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January 14, 2008

Some Tips

Teabag1

I was tagged by Kathy and Jill at The DHX with a Roar for Powerful Words award.  There are two rules that come with the award:  1. write three writing tips and 2. award three other bloggers. 

This was a good exercise for me because I've never really thought about my own writing tips.  I'm always the one reading other people's writing tips.  Tonight, while taking my evening walk, and listening to some Lucinda Williams, I thought about what I would tell someone who loves writing and words about my own process and beliefs.  I came up with a few more than three and I'm going to share them all.

  1. Make it part of your life--So many of the most successful writers make it a practice to write everyday.  Ernest Hemingway wrote everyday.  John Steinbeck wrote everyday.  Ray Bradbury, ditto.  Natalie Goldberg. And most of you are familiar with Julia Cameron's morning pages.  For me it's important to make it part of your life for several reasons:  If it's important to you then you should make it a priority.  The more you practice the better you get. If it becomes like breathing then you find you're always open to what wants to flow through you.  It teaches you to trust your voice.  You don't have to write for an hour.  You don't have to write an entire poem/story.  But write something.  It's more about making it a life practice than it is about quality or quantity.
  2. Stay awake and notice the details--I believe poetry, stories, etc. are always with in us and around us--kinda like God.  Some of my personal favorite pieces came to me because I paid attention to something around me.  Stand in the middle of the street and watch the geese flying above.  Close your eyes and listen to the sounds around you.  Press your nose into the earth and breathe deeply.  Don't watch the sun set from the window; go outside.  Eaves drop on other people's conversations.  Memorize the smell of someone's skin.  All these little things in life make great poetry so wake up.  And I promise that once you start keeping your eyes and heart open you'll be surprised by everything you'll begin to notice.
  3. Listen and Follow--One of my favorite writing practices/prompts is to sit quietly and let a phrase/word/sentence come to the surface, anything.  And then I like to follow it to see where it might lead me.  I'll write it down and then wait for the next little bit to come, and then the next, and then the next.  Sometimes I'll get from one piece to the next by asking myself a question about the previous statement/fragment.  I've written some stuff I've really liked by being willing to follow wherever my words wanted to go.
  4. Let it go--Sometimes something I write will just come on suddenly and flow right through me without my really thinking much about it.  Sometimes it comes just like I wrote above--it will come as a word/phrase and I'll just follow it.  Sometimes it comes in bits and pieces, like a puzzle.  Sometimes it comes while I'm walking or bathing or eating or driving or, yes, even when I'm having sex.  And sometimes as badly as I want it to come it just doesn't.  I've had to learn to let it go.  Often I'll write an entire poem while walking but once I get home I can't remember a word.  I'll try to force it to come back but it just won't.  That's when I just have to let it go.  There are times I'll get bits and pieces and I just can't make them work or I can't find the other bits and pieces that go in between.  That's when I just have to let it go.  Some poems aren't meant to find their way to paper and as much as I hate that I've learned that that's just the way it is.  You can't force writing.  If it won't come then let it go.
  5. Leave it alone--Sometimes I'll have a piece I really, really like but there's a word I can't get quite right or there's a section that isn't flowing the way I want it to flow.  I've learned the best thing I can do is leave it alone, walk away, and then come back to it a few days later.  Once my head has had a chance to clear I'll often find exactly what it was I was missing to begin with.  And if I can't then I'll resort to tip #4 and just let it go.  But there is something I have to be careful about when it comes to re-working a piece of writing.  I've had times when I've re-worked something hoping to make it more powerful when instead, by re-working it and re-working it and re-working it I've actually diluted it. 
  6. Keep a Dictionary and Thesaurus handy--they come in mighty handy when you know what you want but can't quite get it.
  7. When all else fails go to a source of inspiration--Find someone whose writing really speaks to you, whose style resonates with you, or someone who's written a book about writing or writing prompts that you can fall back on when you want to practice but feel creatively empty.  For me it's Susan Wooldridge's book Poemcrazy.  This book resonates with my style so it's a great source to turn to when my creativity has checked out but I still want to write something.
  8. Finally, find what works for you--All the writing tips and/or advice and/or prompts aren't worth crap if they don't work for you.  Find a time of day that works for you.  Find a style that works for you.  Find a practice/discipline that works for you.  Write but make sure you're writing works for you or you'll just end up frustrated, burned out, wiped out, empty, and hungry.  Get to know your writing style/preference and disregard anything that doesn't support that style/preference.

