W.S. Carmichael's Blog
April 6, 2025
Middle-Aged Sass
Middle age is amazing. Being tired is amazing. Not caring is amazing. Bear with me for a few minutes as I explain because I’m certainly not talking about the constant new aches and pains my body insists on discovering. Most days, I can’t tell if I’ve injured myself or if this is just how I am now. I’m talking about the level of I don’t give a rat’s ass only crossing the threshold into middle age can give you. I published my first book eight years ago, and in the time since, I’ve published three more. My sales aren’t great—not because the books aren’t good; my reviews are positive—but because in a sea of romance novels on Amazon, no one will see you unless you make them see you. Cool. I knew that all along. Knowing something and doing something about it are two vastly different things. So why didn’t I do more to make people see me? Why didn’t I try harder to give the romance reading world the opportunity to buy a book I know they’d enjoy? Spending this past weekend at a writers’ conference gave me the clarity I couldn’t get anywhere else. I was surrounded and embraced by people plagued by the exact same issue I’ve encountered. Some of them have successfully navigated through the maze, some are in the process, and some are so early in their writing journey that they don’t even realize how daunting the maze can be. During some of the workshops, I repeatedly heard the question asked in a multitude of contexts—Why? After the last workshop I attended, Building a Brand by Caridad Piñeiro, I asked myself that very question – Why? Why didn’t I put in the effort to make them see me? I have the information. I have the ability. I know I’ve put together some really fun books to read. The answer is simple. Fear. What will people think about me? Will they think I’m silly for making social media posts? Will they think I’m bragging? Will they whisper behind my back, “She really thinks she’s something. Her books aren’t even that good.”? Was I afraid of what success might look like? Maybe I wasn’t ready to embrace the kind of change success would bring to my life. Maybe I was too afraid to chase my dreams. Fear is such a dumb reason not to do something – unless that something is jumping out of a perfectly good airplane – I’m definitely siding with fear on that one. But seriously, I didn’t let fear stop me from writing that first book…or the next… or the next. I didn’t let fear stop me from returning to college to finish my bachelor’s degree after 25 years. I didn’t let fear stop me from taking a promotion. So, why the hell am I letting fear stop me from being proud of my hard work? No one starts at the top. I can’t wait until someone else thinks I’ve earned the right to be proud of my work to be proud of my work. That’s just idiotic. The fear of what others will think has been plaguing my brain for so long that I forgot to stop and ask myself one very important question: Do I really value other people’s opinions that much? The insanely liberating answer is a resounding NO! Which brings me back to the opening lines of this post. Middle age is amazing. Being tired is amazing. Not caring is amazing. As I creep through my forties, I realize I no longer have the energy or the patience to care that deeply about someone else’s opinion. If you think my social media posts are silly, braggy, or dumb….don’t look at them. If you don’t like my books, don’t read them. If you want to poke fun at my efforts, go ahead. Either way, I’ll just be here – writing, posting, not caring, and reveling in the immortal words of advice my father had for any of life’s hardships… “Fuck ‘em.”
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February 4, 2023
The Romance of Death
My dad died. It’s easier to type those words than it is to say them out loud. I’m a fairly straightforward person. I don’t like sugar coating my statements and I don’t like euphemisms. I hate when someone says, “I had a few beers” when they actually got shitfaced and pissed themselves. Saying something in a more pleasant way doesn’t change the facts of what happened. Euphemisms serve no purpose other than to make the truth more palatable. I always found it irritating when people purposely avoided saying that someone had died. Instead, they “passed” or “left this world”. Until now. Now, I understand. Almost every single time I had to inform someone that my dad had died, I would choke on any form of the word death. I would purposely not say it. I embraced any genteelism I could find in an effort to avoid the cold truth. In the eulogy I gave for him, there were plenty of words describing my loss but none of those words included death. Because death sucks. It hurts like hell and it’s hard. So very, very hard. But hard doesn’t equal wrong. My dad’s death (yes, I can say it now) wasn’t wrong. It was and is painful for me. I feel it every single day, but it wasn’t wrong. He was ready and it was time. If he could have chosen the time and place, his death would have happened exactly as it did. He is off on an amazing new adventure, one not hampered by a body that would no longer cooperate with the business of living. To quote my rock, my love and my bestest friend, Mark: “Life isn’t easy for anyone. It’s inherently hard, it’s going to hurt and eventually, it will kill you.” So, why is a romance author writing about pain and death? Death isn’t romantic. Oh, but it is…. Death and sadness are part of the romance of life. Without the lows, the highs wouldn’t be as high. Without the hardship and loss, the joys and gifts of life would be less sweet. Writing romance novels is about finding the hope in the mundane, about always believing everything will work out in the end no matter how rough the road gets. I wouldn’t be able to write the way I do if I couldn’t see the beauty in the pain or the opportunity in the loss. To feel the sorrow is to have known the joy. To feel the emptiness is to have known the love. Being a good writer means drawing inspiration from the spectrum of human emotion. The whole spectrum, not only the parts that make us feel good. My current work in progress is the first in a planned series of four stories about four sisters and their respective happily ever afters. The entire premise of the series is predicated on the loss of their father. The first chapter takes place days after the unexpected death of Jasper Brooks. It is written from the perspective of his daughter, Billie, who is by far the closest to him of all his daughters. Her pain drives her work ethic and her determination to succeed in keeping the family ranch operational. I don’t know what pushed me to start a romance series with one of the most painful losses a person can endure, but I did. And I did it before I knew firsthand the aching loss of a parent. I started this series over a year ago. This chapter was written long before I was Billie. I didn’t touch the book for months after I lost my dad. Partly because I wasn’t ready to share my pain with Billie and partly because I had to work through the pain before I could see the beauty. It’s hard to type when you’re crying. I’m back in the game now – writing, planning, re-writing, still crying occasionally. Ok, more than occasionally. But, I can now see the joy beyond the sorrow and the love beyond the emptiness. My loss will transition into a deeper connection with Billie and what I hope will be a better experience for my readers. I titled this blog post The Romance of Death, but it is really about the Romance of Life. It is about the richness of the emotional experience and the opportunity to be found when it feels like we’ve lost everything. It is about finding the hope in the hurt and the silver in the dark cloud. It is about believing in the happy ending….
