Tag: writing

  • Join Me at Torquere Press Today!

    Join Me at Torquere Press Today!

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    Join me over at Torquere Press today, where I\’m talking about my free workshop in February on writing M/M romance.

  • A Writer In Her Library

    A Writer In Her Library

    \"2016-01-07When I teach, students often ask me for books that I recommend.  I like Debra Dixon\’s GMC: Goal Motivation & Conflict; The Building Blocks of Good Fiction.  Debra breaks down how good stories work and why, and helps us create compelling characters that will drive our story forward.

    Her grids are helpful for evaluating our own stories and making them stronger.  I particularly like how she uses several popular movies as examples, and breaks down where they work and where they don\’t.  It makes it easy to see her points and figure out how to apply them to our own writing.

    Highly recommended.

  • Magic Monday – Fun with Prompts

    Magic Monday – Fun with Prompts

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    So, it\’s like this.  I was noodling ideas for my Monday blog posts, and came up with an idea to share some of the goofy results from Prompt Circles over the past several years.  Today\’s is about … well, you\’ll see in a moment.  I entered \”funny pictures dog bathtub\” into Google, thinking I\’d find something funny.

    THIS poor sod is one of the first pictures that popped up and I think I pulled something laughing.

    For those of you unfamiliar with Prompt Circles and writing prompts, a little explanation will help.  A writing prompt is designed to help germinate ideas, and can take many forms: a short statement, an image, a scent, a song… anything that will give the writer something to start from.  The Prompt Circles that I run in Writer Zen Garden are designed to be a group event where we share prompts, write for a set amount of time, (say ten or fifteen minutes), and then those who wish to, can share what they wrote.

    A popular tool is called the Amazing Story Generator, which is a lot of fun to play with.  I\’ve pasted details on it below the prompt, in case you want to try it out for yourself.  Without further ado, I give you:

    Suffering from amnesia / a talking dog / refused to leave the bathtub

    “No.”

    “Ralph, come on. You have to get out of that tub! Now!”

    “Why? And who are you, anyway?”

    “Oh, Ralph. I’m Louise.”

    “Louise, come on. Just leave him in there.”

    “Dad, you can’t. He’s gonna clog the drain!”

    “Janey, don’t whine. And put your phone down; this does not need to go on Facebook.”

    “Oh, Mom.”

    “I’m hungry. Are you people part of my pack? Where’s the food?”

    “Yes, hello? Animal Control? Harry, I got through. Yes, hello? This is Louis Hancock and six-two-five Crescent. The dog won’t get out of the tub.”

    “Damn right I won’t. None of you will give me a straight answer. I’m hungry, too. Hey, is that a cat? I could eat a cat.”

    “Mooom!”

    “Yes, he’s a Siberian Husky, but he’s from Canada, not Siberia. He doesn’t have any Russian accent at all. What? Who? No, Harry’s from Poughkeepsie. The dog’s from Saskatoon.”

    “Janey, your mother said no Facebook. Ralph, you may not eat the cat. You love that cat. You’ve known him since he was a kitten.”

     

    \"2016-01-04If this seems like fun to you, give it a try.  The Amazing Story Generator is a lot of fun.  You can use it with your family, your church or community group, or your writers group.  Or, give yourself a challenge and post the results on your blog.

    Or, give it a try with this prompt.  Set your timer on your smartphone for ten minutes and see what comes out of your pen or keyboard.  Have fun!

    If you\’re near Chicago, join me in Writer Zen Garden:

    The Writer Zen Garden:  The Writers Retreat Blog | Forum | Twitter | Meetup

     

  • Sunday Box Talk – The Way

    Sunday Box Talk – The Way

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    \”It\’s time to start living the life you\’ve imagined.\”
    – Henry James

    Writing is, much of the time, a lonely pursuit. The writer sits by themselves, even in the midst of others, setting down thoughts in some form that has never existed before. They struggle to capture a vision only they can see and hope to send it out into the world to good reception. The world, consumed by its own concerns and cares, is not always gentle on this writer’s creation.

    The good news is that if you are trying to create, you are not alone. There are others on the path with you who, while they may not be on the same path, are nevertheless engaged in parallel pursuits that can inform and illuminate your own. This is good news for many of us who are, for all intents and purposes, very sensitive beings. (I’m sure there are writers out there who don’t care a bean for others’ opinions, but I don’t know any. Do you?)

    Many of you have participated in the Artist’s Way or other related material by Julia Cameron, either on your own or in one of the workshops we have held. This process yields many insights that deserve to be shared among those of us struggling to make our voices heard above the din. There are also a number of lifesaving, and writer-saving, tools that we can pass from hand to hand, sort of like water in the desert or food in a famine. If you have a tool that’s been particularly helpful to you, please share it and it will see light in these pages. It is to be hoped that our light can shine brightly enough that it will help others to see, as well as ourselves. And sometimes, when you hold a flashlight, you don’t realize just how bright that light is until you have it pointed in your direction. In darkness, even a pen light can blind you.

