FROM THE VAULT :: Celebrating my best good friend

10-year retrospectiveThis month I’m looking back over the past 10 years of blogging to repost some of the entries that help chronicle a decade of public writing as well as reflect who I was then and who I (still) am now. A lot has changed, yet a great deal has yet to evolve, and so I am reflecting on these things without judgement or regret. Thanks for walking through it with me.


THANKFUL :: My Best Good Friend, Cerella Sechrist
originally posted on November 25, 2009
 
I often speak of my best good friend (a term I stole from Forrest Gump) and how we’re essentially just new-style pen pals, but many people have difficulty understanding how a friendship can grow so strong when only emails are shared. But it is precisely that love of the written word that brought us together in the first place and has continued to be the foundation upon which our friendship is built. Though Cerella and I have never met in person during our 13-year history, our bond has grown continually stronger in every aspect of relationship. We’ve become sisters after all these years, and it’s precisely because of that faithful email correspondence.

In 1999, when the internet was just making its way into the home of the average person, I took a stab at writing fan fiction for a now-defunct television series called The Magnificent Seven. Cerella read a single story and declared herself my biggest fan. This was my first foray into online communities, my first experience “meeting” people via the internet, and the first time I’d shared any of my writings in public. I wasn’t even using my real name anywhere yet. [Remember how scary it all seemed back then?] But Cerella was honest and encouraging in her love for my writing and the characters I was adding to existing Mag7 canon, and we quickly began corresponding regularly. I learned that she, too, had writing aspirations, so many of our conversations centered around this topic. There were no boundaries in our communication, no generation gaps or personal issues related to our 10-year age difference. We simply shared our hearts and our thoughts and found common interests in books and movies and celebrity crushes. That was the foundation, but it quickly became only a starting point for something far greater.

During the following decade, Cerella and I would reconnect from time to time and catch up on the past weeks or months that had kept us too busy to correspond regularly. Each time it seemed as if no time had passed at all. My experience is that this is a sign of enduring friendship, and the years have proven that to be true. In recent years we’ve kept in constant communication, using email and texts and packages through the postal service, and we’re still each other’s biggest fans despite not yet having met in person, even now. That detail has no effect on our bond. We are sisters in Christ, encouragers of each other’s dreams, and sounding boards for life’s messy details. I have no other friendship that goes so deep or maintains such honesty. I’m sure there would be little personality quirks between us that would certainly put a new dimension on our relationship if we saw each other regularly, but I’m inclined to believe that such things would be of no consequence in the long run. As I’m fond of saying, we know each other’s hearts, and that transcends even the greatest of differences. We both look forward to the day when we can finally sit down and share a meal at the same table and talk long into the night. As all lifelong friends do.

Love Finds You in Hershey, PennsylvaniaI celebrate Cerella’s friendship every day, but there is one very specific way that is more fun than the rest: the joy of her first published novel, Love Finds You In Hershey, Pennsylvania. Check out this sweet, fun story for yourself and follow Cerella for news of future projects. Join me in celebrating my best good friend!

five minute friday :: If I knew I could, I would…

luggageThe answer is always the same. If I knew I could, I would live a nomadic life. The journey would begin in Pennsylvania, where I would spend a week visiting my best good friend, letting her show off her homeland, and then I would help her pack and take her with me for the rest of the journey. We’d hop the pond to London first, then take in the majestic cliffs of Ireland and rolling hills of Scotland, then zip over to Paris for a long leisurely adventure. After that, Spain, Italy, Greece… Eastern Europe, the Holy Lands, Russia, China, Japan… and everywhere in between. A lengthy touring of Africa would follow, and then a long (long, long) holiday in Australia, the land of my lifelong dreams. We’d eventually meander back to Hawaii and Alaska, then take a casual tour of North America on one enormous road trip. Eventually we’d make it down to South America, as well, after which we’d begin the journey all over again. Just two single ladies on adventure, pen and journal in hand, cameras at the ready to capture every impression of all that we encounter.

I would if I could. Oh, yes, I would.


Five Minute Friday prompts are designed by The Gypsy Mama, challenging us to “just write, and not worry. For five minutes flat. Simply stop, drop and write. Set your words free.” [image via flickr]
 

Life is hard. Faith is harder.

Today’s post was excerpted from a devotional message by Cerella D. Sechrist, author of Love Finds You in Hershey, Pennsylvania

LORD, hear my prayer,
   listen to my cry for mercy;
in your faithfulness and righteousness
   come to my relief.
Do not bring your servant into judgment,
   for no one living is righteous before you.
The enemy pursues me,
   he crushes me to the ground;
he makes me dwell in the darkness
   like those long dead.
So my spirit grows faint within me;
   my heart within me is dismayed.
                              — Psalm 143: 1-4

There are days when my soul aches. The kind of bone-deep weariness that settles sharp and unrelenting in the most hollow parts of my spirit, and I echo the psalmist’s cry for relief, for mercy, for a moment – just one moment – filled with something other than utter despair.

