Monday, February 28, 2011

Get Your Oscar On


Get Your Oscar On

It’s Award season. You have the red carpet walk down, a night out on the town outfit in your closet that still fits, and your acceptance speech memorized. Why not grab the award and make the night yours and enter the National Society of Newspaper Columnists annual column contest?

Like the artists honored by the Academy of Awards, you have a library of work. Your voice is not on the big screen but the painter of words. You are a writer, a columnist, a blogger. Your voice is read. Like the Oscar artist, the writer, the columnist and the blogger are also honored with awards.

Your award may be just around the corner but you’ll never know unless you thumb through your 2010 collection of work and submit the best of the best for consideration. Today.

Deadline to enter the National Society of Newspaper Columnists annual contest is March 15, 2011.

Now may just be your year to walk the *red carpet*, pull that crinkled thank-you speech out of your pocket and make that award yours at the NSNC annual Detroit conference June 23-26, 2011.

Prestige, great friends, superb hospitality suite. Terrific speakers, columnists and journalistic community.

It’s time to get away from the computer, revisit your columns and enter. The time is now…

Cynthia Borris, NSNC Membership Chair


Tuesday, February 22, 2011

We Border on a New Day


Draped across the storefront the oversized banner beacons - Store Closing.

One more time around, I circle the parking lot. Resigned to a long walk, I pull into a stall and reconsider. Do I really want to go to Borders today? Is there anything there that I need?

Silent, I study the people. Moms, dads, women with strollers, men in wheelchairs, children, couples hand-in-hand all on a direct course to the entrance, unfettered in their goal, and the answer is clear. Yes, I need to go to Borders. Today.

I note the customary guidelines. All sales final. No checks. 20-40% off. A meager discount at best. No big deal.

Yet the people keep coming.

“What’s up with this?” a man asks, “Out of business?”

I nod yes and sigh.

“My wife and I are just waiting to see Black Swan at the Cinema next door .” His stature gives him a good focal point as he sizes up the crowd. “We had no idea.”

“You’ll like Black Swan.” I offer, lost in observation of the impending change. No more movies, Applebee's drinks and late nights at Borders.

He eases into a gentle banter and says, “I wanted to see True Grit but the wife…” He shrugs with consignment, “Ballerinas.”

Ah yes, poor man, I strive to redirect his perception and not give away the plot. “It’s about mental illness.”

Brows furrow, his night just worsened.

“Great sex,” I spice up the prospect and walk on.

Yes, I will miss movie night and the Border chatter I note as I relocate to the New Release section. While I thumb through the latest New York Best Seller, a face peers between the racks.

My new friend’s beard tickles the top edge of Dean Koontz as he shares, “I usually watch the Christian channel. Do you think, that, maybe---?”

My sense is that conflict is now part of movie night.

I look to the left, to the right. With no wife in sight, I purse my lips along the book spines and propose, “You can close one eye.”

Satisfied, he taps the tickets in his pocket and perks up.

In truth, I know temptation will win and he’ll keep both eyes open. Wide open.

I shut the book, place it back on the rack and pause. A palatable energy is in the room. This is more than a bookstore. It’s a place of community.

Soon, I understand. This isn’t about a good bargain. There are none to be found. It’s a wake. An honor. A rite of passage.

Weaving in and out of the rows like a confused hamster, an older gentleman ponders, “Where’s the end of the line?”

I point towards the back end of the building. Grateful, he scurries to the distant wall. Nearby, I take a head count.

Over sixty patrons stand in wait. The line extends to the far corner of the Children’s section and beyond. With each transaction, they creep in unison.

No one orchestrates the movement. There is no employee directing customers to the back of the line. There are no ropes or rails to mark the path.

There are no borders. The way is clear. Forward.

No fights, grumbles or cut-in-line crashers. Patience is the virtue of the hour.

More than a moment, it’s a chance to share with a stranger behind you, in front of you and on the side, the memories, the moments and the sadness; an understanding of the finality - that the opportunity to meet at this location is no more.

“Borders may be dead, but books are not,” I say to a thirty-something customer, excited with the possibilities of the possibilities.

“I love books. I love to read.” His answer resonates through the crowd as he shuffles one step closer to his all-sales-are-final purchase. He has no doubt. His purchase is final. It is more than a sale. It’s a tribute. A statement.

Yes, I needed to go to Borders today.

As an author, I’m ecstatic. As a patron, I’m part of a movement. As a person, I am better for the experience.

Perhaps, this was Borders failure.

Doomed in the end by a word. One word. Borders.

There are no borders on creativity, imagination and the people connection.

Renewed in spirit, I trace a paperback with my fingertip. Hello old friend. Close to my face, I breathe in the familiar smell and flip the pages so the breeze gently feathers my hair. The energy of the written word embraces my spirit. Powerful images created by the sculptor of beginnings, middles and ends.

With a final glance, I thread through the customers still browsing the racks and memorize the scene.

Yes, Borders may be dead in the San Francisco Bay Area but books are alive in the wake.

We border on a new day without Borders.

