Friday, December 19, 2025

Writing Lessons from The Polar Express: What This Classic Story Teaches Every Writer

From Edie: Discover the writing and storytelling lessons hidden within The Polar Express. Learn how this beloved Christmas classic can inspire your creativity, strengthen your craft, and remind every writer of the power of belief, detail, and meaningful narrative journeys.


Writing Lessons from The Polar Express: What This Classic Story Teaches Every Writer
By Edie Melson @EdieMelson

I came late to the magic of The Polar Express by Chris Van Allsburg. I didn’t discover it until I had grandchildren. But now, every December, I cherish the time I get to spend with them as we share the enchanting story—sometimes through the classic book and sometimes through the film. Each time, I discover something new. And this year, as I watched the train steam through snow and doubt, I realized how much this story has to teach each of us about writing.

Thursday, December 18, 2025

How Writers Can Prevent Neck Pain: Simple Posture Fixes and Stretches for Pain-Free Writing

From Edie: Learn how writers can prevent neck pain with simple posture adjustments, ergonomic workspace tips, and gentle stretches. Discover practical habits that reduce tension, improve comfort, and support pain-free, productive writing sessions.


How Writers Can Prevent Neck Pain: Simple Posture Fixes and Stretches for Pain-Free Writing
by Susan U. Neal @SusanNealYoga

Writing is often a sedentary profession, and long hours at the keyboard can easily lead to neck stiffness or pain. But with a few intentional adjustments and simple exercises, you can protect your neck and improve your comfort and productivity.

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Finish the Year Strong as a Writer: Biblical Wisdom for Stewarding Time and Creativity

From Edie: Learn how writers can finish the year strong by stewarding time and creativity with biblical wisdom from Ephesians 5:15–17. Discover how clarity, obedience, and faithfulness can replace pressure and help you complete what God has truly assigned.


Finish the Year Strong as a Writer: Biblical Wisdom for Stewarding Time and Creativity
by Kennita (Kay) Williams 

Ephesians 5:15–17

As the year draws to a close, many writers find themselves caught between two emotions: gratitude for what was accomplished and frustration over what remains unfinished. Unfinished drafts. Half-written devotionals. Ideas still sitting in notebooks or voice memos. The pressure to “wrap things up” before December 31 can quietly turn creativity into chaos.

But Scripture offers us a better way forward.

In Ephesians 5:15–17, Paul writes, “So be careful how you live. Do not live like fools, but like those who are wise. Make the most of every opportunity… Understand what the Lord wants you to do.” These verses are not a call to hustle harder or cram more into our schedules. They are an invitation to steward time with wisdom, intention, and clarity especially as we approach the end of a season.

Be Careful How You Live and How You Write

Paul begins with an important word: careful. He is not speaking of fear, but of awareness. Writers are often generous with everyone else’s needs, church commitments, family responsibilities, ministry obligations while treating their own creative calling as optional. Over time, that lack of awareness costs us more than productivity; it erodes confidence and joy.

Being careful means noticing where our time goes. It means acknowledging distractions that pull us away from the work God has entrusted to us. Wisdom begins with honesty. If we want to finish strong, we must first see clearly

Wise over busyness

Paul contrasts wisdom with foolishness, not laziness. Foolishness, in this context, looks like activity without alignment. Writers can be incredibly busy posting, promoting, planning, yet never actually finishing the assignment God placed on their heart.

Wisdom invites us to ask better questions:
  • What is mine to finish this season?
  • What am I carrying that God never assigned?
  • What does obedience look like right now?

Wisdom simplifies. It removes unnecessary pressure and focuses our energy on what truly matters.

Making the Most of Every Opportunity

This verse is often misunderstood as “do more,” but the original language suggests redeeming time, rescuing it from waste, distraction, or misuse. For writers, redeeming time does not mean writing for hours every day. It may mean fifteen focused minutes without scrolling. It may mean returning to a draft you abandoned because doubt crept in. It may mean saying no to one good thing so you can say yes to the right thing.

Opportunities do not always look like open doors; sometimes they look like quiet moments of faithfulness. Finishing a paragraph. Revising a chapter. Submitting the piece you have been sitting on for months.

Understanding the Lord’s Will

Paul closes with clarity: “Understand what the Lord wants you to do.” God’s will is not hidden behind confusion. He is not asking us to complete everything, only what He has assigned.

As the year ends, clarity often comes through pause. Jesus Himself modeled this by withdrawing to quiet places before moving forward. Writers, too, need intentional pauses, not to procrastinate, but to realign.

