Day 365: Series Finale

by Jason Good on January 7, 2012

in 365°,Career Stuff,Memoirish stuff

I recommend listening to Sia’s “Breath Me” while reading this post. Go ahead, click on it. Dramatic, right?

I think drama is unavoidable today, since, as a finale, the desire to reflect and tie things up is irresistible. I’m a little nervous and also listening to “Breath Me.” Please keep those things in mind while reading.

A year ago this past September, I quit my job in marketing at The New York Times to focus on stand-up comedy and writing. It’s a trite and privileged decision, abandoning the comforts of corporate American to pursue one’s “art.” It’s bold and romantic, I guess, but hardly unique – especially in New York City where one can eavesdrop on similar stories of “bravery” at any cafe on any given Tuesday at noon. While turning my back on one stereotype, I was frightened of becoming another.

I worried about quitting. If I never responded appropriately to the discipline of a real job, how could I possibly do anything when deadlines were self-imposed?

For the first 4 months, I talked a lot about what I was going to do. “I’m going to put together a set for Conan.” “I’m going to finish the screenplay with Peter.” I felt productive committing to things, then angry when I failed to follow through. I would quell that anger with a promise to infuse more energy into my next commitment, only to fail again. I was lucky and thankful to be spending so much time with my wife and kids, and to this day, it’s been the best part of the experience, but I wasn’t supposed to be retired. I needed to build a structure that excuses couldn’t topple.

I thought of it like this: The differences between dieting and getting sober are vast. Dieting means eating less, and you’re constantly tempted with morsels of your addiction. Being sober – though difficult in practice – is an easier concept:  never drink again. I made a similarly unambiguous commitment to writing. If I tried the diet method, committing to three blog posts a week, the temptation to procrastinate would undermine the much needed routine.

I told everyone willing to listen, that I would write something every day for a year. I had no other goal but to write and self-publish each day. There was no expectation of success beyond that. I believed I would do it, but was also haunted by my awful track record of promise keeping. The first few posts were filled with self-flagellation and doubt.

Excerpt from Day 1:

One of the things I wanted to do when I quit  was “blog about my daily progress (progress toward what, I’m not entirely sure). This is the first post. I could pretend like this is really day 1, but I think the fact that it took me 4 months to even do the first post teaches you more about me than 120 posts ever could. I spend all my waking hours disappointing myself.

What few readers I had appreciated the honesty. Some even reached out to offer encouragement. One of them said, “You won’t make it past April,” but he meant it in a loving way.

By week two, I was still punishing myself for past failures.

Excerpt from Day 14:

This is the first thing I’ve ever done for two weeks straight besides penicillin.

But I was also beginning to have fun, and see hints of my voice coming through. In the same post, I wrote about returning to Brooklyn for the first time after having moved to New Jersey,

It’s amazing how we can romanticize our past. We went to our old coffee shop, remembering how amazing it was. When we walked in I thought, “Wow, I forgot that everyone brings their dog in here.” The coffee is great and you can’t get a decent coffee in New Jersey, but lord can hipsters make a family uncomfortable without even trying. Hey dude with the macbook, wingtips and bulldog, you aren’t even looking at me, but I can tell by your hair that my kids are annoying you.”

It wasn’t long before my commitment to the blog began to mirror my sobriety; I’d done it for long enough that the idea of starting over provided all the fear I needed to keep going. Missing a day would be like having a drink. It was also now a household ritual that even my 3 year-old understood, “Daddy, are you going upstairs to write your blog?” My wife’s support was tireless, and still is, fifty two weeks later. In addition to emotional support, she reads every single word before I send it out.