    The first tool that Julia Cameron offers us, in nearly every book on creativity that she writes, is Morning Pages. She’s even got them in her book The Writing Diet, which is a book about our bodies and not our body of work. Why this seeming obsession with writing in the morning? Is she that abnormality, an artist who is a morning person? (If she is, can I shoot her?) Is she sadistic?

    Over the years, I have found her to be spot-on. Morning Pages have consistently helped me create more than I ever dreamed possible. They’ve helped with my writing, my knitting, even my relationship and my job. Why? Well, that’s a little complicated to answer. For me, they act as something Julia Cameron calls ‘spiritual chiropractic.’ What that means is they align me with my higher sense of self, that wise inner voice that we sometimes move too fast to hear.

    A shaman once told me that our power exists in the moment. It is only by being present in the moment that we are able to access it. When we are afraid, we are in the future: what might happen. When we are angry, we are in the past: what did happen. When we are in the moment, we are present in the now and able to respond to what is going on around us, right now. Many gurus recommend a meditation practice in order to access this “in the moment” awareness. I am not really cut out for meditation, because I’m usually too busy, and frankly not very good at it. Pages allow me to “do” something while really “doing” nothing at all but allowing my thoughts to come down onto the paper. Since Morning Pages aren’t about writing, (in fact writers may find them very hard to do since they want to “write” them and not just do them), I am not required to actively cognate on paper. This frees me to be as in the moment as I want to be. “I’m on the train. I’m here at the table, drinking coffee.” My pages are filled with little observations like that. In fact, when I get stuck for something to write next, I usually inventory where I am at the moment: in a conference room at lunch break, in the museum on my Artist Date, on the bus, on the train, in the car waiting for my husband… to whit, in the moment.

    Natalie Goldberg, another creativity and writing author, talks about this in terms of her Zen practice. She lamented to her instructor that she wasn’t meditating enough. He laughed and pointed out then when she was writing, she was in the moment, in the flow, and therefore meditating. One of Goldberg’s suggestion in Writing Down the Bones is to fill up one notebook a month. Once the focus is on the production of writing, not the quality, it disconnects the cognitive mind from having to “write well” and becomes about simply writing, filling up the notebook. This can be remarkably liberating, because it isn’t about anything other than just setting pen to paper for x number of pages.

    Many people ask me if the Morning Pages must be done in the morning. Why not Night Pages? When I first started with the Artist’s Way, I was a confirmed night person. I worked a second-shift job from 4:00 P.M. to midnight and stayed up until 5:00 A.M. and didn’t get up until noon. I wrote whenever I had the time and inclination. As long as I got three pages in, or five since that was my daily goal at the time, I was happy. I got a lot of benefit from it, too – I worked on my Artist’s Way exercises, chakra work, poetry, fiction; all kinds of things. Then one day a few years ago I decided to try them in the actual morning, right after I walked my dog, Coyote. I’d walk Coyote for about thirty or forty minutes, then sit down and do my pages. I had an altogether different experience of them. It’s hard to quantify the difference. Perhaps it was the fact that I wasn’t awake yet, so I was more able to contact my inner voice. Perhaps it was that the day hadn’t cluttered up my mind yet, so I was better able to hear myself. Whatever it was, I enjoyed it and liked the results. I’ve done them as near to first thing ever since.

    I saw Julia Cameron speak on her recent book tour for The Writing Diet. She was adamant on the subject of Morning Pages. She said the reason for that is that at night, the day is already over. You can’t change any of it. By doing the pages in the morning, you stand a chance of determining your responses throughout the day, and thereby making more time for yourself and your art. At night, you can only lament lost chances. I thought that was an interesting point.

    A lot of the Artist’s Way is about recovering your own autonomy. It doesn’t matter what your voice has to say, whether your medium be the written word or ceramics or metal or dance. It just matters that you are clear enough to hear and then express it. The exercises and tools are aimed at helping us to uncover from societal conditioning against such independence. For some of us, we have not only societal conditioning but familial interference to deal with. Using the tools, like Morning Pages but also the exercises, I’ve been able to clear out the clutter of my mental landscape so I can finally hear myself.

    Try it for yourself. You don’t have to believe they’ll work, just give them a try and see what happens for you. The scientific method isn’t about knowing what will happen ahead of time, it’s about deciding on a course of experimentation, trying it, and recording the results. If they are lunch pages, afternoon smoke break pages, night pages, middle of the night pages, or morning pages, just try writing three pages of them, longhand, every day. The next day, three more. And the next day, three more. And again. Again.

