Tuesday, March 6, 2012

The Secrets of Agoraphobia


The Girl at the Window - by Winslow Homer

                                       
What is Panic Anxiety Disorder and Agoraphobia?


My book, Angels Turn Their Backs, is about a teenage girl, Addy, who is suffering from panic-anxiety disorder and agoraphobia.

I am very familiar with this emotional illness as I have suffered from it, as have some members of my family. There does seem to be a genetic predisposition to it in some families.

Since I wrote Angels Turn Their Backs,  I have heard from, and talked to, many young people who were - and are suffering from this disorder. So I am writing this blog for those brave young people -  and for those who are trying to understand what this illness is about.

Why am I telling you about my own experience with panic/anxiety and agoraphobia? Because I kept it a secret for a very long time. Because too many who have it, live with it secretly.

It is known as “the panic secret.” 

We don’t keep many physical illnesses a secret anymore, but emotional or mental suffering still has many stigmas attached to it even in 2012. It’s time to end that.

For many years, agoraphobia was described as being a fear of public places.

But, in fact, it is often the off-shoot of anxiety/panic disorder.  Panic/anxiety, leading to agoraphobia, often begins in adolescence and the early teen years, but can occur at any age. I was in my mid-twenties when panic attacks went into full gear for me, but I had always been a very anxious child and teen. More girls/women than boys/men seem to suffer from it.

Often the real underlying causes of this emotional illness become so mixed-up and confused, that all that remains in the person’s mind is the fear of having another panic attack. All they want is for the panic attacks to go away.

Sufferers might tell their parents and a few close family members about these fearful panic attacks, but they usually don’t discuss it with co-workers, school teachers, or most of their friends; generally, because of the shame and embarrassment associated with it  – but  also because mental/emotional illnesses still have social shame attached to them – and some people still  tend to judge those who have this problem in a negative way.

Even when young people tell their parents, or if adults tell their spouses or partners, they don’t always get the understanding and support they need right away. The problem is, often there appears to be “no reason” for the panic attacks to occur. They can begin after certain traumatic events, of course, but just as often, panic attacks seem to come out of nowhere – and the severe anxiety isn’t directed towards anything – it is just THERE.

So if you can’t explain why you are having panic/anxiety to those closest to you, they may dismiss it (in their own worries about you) and claim you just “acting out”; or they may try to convince you that it will go away if you would only ignore it ... or that it is not as serious as you think it is.

Nothing is more disheartening than to try to explain how you feel people to who don’t understand – especially when you, yourself, don’t understand why it is happening to you!

“Pull up your socks” – an old saying that basically means, “Stop whining and get on with it!” can often be the first response of those you confide in. Of course, this only makes the situation more desperate for you.

Most people close to you will eventually “get it” and help you to seek help; still others may be very supportive but yet feel helpless, or perhaps feel a kind of shame, or a belief that no child of theirs is “mentally ill"  - and it may stop some them from seeking medical help for the you for quite a long time. Especially if they can’t afford professional help. But help is there. This illness is very treatable.

If you feel you are not getting help from anyone, talk to your family doctor. Not all doctors are up on this, but you can ask her or him for a referral to a panic/anxiety clinic or a psychologist. Sometimes there are groups who meet to talk about this problem. Keep asking your doctor for some kind of help. If there is a teacher or professional friend you trust, talk to them. They may be able to find you help through school or work related psychologists. Often hospitals have panic/anxiety clinics you can contact as well. There are also some helpful books you can read about it available now. (See below)


What does a panic attack feel like?

The symptoms of a panic attack will often be triggered in a situation where escape is not possible or is difficult. It can be quite subtle. It may occur simply by going into a classroom, or an office at work; or as a simple example, -it may happen at a movie where you are stuffed into the middle row. There are many other other places where you may feel locked in and helpless. A panic attack can even occur just by you anticipating an event like going to school, a concert or a school dance. So often the sufferer stays home to avoid it.

That is the beginning of agoraphobia.