At the beginning of the third month when I published Really Fugazi? I started to feel like I was a writer. It was premature, and I still squash that self-congratulatory identity when it makes its way past my weak defenses. I’ve written 600 words a day for a year, which only means something if those words are good ones. Some of them  are, but not enough yet to call myself a Writer. I read Dave Eggers, T.C. Boyle, Jonathan Ames, or David Sedaris and feel the same way about writing as I did about stand-up the first time I saw Patrice O’Neal. “Wait a minute, I have no idea what I’m doing.” At that point, you can either quit while you’re behind, or dig in and do the hard work it takes to shrink that gap. A quote from Ira Glass explains this best. Here’s part of it:

All of us who do creative work, we get into it because we have good taste. But there is this gap. For the first couple years you make stuff, it’s just not that good. It’s trying to be good, it has potential, but it’s not. But your taste, the thing that got you into the game, is still killer. And your taste is why your work disappoints you.

At least I could blame my self-doubt on the burden of having good taste.

The blog wasn’t my only creative project. My friend Jeff Glasse and I were writing a 30-minute comedy pilot for television titled Making Good. It’s about a father striving, and mostly failing, to maintain a job, a career in stand-up comedy, and a happy home life. I was more focused on the success of Making Good, than I was jasongood.net. Most of my days were spent tweaking and rewriting the script, while trying to squeeze in a quick blog entry sometime around lunch. I wanted to be a TV writer.

After completing that project, I entered a week-long trance during which I wrote another comedy pilot, called “Kustard Kings” about an economically divided town awkwardly drawn together when the family of an idealistic Marxism professor inherits the local ice cream truck business. I’m proud of it, and looking back now, I’m not sure how I did it.

Shortly after clicking “save as” and typing “Kustard Kings draft 1_complete,” everything changed.

In a 20 minute flurry, I listed  what I thought went through my 2 year-old son’s head over the course of 3 minutes. I was glad to have gotten that day’s entry out of the way so quickly. When I showed it to Lindsay and my mom, they each laughed so hard they cried. I should mention they’d been drinking, but still, it seemed like maybe I’d created something special.

You might need to replay Sia’s “Breath me by now. Go ahead. You know you want to.

Day 215: Approximately 3 Minutes Inside the Head of My 2-year-old  quickly went viral. Probably half of you reading this now originally discovered my site as a result of seeing that entry elsewhere. Facebook “likes” were growing at a rate of 5 per minute, and when The Bloggess tweeted it to her 200k followers, and Joanna Goddard posted it on her popular blog, my site crashed. It took a few hours to get it back up, and when we did, the flood of traffic continued.

The vast majority of people read that one entry and left, but there were enough who stuck around, poking through other entries, that I was beginning to build an audience. I was receiving emails from strangers thanking me for explaining their toddler to them. “It’s like you’re living inside my house.” I liked it. Parenting is hard, and I’d enjoyed writing about my kids so much already, that I decided to do more of it.

A Toddler Rite of Passage, The Saturation Failure, and Great Jobs for New Parents all seemed to speak to fellow child rearers. Though I was sharing the very specific details of my own experience as a father and husband, it was that specificity which drew people in and, honestly, made many of them feel sane again. It’s ridiculous, funny and complicated to be so in love with tiny people who are often frustrating and unpredictable.

A month after posting Approximately 3 Minutes Inside the Head of My 2 Year Old, I received an email from an editor at Bloomsbury publishing. She’d come across the post in her Facebook feed and asked me if I’d be interested in making it into a children’s book. After cleaning the drool off my desk, I responded with a polite, “Oh, I think that’s a great idea.” The book is due to come out in 2013, with two more to follow, the topics of which are yet to be determined.

As you might imagine, I got a great boost of confidence from the recognition. Yes, that attention was coming from a list of thoughts I wrote in 20 minutes, and not from one of my more writerly entries, but it didn’t really matter. I felt like I was on the right path.

A few weeks later, after hooking a literary agent, I was approached by a different publisher to do a gift book for new parents – something you might see on one of the tables at Urban Outfitters, for instance. We passed on that offer in hopes that my first “real book” might be something more significant. Whether that was the right decision or not, I still don’t know.

I had written cute little entries for six months and was turning down a goddamn book offer.  I was told that if I wanted a career writing books, I should “start how you want to finish.” In other words, if I’m going to write  books, make sure the first one sets me on a path I’m interested in taking.

