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Local poet Becci Schumaker overcomes adversity, finds solace and healing in the written word

Throughout her life, Becci Schumaker found solace in poetry (Courtesy, Deborah Reed WKTV)

By Deborah Reed

deborah@wktv.org

Grand Rapids resident and poet Becci Schumaker has always been drawn to words and the power within them – so she made words her refuge during difficult times.

Though she classifies herself as an introvert and a loner, Schumaker’s soft voice and kind countenance are the hallmark of a woman who navigated hardships and reached her dreams despite opposition.

Writing poetry was one of those dreams.

Falling in love with words

Becci Schumaker looks through her collection of poems (Courtesy, Deborah Reed WKTV)

“I love working with words,” said Schumaker. “I think words are fascinating. Words can be serene but they can be powerful, they can be enigmatic. It just opens up a whole new world.”

Writing poetry has been part of Schumaker’s world since she was 12 years old.

Coming from an emotionally and physically abusive family background, Schumaker immersed herself in reading and writing to escape the real world.

“It was a means of escape for me,” Schumaker said as she gently touched a binder containing several pages of her written works. “That was my safe place.”

Overcoming struggles and hardship

Words did not come easily for Schumaker at first.

In first grade, a teacher noticed Schumaker struggled with reading and provided extra instruction. By third grade Schumaker was reading college-level works.

“I haven’t stopped reading since,” said Schumaker with a smile.

Young Schumacher was immediately drawn to the genre of poetry, the words and prose a direct contrast to her hostile home environment.


Becci Schumaker’s poems have been published in several compilation poetry books (Courtesy, Deborah Reed WKTV)

Schumaker said she is grateful for the stable presence of an aunt and uncle with whom she spent summers while growing up.

“If it wasn’t for me having that Christian background through them, and getting my morals and values of what a good person is supposed to be, I don’t know if I would have even done this,” said Schumaker, touching the stack of poetry books in front of her.

Schumaker later took an evening American Literature class, writing a short story that her teacher urged her to publish.

However, Schumaker had to put her writing on hold as she focused on raising her four children, working two jobs for several years to support her family.

Reigniting the flame

Meeting her husband Don reignited Schumaker’s creative spirit, and she once again picked up her pen and put it to paper.

“I’ve actually woken my husband up in the middle of the night, jumping out of bed to grab pencil and paper and start writing,” said Schumaker with a grin.

“I will get a thought and will have to write,” Schumaker continued. “Nine times out of ten, the result is a poem.”

When she noticed an ad about submitting original poems to a poetry contest, Schumaker thought she would give it a try. “I Love You Lord” became Schumaker’s first published work of poetry, printed in 1997 under the name Becci Campbell. The poem was included in a Poetry Guild compilation titled By the Light of the Moon.

Everything around Schumaker inspires her writing.

At church, the pastor’s words sparked Schumaker’s imagination and she completed a poem within minutes titled “The Trinity,” now published in Forever Spoken.

Challenged by her husband to write a poem about something as ordinary as a card game, Schumaker immediately put pen to paper. The subsequent poem, “Cards,” can be found in the poetry book Memories of Tomorrow.

With several published works under her belt – the most recent being Schumaker’s poem titled “Carpet of White” in 2022 – the local poet continues to write.

Submission of her poem “The Lonely Man” is next for Schumaker’s publication goals. The poem stems from personal experience of her husband’s struggle with rehab and the beginnings of dementia.

A legacy of words

Becci Schumaker reads one of her poems aloud (Courtesy, Deborah Reed WKTV)

When asked how many poems she has written over her lifetime, Schumaker responded, “Oh gosh, probably hundreds and hundreds.”

When asked if she ever threw one of her written works away, Schumaker quickly replied, “I keep them all. Even if I don’t think it’s good, I’ll fold it up and tuck it away somewhere. Maybe someday I’ll go back to it, and reread it, and write it a different way.”

Though she loves poems, Schumaker said her main reading genre is science fiction, and her favorite movies are “ones that put you on the edge of your seat.”

Schumaker freely acknowledges the incongruity between the lighter, lyrical prose of her written works and the darker genres of her favorite movies.

“Even though I like those kinds of movies, [poetry] is my stress relief, my go-to outlet that brings me into the light,” said Schumaker, looking at the binder of poetry. “This is my sanity.”

A powerful responsibility

The power that words contain is always at the forefront of Schumaker’s mind, especially words wielded with harmful intent.

“People don’t realize words really do hurt,” said Schumaker, admitting that, at 71 years old, she still struggles with hurtful things spoken to her as a child. “The scars are there forever.”

“I have had to survive on my own since I was sixteen,” Schumaker continued. “You learn about life. That’s what a lot of this writing is.”

