NEWS
Book Update with Title
“Adopt the pace of nature: her secret is Patience!”
– Ralph Waldo Emerson
Friends, I wrote a book. This morning, I sent it to my book editor. Now I wait for feedback and edits.
And I have a title! Wait for it…it’s a long one!
50 Ways to More Calm, Less Stress: Scientifically Proven Ways to Relieve Anxiety and Boost Your Mental Health Using Your Five Senses
More than 67 sources (that’s not a typo) generously shared their expertise and wisdom on 50 tips on how to calm our body and mind. 160 research studies and books are cited to support the tips and I seriously cannot wait for this book to be published and into people’s hands. I’ve learned so much and created a toolkit for myself on what works well for me. I hope it’ll do the same for those who pick it up.
As of right now, the expected publication date is August 2023 (yes, as in next year).
I sent an update to friends, family and the people I interviewed via email and if you’d like to stay abreast on any updates, please sign up for my newsletter.
In the meantime, I’d love to hear how you’re doing!
I hope you’re all having a wonderful summer so far. I’m so ready to unplug for a couple of weeks and just soak in the sunshine.
~Megy
2022 Word (s) of the Year and Book Update
Do you have a word or mantra that you want to carry you through in 2022? I have two words this year: Boundaries and Experiment.
Word(s) of the Year
Boundaries and Experiment as words of the year might seem at odds but they’re not.
I’ve learned over the year that I need to set boundaries. Not because people are steamrolling over me but because I need to do a better job at protecting my time, my resources, my mental bandwidth and my heart. That means less social media, less saying yes to things I don’t want to do (whether it’s work-related or personal) and saying yes to spending time with people who I care about and care about me.
Experiments because I want to stretch myself this year. I’m working on a full-length non-fiction book on how to calm our body and mind using our senses and backed by science. I want to try my hand at some creative pursuits. I’m completing challenges with friends (and even some strangers because, hey, why not?). I want to try new things that I’ve either postponed (because I didn’t have time, hence boundaries!) or something was holding me back.
Luckily I’m surrounding myself with close friends who are willing to be my rock, my sounding board, and my accountability masters. It’s humbling and wonderful when you find people who want to support you and help you find your best you.
Seeking Sources
Lastly, as I mentioned in last month’s blog post and sent via my email newsletter, I’m writing a book on how to calm our body and mind using our five senses and backed by science. I’m working on several chapters this month but as I’m looking ahead to chapters I plan to cover next month, I would love suggestions on either people who are practicing these activities or you have an expert who can speak on the science behind why these activities might be beneficial for our mind and body.
Sketching/drawing/doodling
Watercolor / painting
White noise
Use of floatation tank/floatation therapy
Massage
Aromatherapy
Gong meditation
If you don’t already receive my email, you can sign up for it here. This is how I hope to continue to request sources in the coming months as I continue to work on this manuscript. It’s due late spring so I need to stay focused and continue to write weekly.
Finally, because a few people have asked, I did complete my master gardener training last year! I finished my hours after completing the coursework in late 2020. Also, I am gardening this winter! With the help of some gardening friends, I’m trying my hand at winter sowing. Let’s see if they grow any seedlings to transplant come spring.
Happy new year, friends. Be well and stay safe.
Why I'm Choosing to Go With the Slow and My Winter Blues Toolkit
Fall is not my favorite time of the year, although I do love wrapping myself up in my cozy sweaters and breaking out my boots. Fall invites a slower pace, which I appreciate after a busy spring and summer in the garden, traveling to see family and friends and just enjoying the warmth of the sun and sunlight.
The limited or lack of sunlight has a strong effect on my mental health. Seasonal Affective Disorder affects about 5% of adults in the United States, according to the American Psychiatric Association, but even if we’re not diagnosed with SAD, depression during this time period due to lack of natural light is not uncommon.
I’ve been doing a lot of research on various types of ways to help calm our body and mind using our five senses since that’s the book I’m working on right now and talking to experts is helping me better identify things that might help me that I’ve never thought about trying.
One of those experts recommended I try light therapy.
I’ve written about the benefits of light therapy for Natural Awakenings magazine a couple of years ago and the idea of introducing a light for my fall and winter mornings was appealing. But for some reason, I didn’t.