    Like a heartbeat. Or a river. Learn to hear yourself again.

    Originally published on Noonsense blog, 06/11/2010.

  • Thoughtful Thursday – 3D and Writing

    Thoughtful Thursday – 3D and Writing

    \"20150913_0026\"Coyote poses in front of my mobile craft dalek, three drawers and a surface for dreams.

    It\’s strange.  As I look back on 2015, I wrote less fiction than I usually do, despite putting out several books and writing a short story for a podcast.  I\’ve also knit a lot less than I\’m used to, though I\’ve finished more than I think I have when I take time to talley.

    The nature of 3-D creation, things like making soap, knitting, and sewing, to name a few, is that they all operate in the real world, the three-dimensional space in which we physically live.  To an anorexic, this physical space thing is puzzling.  By and large, we live in our minds, and coming down out of the mind into realspace can be scary and unfamiliar.

    Oddly enough, my three-dimensional experimentation this last month and a half has been at the gym, rather than my crafts.  In going to the gym everyday except holidays, I\’ve learned a number of things.  I already knew that \”showing up on the page\” is the way to accumulate words, it never occurred to me to apply it to the gym and getting fit.  Now that I\’ve made the connection, it seems obvious – I mean, if \”showing up at the barre\” works for dancers, or \”showing up at easel\” for painters, why wouldn\’t it work for fitness?  I\’ve been working to apply the same regularity that I have with morning pages to my gym-going.  It\’s been working, if a lot less spectacularly than I thought it would have to be.

    I suppose that\’s the lesson, in many ways:  reality is a lot less spectacular than the echo chambers of social media and drama would have us believe.  The echo chamber wants us to be up in arms, heartbeats pounding, as we worry about the next crisis in some other place over which we have no control and no actual connection.  We need to remember that we are physical bodies, not just mental, and that as such we have our own realities.  The echo chamber is not reality.  On a good day, it\’s a reflection of reality; most of the time, it\’s simply a tool of drama llamas.

    So, while my thoughtful Thursday is less about crafts and writing, it\’s still about three-dimensional space and writing.  They relate to each other more profoundly than we realize.

    What about you, Dear Reader?  How do you experience your three-dimensional space today?

  • A Writer In Her Library

    A Writer In Her Library

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    I\’ve missed my Thursday \”A Writer In Her Library\” feature, so I figured I\’d resurrect it.  I\’ve been doing a lot of work with autobiography and memoir lately, and I adore Tristine Rainer.  She has a great book, Your Life As Story,  and I\’ve found it really helpful through the process.

    One of the first assignments she gives is to write a fairytale of your life\’s story.  It\’s an interesting exercise.  She said that some students want to cram their lives into an existing fairytale, but she suggests writing a completely new tale, in the style of a fairytale.

    What about you, Dear Reader?  How do you feel about memoir and autobiography?

  • Join Me At ChiWriMo!

    Join Me At ChiWriMo!

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    It\’s November, the time of the keyboards singing and the turkey tryptophaning and the avoidance of the holiday madness until after Black Friday, thankyouverymuch. It\’s National Novel Writing Month, Dear Reader, and yours truly is one of the volunteer Municipal Liaisons, or MLs, for the Chicago Region.  My main duty is to help host write-ins, which are big parties where magic happens.  No really, that\’s what they are!  People gather somewhere, like a cafe or restaurant or library or park or… and they write.  And have word wars.  And it\’s a lot of fun.  One of my other duties is to exhort participants to ever greater heights of literary abandon.  (Hey, man: I\’m in mid-NaNo myself and my vocabulary is running full steam ahead!)  So join me at our ChiWriMo blog for some thoughts on Week Two – it\’s not too late!  Keep going!

  • Sunday Box Talk

    Sunday Box Talk

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    Boxes.  I\’ve talked about them before.  We get into them by following set patterns of behavior without question.  So what do we do when we realize we\’re in a box that we don\’t want to be in anymore? More importantly, what do we do when we have no idea what box we do want to be in?

    There are a lot of resources out there that talk about how to network, how to find the job of our dreams, etc. But the more important work, the core work, is to figure out what we want.  Stephen Covey once said that we can fight and scratch and climb our way up the ladder of success, only to get to the top and find that the ladder is on the wrong wall.

    Today, I want to talk about how to find the right wall. Sometimes, all we need is to find the right village with the walls that we enjoy – meaning, we don\’t necessarily need to flip our entire lives inside out when we\’re dissatisfied. We can incorporate elements of our ideal lives into the one we\’re living now. By doing so, small changes can be made that, over time, can help realign our lives – and our ladders – onto the right wall.