The poet regularly encourages people to carry a notebook and write down any idea that comes to them.

“You never know what’s going to come of it,” said Schumaker, gesturing toward her own poems laid out before her.

Staying active and looking ahead

Along with writing, Schumaker stays active by participating in mission trips with her church and volunteering for WKTV Community Media.

“I’ve got to be doing something, and this gave me an outlet,” said Schumaker about WKTV, adding that she fell in love with the camera work at the station.

When asked what is next for the active poet, Schumaker shrugged. “From here, we’ll see what life brings,” she said with a smile.

WOOD TV8 Meteorologist Terri DeBoer promotes her book about empty nesters on WKTV

WOOD TV8 meteorologist Terri DeBoer (right) stopped by WKTV Thursday to promote her first book on a show called Grand Tap Media Business TV, hosted by Pamela Keim (left), which airs toward the end of August. (WKTV)

By Cris Greer, WKTV Managing Editor

For more than 30 years, WOOD TV8 meteorologist Terri DeBoer has woken up West Michigan with her early morning weather forecasts.

In addition to her Storm Team 8 predictions, DeBoer also has co-hosted eightWest, a show that informs and entertains its viewers.

“I’m often one of the first faces many people in West Michigan see every morning,” said DeBoer, who’s also the meteorologist for many of West Michigan’s most popular radio stations. “I love having a challenging job; forecasting the weather in a complicated part of the country, and helping people relate the weather conditions to the lives of our viewers and listeners.”

Recording at WKTV

DeBoer stopped by WKTV Thursday to promote her first book (published in 2021) on a show called Grand Tap Media Business TV, hosted by Pamela Keim, which airs toward the end of August. Keim has produced shows on WKTV since 2017.

Keim said the purpose of her WKTV program is to “introduce West Michigan to all the businesses, nonprofits, individuals that can help us thrive in our lives.

“I’m a cheerleader for West Michigan. I like to promote events, individuals, and talk about what’s new like Terri’s book. There are some wonderful people that live in our community in West Michigan.”

DeBoer said she wrote “Brighter Skies Ahead: Forecasting a Full Life When You Empty the Nest” in 2020 during the pandemic after decades of interest.

An emotional time

“For about 40 years I wanted to write a book and I wasn’t sure what to write about and when I made the transition into the empty nest it really hit hard,” DeBoer explained. “I wasn’t expecting to feel so sad and for things to feel so empty and so I reached out to someone and thought maybe I should write a book about that.

“One thing led to another and I wrote the book as the pandemic shut everything down.”

How did she do it with her busy schedule as a TV personality and mom?

What, turn off the TV?

“I’m going to tell you a secret,” she said grinning. “I turn off the TV. It’s amazing how much time we would find to do the things we say we really want to do if we just turn the television off and get started.”

“The book is 50 short chapters broken into multiple categories, highlighting the past, present and future of the life cycle of a parent. There’s a section on your physical health, mental health, your relationship with your adult kids, your friendships, and your faith is a big part of the book.”

WOOD TV8 meteorologist Terri DeBoer stopped by WKTV Thursday to promote her first book titled “Brighter Skies Ahead: Forecasting a Full Life When You Empty the Nest” (Courtesy)

Millions of empty nesters

According to recent US Census information, there are approximately 22.5 million empty nest households in the United States. 

DeBoer said it’s an emotional time and the overwhelming feelings of sadness, grief and emptiness can be common.

The book outlines her strategies for weathering the often stormy transition to an empty nest. DeBoer helps readers find hope, peace, comfort and joy in this next stage of life. 

Ginger Zee endorsement

Ginger Zee, chief meteorologist at ABC News, said the book is “a blast of sunshine full of wisdom, wit and inspiration for every stage of life.”

After the first round of edits, there was one chapter the editor felt needed to be taken out. The one about her relationship with her husband, Bill.

Enter her four-legged friend

She joked about replacing Bill’s chapter in the book with her daughter Jenn’s adopted dog, Hank, which was really due to not oversimplifying spousal relationships, which are unique from person to person.

DeBoer said her editor felt the chapter about her relationship with her husband isn’t as simple as she made it to be. 

“People’s relationships are complicated,” she and her editor determined. “Some people are married, some aren’t, some are divorced, widowed or in unhappy marriages. It’s not that simple.”

She admitted she wasn’t ever a pet person until Hank came along, and the answer was always “no” when her three kids asked for a dog. 

The Great Dane/mastiff-Lab mix, that she now calls her grand dog, however, has swayed her opinion. She now touts the great health benefits of having a dog and how they can expand your social circle at the dog parks, and recommends a pet for empty nesters.