But I didn’t even know if I wanted to write a book at all, much less what kind of book. I still wanted to be a TV writer. People were reading Kustard Kings and liking it.

I had also started to connect with some of the more memoir type writing I was doing. A piece about my father-in-law titled, The Blue Blazer, as well as the two about my grandfathers, The Pinewood Derby, and Edwin Good, felt right and real. I was getting more comfortable seasoning my acerbic voice with some tenderness. Considering how uncomfortable I am with that last sentence, I still have some work to do in that area.

At the same time, I was also connecting viscerally with chronicling my daily life. Lindsay, Silas or Arlo would do something funny, and I’d write about it the next day. I was keeping a journal, really; taking snapshots in my brain and expanding on them the next day. Those posts will provide far more emotional value than any picture or video.

A big chunk of my sense of humor comes from criticizing and making fun of myself. I’ve painted my life in this blog with that set of brushes. It’s easier for me to make light of poor choices, honest mistakes, moments of panic, and times of frustration, than it is success, happiness, serenity, and cuteness. The picture you have of my family might be one of four people run amuck  – of an ear picking, foot rubbing husband struggling to enjoy life;  a wife who never sleeps and can’t remember simple words; and their two young children who stomp all over them. If I could tackle the amazing stuff head-on and make it funny, I would. I hope, though, that through the harsh realities I communicate about my life, you see that I’m lucky, and thankful; that my kids are amazingly perfect, and my wife, the strongest most giving person I’ve ever met.

You probably need some more Sia. I know I do.

I’m still deciding what I want to do. In fact, I think that might be the key to happiness: Spending your life trying to figure out what you want to do with your life.

I’ve blogged now for 365 days in a row. In the grand scheme of things, that’s hardly impressive, but considering where I was a year ago, I’m proud. I didn’t build 40 houses for Habitat for Humanity, or sail around the world in a boat I built from driftwood. I simply created and followed through on a long-term promise which I knew would get me on a path to feeling productive and in charge of my life.

I’m still not a Writer, and I’m ok with that. I want to be one though, and whether I’m writing books, or TV scripts, or both, I’d be happy. I still enjoy performing stand-up, but have honestly lost the desire to pursue the business side of it – the phone calls, emails, auditions, and ass kissing. I usually accept offers to do shows, but seldom pursue them. The response of my readers is almost as good as the laughter of a room full of people. I’ll always need that immediate reaction of a comedy club, but I realize now, that I’m never going to be a career stand-up comedian. I think I’ve known that for a long time, but only recently have I been willing to admit it publicly. I could always change my mind.

I will continue writing this blog, but feel it’s engrained enough in my routine that I no longer need the unambiguous commitment of daily entries. I can take weekends and one weekday off without everything falling apart and asking for my job back at The New York Times.

As this blog has become more important to me, the entries have taken up more of my time. I need days where I can concentrate on one project without thinking about the post I have yet to write.

This might be the series finale, but it’s not my final entry. There will not be a post tomorrow, which will be very strange for me. There might be one on Monday, and if there is, it won’t have “Day 366:” in the title. I hope you all stick around to see what happens over the next 365 days (and probably around 200 posts.)

I set out to change my life, and all of you helped me do that.

Thank-you.

  • Kim

    I never watched “Six Feet Under”, and honestly did not click and listen to the song yet, but I was absolutely crying at the end here today… You may not really understand how you feel about it yet, but you are tender, thoughtful, loving and from what I can tell a wonderful father. Those two monsters are lucky to have you :-) And you, of course, are lucky to have Lindsay.

    You should be very proud of yourself!! You did what you set out to do and got some fantastic, though perhaps unintended, notoriety as a result. Not only are you a writer, you are published, and not “just” a blog, but a book!! Again, maybe not the book you thought you would do, but what an awesome opportunity you’ve been given. You earned it!!

