Katie Steedly’s first-person piece [The Unspeakable Gift] is a riveting retelling of her participation in a National Institutes of Health study that aided her quest to come to grips with her life of living with a rare genetic disorder. Her writing is superb.
In recognition of receiving the Dateline Award for the Washingtonian Magazine essay, The Unspeakable Gift.
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Little Book of Cheerful Thoughts
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Small enough to fit
From Jeffrey Harrison’s “Little Book of Cheerful Thoughts”
in your shirt pocket
so you could take it out
in a moment of distress
to ingest a happy
maxim or just stare
a while at its orange
and yellow cover
(so cheerful in itself
you need go no further),
this little booklet
wouldn’t stop a bullet
aimed at your heart
I have more little books of cheerful thoughts than I know what to do with. (I tried to count them before a recent move and lost track at 20.) They cover daily reflections, motivational quotes, meditation prompts, writing advice, cat antics, and much more. I have bought some and some have been given to me as gifts. I love them in the way I love the perfect quote at the perfect time. I love them in the way that a phone call with a friend can snap me out of a funk. I love them in the way they ask nothing of me but to simply be. Brevity and lightness are gifts in what can otherwise be a heavy and complicated world.
I understand what Harrison is saying about expecting too much, or diving too deep into little book waters. I view them more for inspiration than information. The word “little” can demean and denote a certain lack of seriousness. The word “cheerful” can do that, too. (I don’t believe everything that is big and/or serious is necessarily high quality. Also, I do not believe everything must be big and/or serious. In fact, I am glad they aren’t.) Fundamentally, positivity that denies or ignores life’s realities is not helpful in a healing, truth-telling, growth kind of way. The positivity of little books speaks to me differently. It comes from a creative, kind, gentle, and (sometimes) funny space.
My writing can fall into the little book category. My daily blog. My Weekly Wide-Awake. The book I am writing about gratitude. The writing I submit for publication. It all comes from the same impulse. I offer it all as a reminder to stay awake to the gift that is each day, a glimpse of beauty offered by artists, and a moment of solace and comfort within life’s routine. From there, I read and write little cheerful thoughts.
About Katie
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From Louisville. Live in Atlanta. Curious by nature. Researcher by education. Writer by practice. Grateful heart by desire.
Buy the Book!
The Stage Is On Fire, a memoir about hope and change, reasons for voyaging, and dreams burning down can be purchased on Amazon.