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Helping to Change the World…Word by Word

The Steve Laube Agency

The Steve Laube Agency

Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Home » Karen » Page 6

Karen

Focus from the Mountaintop – Part One

By Karen Ballon April 17, 2013
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Lower_Table_Rock_(Jackson_County,_Oregon_scenic_images)_(jacD0040)

Our valley is watched over by two majestic sentries: Upper Table Rock and Lower Table Rock. A number of years ago a friend of mine and I hiked the trail to the top of Lower Table Rock. We both suffer from asthma, and it’s not an easy hike, so we feared they might find us collapsed halfway up! But we made it, and when we reached the top…well, you just don’t see views like that often enough.

I grew up in this valley, and know it front and back and sideways. But seeing it from that vantage point–it was as though I’d never seen it before. The view of the mountains all around, the sun shining through the clouds, the patterns and textures of the landscape, it all worked together to create a stunning panorama that is the Rogue Valley.

view-from-table-rock

What’s more, these two plateaus stand so straight and tall that I can see them from almost anywhere in the valley. And when I see them, it’s a reminder that I am, indeed, back home in Oregon.

upper tablerockThat’s what Mountaintop Focus does for us in our careers. It helps us step away from the day-to-day details, the minutiae of our work, and take a long look at the whole picture. It helps us to see our work, our careers, as a total picture, to remember why we jumped into this miry pond to begin with, and we’re trying to accomplish not just for ourselves, but for the One who drew us into writing. It also helps us to see farther than today. To look out over the landscape that is writing and publishing, and consider our dreams and goals. And, when we’re not on the mountaintop, they can remind us of those overarching goals and missions we believe God has given us in this work.

Next week I’ll share a list of questions to ask yourself as you consider using Mountaintop Focus for your career. But right now, I want you to ask yourself one Mountaintop Focus question. Because this question has to be answered before we can go on:

What are My Top Priorities in Life?

Now, don’t shake your head at me. Don’t roll your eyes. I want you to sit down and really think on this. Don’t spit out the easy answers. Dig deep. What are the things that truly matter most to you. What would you fight tooth and nail to hold onto? What could you not live without?

As you ponder that, consider this follow-up question:

Do my actions, involvements, and relationships reflect those priorities?

As you feel led, share your thoughts with us. And remember, this is just the first step. Next week, we’ll dig deeper into using Mountaintop Focus.

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Category: Book Business, Career, KarenTag: Career, Focus

Focus (Part Three)

By Karen Ballon April 3, 2013
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I've always enjoyed photography. But it wasn't until I came to understand the power of focus that I loved taking pictures. Focus helps you tell the story that you see in the picture. Whether your focus is on what’s close to the camera:

Or what’s in the background:

Or on the minute, microscopic details:

Each aspect gives us a different story in the same picture.

Our careers in …

Read moreFocus (Part Three)
Category: Book Business, Career, Craft, Creativity, Karen, Marketing, Writing CraftTag: Career, Focus

The Beauty of Community

By Karen Ballon March 27, 2013
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As I write this blog, I’m sitting on a bench beneath towering California Redwoods. There’s a gentle breeze blowing, carrying with it the fragrance of evergreens and sunshine. But it carries something else. Something wondrous…

The sound of community.

All around me, people are walking and sitting and standing, and as their voices drift past me I hear a number of things:
Excitement
Shared …

Read moreThe Beauty of Community
Category: Conferences, Get Published, KarenTag: Community, writers conferences

Refine Your Focus

By Karen Ballon March 20, 2013
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Let’s talk about Focus.

I like Webster’s definitions:

Focus (noun)
a : adjustment (as of the eye or an eyepiece) for distinct vision
b : the position in which something must be placed (as in relation to a camera lens) for clearness of image or clarity of mental perception
: a central point: as
a : a center of activity or attraction or one drawing the greatest attention and …

Read moreRefine Your Focus
Category: Book Business, Career, Craft, Creativity, Karen, Writing CraftTag: Career, Focus, Writing Craft

Get Focused

By Karen Ballon March 13, 2013
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Listen.

Do you hear it?

Voices… all around you…thoughts and opinions on the state of publishing, on what sells and what doesn’t, on good ideas and bad…words zipping back and forth in the ether. Write this. Write that. This is how you market. This is the key to platform. Buzz words. Marketing. Blogging. Craft. Deep POV. Are you Pinning? Tweeting? Linked-in? Google plussed? Skilled in …

Read moreGet Focused
Category: Craft, Karen, Writing CraftTag: Focus, Writing Craft

Down in the Valley

By Karen Ballon February 20, 2013
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Imagine awakening one morning, not knowing where you are, utterly unable to move or speak. Imagine coming to the slow realization that you are in a hospital, and that the people all around you are looking at you and talking to you, but you can do nothing in response. Imagine doctors telling that, at the age of 43, you’ve suffered a stroke that has caused what they call “locked-in” syndrome, where …

Read moreDown in the Valley
Category: Book Business, Career, Craft, KarenTag: Career, Discouragement, perseverance

The Writer as Editor: More Tools to Use

By Karen Ballon February 13, 2013
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There are some great quotes out there about editors and editing. For example:
“Read your own compositions, and when you meet a passage which you think is particularly fine, strike it out.” Samuel Johnson
“What I have crossed out, I didn’t like. What I haven’t crossed out, I’m dissatisfied with.” Cecil B. DeMille
“From now on, ending a sentence with a preposition is something up with which I …

Read moreThe Writer as Editor: More Tools to Use
Category: Editing, Karen, Writing CraftTag: Editing, Editor, Writer

The Writer as Editor: Tools to Use

By Karen Ballon February 6, 2013
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As we’ve been discussing over the last few blogs, switching hats from writing to editing can be a bit…challenging. In fact, it can make you feel like your poor head is about to explode! However, you can make the process easier by following the tips from last week’s blog by not letting the editor and writer come out to play at the same time, and by giving yourself time away from the …

Read moreThe Writer as Editor: Tools to Use
Category: Craft, Editing, Karen, Writing CraftTag: Editor, Writer

The Writer as Editor

By Karen Ballon January 30, 2013
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As we saw in my post last week, there are any number of ways a manuscript can go wrong. Hard enough to write a novel, but then to have to dig in and edit it yourself? That’s especially tough. So here are some tips to help you be the best editor you can be.

Don’t let the editor out to play too soon

Writing and editing are very different functions for the brain. Writing is a creative process; …

Read moreThe Writer as Editor
Category: Craft, Editing, Get Published, Grammar, Karen, Writing CraftTag: Editor, Writer

Editing 101 – My Turn

By Karen Ballon January 23, 2013
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Thanks for all the great comments and conversation on what needed to be edited in the text I posted in my last blog (Editing 101 - Y0ur Turn). You all made some great observations!

Below you’ll find the edited text. I tried doing it in Track Changes, which is what I usually use to edit a manuscript, but the blog server didn’t like that much. So I’ve made the edits red (think the dreaded red …

Read moreEditing 101 – My Turn
Category: Craft, Editing, Karen, Writing CraftTag: Editing, Writing Craft
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