    Thank you for the past year and thank you for agreeing to enhance our lives, even if not daily, for a bit longer. I look forward to it.

    Love ya,
    Kim

    • http://www.jasongood.net Jason Good

      Thanks, Kim.

  • Rebecca (different from the one above)

    I’m one of the ones who came from The Bloggess link. I spend my life on my computer and have been reading blogs accumulated over several years on my feed reader. Yours is one of my top 3 favorites. I am also a bookworm, just you know that I am a READER. And I love your writing.

    I am SO glad you will continue, even if just a few times a week. Just remember, keeping your writing honed is just like keeping your muscles toned, regular exercise is best.

    Also, HUGE congratulations on your accomplishments this year. You’ve earned them and I am thrilled for you. Wishing you the very, very best on all your future projects.

    • http://www.jasongood.net Jason Good

      That’s really nice of you to say. Thanks Rebecca

  • http://www.kristalynknott.blogspot.com krista

    i totally pictured the last shot in the series finale of ‘six feet under’ as i read the last sentence. and your post scrolled up and out of frame.

  • Cathy

    Hi I’ve read every single entry in your blog and I’ll continue reading them as and when you do write.

  • Parents of Tots

    Your blog makes me happy. Thank you.

  • Candace

    Sooo happy to see that so many good things are happening to you and your wonderful little family. Your blogs have gotten me through some really crappy days and I give you my sincerest “thank you”. Your page is under my favorites and I will continue to check daily to see if you decided to grace us with your words :) Good luck and thanks again

  • Megan

    Proud of ya man.

  • Raizy

    Congratulations on all 365 posts! I found your blog when my baby was two weeks old and it got me through a lot of sleepless nights with so many laughs. The first post I read was parenting as a suicide watch, and as a pre school teacher I totally related. 3 minutes had me hysterical with crying laughter and I shared it with lots of friends.. Thank you for sharing with us all, I wish you lots of success.

  • http://about.me/larakretler Lara K

    Jason, I am a daily reader (saw the toddler mind link on Facebook and I’ve been hooked since) and when I saw the title of this post on my RSS reader, I thought “Oh no! He can’t STOP!” I am so glad to hear you’ll keep blogging. Congrats on the milestone of 365 daily posts (truly impressive – I swore I’d blog at least 3x a week and it died after 3 months) and please keep sharing your hilarious take on fatherhood, toddlers and family life. I love laughing along with your blog.

  • Shay

    Love your blog so,so much. It has been one of the few things that have kept me going during a hard time.
    You have made me laugh ( thus creating an extremely high does of endorphins to occur within my mommy brain) and cry, and okay I admit I may have had a MINOR accident in my pants one time while reading it.
    You are very talented and have touched a lot more lives then you may realize.
    When I thought I was going crazy and was the only person that was going through these parenting as well as life issues,I was lucky enough to come across your writing.
    Knowing that there are others has really helped lol. I no longer feel lost and crazy.
    So thank you, thank you, thank you!

    P.s This blog should be turned into a book. I think without you knowing it you have created your first real book of writing. It’s a pretty good one. One to be proud of for sure.

  • Amelia

    I can’t wait.

  • Rhonda

    I, too, discovered you thru my cousin sharing your “3 minutes” entry, and have been hooked ever since. Thank you for sharing your journey, and thank you for not leaving us altogether.

  • http://sliceoflifedayone.blogspot.com/ Sarah J

    Really liked how you shared your journey of writing and maturing this year. It means a lot to know that people I think of as successful, creative, & talented struggle to fulfill their own dreams just as I do. Congratulations on your accomplishments this year, and the book deal. There is nothing I love better than hearing my oldest (almost 4) dissolve into giggles as we read together. I will be on the lookout for your books… Good luck!!

