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Callie Feyen

Fragments

in Uncategorized on 14/05/15

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The plan was to go fishing at Black Hills Regional Park, so I kept my camera close by because two girls who fish with princess fishing poles seemed like a good beginning to a story. I snapped photos and listened to Hadley and Harper while constructing a possible blog post.

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But the fish weren’t biting. It was one of the first warm days and the water was probably cold. Or, the other fifteen or so kids screaming on the dock clued the fish in that trouble was at the surface. So, after a while we headed to a little beach to see what there was to see.

IMG_1107IMG_1109IMG_1110 Hadley and Harper found these tiny shells along the shore.

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Hadley was focused on picking up whole shells, but Harper examined every fragment, turning it over, seeing if its lost part was somewhere else nearby, then handing them all to me to keep safe. “They’re broken, but they’re still shells,” she said.

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What I like about writing on this blog is the space it gives me to make observations. Unfortunately, that will never be a brand or platform.  I doubt I will ever have an elevator pitch as I’ve been told I ought to, and that is because I rarely know what it is I’m going to write. The reason I write anything is because I’m interested in exploring.  Sometimes I’ll have a whopper of a story, but other times what I have will be fragments, tiny notes that I’m turning over and deciding to hold in my palm so they won’t get lost.

13 Comments

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Comments

  1. Lisa says

    May 14, 2015 at 6:39 am

    Funny…the sentence I woke up thinking this morning was, “I fear I am running out of time to be spectacular and memorable.” I also just like to write what I am feeling/seeing in a moment. Not sure anyone will ever pay me a million dollars for it. Oh well. I’m happy to know you, and I think your essays are terrific. I would buy a book of them.

    Reply
    • calliefeyen says

      May 15, 2015 at 3:09 pm

      You are spectacular, Lisa. 🙂

      Reply
  2. Michele @ A Storybook Life says

    May 14, 2015 at 8:00 am

    The Callie brand of beautiful writing will keep me coming back in any form.

    (So, too, will the Lisa brand!)

    Pieces like this give me a nudge to just write down what I’m thinking, already. Thanks for that.

    Reply
    • calliefeyen says

      May 15, 2015 at 3:10 pm

      Thank you, Michele. I really appreciate that!

      Reply
  3. Sonya says

    May 14, 2015 at 3:22 pm

    I’m pretty sure this is a bit of writing gold. I completely identify… and I love it.

    Reply
    • calliefeyen says

      May 15, 2015 at 3:10 pm

      Thank you very much, Sonya! And thanks for sharing my post!

      Reply
  4. Abbigail Kriebs says

    May 15, 2015 at 11:48 am

    I am always amazed at the lovely words you can spin around simple observations, Callie. It’s something I’m striving to do more of these days, to submerse myself in what is around me and think less about the big picture.

    Thank you for sharing the things you observe.

    Reply
    • calliefeyen says

      May 15, 2015 at 3:11 pm

      Thanks, Abbie! Sometimes my spinning takes a while, so I’m glad to know you enjoy the web. 🙂

      Reply
  5. Jessica says

    May 15, 2015 at 7:46 pm

    Me too, to everything.

    Reply
    • calliefeyen says

      May 18, 2015 at 10:29 am

      I’m glad I’m in good company. 🙂

      Reply
  6. Jeannine says

    May 18, 2015 at 7:04 pm

    This is one of those piece where I say, “I wish I had written that.”

    Reply
  7. alison says

    May 19, 2015 at 3:19 pm

    i got that big tight lump in my throat when i read harper’s line “they’re broken, but they’re still shells.” i love that little girl’s heart and the grace she shows things that are less than perfect. isn’t this how we should think about ourselves… and others? incomplete and searching and flawed, but still with great worth. still image bearers. looking around for the parts of us that are missing, but still inherently valuable in the fragment?

    Reply
    • calliefeyen says

      May 25, 2015 at 9:49 am

      I know. Me, too.

      Reply

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Hi! I’m Callie. I’m a writer and teacher living in Ann Arbor, Michigan. I write Creative Nonfiction, and in my oldest daughter Hadley’s words, I “use my imagination to add a bit of sparkle to the story.” I’m a contributor for Coffee+Crumbs, Off the Page, Makes You Mom, and Relief Journal. My writing has also been featured on Art House America, Tweetspeak Poetry, Good Letters, and Altarwork, and in 2014 I was one of the cast members of the Listen To Your Mother DC show.

I hold an MFA in Creative Writing from Seattle Pacific University, and I am working on my first book that will be published through TS Poetry Press.

Have a look around and be sure to subscribe to the blog. Thanks for stopping by!

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When I was in fourth grade, I got my front tooth k When I was in fourth grade, I got my front tooth knock out during a baseball game. I was in the dugout, trying to make a butterfly in the dirt with my shoe. The batter, who’d hit not just a home run, but a grand slam, came running in and everyone cheered and so did I because I’d gotten really good at reading cues for when a good thing happens in sports. I even attempted a high five, and somehow I knocked my face into her batting helmet, thus spending the good part of that weekend summer day in the dentist’s office getting a root canal.

No teeth were lost in this latest incident, but I was lost in a bit of imagining on Sunday when I tripped and fell on Packard while running. I look like I’ve been in a bar fight and my shoulder looks similar to how Wesley’s looked after being attacked by an ROUS. 

But I’m going into work today, and when I told my boss I’m nervous about how I look she said, “It’s OK because you have a story,” and if that isn’t the best thing you could ever say to me, I’m not sure what is. 

So, here I am with a story. Thanks to all my friends and family who’ve been so kind and keeping me laughing.
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