She admits, however, that she can enjoy Hank as much as she wants, and “when he needs to go potty in the middle of the night, it’s Jenn who gets to take him out.”

She said she has been “blessed” along the way to have raised three wonderful children, “who are all hard-working followers of our incredible God; combining their talents with their ever-deepening faith. 

“They are all fun-loving and kind individuals; who are making strides through making the world a better place.”

A look at the career of Michigan author and ghost hunter Exie Susanne Smith

By Wayne Thomas
Grand Rapids Ghost Hunters


Exie Susanne Smith

Back in the day not so long ago, certain topics were not talked about in public and were commonly taboo at the family dinner table. So when Exie Susanne Smith started hearing strange noises and seeing shadows move around her house, it’s no surprise she didn’t tell anyone.

In her first book, “My Paranormal Life,” Smith explains it like this, “When I was 12 my life changed, forever. In one night I knew I was going to have to grow up keeping a secret; the fact that I could hear and see things that other people couldn’t.” Smith says that she was a “weird little kid” and when you combine being different and keeping her secret, it resulted in 40 years of journaling. All of this culminated in Smith authoring and publishing four books to date. Following her first book in 2012, Smith penned “When the Dead Come Calling” and “The Essence of Death.” Just last year in 2021, she published her forth book, “Dialog with the Dead,” another amazingly detailed account of Smith’s paranormal encounters.

Exie Susanne Smith first book.

Smith discovered her “special gift” with abilities to see, hear, and sense spirits early on. She knew she was clairvoyant and clairaudient and it wouldn’t be long before she discovered other paranormal talents. As a prophetic dreamer, she was able to foretell upcoming events; also displaying other psychic abilities, ESP, and super sensitivity with empathic susceptibility to other people’s attitudes, emotions, and feelings. Smith developed a simple goal to achieve a balance within herself as well as “helping people find peace in their own world.”

It seems when you make yourself available, people do come calling — alive and dead! Smith explains that people with psychic gifts are “like a beacon in the dark to spirits, they are drawn to us.” Many ghost hunters report hearing disembodied voices saying their names and spirits knowing they were coming even before arriving at locations. Smith details events suggesting, “Spirits have no boundaries” and she explains the importance of keeping grounded as well as setting limits and learning how to shut it off, so you are not open all the time.

 

“Dialog With a Dead” was published in 2021.

Smith has worked with ghost hunting teams, participating in investigations and smudging and blessing people and places free of charge. As a Reverend, Smith is prepared with the full armor, wielding the word through prayer while utilizing the power of crystals, cedar, sage, and sacred Palo Santo wood. Smith says, “I didn’t go in search of the dead, but it seems the dead came in search of me.” With direction from her Spirit Guides, Smith has accepted her inherent responsibility, emerging from an enchanted life as a light for lost souls and an inspiration for those of us who may be struggling with our own spiritual gifts.

Check out Exie Susanne Smith on Cryptic Frequencies, Across the Golden Veil and Grand Rapids Ghost Hunters Podcast episodes 30, 45, and 58.        

School News Network: Kentwood fifth-grade author keeps turning out new fiction

Oummu S. Kabba smiles with her biggest fan, her dad, Brima Kabba, at her book-signing.

By Erin Albanese

School News Network

 

In colorful markers, Oummu S. Kabba neatly wrote “O.S.K,” adding a smiley face inside the “O,” during her book-signing event at Barnes & Noble bookstore in Grandville’s Rivertown Crossings Mall.

 

Catering to a steady stream of shoppers, the Kentwood Public Schools’ Discovery Elementary fifth-grader was selling stacks of the three books she has already published for $10 a piece.

 

“I feel excited about all the people who care enough to come,” Oummu said. She was joined at the signing table by her father, Brima Kabba; brother Alpha, a third-grader; and sister Rugui, a sixth-grader.

 

Oummu S. Kabba, 10, has published three books and has a fourth soon to be released ‘You Can Express How You Feel’

Oummu published her first book, “Charlie the Talking Dog,” at age 8. Now 10, she has since published “The New Girl” and “The Chicken Man.” Her next book, a 150-plus page novel called “Battle for My Brother,” will be released in the near future.

 

The young author is the daughter of refugees who had no formal education. Brima Kabba was born in Sierra Leone. He was a refugee in Guinea when he met and married his wife, Fanta. They eventually settled in Malta and were part of a group chosen by the U.S. government to come to America in 2009, when Oummu was a toddler.

 

“I always tried hard to help my kids read and write their names,” Kabba said. He said he didn’t know his daughter would turn those skills into books. “I’m so proud of her.”

