
business & mindset mentor
I'M ON A MISSION TO HELP YOU LIVE A fulfilled, authentic life WITHOUT FEELING STRESSED, EXHAUSTED AND INADEQUATE.
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Hi, I,m Renée Durfield
SO HERE’S THE REAL STORY
How exciting my life is! I’m almost 80 and rarin’ to go! One reason is––I know my mission. It has always been to help women succeed and understand how divinely precious they are.
I earned all of my degrees from the School of Hard Knocks, and I wouldn’t trade any of the lessons learned for the insight gained. I pour much of what I’ve experienced into every novel I write, believing nuggets of wisdom can be passed down in story form.
My life has been filled with passion, challenge, and excitement––even having had a near-death experience and a brief taste of heaven fifteen years ago. In 1966, I married the most incredibly wonderful man, Ric, a Ph.D. in psychology from Fuller Theological Seminary and graduate degrees in theology. We have pastored, counseled, taught, and written many books benefiting thousands. Ric’s love has been as steadfast as an ancient oak. He has been a model father to our four highly successful adult children and three grandchildren––the sweetest kids on this side of heaven and the brightest stars in my celestial sky.
Daily, I choose to have a positive outlook. But don’t be fooled. My life didn’t start so well.
Those childhood and teenage years growing up… were less than perfect. But it’s part of the story that helped form my character. With six stairstep kids in my family, an abusive, alcoholic, primarily absentee father, and a sickly mother who died very young, you might begin to form a picture of my upbringing. Being a mixed African American family, indeed a taboo during those years, was the most challenging part. Although we were dirt poor and struggled to survive the years after World War II, I always dreamed of beautiful things, exotic places, and how others lived. Although it became a way to escape the harsh reality of my circumstances, it drove my imagination to heights that caused me to soar into other worlds.
A dear friend recently asked me what inspired me to write such fantastical stories. To answer their question, my thoughts returned to parts of my childhood, where I dwelled amongst the fog-kissed people of Bull Creek in the back hills of Pennsylvania. My hard-working grandparents were the ones who took me in during those wistful years when wonders danced in the air, seeping into my young mind, and the honey-filled words of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Sonnet 43 swept me away.

If you ever dare to venture to that beguiling place called Bull Creek, tread cautiously. Truthfully, you should avoid visiting there, for I am not sure it has changed for the better. However, if you dare visit, try to find an inconsequential concave on the side of the road called Job’s Hollow. That’s where you’ll see a turn-off where I spent much of my youth. The only entrance to the hollow is a single potholed road meandering back into the hills. A narrow row of shanties, most constructed by someone’s industrious but unskilled grandfather, father, or uncle, line the roadway. Most lean crookedly to one side with lopsided porches tacked proudly on their front.
The hollow was my unique place. It was where stories sprung forth like wild, breathtaking tales—towering castles emerging from thin air and mischievous children pranking unsuspecting people passing by. I envisioned adventures in far-off lands and extraordinary realms–vastly different from the country trails in the dusty hollow that greeted me every morning.
My grandpappy’s residence was perched high above the basin, where a bumpy and somewhat dangerous road snaked up to it. He built the house with unskilled hands 1928, room-by-room, without a written plan. When completed, it had two stories––a marvel to all. No one believed the house would stand. We were so proud because the neighbors considered it gigantic, 200 feet larger than the 500-square-foot homes at the bottom of the hill. But stand it did and weathered many bad Pennsylvania winters. The stairs to our lofty, one-room second-floor sanctuary where all ten kids slept twisted and turned like a labyrinthian puzzle. Only a vision-impaired person would miss the strange slant of the house with its unusually placed windows. However, we thought our home was grand, showcasing a sizable but lopsided outhouse nearby.
Please give me a quill and parchment; the tales will pour forth like a river in springtime rains. Akin to the ancient prophet, Jeremiah , as he confesses, “It was like fire shut up in my bones,” a fire ignites deep within my soul––to chronicle extraordinary odysseys that stir hearts and awaken dormant dreams. With every tale spun, I feel an indescribable joy that dances through my veins, forever reminding me of the power God has invested in us to fulfill our dreams.