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March 22, 2021
Renovations Are Fun
It’s finally happening! I’ve worked hard. I’ve saved my money and I am now on the road to renovating and redecorating my kitchen/living/dining room area. Open concept floorplans are great but change in these large areas create an equally large mess. When your kitchen, living room and dining room are essentially one big room, you can’t renovate only one area. That would be weird. And ugly. Living in a construction zone is enough to make anyone crazy, and me being the OCD organizer I am, I had a plan. (Side note – I like to organize, but I rarely am organized.) Anyhow, I had a plan. There were some tasks I planned to perform myself and some I was going to hire out. A detailed schedule of events was created, carefully orchestrated to maximize efficiency. You know, because renovations always go exactly according to plan. One of the jobs I did myself was painting my kitchen cabinets. This needed to be done before any other work could start. The reasons for this are based in solid construction and renovation principles predicated on the fact that I make a huge mess when I paint, and I didn’t want to screw up anyone else’s hard work – especially if I was paying for that hard work. If you have never painted cabinets before, I can tell you it isn’t too hard. Until last week, I had never done it either. You just need to use the right supplies and follow some step-by-step instructions. Because I love making lists, here are those step-by-step instructions: Step One: Clean Out All Cabinets And Drawers An untalked about bonus to painting your cabinets is having the chance to clean out all your hidden spaces and junk drawers. You don’t want to be using paint and chemicals around food item and utensils, so it makes sense to remove everything even if you aren’t painting the insides of the cabinets. This is a great opportunity to find open Pop Tarts and crackers someone shoved to the back of the top shelf before the mice do. Pro tip: You should definitely place all the items you remove somewhere close by in order to limit your workspace and maximize the number of times you trip over them. Step Two: Degrease The Cabinets This is a particularly important step. Any hardware store sells a degreasing concentrate you’ll use to clean the cabinets before you do anything else. The reason this is so important is because if you have kids in the house, your house is grosser than you think. My cabinets are eighteen years old. That means even though I’d wipe them down a few times a year during deep cleaning binges, they still had eighteen years’ worth of grime on them. Yum. Step Three: Sanding Alright. You’ve scrubbed off years of accumulated filth, now what? Sanding, that’s what. Don’t be afraid of this step, though. Unless you’re staining the cabinets and need to get down to bare wood, this is an easy step. Just use a medium grit sandpaper (the blocks work great and are easy to hold onto) and scuff away. This part isn’t rocket science. Pro tip: Don’t forget to repeatedly sand over your own hands like I did. Fine cuts and abrasions add to the DIY experience. Step Four: Priming Now we’re getting somewhere! This is the point when you can actually see progress. It’s shitty looking progress, but it’s progress nonetheless. This is the point when you will look at your primed wood and wonder if this was a really bad idea. Make sure you use a good primer specifically designed to adhere to hard to paint surfaces. I used Stix primer. Two coats. Worked great. Looked terrible until I used the actual paint. Step Five: Painting Ah. The moment you’ve been training for! This is the main event. I used a high gloss white paint. I’m realizing now I left a few details out of my previous instructions. I had my son remove all the cabinet doors and hardware for me. You’ll get much better results and less drips if you paint the doors while they lie flat. Factor in lots of drying time because you’ll need to do two coats and can only do one side at a time for obvious reasons. I also painted the sides of the cabinets in the space where the stove sits. Completely unnecessary because no one will ever see them, but I have overachieving OCD. Pro tip: Remember, and this is super important, when painting in tight spaces, swipe your hair through the fresh paint as much as possible. I sat on the floor in the small space for the stove and painted the sides of the cabinets. Not once, but twice (two coats, remember) I finished painting one side, turned to paint the other and smeared my ponytail through the wet paint. If you think you’re fancy and refuse to do this part, you’ll miss out on the next step. Step Six: Spend The Next Week Picking Paint Out Of Your Hair I don’t think this step needs detailed instructions. I’m going to assume you can figure it out. If you need help, though, watch a nature video where monkeys pick bugs out of each other’s hair. It’s a similar process. Just don’t eat the paint chips. You’ll also repeatedly answer the question “What’s in your hair?”. Or, if you’re as lucky as I was, you’ll grab a hair thinking it has white paint on it only to discover it is, in fact, just a white hair. Tada! We’re done! My cabinets actually look great. The rest of my kitchen is a paint covered mess, but we’ll fix that soon enough. Although I probably gave you some real tips here, please don’t use my blog as a place for actual instructional information. If you need to know how to make a messy renovation even messier, though, I’m your girl.
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