New Year.

     

     

     

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    The Perfect Blog Post

    Friday, January 2, 2009, 07:29 PM EST [General]

     

    Today I have spent a great deal of time discussing perfection-the quest for it and its possible attainment.

    I will stand up right now (figuratively as I can't type on my laptop while standing because my lap disappears) and say, "Hi. My name is Hollee, and I am a perfectionist."

    That being said, I will also now admit that I am far from perfect in any way, shape, or form, ergo most of my life, I have been my biggest disappointment.

    During a long conversation with a loved one who, in some ways, knows me better than I know myself, I realized what a hard row to hoe this has been-this standard of perfection I have set for myself. Not that I was feeling sorry for myself at the difficulties I've encountered since my perfection quest was initiated in my teen years-no, I have no patience with woe is me conversations when I am the woe-er-I merely acknowledged to myself that those difficulties were of my own making and not the fault of any external force.

    Nor have I set the same standard for others that I have set for myself, which, when you really get down to the nitty-gritty, means that I have set myself above others since perfection was obviously not possible for them . . . Wow! That thought just occurred to me. That is not good.

    But I digress.

    This need for perfection has, at times in my life, hindered my ability to start a task because I was afraid I would not be able to do it completely right. It has skewed my vision of myself to such a degree that I mentally pick myself apart whenever I look in the mirror-I literally do not see what I am told others see when they look at me. It has made me choose friends and companions that I felt were not perceptive enough to see my flaws, my defects, my "idiot"syncracies. Yes, that is a harsh statement, but there it is. But in my mind this was logical-if I chose someone who was as smart as me, or as driven as me, or who had my same talents, then they would be able to see when I made a mistake. (Now please take that last sentence in the spirit it is intended, those of you who don't know me. I do not dumb myself down-I know I am intelligent, ambitious, and have certain talents-I inherited all of those things and I won't deny a single one. To do so is false modesty.)

    My greatest fears in life are being wrong and being made to feel stupid. I don't fear dying-I am a Christian, I don't fear being alone-I don't want to be alone, but I don't fear it. Admittedly, I do fear clowns, but that's a whole 'nother blog post. To the depths of my soul, I fear I may make an error in judgment, in my work, in my life, and I fear that someone may find out some day that, for the most part, I have no clue what I am doing.

    That last is entirely illogical, because I have spent my life learning everything I possibly can about what I do for a living, and yet, I have had no formal "schooling" in my craft. I have worked my way up or sideways through the ranks of the writing community for the past 30-plus years-I have picked the brains of everyone that I admire as a writer and gleaned what I could from the fields of work I am pursuing or want to pursue.

    So in some ways my need for perfection has forced me to put myself out there-to forgo my fear of having "Stupid" written on my forehead-and asked those who do know how they do that voodoo they do so well. I would have much preferred to just stand next to them and osmosisized the knowledge from them (no, osmosisized is not a real word), but since that is not yet possible, I had to actually ask questions. Asking questions was me admitting to myself and the person questioned that I did not know something. That is and was very hard.

    My need for perfection has also driven me to always do the very best I can at anything I undertake-although it has hindered me from being an undertake-er in some instances-that qualifies it as a catch-22.

    The question is: "What do I do? How do I accept less than perfection in myself?"

    And these thoughts occurred to me as my loved one and I were talking: Is a sunset any less beautiful when you discover that the reason for the multi-colors is pollution? And which is more beautiful-the perfectly unblemished piece of pseudo-wood, or the knotty, nicked, and weathered wood that has a story to tell?

    My mother continuously reminds me that a diamond-the most perfect of gemstones-is made from coal which is decomposed vegetable matter. A pearl-my particular favorite-is not, as commonly told-made from a grain of sand. A pearl is formed when something organic, most often a parasite, penetrates the shell of a mollusk and lodges within the soft inner body of the animal. The parasite encounters cells within the mollusk's mantle tissue known as epithelial cells which grow into a sac, envelopes the intruder, and excretes a chemical substance of aragonite and calcite. This is known as nacre or the composite of a pearl.

    I don't know how not to be hard on myself. I have no clue. But I have been told that there comes a time when good enough needs to be accepted. I am not to settle for only achieving good enough-that is a bar set too low for my personality and I am done with settling-however, as long as I can truthfully say that I have given my absolute best effort, then that is good enough. I cannot be all things to all people, I cannot fill everyone's needs, I cannot do everything myself-I have to ask for assistance, let go and allow someone else to help me (not ask for help then do it all myself anyway), learn from my mistakes, learn from others who have already successfully done what I want or need to do, and accept that there may be times when I can't do something. I need to learn when "No" is the perfect answer.

    I need to look at my flaws and defects-the decomposed vegetable matter and parasites-as, perhaps, that which makes me unique. It is those very things that keep me from being a cookie-cutter human, a Stepford, which gives me depth and contrast, just as clouds enhance the perfection of a blue sky.

    I will think on these things-remind myself of them when my perfection bug gets the best of me. That is the best I can do in this instance.

    However, I was told today that I am loved for who I am, flaws and all, without reservation, without modification, without an "except for . . ."

    How perfect is that?

     

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