This week, I spoke with a therapist who recommended those who struggle with the winter blues create a “toolkit” to help us get through these dreary seasons. The idea is if we can identify things we enjoy doing, make us comfortable or look forward to, we can reach for those things when we start to see the negative effects of those winter blues.
I started to think of things that make me happy or I can look forward to and started to jot them down. It was then I realized there are a lot of things I can do to help me get through this season. Might this be the year I embrace the cold and dreariness of Chicago’s fall and winter seasons? I don’t know but at least I’ve put together my toolkit to help me. 13 things because 13 is my favorite number. ;-)
Winter Blues Toolkit
1. Getting at least one 30-minute walk outside, no matter the weather
2. Cup of warm tea (my British cousins will love me for adding this since I’m a coffee fiend)
3. Warm bath
4. Wrap myself in a cozy blanket
5. Invest in light therapy (therapist is sending recommendations but if you have one you love, please let me know!)
6. Read my magazines that I’ve not had time to enjoy because of work commitments
7. Plan more dates with friends (schedule them in advance so I have a date to look forward to!)
8. Schedule time to visit a museum or visit the Garfield Park Conservatory (my favorite winter hotspot)
9. Clean/organize my space (generally, the idea of cleaning or organizing anything is not a source of pleasure but the slower pace of the season allows for reflection and introspection and going through my spaces and choosing to let go of things that no longer serve me or, to use a Marie Kondo phrase, brings me joy, is particularly therapeutic)
10. Plan a trip away – even if it’s to work from a different location (I’ve been spending a lot of time at Guild Row lately.), book a hotel as part of a staycation (this sounds kind of fun) or a place a couple of hours away to explore (something to look forward to in early February, for example, when the weather is really horrid and I feel like winter will never end)
11. Yoga, meditation and movement
12. Find events to attend, whether it’s an author reading, live performance or discussion I’m interested in
13. Use those creativity muscles to try something new
If you get hit with the winter blues, too, perhaps spending time developing your toolkit might help you, too. I’ll admit, it was a fun exercise to think about what I enjoy and listing them in this way.
I’d love to hear what things you do during the fall and winter months that you enjoy. Maybe I’ll give it a try this season!
Tomatoes Hate Cucumbers, Carrots Love Tomatoes, And Why I'm Digging Deep This Spring
Happy May, my friends!
Until last month, I’ve never heard of a potato tower. Or that tomatoes hate being planted next to cucumbers. Or carrots like tomatoes as neighbors. But thanks to a bit more time on my hands due to the coronavirus pandemic, I’m trying to keep myself busy and soak up all I can from gardening friends, old and new.
In between writing some articles I was assigned PC (Pre-Coronavirus) and handling some client work, I was getting my hands dirty, planting some seeds from a new-to-me friend from a local neighborhood gardening group. Someone in the group asked if it was too late to start growing seeds indoors (something I’d never done) and she was told not at all. That made me think — hey, why not try something new this season? So I reached out to Christine, who apparently is the seed keeper for the group, and she kindly shared half a dozen different types of plant seeds with me. Later that week, into the soil they went and I’ve been babying them ever since. Within a week, the first seedling made its appearance and I kid you not, I cried. It was the first hopeful thing I’d experienced in a long time. My babies are growing.
I decided I was going to go all-in this season. Upon my brother’s recommendation, I purchased a warming pad for my seedings. My gardening group recommended a grow light to help so I invested in one of those, too. Now, every morning, I turn both of those on and talk to my babies. I’ve learned about needing to “harden” the seedlings so I can prepare them for transplanting them outdoors. I picked up Fran Sorin’s book, Digging Deep, and participated in my first Zoom chat with fellow gardeners.
This month is my 13th year in business. Thirteen years, my friends. I’m so grateful for my family, friends, clients, editors, fellow writers, and former colleagues, who have helped me get to this milestone. Thirteen years I’ve had the pleasure to learn and grow from each and every single person I’ve met. How much my business will grow this year financially is still up in the air, but as far as I’m concerned, I’ll keep growing and learning as long as I’m able to do so. Right now, I’ve just shifted my time and energy so I can spend more time learning about my garden and what it wants and needs. Later this month, I’ll be transplanting my babies into my raised beds and hope they are hardened enough to make it so they can continue to grow and produce fruits and vegetables.
