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What was the convention like? (the long answer) The short answer? It ROCKED! |
This is about the second Writing.com Convention, held at the Sheraton in King of Prussia, PA from August 15-18, 2003. - - - What was the convention like? Here's how I'll try to explain it... Have you ever seen a movie so captivating that you run home and tell friends and family they absolutely HAVE to see it – the sooner, the better? You’re buzzing inside with excitement, revved up to share the electricity of this event. My best friend, Gina, once raced home from such a movie to literally drag me out the door and straight back to the movie theatre, where she sheepishly purchased a second ticket to the same movie she’d seen just hours before. As I watched the movie, I soon understood her fervor to allocate some of the emotion she’d felt. Halfway through the film, I began crying – silent, streaming tears which nearly erupted into sobs by the end and ceased only after the lights came on in the theatre, long after all credits had rolled. I could not explain why I cried, and Gina knew it. She reached for my hand, I white-knuckled hers, and we sat soaking in the shared, evocative experience. The convention was kind of like that. If you were there, we are now sitting together in the theatre after the lights have come up. We’ve experienced the same magic, so we don’t really need to say anything at all. But like the movie Gina saw, this year’s convention is an experience I am bursting with…a joy I’d like to share. My friend Gina knew more about openly sharing joy than anyone I’ve ever known. Never the hoarder of happiness, she gave freely to everyone she encountered. My life and mind was saved, and changed, and stretched by her; she and I recognized a soul-language and spoke it fluently to one another. Then came the unexpected day last fall when Gina placed a gun to her head and pulled the trigger. In that instant, our language was abandoned; I found no voice but guilty stammers, shrunk by degrees into a new, frightening kind of silence. I hadn’t written anything at all in years except dry, educational passages for freelance money, so it never occurred to me to brush off my dusty pen and express grief with written words. Instead I concocted a desperate remedy of Prozac and denial. I turned an inner switch to off and operated as a robot wife… a tired mother. Then a flail toward philanthropy through modestneeds.org led me to confide in one giver I met there, known to you all as lifewriter. She suggested I join a site called stories.com, soon to be in transition to writing.com. The date was December 15, 2002. I immediately became a registered author and never looked back. Within two months I’d already written twice as much as anything I’d ever written collectively before in the 33 years of my life. Much of what I wrote initially was about Gina…exploring my rage, despair, hope, and endless questing for answers never coming. I found myself supported, encouraged, and embraced by this writing.com family. My incredible husband, Andy, encouraged me to write as much as I wanted -- so I did. I typed for hours on end, reviewing, writing, reading, rating, entering contests, and exploring the unbelievable opportunities and activities abounding here. They say the writing saves the writer. It most definitely saved me; even as I considered joining Gina in stepping off the wheel, I was held in check by a strange, newfound need to write it all down. At the risk of sounding maudlin, I credit Writing.com as nothing less than a fresh soul-mating for me…a passage through solid rock, discovered at exactly the right moment in time. So when a last-minute opportunity to go to the convention presented itself, you can be sure I was all about jumping on board. Thanks to the help, support and generosity of the The StoryMaster ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Today my memory of Convention weekend is a giddy blur marked by roller coaster loops and corkscrews of emotion. We were greeted with smiles, goodies, games, food, and hugs. We raced laps of the Sheraton’s beautiful pool within minutes of meeting one another. We joked and teased and cavorted late into the night. We sang karaoke, cheering for everyone regardless of skill. We composed campfire stories all day long, hysterical over gender-challenged leprechauns and Sesame Street monsters. We ate rich chocolates and danced to Rob Zombie and Baby Got Back. We pooled $225 at the scholarship auction to cut, style, dye, and mangle Zoo - Salted and Roasted ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() It was open mic night, Saturday evening, and everyone who’d signed up to perform was nervous as hell...none as much as The StoryMaster ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Flourishing a magician’s black hat, he pulled a chair next to him and scanned the ‘audience’ for a volunteer. “How about The StoryMistress ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() What happened next was the single most romantic thing I have ever seen. The StoryMaster ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The room absolutely exploded with excitement as if we’d collectively won a hundred million dollars. We hugged, cried, screamed, congratulated, and basked in celebration. It was both honor and privilege to be witness to such incredible love… such shared joy. Gina would have been proud. After 11pm on formal (our final) night, I stumbled and felt my knee pop out and back in somehow, accompanied by a surreal blast of pain. Then I was on the floor watching fuzzy floaters fill my vision. After a few seconds my vision cleared, and a group gathered around to make sure I was okay. catwoman ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() There are far too many tiny aspects of our weekend to even attempt further explanation. But I will say this: the convention was astounding. You have got to experience it (and especially the The StoryMaster ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Years from now, I'll look back at this 2003 writing.com convention with the exact opposite of regret. Thank you, everyone reading this, for being part of the reason why. I'll see you at the next convention! |