Happy New Year! – Thoughtful Thursday
I’m glad it’s the new year. It’s an election year here in the States, finally, and I am optimistic about our ability to get ourselves back on the right track. It’s funny, though; many years I feel called to set intentions or resolutions and I’ve felt none of that this year. I’m more interested in taking it easy and working on my mindfulness practice, which ultimately seems to be helping me with productivity. I feel like that’s logically backwards but I’m also superstitious enough to not want to mess with it if it’s working.
Writing
This is still like pulling teeth. I trust that fallow periods are necessary, and things are starting to crack loose slowly, but man. Slow sucks. 🙂
I’m working on drafting Ambush, and playing with a couple other things. One involves crow shifters and that’s got both Rachel and I excited. I’ve been messing around a little with poetry and memoir, and those are satisfying. I’m re-reading Deena Metzger’s Writing For Your Life, and it’s been a good thing to revisit the silence of my own mind and thoughts. I like her ideas about writing and life, self expression, and psychology.
Community
One of the local writing organizations here has put out a call for Writer In Residence and I’ve decided to apply. I think it sounds like a lot of fun and a great way to give back to the writing community while having a more structured place and time to specifically write.
This weekend, we have our first Soulwoman Circles of the Salish Sea event and I’m excited. The SoulArt Pocket Vision Journal session still has spaces open and we’d love to see you there on Saturday, January 18th. More info is on the link.
We’re overhauling the Writer Zen Garden website and have a new forum and chat function available, which I’m stoked about because I want to move off of Facebook. I don’t like their practices or interference in our elections here in the States, and want to have an alternative for our members when we offer workshops and other events.
Day Job
I think working writers don’t talk enough about working and writing, and it leads to the persistent myth that a) writers can easily make a full-time living by writing and that b) if one isn’t doing so, one’s writing isn’t successful. Most of my colleagues who write full time have spouses who support them and pay the mortgage and other bills. It’s rare that a writer can make a full time living. The Author’s Guild just did their annual earnings survey and earnings have sharply fallen due to the consolidation of publishers, rise of independent publishing, and many other factors.
I work a day job in the insurance industry and have found it useful from several standpoints, one of the most important is that it grounds me on the left side of my brain. I can go to work and when I leave, I can leave my work at the office and not drag it home with me. That allows me to focus, without pressure, on my writing and other creative pursuits, knowing my bills are taken care of. I like to write in the mornings before work, and I used to write extensively during my commute on transit. I no longer commute that way and am trying to figure out where to fit that writing time in my current daily round.
Art
I’m knitting like a fiend. I’ve got a blanket going as well as two sweaters and a shawl. I find that deeply satisfying and meditative.
What about you, Dear Reader? What do you like to do to fill your creative well? What’s new in your world? Tell me in the comments; I’d love to know.