The three bloggers I'm choosing to give the Roar of Words Award to are Christina, Delia, and Liz.  If you've already been tagged then ignore this and if you haven't been tagged and want to play along please do so and let me know because I'd love to read your tips.    

January 13, 2008

the year that was;the year that will be

Cheers

T, the B-Dog, and I celebrated the new year in a pretty low key fashion.  T made homemade mac & cheese (the beautiful Giada's version--love her) and homemade pizza (which he didn't drop on the floor when he tried to toss it by hand--yeah!).  We invited a good friend over for dinner, ate until we about popped, and sat around the table talking and drinking wine.  During dinner I decided we would play a little game.  One of us would pick a subject/topic that had something to do with 2007 or the upcoming 2008 then we would go around in a circle each giving our answer.  Then the next person in the circle would choose a subject/topic and we'd go around again and so on and so forth.  What was supposed to be dinner conversation turned into a game we played from the time we started dinner (around 8:30/9-ish) until midnight.  It was a great way to celebrate the year that was and look forward to the upcoming new year as well as a great way to learn a little about what the year was like for each other and what we all hope for/dream about for the new year.  The subjects ranged from the surface to the deep.  I can't remember all the topics we covered but here are just a few of my answers:

Favorite Movie Released in 2007:

I'm a big movie fan so I can't just choose one.  Mine was a tie between The Waitress (if you haven't seen it please do) and the latest collaboration between the always fascinating Tim Burton and the genius that is Johnny Depp, Sweeney Todd...but I'm a little bit partial to the Burton/Depp combo.  I mean this was their 6th collaboration and of the five before this I own, mmmmm, yeah, that would be all five...and I'll own this one too.

Favorite TV show of 2007:

my family and I are in love with Chuck, all week we look forward to Chuck night

Favorite cd of 2007 (the cd listened to the most--didn't have to be released in 2007):

hands down Skin & Bones by the Foo Fighters

Proudest moment of 2007:

Being published twice--once in Artful Blogging and once in Life Images

Greatest memory of 2007:

walking into B&N and seeing my image on the cover of a magazine...and then propping the magazine up beside other magazines and taking my picture with other celebrities like Oprah, the oh-so yummy Christian Bale, and the equally yummy Orlando Bloom

Five songs listened to the most over 2007 (don't have the be released in 2007):

in no particular order--

  1. Green Eyes by Cold Play (wonderful, sexy love song)
  2. Live Forever by Oasis (my favorite walking song, I can play this one song over and over and walk for over an hour)
  3. Black by Pearl Jam (mmmmm....Eddie Veder)
  4. Another Round by the Foo Fighters (from the fabulous Skin & Bones)
  5. Four White Horses by Counting Crows (on their live in New Amsterdam album)

Saddest Moment of the Year:

the death of my uncle

Greatest Regret/Disappointment of 2007:

not getting to have one last time to tell my uncle I loved him...even though I know he knew I still would have liked to tell him

Best Choice of 2007:

putting the B-Dog in pre-school, his intellect is growing by leaps and bounds

Two People (one 'real life', one famous) that you're glad came into your life in 2007:

  1. my co-worker--when you work as closely as the two of us you really need someone you enjoy, get along with, can talk to, and who makes you laugh
  2. Sharon Olds--although I've read Sharon Olds' work for more than the past year she truly was my poet laureate of the year

One person who's work influenced 2007:

for me it was William Stafford, his discipline of writing a poem every morning inspired me, and continues to inspire me, to do the same

Another Celebration of 2007:

getting a raise!

Favorite Scientific/Technological change/advancement of 2007:

this category was the toughest one for me.  T is a computer genius and our friend is a scientist with his PhD...and then there's me...the more artistic of the group.  The other two had to skip me, give their answer, and then come back to me.  And I still couldn't come up with anything.  Then later in the night I finally thought of something--Radiohead releasing their latest album on-line and letting buyers set their own price.  At first I thought why in the world would you let buyers set their own price?  And then I realized they really might be on to something.  I mean if you cut out the middle man, cut out shipping and packaging costs, then even after letting buyers set their own price Radiohead will probably make more money off the album than they would have otherwise.   