The panic attack you feel with agoraphobia, is like any severe panic attack. The symptom/reactions  may include intense fear, pounding  or racing heart, shaking hands, sweating, dizziness, fear of throwing up, gulping, finding it hard to breathe, a feeling of disorientation, and sometimes diarrhea or nausea. You may also feel as if there is a band tightening around your head.

And to repeat, panic attacks that seem relentless might cause you to avoid certain situations where you feel you could be “locked in” socially.

This can lead to avoiding school, or work, and other social situations  – even shopping or going for a walk alone (in case you faint or run down the street out of control – which will not happen by the way!). And in severe cases, it becomes harder and harder to go anywhere at all.

It is no wonder that agoraphobia and panic disorder can lead to depression, another offshoot of the illness.

It might help and reassure you to know there are many myths that tend to circulate around panic attacks and agoraphobia. It’s VERY important to understand some of these “myths” when learning about this illness.



Myth 1 - Panic attacks can make you go “crazy” and lose control of yourself.


Not true. Be reassured. This will not happen. Even though panic attacks can be very scary, they will NOT make you go crazy. You may have many frightening thoughts and weird physical reactions while it’s happening, but  you must always remember this. You are not crazy – and you are not going crazy. You will not go berserk and embarrass yourself publicly. In fact, most people with this problem actually become more controlled, not less, so that even their intimate friends and family don't even suspect their condition until they are told about it! The physical symptoms you are feeling are a reaction to the fear you are feeling. With help, you can learn to ride through them.


Myth 2 - Panic attacks are a sign of  weakness and a lack of control over your emotions.


Not true. It is not your fault you are having panic attacks. It is an emotional illness and is recognized as such by all mental health professionals. Just the words “mental health” scares people. But mental/emotional illnesses are no different than any other illness. Like diabetes. There is no known cause of panic disorder. It seems that often a series of triggers are involved. But you CAN learn to live with it, control it.Most people do get well again. Once you understand this, it will help you to come to terms with it by learning to recognize that this is an illness that can be helped – once you learn to understand it and control it with guidance from a skilled councillor.


Myth 3 - Panic attacks are destroying you health and body

People with panic attacks believe very strongly that the "attacks" they are experiencing mean that something physically harmful is happening to them.
There are many frightening symptoms that can occur while having a panic attack. As I say above, these can include an accelerated heart rate, trembling, shaking and sweating. Not being able to take a deep breath, called shortness of breath, is also very common. It can sometimes make you feel lightheaded and nauseated. You may get a headache also. None of these things are life-threatening, according to the experts. And I know this to be true from experience.  Many people who have panic attacks are sure that the shortness of breath will make them faint. But it is extremely rare.
Myth 4:  I will never get over the panic attacks. There is no help for panic disorder.
This is a highly treatable illness. With the right treatment, you will be able to learn to control your panic. It is very possible to effectively manage your symptoms through one or more treatment option. But you need to get expert help. However, sometimes just knowing you’re not alone – that many people have this problem - and that you are not going crazy will help a LOT!


Myth 5 - If I use self-medications like alcohol or the illegal drugs, the panic may go away.
This is absolutely not true. This is referred to as “maladaptive” behaviours which can cause many more problems in your life. Things like alcohol may mask the fear for a few hours, but when the effects of the alcohol wear off your panic attacks may come back three-fold. And you’ll need more and more alcohol and then your life and health truly will be threatened. The same goes for illegal  or recreational drugs. Your doctor may give you anti-anxiety medication, just while you are coming to grips with the illness, but eventually many people with panic-anxiety disorder learn to get along without any chemical help at all.
You are not alone. My character Addy realizes this eventually. You will, too. But life is not a fiction story, is it? Life is something that is very tough and frightening at times. But you will get better with the right help. Knowing I was not alone – that others had these same feelings - was a huge help for me. I hope this has helped you understand a bit more what this illness you are suffering from is all about.
You will get you life back!