I’m going to record my progress on my Instagram account if you have any interest to follow it. I’m doing it more for myself and to see how my garden grows throughout the summer.
Do you have any good books or articles for me to read or videos watch? I’ve also been listening to a few podcasts, including The Mike Nowak Show (with Peggy Malecki), Bloom and Grow Radio, and Plantrama.
By the way, here’s a great cheat sheet list of plants that grow well together as well as a list of their garden foes, thanks to the Old Farmer’s Almanac. Or, pick up Carrots Love Tomatoes: Secrets of Companion Planting for Successful Gardening.
It's April. We're Here.
It’s April. Tulips and daffodils are growing in my garden. Let’s hope this month treats us better than March. I hope you’re healthy and staying well as we all do our best during this coronavirus pandemic. In case you care about what I’ve been up to during these past few weeks:
Book I’m reading or recently finished reading (what day is today?):
Plants as Therapy. This book was recommended to me by Lisa Edlred-Steinkopf, also known as The Houseplant Guru. I interviewed Lisa for a story on houseplants that published in the March issue of Natural Awakenings magazine: Channeling Your Inner Botanist. I’m reading a chapter every morning as a form of therapy and I cannot tell you how much I’m enjoying it. The book may have published in 1976 but it’s as relevant today as it was back in the 70s.
Catch and Kill: Lies, Spies, and a Conspiracy to Protect Predators by Ronan Farrow. My friend Hilary Shenfeld recommended She Said: Breaking the Sexual Harassment Story That Helped Ignite a Movement by Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey, which was great. This book is along the same lines. I’m having a harder time reading this one right now just because it’s not really an uplifting book but I’m going to try and get through it because my friend Delphine and I started a virtual book club and we’re supposed to discuss it mid-April. Gotta get moving on reading it!
Podcasts I’m loving right now
Brought To You By by Business Insider. Ever knew Marlboro cigarettes were originally marketed to women? Or why red M & M’s disappeared in the mid 1970s to the mid 1980s? Or who was the woman who put Veuve Clicquot champagne on the map? If you love marketing and advertising stories, this is a fun one to subscribe to.
Poetry Unbound by OnBeing. Thanks to my friend Tracy Seglin Marks who recommended this one because I can listen to this poet/host read poems all day long. He has such a way of reading them that is meditative but I also love how he takes the time to discuss the poem he reads and asks listeners to reflect on a question that brings us back to the poem.
In Defense of Plants. I’m starting to sense a theme here.
Netflix and Chill. Man, I can’t remember the last time I’ve sat on the couch to watch anything on the boob tube since before we had kids. Or at least anything for more than an hour.
Mad Men. I didn’t watch Mad Men when the series ran from 2007-2015 but since Netflix released all seven seasons and 92 (!!!) episodes, it was a great time to binge on this series. I’ll admit, it brought me back to my agency days which was a fun reminder of that love/hate relationship between the Accounts side (where I lived) and the Creatives. While we didn’t drink and smoke as much as the characters of this show did, we did have booze accounts and there was always something cold on tap to enjoy. Gosh, I seriously miss those days. I enjoyed the earlier seasons than the latter ones and I’m glad I finally watched this series, even if was a decade behind.
Tiger King. Finally watched this monstrosity because it seemed like everyone except us watched it. What a friggin’ train wreck.
I’m taking a break from watching anything right now and going back to reading and writing. I think I’ve had my fill for a while. Unless you have a recommendation? If so, email me!
Decluttering: While most places aren’t accepting donations at this time, you can still do some spring cleaning and set aside donations for when we get out of this nightmare we’re living.A friend recently shared the Decluttr app that accepts some books, CDs, DVDs, games and other types of technology such as smartphones and computers. Instead of hauling all of these items to a resale shop, you can scan your items and it’ll tell you right then and there if it’s worth anything. I sent about 16 books and $13.06 was deposited into my bank account. It’s not a ton of money but it’s also 16 fewer books in my house so I’m happy. If you choose to try this and use my link, you’ll get $5 and I’ll get $5. I think. I’ve never actually tried to use this link since I just did this last month.