Life is hard. Faith is harder.

But the one thing I count on when my “spirit grows faint within me” is that God is a God of promise. He takes vows seriously, our God does – not words to be uttered frivolously nor oaths lightly kept. I’m staking my very existence on the belief that God doesn’t quit. So even when the world is at its darkest, and mankind’s savior lies lifeless within a tomb, God’s promise of resurrection says the dawn is coming to wash away all decay and despair.

That’s a faith work keeping, even when it’s difficult.
 

Sunday's comin'Be sure to visit The Cerella Life to read Cerella’s complete devotional post.

Anniversary Celebration :: Win free stuff!

One year ago, this month, the debut novel from my best good friend was published, and we celebrated with a week-long event right here on phrenetical. Love Finds You in Hershey, Pennsylvania, by Cerella D. Sechrist, is the story of Sadie Spencer, a former TV chef, who has returned to her charming hometown of Hershey in order to raise her daughter and build a new career in the restaurant business. With the help and encouragement of her best friend, Jasper, Sadie manages to rise from the ashes of her past until she is suddenly threatened by the arrival of a handsome Russian entrepreneur who seems intent on opening up his own restaurant in direct competition to hers. Sadie’s story takes flight as she attempts to outshine her new competition in an area of which she has no skills, and the resulting story is at once comic and endearing and most definitely sweet.

To mark this first anniversary, Cerella is giving away a fun prize package to one lucky reader, including an autographed copy of the novel itself. Take a look at the details below then submit your own entry. But hurry! The winner will be chosen in just a couple of days!

One winner will receive a gift basket that includes:

  • a Gooseberry Patch coffee recipe booklet
  • a Gooseberry Patch CHOCOLATE recipe book
  • Letters to Myself CD by Briar Cox, featuring one of the songs featured on Cerella’s “personal soundtrack” for the book
  • an angel suncatcher, in honor of Sadie’s restaurant, Suncatchers
  • a conversation hearts night light
  • a hand-crafted bookmark featuring a quote from the novel
  • an autographed copy of Love Finds You in Hershey, Pennsylvania

You’ve got three ways to enter — the more you enter, the more chances you have of winning!

  1. Visit YouTube.com and leave a comment beneath the trailer for Love Finds You in Hershey.
  2. Follow Cerella on Twitter and then tweet about the contest (make sure you mention @thecerellalife so she finds your tweet!)
  3. Ask to be Cerella’s friend on Facebook and then post this link to the contest as your Facebook status

If you’re already a Twitter follower or Facebook friend, just give a shout out about the contest (including @thecerellalife in your post) and Cerella will make sure you gain additional entries.

Be sure to check her website at the end of the month to find out if you’re the winner, and check out the novel for yourself. You won’t be disappointed!

LOVE FINDS YOU IN HERSHEY, PENNSYLVANIA


Genre: Inspirational Fiction
ISBN: 1935416642
Acquired:
I received my copy from the author, but I would have happily purchased it anyway!
Completed Reading:
March 2010
Overall Rating:
Nine out of ten
Many moons ago I completed this novel, the debut by author Cerella D. Sechrist, but just realized how neglectful I’ve been in posting my thoughts. My omission has nothing at all to do with my enjoyment of the book but rather about the stuff of life and time and general management of priorities. But I correct that error today and hope this serves to spark renewed interest in this delightful novel.

The story revolves around former tv chef Sadie Spencer, who has rebuilt her life in hometown Hershey, Pennsylvania, by establishing a successful restaurant and raising her 5-year-old daughter with daily assistance from lifelong best friend Jasper. Life seems to be running smoothly for Sadie until a mysterious newcomer begins to patron her café and then word reaches Sadie that he has purchased property across the street. Suddenly Sadie is set on a course of worry, fear for her business, intense competition, and an unexpected romance thrown into the mix. And Sadie is never her best when life turns upside down. But the story is also the most enjoyable when Sadie’s in a tailspin.

As a rule, I’m not a fan of inspirational fiction nor typical romantic comedy, but Love Finds You in Hershey, Pennsylvania expertly transcends the stereotypes of both genres. It is engaging from start to finish, the characters are just like people I’ve known in my life, and the situations that Sadie encounters are fully believable and often hilarious. Even the two or three scenes that serve simply to further the plot do not seem forced or the least bit preposterous. And this is one of the only books I’ve read from these genres that can make that claim. I never wanted to put the book down, yet I never wanted the story to end. When I did complete the book, I immediately wanted to read more about many of the characters. For me, that’s the highest compliment for a novel and a writer.

I’m still not sold on inspirational fiction or general romantic comedies, but reading Hershey did make me wonder about other titles in the Love Finds You series from Summerside Press. If they are as rich in character as this one, I look forward to exploring more of them. I’m certain I’ll follow Cerella’s career. She’s a truly gifted author, and no matter what types of novels she creates, I know they will have compelling stories with fascinating and relatable characters. Which is all I really need in a book. Congratulations, C! You’re off to a great start!

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