With a little help from my friend...
I know, I know. It has been a ridiculously long time since my last post. I’m sure some of you are asking, “What have you been doing?” or “What made you decide to start blogging again?” The first question is easy. I’ve moved twice, started writing for OKRA Magazine, and taught over 2500 students in my cooking classes. As for the second, …
I know, I know. It has been a ridiculously long time since my last post. I’m sure some of you are asking, “What have you been doing?” or “What made you decide to start blogging again?” The first question is easy. I’ve moved twice, started writing for OKRA Magazine, and taught over 2500 students in my cooking classes. As for the second, …
I recently had the pleasure of sharing lunch with the
generous, kind, inspiring, amazingly talented, and always gracious Nancie
McDermott. Nancie urged me strenuously to blog again. Her last words to me that
afternoon were “1 post, 1 week, don’t over think it, and don’t make it too
long…or I’ll have to yell at you.”
In the days that followed our lunch, two of Nancie’s
insights kept playing in my head. The first was an old Chinese saying: “The
best time to plant a tree was twenty years ago, but the second best time is
today.” That is, don’t lament what you haven’t done. You can’t change the past,
but you can get started (or restarted) today. Just show up every day and take baby
steps. You’ll get stronger along the way.
The other was that we, as professionals, have a lot of
knowledge that we take for granted. The techniques and tidbits we have
stockpiled may be common practice for us, but they could be what motivates
someone else to get in (or back in) their kitchen. As a culinary instructor,
that hit me hard. I can’t count how many times I’ve seen something on Facebook
or Twitter liked or shared a thousand times or called “genius” and thought,
“Really? There are people out there who didn’t know that?” So, please, don’t
take your talent, expertise, or experience for granted. Celebrate and share
them. As Nancie reminded me, “You never know what someone else doesn’t
know.”
Thank you, Nancie! Here is my first baby step, my first post
in over two years. And, by the way, I’ve already begun writing my next!
P.S. On top of being such a wonderful person, Nancie is the
author of 10 cookbooks chock full of delicious dishes (including Southern
Cakes, Quick and Easy Thai, Southern Pies, and Quick and Easy Vietnamese) with
another on the way. Please read more about her and keep an eye out for her new
book at http://www.nanciemcdermott.com/index.htm.
Nancie also runs her own blog http://nanciemcdermott.wordpress.com.
You can find her on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/NancieMcDermott
and Twitter @nanciemac.