Angels Turn Their Backs is recommended reading in the book below:

This book is aimed at parents:

REVIEWSSome reviews:"Problems with anxiety can change the life course for many teenage children. Yet good and unbiased information is almost nonexistent. This book is written by two authors who are armed with a wealth of scientific information, extensive experience, and empathic understanding. Dr. Foa and Ms. Andrews provide a vital resource for parents of anxious teenagers. The language is clear and straightforward and the information is accurate and up-to-date. It is a book that every parent with an anxious teenager must have."--Ronald M. Rapee, Ph.D., Director, Macquarie University Anxiety Research Unit, and Author of Helping Your Anxious Child: A Step by Step Guide for Parents


"An essential read, this book is a clear, concise, comprehensive resource for parents of children experiencing problems with anxiety."--Louis Harkins, Founder and Administrator of the OCD and Parenting List


"Easy-to-read, an invaluable resource for parents and professionals alike. This volume can greatly assist parents as well as professionals to more effectively identify and help adolescents who are suffering. I would highly recommend it to parents as well as professional colleagues." --Esther Deblinger, Ph.D., New Jersey CARES Institute, University of Medicine & Dentistry of NJ, School of Osteopathic Medicine


"Each disorder is accompanied by a definition, contributing factors, treatment information, and case studies. Quotes, helpful tips from parents, and sidebars appear throughout the text. This in-depth, logically arranged book also contains an expanded table of contents, a useful appendix, a glossary, and a list of resources. An essential addition to public, middle, and high school libraries."--Library Journal (starred review)



                                                                        and by the

Books for parents and professionals in the Family Resource Center


Behavioral Health Library

Edna B. Foa, Ph.D., and Linda Wasmer Andrews
The Annenberg Foundation Trust at Sunnylands’
Adolescent Mental Health Initiative
Oxford University Press 2006


Here is a book worth looking at just for teens:




Review


Speaking directly to teens, the authors walk readers through recognizing anxiety and its effects, both physical and mental, then deliver recommended therapies, tools, and resources for overcoming it. First-person, "real-life" vignettes are included in each chapter, which allow teens to relate to situations in a peer-to-peer fashion. This title belongs in every middle and high school library and teen resource collection. --School Library Journal Extra Helping, March 10, 2010



I've just ordered My Anxious Mind and will be reading it soon.


The books above are can be found at Amazon and are also available in regular book form. You can order them from your local bookstores or online.

The one book I relied on as a young adult suffering from panic anxiety was the one written by the wonderful Dr. Claire Weekes, one of the first people to write about how to cope with anxiety and panic disorder.

It was the only book I could find at that time and I was so fortunate to find it in our library. Then I bought it!

You can buy also Claire Weekes books and audio books online at Amazon.


The link for Amazon.ca


The link for Amazon.com












Sunday, March 4, 2012

Library Book Secrets



In my library books, I often find that people have been scribbling and correcting with busy pencils many works of fiction and non-fiction. Some are very indignant and unable to stop themselves from stabbing exclamation marks at the end of their tirade - while others politely pencil-in tiny corrections, just in case you missed them (and to show they have not missed them.)

I especially like it when the noisy scribblers are wrong. The temptation is almost overwhelming to pencil in one's own view of the scribbler's "error", and I have to say I have succumbed - but only a few times. One of my own library secrets!

I should, of course, only write in the margin of my own books - which I also do at times. But they are my books, and I can scribble in them if I want to.

I have found photos, book marks and recently a letter from one acquaintance to another from a distant city, explaining why she hadn't been able to meet the receiver when the receiver was visiting the sender's city. I didn't believe the letter writer's excuse. I wonder if the receiver wrote back? It was such a weak excuse and this writer had clearly not wanted to meet up with her old friend at all.

Just this week, I found a "Checkout receipt" from a library across the city from me. I always read these slips of paper, as many use these paper bits as bookmarks. This list of books I found particularly interesting. Here are the four this library visitor took home.

"Natural Healing : Herbal, Homeopathic" 615.535 HAY

"Rest: Living in Sabbath Simplicity" 623.3 KEN

"Is God a Mathematician?" 510 LIV

"Pride and Prejudice and the Zombies." Graphic Fiction:LEE  ...... WHAT??