Ask the Lord:
  • What needs to be completed before this year ends?
  • What can be released without guilt?
  • Where do You want my focus, not just my effort?

When clarity comes, finishing becomes lighter not heavier.

Finishing Strong Looks Different Than Starting Fast

Finishing strong does not require perfection. It requires faithfulness. You may not complete the entire manuscript this year, but you can complete the chapter God asked you to write. You may not publish yet, but you can prepare. You may not see the fruit at once, but obedience is never wasted.

Time is a gift. And how we steward it speaks to what we value.

As writers and Christian communicators, we honor God not by exhausting ourselves, but by aligning our time with His purpose. As the year closes, choose wisdom over pressure, clarity over chaos, and faithfulness over frenzy.

Finish strong not because the calendar demands it, but because obedience invites it.

TWEETABLE

Dr. Kennita Williams is a visionary leadership coach, author, and founder of Clear Vision Consulting. With a passion for helping leaders overcome fear, lead with clarity, and live whole, healthy, and healed, she equips others to write, speak, and lead from a place of faith and obedience. She is the author of multiple devotionals and leadership tools and serves as a monthly contributor to The Write Conversation. Contact:  drkay@clearvisionleader.com www.clearvisionleader.com

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Why Writers Grow Outside Their Comfort Zone: The Power of Discomfort in the Writing Life

From Edie: Discover why writers grow most outside their comfort zones and how embracing discomfort can strengthen your craft, confidence, and publishing journey. Learn practical ways to turn awkward, uncertain moments into meaningful creative and professional growth.


Why Writers Grow Outside Their Comfort Zone: The Power of Discomfort in the Writing Life
by Katherine Hutchinson-Hayes by Katherine Hutchinson-Hayes @KHutch0767

Growth rarely announces itself politely. More often, it shows up as a racing heart, a knot in the stomach, a shaky yes, or the uneasy realization that we’ve stepped into territory where we don’t quite belong yet. For writers and publishing professionals, those moments of discomfort are not detours from success. They are often the very path to it.

In the writing and publishing world, we talk a lot about craft, platform, and strategy. We attend conferences, read blogs (like this one), and listen to podcasts, hoping to find the next clear step forward. What we don’t always talk about is the quiet, persistent discomfort that comes with growth—and how essential it is.

Monday, December 15, 2025

How Writers Can Finish the Year Strong: Simple December Newsletter Tips That Actually Work

From Edie: Discover simple, effective December newsletter tips to help writers finish the year strong without added stress. Learn how to reflect, connect with readers, and set up a purposeful plan for January—all with one thoughtful, manageable email.


How Writers Can Finish the Year Strong: Simple December Newsletter Tips That Actually Work
by Kate Huff @KateOliviaHuff

December is a hard month for writers, at least it is for me. Schedules are full, routines are disrupted, and creativity often takes a back seat to obligations and celebrations. For many authors, newsletters are the first thing to slip through the cracks.

Let me be the first to remind you that it's okay. My personal author email has been a week late the past two months! And honestly, no one has noticed. It's only late to me.

Sunday, December 14, 2025

Writing Through Life’s Hard Seasons: Finding God’s Strength When Creativity Feels Impossible

From Edie: Discover how writers can navigate life’s hardest seasons with faith, resilience, and creativity. Learn how caregiving, grief, and unexpected challenges can shape your writing, deepen your spiritual growth, and reveal God’s strength when words feel impossible.


Writing Through Life’s Hard Seasons: Finding God’s Strength When Creativity Feels Impossible
by Martin Wiles @LinesFromGod

Seasons pass, but one of ours has hung around longer than we anticipated. But no one ever said writing through the seasons would be easy. 

The spring of our season arrived, and Mom fell, breaking her wrist. Since my stepfather had Alzheimer’s and could barely care for himself, we made plans to place Mom in a skilled nursing facility. She wasn’t excited, and neither were we, but we had no choice. Neither she nor my stepfather could afford round-the-clock care.

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Writers, Focus on Your One Significant Word in 2026

From Edie: Discover how choosing One Significant Word for 2026 can refocus your writing life and deepen your spiritual walk. Learn practical tips for selecting your word, anchoring it in Scripture, and using it to inspire your creativity, discipline, and purpose throughout the new year.


Writers, Focus on Your One Significant Word in 2026
by Beth K. Vogt @BethVogt

Writers, do you know what your word count is?

“Umm, Beth,” you’re probably wondering, “which word count do you mean?”

Whether we write fiction or nonfiction—or both—we’re all about word count, right? We track it day by day, celebrating when we hit the magic number. We keep an eye on our manuscripts’ overall word count.