Jealous
Last week, I received some great news. I learned that two of my books, The Collector of Burned Books and The Christmas Book Flood, were finalists in one of Christian Fiction’s most prestigious awards, the Carol Awards of ACFW (American Christian Fiction Writers). This was a lovely thing to learn. Lovely enough that I made a pretty image to share on social media.
Lovely enough to make my day. But it also got me thinking.
The first time I blogged about contests and awards and the twisty paths that God takes us on in our careers was way back in 2012. That previous year, I had two books release–Jewel of Persia in January and Love Finds You in Annapolis, Maryland (now A Heart’s Revolution) in November. Which meant in April 2012, I had two books eligible for awards…neither of which had finaled in anything.
In that post from 14 years ago, I mused that I didn’t know if God would ever lead me on a path that included an award, for a very simply reason: I wasn’t sure my heart was ready for such a thing.
See, I’m a competitive person. Not in sports, LOL–but in the things I love. I was always the best in the school–but I never won a writing contest, even back in middle school. Even though it was “my thing.” I wasn’t the first of my writing friends to be published, I haven’t been the most successful, certainly not the most award-winning, also not the best selling. And that’s something I’ve had to grapple with all through my career.
It might be “my thing.” God has blessed me with success in the ways that matter. But He’s also made it clear over and again that my job is not to win awards–my job is to win hearts. My job is not to be the best–my job is to do my best and to give glory to Him. My job is not to write a book that sells a million copies–my job is to tell the stories He lays on my heart.
When I wrote that first post on the subject in 2012, I said that God hadn’t impressed on me that I shouldn’t enter contests…but He did, soon after. First, in the year to follow, it was that I wasn’t to put money into it. Then it was that I could only enter one award, for a very specific reason. Then it was a clear directive not to enter them at all–not personally. If my publishers wanted to enter my books in the Christy Award, they could–but that was on them. I, however, would not enter other awards. Why?
Jealousy, friends. Because I knew myself. When I had a book entered into an award, I wanted to win. And yeah, I daresay most authors do–why else enter? But I didn’t like myself when I didn’t win or final. I didn’t like the way that jealousy gripped my heart. I didn’t like the feeling of “Why not me? Wasn’t my book good enough?” Or even worse, “But I’ve read that book and it was not better than mine!”
That isn’t who I want to be. That isn’t the heart I want to have.
And so, for the last 13 or so years, I obeyed that stay the Lord had given me. I did not enter contests on my own. In that time, I was nominated for the Christy Award (publisher submitted) 4 times and won once. And each year when that publisher-nominated contest announcement rolled around, I would gauge my own emotions.
How am I doing? Am I jealous? Am I falling prey to that competitive nature again? Am I slipping into pride?
In the last two years, a lot has changed in my world. And a lot has changed in my jealousy. You know what makes me jealous now?
Eyebrows. I will look at your lush eyebrows and absolutely long for my own. 😉 (Okay, so I don’t want to pluck yours off and steal them, but man, do I wish I had eyebrows I didn’t have to draw on every day!)
A full head of hair. I was so, so excited when my hair started regrowing after chemo, and to have it thinning again on this new treatment…it’s hard. And so yeah, when I see so many friends carelessly (ha!) posting pics of their gorgeous hair…
Old age. While looking jealously at eyebrows is hilarious, this one has really hit hard. It used to be that I would see the old women shuffling into a pew at church with their canes and I’d say a prayer for them and, if I’m honest, pity them a bit for their obvious difficulties.
Now? Now I look at them and think how lucky they are. How blessed they are. Because I want that. I want to live long enough to have arthritis in my joints and a head of white hair. I want to live long enough to go from a stride to a shuffle. I want to live long enough that my face is just a mass of wrinkles.
And I am so keenly aware that I have no guarantee of it. We never do–but these last two years, this last six months especially, has hammered that home to me. As I’ve sat in my pew with tears in my eyes as I wait for test results and scans to tell me whether I’m in Stage 4 cancer, whether I’ll be on palliative care for the rest of what is sure to not be a super long life, I know in a way I just couldn’t know before how precious this life is. How fragile. How crucial. How each day, each week, each month, each year, each decade is a profound gift.