Some places like Open Books aren’t doing pick-ups of donations but are still (for now, as of April 1, 2020) accepting book donations at their drop-off locations. We might do a drive-by since we have 6 Bankers Boxes filled with book donations (and that’s not even a fraction of what we still have at home and for our Little Free Library, which has been getting a TON of use during we’re all sheltering-in-place right now).
Writing. Despite all of this, I’m writing. Not as much as I was but I’m still doing my morning journaling, which become my form of daily meditation. I’m also wrapping up a book-length project for a client (ghostwriting / book coaching) and working on another book-length project. It’s going slowly, but I’m happy to make as much progress as I can on a daily basis. And that’s fine with me.
Be well, my friends. And, as always, if I can help you in any way, please reach out.
Top 7 Reasons Why You or Your Organization Needs A Book
Top reasons you need to write a book.
Ever considered writing a book? The process can be easier than you think when you partner with a writer. Photo by David Iskander on Unsplash.
Have you ever considered writing a book to establish yourself as an authority or for your organization to use it as a marketing tool? What makes someone choose to work with you or support your organization over another option? Customers and clients today want to support businesses or individuals who they feel align with their interests, have the expertise or feel like their investment is worth it. Many experts are choosing to partner with a writer who can take their knowledge and expertise and develop it into a book that they can then share with their potential customers.
Authority Marketing
Authority marketing is an approach in which business owners or experts position themselves as an authority in their field and, therefore, stand apart from their competition. This approach can be done in a number of ways, from writing trend articles in trade magazines about your industry to speaking at events in which your customers will likely be attending. It can also mean having written a book that you can offer clients and customers.
Not everyone should write a book but for those who want to differentiate themselves from their competition or give more insight into their organization, whether it’s a history book about the company or the people who are part of it today, a book can be a valuable marketing tool.
Here are the top 7 reasons you might consider working with someone to help you write a book for your company or organization in 2020:
1. Having a book can be a powerful way to set yourself apart from others in your industry.
2. A book can help establish your expertise in a particular field.
3. Publishing a book can be considered a form of validation. It enhances your reputation within your community.
4. Having written a book demonstrates that you care enough about your business or organization to help educate your customers and clients who are making decisions about whether to support you or not.
5. You can sell a book at speaking engagements, in your place of business or online and in bookstores, depending on the type of book.
6. You can use it to secure media coverage.
7. It can be used to leverage paying speaking engagements (and you can sell the book at the events, too).
Writing a book can be a daunting experience for many who aren’t writers. Some may have the expertise in their field but not in the actual writing of a book while others are concerned with the time and effort it’ll take to write it. For those who will be self-publishing the book, the cost can be a factor as well.
There are a number of ways you can make the process of writing a book easier. You can hire a ghostwriter or co-author. For those who don’t feel they have enough to write an entire book by themselves, they can reach out to colleagues in their field and include them in the book as other experts. Depending on the type of book, they may also be able to split the cost, making it financially feasible to write and publish the book.
Writing A Book: How To Get Started
If you’re serious about writing a book, consider sitting down and creating questions that you feel need to be answered and for which you have the answers or can find someone to answer. Those questions can become chapters.
Another way to approach is to start by writing blog posts about your topics and see which ones resonate with your audience. One of my friends loves to cook and although she’s not a professionally trained chef, she’s been experimenting with recipes and posting them on her blog and social media. Her friends love trying them out. Some are hits, others aren’t getting as high marks. Her friends have been sharing her recipes and now she has started a bit of a following with fans waiting for her next recipe every week. She’s using those platforms to see which ones will make the cut into a cookbook along with a history of some of the ingredients she’s using.
Working with a writer on your book can help you brainstorm ideas that might make for good book material. It’s unnecessary to take on this project on your own. There are plenty of talented and professional writers who can help you write your book and you can decide how involved (or not) you want to be in the process. Some people prefer to give the writer all of the material and they can use that to write the book while others want weekly check-in calls so the writer can interview the expert or give the person an update on the process.
If having a book written on you or your business is part of your 2020 new year’s resolution or goal, reach out and let me know. I’d love to connect and see if we might be a good fit to work on it together. If not, I have friends with expertise in a number of industries and would be happy to make an introduction.