I had to chuckle when I saw three such inspirational titles, followed by one MOST non-inspirational one, which I have seen floating around the internet and on half-price sales shelves in bookstores. But as I haven't read it, could I be wrong about it not being inspirational? Doubt it! ;-)

Fun, though....


Saturday, March 3, 2012


Taken at 6:30 a.m. March 2, 2012 by Margaret Buffie



"The snow had begun in the gloaming,
And busily all the night
Had been heaping field and highway
With a silence deep and white." 



James Russell Lowell (1819-1891), U.S. poet. 'The First Snowfall'

In our case, after a long winter, it is not our first snowfall,
but the snow worked busily all night and heaped on field and highway.  March is coming in like a lion in Manitoba!


Monday, February 27, 2012

Photo by Margaret Buffie - "Snow Flower Cave"

 

February

O Master-Builder, blustering as you go
About your giant work, transforming all
The empty woods into a glittering hall,
And making lilac lanes and footpaths grow
As hard as iron under stubborn snow,
Though every fence stand forth a marble wall,
And windy hollows drift that shall your might o’erthrow.
Build high your white and dazzling palaces,
Strengthen your bridges, fortify your towers,
Storm with a loud and portentous lip;
And April with a fragmentary breeze,
And half a score of gentle, golden hours,
Shall leave no trace of your stern workmanship.

1910



Early Canadian Poet

AGNES ETHELWYN WETHERALD (1857-1940)


The first decade of the twentieth century was A. E. Wetherald's most productive, and saw the publications of three books of poetry. A review of The Last Robin: Lyrics and Sonnets (1907) in The Globe said, “The salient quality of Miss Wetherald’s work is its freshness of feeling, a perennial freshness, renewable as spring. This has a setting of harmonious form, for the poet's ear is delicately attuned to the value of words, both as to the sound and the meaning.”

Thanks to Keryn Huenemann for introducing Agnes Ethelwyn Wetherald to me on the blog "Canada's Early Women Writers"  http://ceww.wordpress.com/ , and to this poem for my February blues!!


Wednesday, February 22, 2012

A quotation of hope: Is spring coming? What is it like?

Morden Blush Roses, Copyright Margaret Buffie

“Is the spring coming?" he said. "What is it like?"...
"It is the sun shining on the rain and the rain falling on the sunshine...”
Frances Hodgen Burnett, The Secret Garden


The Secret Garden is one of the great classics of children's literature.

This photo was taken in my own garden last year. It is a Morden Blush Rose. Its smell is tender and sweet. I am longing for spring and roses and rain falling on sunshine.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Quote of the Week: On the necessity of writing every day - By Vta Sackville-West


It is necessary to write, if the days are not to slip emptily by. How else, indeed, to clap the net over the butterfly of the moment? For the moment passes, it is forgotten; the mood is gone; life itself is gone. That is where the writer scores over his fellows: he catches the changes of his mind on the hop.”    Vita Sackville-West 





I'm taking this to heart right now.
One of my favourite books (and one of the best short series made for TV starring the brilliant Dame Wendy Hiller) is Sackville-West's  "All Passion Spent." I do not have my own copy of this book and order it from the library each time - for fear they will one day remove it. Ordering books keeps them alive in the library system!

We visited Sackville-West's garden at Sussinghurst when we were in England. Magnificent!

I have always had real flowers somewhere in my home - picked from my own small garden or from anywhere I can find a pretty bunch of them for sale in the winter. So I agree with Vita Sackville-West when she says:

"A flowerless room is a soulless room, to my way of thinking; but
even one solitary little vase of a living flower may redeem it."
Vita Sackville-West



Vita's Desk, Sissinghurst Tower

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Here are two readers' emails sent to me recently that I thought were wonderful. Thanks to Khushi and Christopher! (These will be posted with the books referred to as well.)