Surprise of the year:

Al Gore winning the Noble Peach Prize, I'm happy for him...but it was a surprise

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One of the things looking forward to the most in 2008:

ArtFest baby!

A fun 'resolution' for the year:

In 2008 I'm going to travel the world without ever leaving my couch by reading one travel memoir/essay each month.  I've started the year off by traveling to 1920's Paris with Ernest Hemingway by reading The Movable Feast.

A discipline to incorporate into 2008:

I'm following in William Stafford's shoes by writing a poem a day

Mondo Beyondo for 2008:

I've mentioned this to a few friends and I'm still tossing it around...but...I'd really like to start my own zine (we'll talk about this more in a later post)

October 22, 2007

Monday Mosaic and a tag from Mindy

Mosaic

This weekend I finally pulled my camera out of its bag after a week and a half in hibernation.  I haven't taken any pictures since my uncle's funeral and although I don't think I have been associating the lack of use with his death I really haven't felt much like photographing anything.  Plus my creativity right now seems to really want to find it's expression in words so I've put a lot of my energy into writing as opposed to picture taking.  But this weekend I strapped my camera around my neck and went for a two hour walk around the neighborhood (and by the way, alleys are much more interesting to photograph than streets and front yards).  Once home I pulled out the large sketchpad and created a makeshift seamless studio in the kitchen just to get in a little more camera time.  The above mosaic is just a handful of shots captured this weekend.

********************************************************************

I was very pleased to see Mindy's recent return to blogging.  Her blog and her sweet, honest words have always been an inspiration to me.  Today I discovered an e-mail from her letting me know she'd tagged me to play along on a meme.  I decided to take her bait because 1) well it's Mindy, 2) it's been awhile since I've posted a meme on this blog, and 3) it's about all I have energy for tonight.  So here is my list of 5 things I want to be when I grow up, because it's never too late to live your dreams!

when i grow up i dream of...

  1. spending weeks, maybe even months, exploring Paris.  I traveled to Paris with my 9th grade French class years ago.  I was really too young to fully appreciate a trip of that magnitude.  But I've never forgotten it...and I often dream of Paris.  One day I'd like to return.  I'd like to spend my days exploring the back streets, the museums, the cemeteries, the cafes.  I'd like to write all day long and stroll through the moonlit streets at night...and then fall into bed exhausted from the sheet delight of it all.  Would you like to join me?
  2. taking my son to see the ocean...and not the Gulf of Mexico...that doesn't count...I mean the Pacific or Atlantic ocean.  I saw the ocean for the first time with my grandparents when I was a child.  When I became a mother I knew one of the things I couldn't wait to do with my child was take him to see the ocean.  I can't wait to see the look on his face when he sees so much water stretching as far as the eye can see.
  3. being out of debt...no more credit card debt...no more school loans to pay off...i dream of being debt free.  It would feel so good to have that weight off my shoulders, to have some breathing room, and to live in that kind of sweet freedom.
  4. bumping along the desert roads of New Mexico in a pick up, a little Lucinda Williams blaring, in dirty jeans, a worn t-shirt, and comfortable boots, my camera beside me on the seat, in search of interesting things to photograph.  I'd like to spend all weekend just roaming the desert looking for cemeteries, abandoned buildings, adobe houses, cactus flowers, and rusty things of all sorts and sizes.  I'd be a regular Georgia O'Keeffe...only with a camera instead of a paint brush.
  5. writing my little heart out, getting everything that's stuck deep inside out on the page until there's nothing left and the only thing I can do is close my journal, put down my pen, and leave this life for the next one.

Usually with these tags I leave the tagging open and ask anyone to play along that would like too.  But tonight I think I'll actually tag 5 other lovely bloggers.  So I tag Stefanie Renee (one of my first blogging loves),  Erica (one of my favorite photographers, Jenica (one of my newest loves), CK Girl (one of my most loyal readers), and Kim (one of the bloggers I can't wait to finally meet at ArtFest in April).