It's IWSG Day. The goal of this blog hop is to share and encourage. Writers can express doubts and concerns without fear of appearing foolish or weak. Those who have been through the fire can offer assistance and guidance. It’s a safe haven for insecure writers of all kinds. IWSG is the brainchild of Alex Cavanaugh, our brilliant ninja leader. Co-hosts this month: Olga Godim, Chemist Ken, Renee Scattergood, and Tamara Narayan!
This month’s optional question: When your writing life is a
bit cloudy or filled with rain, what do you do to dig down and keep on writing.
Things to do when your writing goes south…
Explore a place you’ve never been before--a park, a town, someplace
in the city, a museum or a botanical garden. Take yourself on a writer’s date to a place that will stimulate
your senses. Paddle a boat, walk a beach, take a run on a route you've never followed. New experiences encourage creativity.
Take a walk while listening to music. I don’t know about you,
but music brings me to a place where I see, hear and think
more clearly. Deeper. The more I connect with the music, the better the inspiration.
Google writer websites for scene-storming hints. Give
yourself a timed writing exercise. Don’t stop. Don’t edit. Just write what
floats into your brain. Let the words flow. They may not be good, they may not be
worth keeping, but they’ll come. And when they do, more words follow.
Talk to other writers. By nature, the writing process is solitary, but it doesn't have to be all the time. Writer friends
buoy each other up during the bad times and celebrate each other when things
are good. We all need support, feedback and encouragement. In short, we need
our peers. If you haven’t joined a writing group, I encourage you to do so.
Here’s a confession. It might be possible that my writing life is a bit cloudy
right now. But one of the members of my writing group encouraged me via email
yesterday. She said: “Maybe just play around and throw a lot of little ideas at
the writer brain and see if anything takes hold, with no expectations of any of
it.” Just that little suggestion had me sitting down in front of the computer,
“playing.”
Take a look at an old project. Even if your skills
have surpassed where you were when you wrote the piece, it may offer something…a
character that you liked writing about, or a scene you crafted well that may inspire
you to branch off to something new.
Above all, don’t NOT write. As bad as it may feel if you are struggling, be sure to
sit down for a least a small period of time every day. No matter how hard it seems,
as awful as you think the writing may be, it’s writing. To be a writer, that’s what we
have to do.
After
I wrote this post, I was heartbroken to learn that one
of my favorite authors, Anita Shreve passed away this past Thursday. I
was supposed to attend one of her readings a year or so ago and was
dreadfully disappointed when she
had to cancel for health reasons. Given this month’s IWSG question, the
quote I
read from Saturday’s Boston Globe memorial on this lovely writer seems particularly
appropriate:
“To other writers, published and successful or merely toiling and aspiring, she offered three words of encouragement that her father had used to nudge along her youthful writing efforts.
‘My father one told me, ‘Don’t give up.’ she recalled in 2008 for the London newspaper The Guardian. ‘It’s advice that has served me well.’”
RIP Anita Shreve.
17 comments:
Very sad. She definitely heeded her father's advice.
I always walk while listening to music. Unless my wife is walking with me. That would kind of rude.
So sad to hear of Anita Shreve's death! I loved her books. Yes, your advice is good. Writers write - no other thing will do. My daddio would say "bum in chair". I'm revising a big overgrown garden of a memoir, so my bum is seeing a lot of the chair.
first - I'll comment on your writing. Even if cloudy - keep at it, go take some pictures (using your fine lens and eyes) and then write about what you think you saw versus what's on the screen.
Second - I too was surprised by Anita Shreve's death and said, "darn". She was an excellent writer.
Take care and keep splashing in the rain with words
Thank you so much for mentioning the death of Anita Shreve. I had not heard about it here in Germany. What a wonderful piece of advice her father gave her. It is advice that still rings true today.
All the best.
Shalom aleichem,
Pat G @ EverythingMustChange
All of your suggestions are spot on. Most of us think of writing as being almost as necessary as breathing. Even if the breathing is labored, we've gotta keep going.
I like going to new places, too. They never fail to offer me nudges and ideas. That advice from Anita Shreve's father is still good today.
Love your inspirational ideas for how to get through the dry spots. Going somewhere new sounds so fun too.
Great advice for writers. Thank you for sharing this wisdom and inspiration. "Don't give up," applies to everyone, I think.
WOW! What a beautiful post :) Thank you for sharing your ideas to keep on going, and for sharing the loss of someone you admired so much. Lots of love. An don't give up !!!
I hadn't heard of her passing. Her father's advice is good for us all.
What an inspiring and helpful post. Thank you.
I'm sorry to hear about your friend.
All great ideas here but I think "don't give up" is the most important as well as the hardest to follow.
Great suggestions! Always works for me too.
I was so sad to hear about Anita Shreve. I have so many of her books on my shelves.
I love your advice. Walking helps me. Same with kayaking with my husband. There's something about nature, right? Your critique partner sounds wise. Rediscovering the play during a cloudy period is so important! Free writing with no expectations can lead to interesting jumping points. And writing friends ARE so helpful! Mine buoy me, too!
Such sad news. Her dad's advice is excellent.
New experiences encourage creativity. <-- This is interesting; I'd never thought about it. But it makes sense.
I'm not a writer, but when I had to write essays in high school and couldn't come up with something, I'd read something. It only makes sense that writers are prolific readers.
Great advice!
I have often said to myself "What would I do if I didn't write?" I still can't come up with an answer, so I write...
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