"I'm 12 years old and i just finished reading your book called Winter Shadows and I have to say, i loved it! It's probably something you hear all the time...but anyway, I loved the way you sculpted the book, I loved the way you showed Beatrice's cluelessness to her love towards Duncan, it was so sweet but, i didn't like Robert he's to uptight, no fun, my idea of fun is kinda weird but, it's fun for me to curl under the covers with a good book and the fireplace crackling, hearing the soft rain touching my window......well anyhow I nearly cried when Cass was always fighting with Jean and never forgiving herself for not being there when her Mother died, it's, like this weird feeling inside me, very few books can do that to me. I'm sort of a writer myself but my books aren't really all the spectacular.....i do hope you read this email, even if you skimmed, thanks for listening!

A very big fan,
Khushi  -- "


 Hello Ms. Buffie,

Once again, I've read and explored your novel, Who is Frances Rain? and
once again I've uncovered yet another layer I did not know existed...

I've taught your novel to my grade sevens for over ten years now and I
never tire of it. Sometimes I read it aloud - while they follow along
with their copy - and sometimes I get the students to read it. I've
always felt that the plot was perfect for this age group and more
importantly the many themes of change, acceptance, and growing up, to
mention just a few... For that reason alone, it deserves a hallowed place
in my classroom.

Each time I've read the book I've been intrigued by its many teaching
possibilities. Early in our use of the book, it was always a great
springboard for important discussions about divorce, sibling rivalry and
the beauty and importance of grandparents. I also use it for exploring
journal writing and point of view. Sometimes students will journal write
about things going on in their world and sometimes write from Lizzie's
point of view at critical points in the novel.

As I read the novel aloud, I often pause to celebrate how real all of your
characters are, including your minor ones. I take the time to let the
kids enjoy your description of Harvey, which is so so colorful. And then
when Lizzie and Alex go to pick him up at his shack, the description of it
is so appropriate and really a description of him, which is really the
case in the real world. We actually take the time to create a visual
representation of it.

One day, as I was reading, all of the figurative language suddenly
appeared to me. I don't know why it took so long, but it did. It made me
rethink my way of teaching. This may seem like a trivial point at first,
but I used to teach my literary terms / devices by genre and figurative
language was included in my poetry terms. And then I thought... How
limiting, to call similes, metaphors, and personification poetry terms.
It was indirectly telling my students that these terms only have a place
in poems.

Thanks to you, I now explore these terms with my students as literary
terms and encourage my students to use figurative language in all forms of
writing.

Your first novel? Wow! Who is Frances Rain? is the work of a true master
storyteller."

From a grade 7 teacher, Christopher ---  from Newfoundland

Sunday, February 12, 2012


My daughter made these gorgeous sugar cookies with candy windows for her daughter's school class. What could be sweeter than
that?

HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY TO ALL MY FRIENDS AND READERS!

Friday, February 10, 2012


FOR THE LOVE OF READING





For Valentine's day I chose the quote below,
because I reread all the books I love over and over again.
One day I will make a list!


"Tell me what you read and I'll tell you who you are" is true enough, but I'd know you better if you told me what you reread. ~François Mauriac







Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Paperback edition of WINTER SHADOWS coming out September 11th.....


Finally! Winter Shadows will be released in paperback on September 11, 2012, and is now available on Amazon for pre-ordering!






Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Still going strong....


Charles Dickens


"Only jolter-headed, conceited idiots suppose that volumes are to be tossed off like pancakes, and that any writing can be done without the utmost application, the greatest patience, and the steadiest energy of which the writer is capable."   Charles Dickens

A great quote, and one that many new and seasoned writers can take something from; and will, in the doing, attend to their writing with three vital ingredients:
1) Utmost application
Putting one's backside onto a chair in front of a table and writing - something, anything, every day.

2) The Greatest Patience
Allowing for mistakes, allowing for changes, and rewriting and rewriting, editing and re-editing.

3) The Steadiest Energy they are capable of.
No matter how confused and tattered one feels, to never to give up.


But the real secret is offered up, beautifully, by Dickens' acknowledgement that any writer must believe in what they are writing about. Completely.

"I have nothing else to tell; unless, indeed, I were to confess that no one can ever believe this narrative, in the reading, more than I have believed it in the writing." Charles Dickens

Monday, February 6, 2012

Quote of the Week - For the Love of Reading....

