
My cooperating teacher is napping behind a barricade of books on his desk. I am three inches

At the top of my surprisingly formidable camp counselor lungs, I bellow, “STOP!”
There is an instant of shocked silence. I find this immensely gratifying & am about to perform a hostile take over of my own class when somebody gets there first. Two beats into my hard-won silence, a girl yells, “Hammer time! Doot, doot, doot-doot…”

Anyway, the class about injures itself laughing—admittedly, her comic timing is exquisite—and there goes my brief flirtation with efficacy.
Okay. So. Not a teacher. Sorry, Dad.
And why am I telling you this story?
Because I got invited to my 20 high school reunion this week.

Because while my dad didn't specifically include writing romance novels in the "camp counseling is not a career" talk, I understood it came under the same heading.
Because after thirteen years of trying other things, I sat down & started writing anyway.
Because after five years of writing, I sold a book.

In exactly one week.
Ladies (and gentlemen, I know you're out there), today I am here to testify. If yesterday's post didn't convince you (and congrats again, Suz), maybe today's will tip the balance.
Dreams aren't impossible. Only improbable. And this is coming from a woman whose toddlers used to blurt out, "Rejection letters!" every time they saw a mailbox.

Worth it. Totally worth it.
So what about you? Have you ever dreamed the impossible dream? Longed for something so outlandish you didn't really allow yourself to hope for it? (I include Hugh Jackman, Christian Bale, & a tremendous singing voice on my list, so don't be shy.) Did you ever pursue it? Even a little? How did that work out for you?