  • Erica

    Congratulations! You should really feel proud of your accomplishments over the last year! I found your blog through the 3 minutes post and I’m so glad I stuck around. I have shared MANY of your posts on FB and I can’t wait for more. Your sense of humor is right up my alley and I definitely appreciate your blog. Thanks for sharing and making me laugh :)

  • Darci

    Your blog is a big highlight of my evenings…and that means a lot since I highly value my “kids are finally asleep” time! Now it will be a gamble each night to see if there is a new entry to laugh over and relate to. I may even need to look into ab exercises since I won’t be laughing as hard as often! I’ve read every entry and agee with other posters that you are most certainly a WRITER, and one of my favorites. Good luck to you in all your endeavors! And thank you for sharing your life with us so honestly…and a special thank you to your wife and kiddos for both providing material and supporting you in this process!

  • TJo

    I found your blog on Day 215. I read through the first 214 entries that day. I look forward to following you into your future.

  • Nancy

    I’m a little bit misty!!! You’re blog is one of my guaranteed happy moments each day; after a long day, the house is clean, dinner has been made, served and cleaned up, the baby is asleep- I sign on to read your post and most always laugh out loud or at least say “honey you have to read this” to my husband ….to which he responds by saying he is really getting jealous of my “blog boyfriend” that’s always making me laugh.

  • Laurie

    Thank you and congrats on 365!!!! What a great year of laughs we have had, all thanks to you! I will be looking forward to, not only future posts, but all endeavors from you! Enjoy your days off!

  • Jen

    Were you a fan of Six Feet Under? They played Breathe Me during the series finale of that show. Good choice!

    • http://www.jasongood.net Jason Good

      My favorite show ever. That’s exactly why I chose that song.

      • Megan

        Best show! Still miss it , as I will miss the daily-ness of your blog, but wish you the best and look forward to finding the more sporadic gems you post. Thank you for making me laugh.

        • http://about.me/larakretler Lara K

          I still miss Six Feet Under too. And when I saw Jason’s reference to the song I immediately thought of the show, and I thought “oh no, not another awesome thing disappearing forever!” So glad Jason’s still going to blog.

  • Jen

    Thank you. I have a 19 month year old boy, so I especially appreciate your posts about your boys. Toddlers are unstable nutbags!

  • Diane

    Love your blog. You are a separate entry on both of my tool bars (in case one of them is acting mean)
    My fix in the morning. Now I am going to be like Glenn Close in “Fatal Attraction” (clicking on the light), just to see if you have posted that day.
    Good luck on your new book, and hope you get that TV screen play. Will you play yourself? You may have to. Not too many 6’6″ guys in Hollywood. I will have to go through and read them all again to get the fix.
    Thanks for the fun reading.

  • Dana

    Congratulations on completing your 365! I have been reading your blog way before the 20 seconds post and and I will continue doing so with great pleasure. Actually, I might even be glad you wouldn’t be posting every day – my days are so filled up that sometimes I need a break too ;) I am proud of you for persisting and coming out on the other end; I am sure you have grown not just as a writer but as a person, father and husband through this experience. I have to also admit I am a little envious, I have been willing to do a 365 photography project but I know how slack I can be… hopefully some of your determination will rub off on me and I will do this next year… (I am starting easy and doing a 52 in 2012 LOL)

  • KaralynZ

    I came in on the one about Pandora, linked by a childless friend, and stayed for the spot-on posts about the toddlers. The shoes and the one about agents are the favorites in this household. (We’ve decided to start calling our son Tarentino when he’s too demanding.)

  • Melanie

    I so looked forward to reading this every day, and what a great series ender. I can not listen to the Sia song as I immediately see the final episode of Six Feet Under and start crying every time I hear it. Yes, pathetic I know.
    Anyways, thanks for having us all along on this crazy journey. It’s been a good one.

    • http://www.jasongood.net Jason Good

      Melanie, I’m the same way with that song! Every time I hear it I think of Claire
      lying in her death bed at 101 years-old and I choke-up

      • Melanie

        It’s too bad she doesn’t use “love” as a noun in there somewhere. If she did we could turn it in to a lunch song and totally lighten the mood. Damn you Sia!