*****************************************************************************************************************

Cynthia Ballard Borris, author No More Bobs and humor columnist

Copyrighted 2-21-11

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Pass the Blessings, Please

Pass the blessings, please

Turkey up, put down the fork and season the day with a compliment

In the Spirit of the Thanksgiving season, offer the gift of self for the season. Join me as I embrace the words of a fellow author, blogger and columnist and wish them a wonderful holiday.

Add spice to the moment and pick up that phone. Let your voice warm the kitchen of a family member, old friend or neighbor like hot apple pie.

In celebration of the meaning of the day, visit postings and wish the friend the gift of giving. Season your words with motivation, energy and mirth.

Make this the gift that keeps giving and when blessed, share the sentiment with a nearby stranger.

Remember to receive give with an open heart and you'll be surprised how one kindness multiplies!

Pass the blessings, please...

HAPPY THANKSGIVING!



Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Writers the Moment is Now


I attended the SF Writing for Change conference this past weekend.


Under the warmth of a November sun, we gathered at the SF Hilton in the Financial District, just steps from the heart of Chinatown. The Writing for Change conference is one of my favorite events. The core element is non-fiction and the atmosphere is rich with individuals reaching for a better tomorrow by understanding today.

Not only did I re-ignite my creative energy, refocus my goals and connect with positive people, I learned that I can walk into a conference without mascara and eyeliner. What a better place to forget my makeup than a motivational self-esteem building event. Maybe I'll go naked next time.


From Stephanie Chandler to Kevin Smokler to Dan Millman to Rita Rosenkranz - the message was clear: the moment is now. My moment is now.


Yes, Kevin I will strive for balance and at all times be happy. So good to see you again and I'll see you in February. I appreciate the kick.


Thanks Stephanie for the countless tips and book. I listened and will act. Your energy is contagious.


Dan, I bought a huge club to ward off procrastination. Interlopers and time thieves beware.


Excellent conference! Thanks Mike Larsen and Elizabeth Pomada for a wonderful experience. I'm so glad to part of your team.

Gobble-gobble or Not to Gobble

Gobble-gobble or not to gobble.

75% of my invited Thanksgiving Day guests and family all agree - they do not like turkey.
Go figure.
I wonder then just how many people partake of this annual ritual on Thanksgiving to be polite. Are rituals negotiable? Is a turkey dinner the symbol of Thanksgiving or is the symbol the gathering together to share blessings?
I plan to share the blessing and not serve a roasted turkey with all the trimmings.
For me and my family this year it's steak, mashed potatoes and sweet potatoes.
Yes, rituals are negotiable and compromise comes in many shapes. No turkey on Thanksgiving? No way.
Compromise also comes in many flavors including See's milk chocolate foil-wrapped turkeys.
A Thanksgiving Day I don't spent probing a turkey's cavern is fine with me. For that I give double thanks.
Chocolate anyone?


Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Naked Men on the Market


Two naked men walked down Market St in San Francisco.
Save for the flip-flops and one birthday hat and a sign that read vote for someone for supervisor, imagination wasn't needed. The dimpled-pock mark on the thinner man's right butt cheek; the only crinkle in his pale skin.
Mothers shrouded children's view with coats. Little boys were whacked in the head for roaming eyes. Teenage girls reeled back and laughed. Old women smiled with gentle memories. Men jeered with "Hey pencil dick" and "At least my tally-whacker is in my pants" and "There's kids out here!"
Cameras snapped, Twitter tweeted and for me, I walked behind the behind with the pock-mark on the right-cheek and noted both men's fine physical shape. Not a wrinkle or sag.
Cloaked in our inhibitions, an exchanged glance of "I wish I could do that" spoke volumes. The social barrier of ties, pants, and summer dresses hiding our desire to prance naked down the streets of San Francisco.
"You know you want to," I whispered to a man and his dog.
Block after block, they sauntered. Me, too. On the same route to different journeys, soon the nakedness became normalcy. The reaction of the people stood out in the crowd and drew the attention.
Side-by-side at the signal light, I confess, I peeked. As the light turned green, I walked ahead and spoke softly, "If that was a pencil I want an entire box."
Ah, the days of summer and a cool bay breeze.
But wait, just who was I to vote for? Guess I'll have to go back...





Monday, June 7, 2010

Bloomington Indiana Welcomes America's Columnists

My hair is styled, my airfare booked and I lost a pound or two so I can gain a pound or two at the NSNC conference. But more importantly, I plan to gain knowledge and strength as I celebrate the camaraderie of columnists from across the country.

I'm ready for the National Society of Newspaper Columnists 34th annual conference,
Get Schooled, in Bloomington, Indiana, July 9-11. I even rescheduled my flight so I can accept the hospitality of West Baden Springs and the French Lick Hotel to enjoy a massage or round of golf with my *free* night lodging after the conference. Since I'm a duffer with a duck hook, I think I'll take the massage.

I'm looking forward to renewing old friendships and discovering new ones. Hope you'll join me in a toast in the hospitality suite.

What you're not registered yet? I'm sure that's just an oversight. Columnists are known to procrastinate. That's okay. It's what makes us special. So let's call it a deadline. July comes right after June...the time to act is now.

For complete conference information and registration, visit the
National Society of Newspaper Columnists.

Now I better start packing. You know how it is for women. We pack and repack at least five times. With the conference five weeks away that's just about once a week until we share that drink...see you soon!

Cynthia