"I had just taken to reading. I had just discovered the art of leaving my body to sit impassive in a crumpled up attitude in a chair or sofa, while I wandered over the hills and far away in novel company and new scenes... My world began to expand very rapidly,... the reading habit had got me securely."


H. G. Wells



Wednesday, February 1, 2012

What is it about some houses that makes us uneasy?








I was walking slowly past a particular house the other day (not the one above) - one that I often see on my now much shortened walks (a knee injury!) - and, once again, felt that deep inner recoil I always do whenever I'm near this place. I have no idea who lives there, but there is just something about its very presence that causes me to shrink from it with a feeling of uneasiness - almost dread.

When I  was researching My Mother's Ghost, my husband (of Scottish heritage) and I went into an old Alberta ranch house built in the late 19th C.  It was a typical ranch house of the time - a little worn around the edges, but it had been refurbished and set up in the 1980's as a guest ranch. We made it down the hall and into the kitchen and, there, my husband (whose grandmother was "fey" and who, himself,  has strong psychic connections at times) walked right out the back door and would not return to the house. He said to me he'd felt a heavy weight fall on his shoulders, and one section of the room was misted with a thick gray film.

The woman who owed and ran the guest ranch nodded when I asked her about the house - and said, very matter-of-factly, that the place had been haunted for years - and they had lost a number of workers because of it. Now this was ideal for my story about a family in grief who buy an old haunted ranch house! It felt like kismet. This place was perfect! But I also knew I wouldn't want to live there!

What is it about houses? Can they really hold the spirits of those who came before us? Can houses be sad for years on end, because of "things" that happened inside them?

Is it us? Can a human spirit in turmoil do this to bricks and mortar?

Or perhaps, when we recoil from a house, it is because we are affected by our own buried memories of something; something that has nothing whatsoever to do with a particular house.

Of course, abandoned houses can spook some people because they are empty, and crumbling, and have no one to look after them. They also remind each of us of our own fragile vulnerability in many ways as well.

I had encounters with two old and empty houses as a kid - and got caught with some friends exploring one of them. We were chased out by a man who seemed to appear out of nowhere, but it was clear he was no ghost! We scattered like rabbits. He didn't stand a chance of grabbing one of us! That house was old and empty, but not particularly scary. We just wanted to poke around in it. The other one was different. I'm keeping that story for another book one day ... :-)

But there are houses that seem to reek with something that repels some people. Why?

Of course, movies and books have often used typically Gothic-style houses to advance the idea of madness, horror, and fear. Like Norman Bates's house in Psycho, which was created to look like a house that simply had to be filled with insanity and crazy goings-on. Much like the rather bizarre and very real Alwyn Courts Apartments that Ira Levin chose for Rosemary's Baby.

But the house I walk past fairly often, is a perfectly ordinary early 1900's house. It's fairly well cared for. People live there. In summer there are rigid rows of marigolds in its front flower beds. Yet ... I'd be very hard-put to actually walk through the door of that house!

When I began to write The Warnings (originally called The Guardian Circle), I dug out a book from 1903, one that my husband's family had had for years - a large bound photo-filled book of black and white images used to promote Winnipeg businesses, banks and posh houses from that time. I looked for "my guardian circle house" in that book. Found a few that might suit, but none were exactly what I was looking for.

I did find it when I went to a local museum called Dalnavert (the house above) just by accident, really. Dalnavert is one of the finest examples of Queen Anne Revival architecture in Winnipeg, and is the restored home of Sir Hugh John Macdonald, who had it built in 1895. Hugh John was the son of Sir John A. Macdonald - one of our most famous Prime Ministers -  and was a lawyer who became Premier of Manitoba. When Hugh John died in 1929, his wife no longer wanted such a large house, and sold it. Their only son, John Alexander had, sadly, died of diabetes at nineteen years of age in 1905. We were told by our guide that the son died in the large attic area which had been used as a play room when he was young. Not sure if that's accurate, but it hit my creative bone with a tingle.