  • jessica

    You are a great writer! I like hearing all the sides of your writing from cute to serious to dark. I like the realness and honesty of this post. And I almost got a little choked up at the end. But I think it was just a side effect of the music. I’ll keep following your blog!

  • Moriah

    Congrats on making it to 365. I have really enjoyed your posts and indeed did find it via Cup of Jo. Although I do so enjoy the toddler posts (as they make milk come out of my nose), one of my favorites was the pinewood derby post. Good luck!

  • Tam

    I came in with ’3 minutes,’ back tracked to day 1, caught up, and stayed. Some days I chuckle, most days I laugh at loud. Thank you!

  • http://realmountainvalues.com Brianna @ RMV

    I’ll be around. If for no other reason than your in my in my Google reader and I am damn bad about unsubscribing.

    No that was a lame attempt at a joke, Thanks for giving my husband and I some much needed laughs each evening :) . We’ll keep looking for some more.

  • http://catchinghappiness.com Kathy

    I clicked over to your site from The Bloggess and am so glad I did–I’ve been reading you ever since, and I’ve read many of your older posts as well. Congratulations on your 365 days of entries, and all the other good, writerly things that are happening for you. You are a writer, because you write. Period. I’ll keep reading, and look forward to seeing what happens for you next! (My son is 17 now and it would have been a real sanity-saver for me when he was little…)

  • Cindy

    If you keep writing, I will keep reading! Thank you for all of your 365 posts… Good luck on the book and other projects, and best wishes to your family.

  • Heidi

    Thank you Jason for your 365 days of honesty and creativity and humor. I will certainly keep reading and look forward to your entries when they appear in my newsfeed.

    Oh and PLEASE stop saying that you are not a writer. OWN your talent my friend!!! You are fantastic.

  • Scott

    I am one of those people who started reading after “3 Minutes”. I haven’t read every post since, but most. Your observations on life are touching, insightful, and just fun to read. Many years ago, I chose a safe path (science instead of theater), both for my own stability and for any future family I might have. Sometimes I regret that, but I know that it would require a huge commitment to take that leap now. I commend you on your courage and follow-through over the last year. And know that you aren’t just helping yourself here. You really are helping all of us every day. Thanks, good luck, and we look forward to your future!

  • Kate

    As with many others, I found you via day 215. Some time later, I added your feed to my reading list. It’s been a highlight to see what’s going on with your family, and/or in your mind, on a regular basis.

    I had no idea that it was a specific tool in a specific struggle. All I know is that while I sometimes just nodded, I often busted out howling with laughter at some family bit that truly resonated with me.

    You are a writer, sir. Don’t let anyone, including yourself, tell you any different. I look forward to seeing what you do next.

  • Dave

    What you have accomplished over the last year is truly impressive. It was inspiring to witness a writer finding his voice and finding a pool of confidence that he didn’t even realize was there to tap. Keep pushing yourself and great things will come.

  • dad

    What? You quit you job at the New York Times?

    • http://about.me/larakretler Lara K

      LOL!

  • puasamanda

    I was one of those people who clicked over to read Day 215. I got a link to it from Babble Dot Com, and since I have a two-year old, I though “What the hell…”

    I was hooked. Went back and read all your archived stuff, brought myself current in one great gulp, and have clicked on your site every day since.

    You are absolutely a writer, and I am absolutely a fan! Congratulations on making 365. I’m looking forward to the rest.

  • Rebecca S.

    Thank you so much for sharing the previous year of your life with the world. I am grateful that I got a glimpse into your wonderful family. The stories about your wife and kids are very touching and reading Dad’s comments make the whole thing real and meaningful. Congrats on meeting your goal! I’m looking toward to buying your book and thanks again for a great year!

  • Jen

    You ARE a writer, Jason, however you want to clarify or deconstruct it. And even though I’ve only been reading for a month or so, I’ve worked my way through your archives and will continue to read whatever you choose to write in the future. Can’t wait for the book. Cheers.