Kabba said he first realized his daughter’s passion for writing when she was 6 and he came across her journal, where she had begun “Charlie the Talking Dog.” He promised to publish the book when Oummu finished. True to his word, he did, through Chapbook Press at Schuler Books, where her other books have also been published.

 

 

Oummu said she loves the creativity of writing fiction. “You can express how you feel through different characters and no one can tell you what to write. No matter what, the story is yours.”

 

Oummu is in the gifted-and-talented program, PEAKS, at Discovery Elementary. Her parents are putting any profits she makes from books sales into an education fund. She hopes to go to Harvard University and become a doctor, but she said she will always make time for writing.

 

Check out School News Network for more stories about students, schools, and faculty in West Michigan.

Grand Rapids author reads from new book at Schuler Books

Kenneth Kraegel

By Whitney Spotts

Schuler Book & Music

 

Grand Rapids children’s author and illustrator Kenneth Kraegel makes a visit to Schuler Books & Music, 2660 28th St. SE, this Saturday, March 25.

 

Kraegel will present his newest book “Green Pants!” in a special story-time set for 11 a.m. In celebration of anyone who marches to their own drummer, Jameson wears his individualism as his own personal style which happens to be his green pants. When he wears them, he feels like he can do anything. Now he is forced to make a big choice: to where black pants and be in his cousin’s wedding or to keep his signature green pants and not be part of the wedding. What will Jameson decide to do?

 

Kraegel is the author and illustrator of several picture books including “The Song of Delphine” and “King Arthur’s Very Great Grandson,” which was a New York Times Notable Book and a Wall Street Journal Best book of the Year.

 

For more information about the story-time or other programs at Schuler Books & Music, visit schulerbooks.com.

School News Network: Author to student writers ‘Do it because you love it’

MarcyKate Connolly shows Lee students her first list of edits that needed to be done for her novel “Monstrous” - See more at: http://www.schoolnewsnetwork.org/index.php/2016-17/author-student-writers-do-it-because-you-love-it/#sthash.9jll4iM8.dpuf
MarcyKate Connolly shows Lee students her first list of edits that needed to be done for her novel “Monstrous” – 

By Erin Albanese

School News Network

 

It can be a looooong way from when the first sentences are written to when a completed novel hits the shelves. Publishing is a journey often wrought with rejection and lots of revision, said MarcyKate Connolly, author of fantasy books for middle-grade and young adults.

 

“If there’s anything I want you to take with you today it’s that writing is rewriting,” Connolly told about 50 Lee Middle-High School students who attended the session because they have an interest in writing.

 

Connolly talked about the roadmap to publishing, which she learned by writing her books “Monstrous” and “Ravenous,” tales geared toward tweens that have been likened to Frankenstein and the Brothers Grimm.

 

Connolly, of Boston, made a stop at Lee while visiting Grand Rapids Comic-Con, the popular event where sci-fi, fantasy and comic book fans gather. She explained the quest of a writer, including spending many hours in her “writing cave,” the challenge of finding an agent to represent the book, the experience of rejection and the work that continues after a book is accepted for publishing.

And finally, the thrill of seeing the book at stores and in the hands of others.

 

MarcyKate Connolly signs a book for the Lee Middle-High School media center
MarcyKate Connolly signs a book for the Lee Middle-High School media center

A marketing professional by day, Connolly said her love for writing and storytelling kept her going despite more than 300 rejections from publishers. She wrote several books that were never published and received her first offer for publishing after four years of trying.

 

“Publishing is not something you get into thinking you are going to get rich quick or going to be a mega bestseller overnight,” she said. “You do it because you love it.”

 

Connolly had to re-assess her goals, at one point. “Why am I doing this to myself?” she recalled asking after getting rejection after rejection. So she continued writing for herself, making up the stories and characters she loved.

 

Kelly McGee, Godfrey-Lee district media specialist, said Connolly’s visit helped students think about writing as a career and the process of becoming an author. He said he hopes to start a student writer’s group. “I think we have a lot of writers here.”

 

He said he also wanted students to leave with the message that perseverance is required for accomplishing your dreams.

 

Connolly’s books were published through HarperCollins Publishers. Her next book, “Shadow Weaver,” is scheduled for release in winter 2018.

 

She encouraged students to find their “tribe” — other writers they can use for empathy, feedback and critique. And no matter how many failed attempts, she urged students to look at it as getting somewhere.

 

“Whatever words you write are not wasted,” she said.

 

Freshman Olivia Clark, who loves writing, said Connolly’s words resonated. “Don’t give up. You’ve got to be strong. There are harsh people out there.”

 

Be sure to check out School News Network for more stories about our great students, schools, and faculty in West Michigan!