The house was sold and used as a rooming house for almost 40 years. It is believed to be haunted - of course! I decided the lay-out and look of the house, and its history as a long-time boarding house, were perfect for my needs. And the odd thing is, I didn't feel repelled by this old building at all, but did feel wonderfully immersed in Winnipeg history.


Under the staircase


The stairway that Luther Dubbles loves to "fall" down - just for the fun of it - in The Warnings

Writing about ghostly comings and goings is something that has always intrigued me; and houses, cottages and old stone buildings are often the settings I chose to use.

But I'm still not going to ask to see inside that house I pass when I go for my walks!

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Quote of the Week: C.S.Lewis on friendship....

I love this quote. It is so true!


“Friendship is born at that moment when one person says to another: "What! You too? I thought I was the only one.” C.S. Lewis 






Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Quote of the Week: Henry James on stone circles

"It is indeed immensely picturesque. I can fancy sitting all a summer's day watching its shadows shorten and lengthen again, and drawing a delicious contrast between the world's duration and the feeble span of individual experience. There is something in Stonehenge almost reassuring; and if you are disposed to feel that life is rather a superficial matter, and that we soon get to the bottom of things, the immemorial gray pillars may serve to remind you of the enormous background of time."
Henry James, 1875

I chose to use a circle of stones to begin my fantasy series, The Watcher's Quest Trilogy. What is it about these stone circles which are scattered across  the British Isles, Ireland and parts of Europe? They have caught the imaginations (and passions) of generations of human beings. I chose two small and fascinating henges to recreate the one that Emma's dad is building on the bee farm. But I think Henry James said it best when describing the impact of these strange and magical circles, when he wrote about one - Stonehenge.

Here are two multi-media images I created to show how I see the stone circle in The Watcher. I have added these images along with other photos and artwork to my Watcher's Quest book tab. I'm planning on adding more images in time....








Saturday, January 14, 2012





Winter Shadows has just been just selected for the :

VOYA (Voice of Youth Advocates) Top Shelf for Middle School Readers 2011 list


It was previously:

Winner of The Silver Nautilus Award, 2011
"Silver awards are given to print and audio books of exceptional merit that make a literary and heartfelt contribution to spiritual growth, conscious living, high-level wellness, green values, responsible leadership and positive social change, as well as to the worlds of art, creativity and inspiration. Winning books are featured at Book Expo America 2011."

Finalist: The Canadian Library Association's Book of the Year Award.

Finalist : The McNally Robinson Book for Young People Award

Selected: Ontario Library Associations's Best Bets List for Children and Teens 2010 Honour Book

Selected: Books of Note list by the TriState YA Review Committee

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Quote of the week:

“To acquire the habit of reading is to construct for yourself a refuge from almost all the miseries of life.”    W. Somerset Maugham



This is my most favourite quote by another writer. I live by it.

My refuge from the miseries of life....
a few of my bookshelves



















Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Winged creatures and coloured threads played their part in Angels Turn Their Backs



Two winged creatures can be found in Addy's world - one is a tapestry angel,
the other, a battered old parrot. One is silent, the other never stops talking.

Weeping angel




One of my favorite characters in this story is Victor: an African Gray Parrot. Touchy, loud, secretive, funny, smart, magical, annoying and lovable. But can he keep a secret?


Art through needlepoint tapestry is also an important part of my character Addy's healing.
The work below was done by an older teen close to me, when she suffered from a lengthy battle with agoraphobia and panic anxiety disorder. The work kept her focused and grounded - and played a huge part in her own healing.





For more NEW photos and information on this supernatural novel about healing and growth, go to Ebooks or to the "tab" for "Angels Turn Their Backs" on my Home Page.
Quick link to it: http://www.margaretbuffie.com/p/angels-turn-their-backs.html

More photos to come.....

Friday, December 23, 2011

Quote of the Week


Photo Margaret Buffie, 2010 - a tiny corner of my office window.


Nature is full of genius, full of the divinity; so that not a snowflake escapes its fashioning hand.
                                             Henry David Thoreau