  • http://longdistanceneighbors.blogspot.com/ Julie

    I just discovered you yesterday, so I’m reading backwards but I want to commend you for quitting your job and following your passion. The only people who make it are the ones who actually TRY. That’s no easy task. Good for you and good for us for getting the chance to read your work.

  • Becky

    It may not mean much from a stranger, but you’re a Writer to me. Thank you for all the laughs and connection to a kindred spirit from afar with my own 4- and 2-yr old in the house. I will faithfully continue to follow your blog and I sincerely hope to see your name in sitcom credits soon. All the best to you, Lindsay, Silas and Arlo.

  • http://overthemoon2.canalblog.com/ Zahhenah

    I so loved reading those 365 posts, reading about your wife, kiddos, life…it was a real pleasure and let me tell ya that some of them helped me feeling less “alone in that crap” lol since we seem to have the same crazy kiddos lol ;D…what a relief to read words that sound so true, so full of life…and what a fun :D
    Thank you Jason Good…you’re Good for me <3 :) xox

  • Ted

    Thanks for the daily dose. Not sure what I am going to do around 2 pm everyday now… My work day just five minutes longer.

  • LeighGM

    Thank you for writing so openly about your life. I have truly enjoyed following your blog & will continue to do so. Please continue to share these glimpses into your world. Its nice to have someone show such joy & humor in the every day routines of family life. Congratulations on meeting your goal & here’s to accomplishing even more.

  • Pingback: Free-Range Weirdo » Blog Archive » Dammit.

  • Caroline

    Thank you for showing my husband that our crazy insane two year old is normal. He kept asking me all of the time why he was so active and “bad” and I kept trying to tell hi
    It was his age. He didn’t believe me until I found your blog!!!

  • http://sianyblog.blogspot.com/ Sian

    I only found you recently. I love your blog. And I’m usually all about the photo blogs to be honest. I often laugh out loud while reading and will continue to read your posts whenever they arrive. It’s easy to say you want to do something but its much harder to actually do it and stick to it. You should feel proud x

  • http://the-pish-posh-blogspot.com Pish Posh

    A wonderfully written closure and new beginning, a transition. I appreciate the reflection you shared too. I think watching your voice grow and reflecting on your journey helps not only other parents, but other writers. Enjoy the new directions you take, as we will enjoy you writing about them!

    • http://the-pish-posh-blogspot.com Pish Posh

      Just a question for a hopeful writer – did you have enough income set aside, from previous work, family, savings, spouse, etc. did you have an income source this past year? Do you recommend others take leaps of faith (quit jobs etc)?

  • http://teresastips.wordpress.com Teresa

    Reading this post made my eyes tear up a bit. I am still working my way through your posts. I’m on day 162 now, with a few jumps up to the newer posts from time to time. The first one I read was day 319, Self-help advice from a 2 year old. Loved it and had to go back and read from the beginning.
    I am starting on my own venture this year with my sister-in-law, I hope I am as successful as you have been and touch as many people.

  • Charlene Crafton

    Thank you.

  • Rebecca

    thank YOU for bringing so much laughter and amusement into my life. Even though my daughters are “all growed up,” I can still identify with a lot that you write about. Perhaps you are not a Writer (by that do you mean like Hemingway, etc.), but you ARE a writer (pop culture, i.e., Steven King, Dave Berry, Charlaine Harris) and in my life (and I’ll bet many others) that kind of writing is far more important, because I can identify with the subject, and I can escape the mundane by crawling into your story. Success in all you do is wished for you. (BTW, one of your most appealing aspects is the way you write about your wife. She sounds like such a wonderful person and your love and adoration for her shines through. It’s always a pleasure to encounter a couple who truly love & admire each other. The love you have for your boys shines through, too, and even though it “appears” you might be too easy on them, I seriously doubt that you don’t give them the guidance they need. As an older parent myself, I know that our life experiences allow us to eliminate a lot of the bulls*$t that we’re told we’re supposed to do with our kids.) Looking forward to Jasper’s book!!!

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