This is a new kind of jealousy. There’s nothing dark in it–nothing envious. There’s no I want to take what’s yours. There’s simply, I want that too. And a bit of Do you understand the gift you have?
I’m not in Stage 4 cancer. I currently have no cancer in my body. But I’m still in a year-long chemo cycle. I’ll be getting scans every few months for many years to come. And that’s always going to be a shadow over me. It’s always going to be a reminder that I might not reach my 80s or my 90s or certainly not the 104 I always joked I’d live to. It’s a reminder that I must live my now with purpose. I must keep my eyes always on God.
And so, this is the mindset I’ve been in this year, as I pray new prayers for those little old ladies who walk so slowly into church with their canes in hand. This is the mindset I was in when contest-entry season rolled around again this year.
The last decade, I just let it pass me by, that directive in mind. But this year…I felt a shift. And so I prayed about it. I asked God, “Do you want me to enter?” And I examined the reasons I would or wouldn’t.
I had one primary reason for wanting to–to thank Tyndale. My new publisher took a chance on me with The Collector of Burned Books after my previous publisher passed on it, and I wanted to thank them. Do contest wins increase sales? Nope. And that’s always the bottom line. But even so, publishers do like having award wins. It’s a respect thing in the industry. I wanted to enter for them. Because if it could win, I wanted them to have that.
So in the course of a week, I entered a few awards. I don’t honestly remember how many or which ones (how hilarious is that?!). The Carols, for sure. I entered Awakened in the Realm Awards (didn’t final). And…I think there was one other? Maybe? Seriously, I can’t remember, which I think is a good sign that my heart isn’t wrapped up in it.
I knew that the Carol Awards would be announced last Wednesday on the ACFW Facebook page. I looked up the time earlier (and, ahem, had the wrong time in mind, forgetting it said “central”). And then I sat down with a good book and got completely engrossed and 100% forgot the awards were even a thing until my phone buzzed with a message from Marisa (friend and one of our primary editors at WhiteFire). The text said, “Congratulations on your double Carol nominations!”
This is a pattern with me, LOL. Someone else has had to tell me about my finals almost every time. I might have caught one or two, maybe. Maybe. But usually, I’ve forgotten to pay attention. Another good sign, for me.
In this life, I may never fully escape the competitiveness I’ve always had. But I pray that with the Lord, I use it to continually improve and challenge myself. I pray that every pang of jealousy, whether over something professional or those lush eyebrows of yours (LOL), will make me pause to pray for that person. I hope that as I contemplate the twisty path God has led me on to get me right here, I’ll look forward, not to the bends in the road but to my destination.
Him.
I don’t know if it’ll be a day or a year or a decade or a century until I see Him face to face. But I do know that what I yearn for most in the time I have left has nothing to do with awards or bestseller status, even though those things are nice. What I yearn for most is to walk worthy of His call. To be a mirror reflecting His light. To be who He wants me to be.
I’ll be at the ACFW conference this year, present at the awards gala–because I’m there representing WhiteFire, and David will be too. It would be nice to win. But more than that, it will be a joy to be in a room with my people. With other writers who love God and story. To see my agent and my editor in person. To hug friends. To hear people pitch their stories to me. It will be utter joy to immerse myself for a few days in this world that is MY WORLD, the one filled with words and stories and the people who steward them.
And yeah–you can bet I’ll be paying attention to eyebrows. 😉 I’ll probably be a bit self-conscience about my obviously-thinning hair. And I will be praising Him that I’m there. That I’m here. That He’s given me this time. It isn’t another year to try to win awards.
It’s another year to glorify Him with the words He’s given me.





Roseanna M. White is a bestselling, Christy Award winning author who has long claimed that words are the air she breathes. Having successfully launched two homeschool grads, she now spends her time writing fiction, designing book covers, and pretending her house will clean itself. Roseanna is the author of a slew of historical novels that span several continents and thousands of years, as well as a fantasy series and contemporary mysteries and romances. Spies and war and mayhem always seem to find their way into her books…to offset her real life, which is blessedly ordinary.