    So how do we figure out what we enjoy?

    One way is to grab our trusty journal. Don\’t have a trusty journal, you say? Go to the dollar store and grab a spiral notebook, or get some loose-leaf paper. Something, anything to write on will do. Now, number your page from 1-5. Moving as quickly as you can, write down 5 occupations that sound fun.

    Next, number from 1-5. Write down 5 occupations that intrigue you, but you\’d personally never try. They might include professional skydiving instructor or tarot card reader with a traveling circus.

    Now, write 5 hobbies that sound fun.

    And finally, 5 things you would love to try once, if you didn\’t have to tell anyone you did it. Maybe, go to a strip club, or midnight golf, or hitch hike to New Orleans (which is more fun if you don\’t already live in New Orleans, but you get my point).

    Now you have your list of things to explore. You can read up on them, do internet searches about them, talk to people who are already doing them. There are many ways to incorporate our desired lives into our current ones if we are willing to start small, be creative, and honor our own creative impulses.

    Now, I\’m curious. What\’s one thing from your lists that you\’re willing to share? Mine is be a professional tarot card reader and psychic with my own storefront, Madam Noony. What about you?

     

     

  • O Is For… Outdoors!

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    The outdoors. It calls to us, if we let it.  It wasn\’t until I moved to Chicago and met people who had been raised their entire lives in a metropolis, (Chicago is the third-largest city in the United States), that I realized not everyone feels the call the way I do.

    When I was young and living with a mentally-ill mother, one of the common escapes for me was to go hiking into the mountains behind our ranch.  It backed up to a thirty-acre cow pasture, but beyond that, it was just National Forest – no houses for, literally, miles.  Since my mother disapproved of my writing, I hid my papers and pen under my shirt and took off with my dog to go walking.

    At the time, I only knew I was escaping.  Now, at a couple decades\’ remove, I realize that I was also communing with nature and finding peace in what was a very dangerous and unpeaceful situation.  Many spiritual traditions talk of the silence one gets in touch with when one walks, and I find that silence is accessible as much in the city as it is in those faraway mountains of my childhood.

    What about you, Dear Reader?
    Where are your favorite places to walk?

  • A Is For… A. Catherine Noon! (Of course…)

    A Is For… A. Catherine Noon! (Of course…)

    \"Noony-Thumbnail\"Welcome to day one of the A-Z Blog Challenge.  I\’m your host for this stop on the tour, A. Catherine Noon.  I\’m glad you\’re here!

    I\’m an author, which you may have guessed by my site.  I love to write.  I wrote my first story at the age of nine and I\’ve written essays, novels, poems, short stories – you name it.  I\’d write on walls if I didn\’t get dirty looks from people.  (Okay, maybe not really the walls.)  (Unless I had permission.)  Together with my coauthor, Rachel Wilder, we write as the duo Noon and Wilder and have several books out – and more on the way.

    But I digress.  Writing is, for me, as necessary as breathing.  It\’s become more than a way to communicate.  It has, quite literally, saved my life and given me a life worth living.  But that\’s not my only passion.  I adore music and have played piano my whole life.  I love to sing and can play a pretty passable recorder.  My guitar skills, however, are sadly undeveloped.  Someday I\’ll invent a machine that gives me more than 24 hours in a day – or that lets me pursue my passions full time without the bothersome necessity of earning a living so I can pay my rent.

    I discovered knitting in the year 2000, coinciding with the Millenium.  My mother died that year and knitting gave me a way to express myself that didn\’t involve having to articulate anything.  I could grieve and process in silence.  Since then, knitting has become a beloved art form and I\’ve joined the happy conspiracy of avid textile addicts.

    What about you, Dear Reader?
    What brings you to the A-Z Blog Challenge?

  • Sound – A Poem

    Sound – A Poem

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    The sounds are still,

    Silent now in the wake of madness.

    The crowds came through like locusts,

    Digesting everything in their path as

    Huge earthmovers rearrange landscape.

    The air is frigid and wet, an arthritic\’s nightmare.

    Paper detritus blows in the breeze, a dance without music.

    The anniversary has passed, the revelers gone home,

    Their legacy filling the large garbage trucks

    That will prowl the predawn streets before traffic.

    But here, now, it\’s still night, and cold, and

    The sounds are still.

  • A to Z Challenge – Do You Haz It?

    A to Z Challenge – Do You Haz It?

    My buddy Jennifer Fischetto posted on Romance Divas that she was considering doing the April A to Z Blogging Challenge.  The challenge, in brief, is to write a post for each day except Sunday, and that each post has an alphabetical theme.  So the first is A, the second is B, and so on.

    I figure, what the heck; this sounds fun!  Join me?

    Write on!