This Old Barn . . . Prompt #226

  • This Old Barn . . . Prompt #226

    Wilma's Barn

    Today’s Writing Prompt . . . This Old Barn.

    Or: If this barn could talk. . .

    What do you think this barn was used for? Did you grow up near a barn like this?

    Either write what really happened or make something up.

    This old barn . . .

  • I never thought of that .. . Prompt # 225

    Winter landscape with falling snowflakes, snow and hills

    Part Three of a three-part series of writing prompts inspired by Susan Bono’s Jumpstart Writing Workshop.

    A rewarding aspect of writing is when writers create scenarios that offer illumination for  readers . . . that  “aha moment.”

                           Inside a Snowflake

    Tiny snow droplets slide into the snowflake

    as it falls to the ground. if you listen, really closely,

    you can hear the sun crunching together.

    The weather is stormy—a snowstorm

    with little snowflakes inside the big snowflake.

    A girl lives in the snowflake, with golden hair in pretty braids

    with a ribbon on the bottom.

    At midnight she watches the snow fall outside the snowflake,

    and the icicles drip. the next day she goes out

    on the frozen lake and ice skates.

    Sparks of ice fly up behind her.

    By Emily Osborn, Grade 3, Poetry In The Schools

    I love this fun and creative perspective, “. . . little snowflakes inside the big snowflake.”

    Our unique ways of seeing things and capturing our thoughts in the written word can inspire readers, “Oh, I never thought of it like that.”

    But how do writers access those sparks of creativity? Just Write. Be  yourself. When you sit down to write, shed your inner critic, get in touch with your child-like world of discovery.

    Writing Prompt: Write about being inside something.

  • Tri-Quarterly – writing, art and cultural inquiry

    Tri-QuarterlyTriQuarterly is the literary magazine of Northwestern University. This web journal is edited by graduate students and supervised by faculty. TriQuarterly is “an international journal of writing, art, and cultural inquiry.”

    From now until May 12016, TQ welcomes submissions of fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, short drama, short-short prose pieces, video essays, and hybrid work from established as well as emerging writers. TQ is especially interested in work that embraces the world and continues, however subtly, the ongoing global conversation about culture and society that TriQuarterly pursued from its beginning in 1964. TriQuarterly pays honoraria for creative work and publishes two issues a year.  Submission Guidelines.

  • Narrator is the last to know . . . Prompt #224

    This is Part Two of a three-part series of writing prompts inspired by Susan Bono’s Jumpstart Writing Workshop.   Part One: Something Missing . . . Prompt #223

    Susan talked about creating tension when the reader knows something that the narrator/character doesn’t know.

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    Prompt: Create or recreate a scene where the narrator/character doesn’t know what’s going on.

     

  • Story of A Reluctant Memoirist

    Zoe Fitzgerald CarterGuest Blogger Zoe FitzGerald Carter, author of Imperfect Endings: A Daughter’s Story of Love, Loss, and Letting Go (Simon & Schuster), writes about being a reluctant memoirist.

    I never intended to write a memoir. As a reader, I’ve always preferred fiction to non-fiction and my book, Imperfect Endings, which is about my mother’s decision to end her life after struggling with Parkinson’s for many years, started off as a novel.

    I wanted to write a fictionalized account of my experience growing up as the youngest of three girls and explore how it felt to have two powerful older sisters fighting over my soul. My idea was to create a crisis in my characters’ lives as adults and then show how the old alliances and animosities from their childhood were re-ignited by this “current” event.

    At the time, I was struggling to make sense of my mother’s suicide and I thought, “Hmm… well there’s an interesting crisis.”

    After writing the first 50 pages, my agent suggested that I turn the book into a memoir, claiming that it would have more impact as a “true” story. (I think she also figured it would be easier to sell than a novel.) After much hemming and hawing, I decided to give it a shot.

    Despite my fears, as soon as I made the switch from fiction to nonfiction (and tossed out all the made-up stuff), the tone, language and pacing of the book seemed to fall into place. It may sound strange to say that writing a book about your mother’s suicide was enjoyableand there were parts that were difficult to re-livebut I did find writing “from life” more rewarding than I had expected.

    It was certainly easier than writing fiction, as much as I hated to admit it. Now that I was the character and these were my feelings, my experiences, generating new material was a breeze. Instead of making things up, I was excavating what already existed and using that material to fuel the writing process. I can’t say I became a fast writer, but I definitely got faster.

    Day after day, I would settle myself in my office or in a café and focus on an experience or time period that I wanted to capture. Once images and events began to drift up, I would scribble them down, especially if they seemed vivid or emblematic of a central issue or character. I would then take this material, flesh it out andif warrantedturn it into a fully developed scene.

    I came to think of this like translation. I was essentially taking emotion and memory and translating it into language. But being able to enter into an experience while also standing apart from it, observing and recording it, takes a certain dispassion. (No wallowing allowed!) It is fascinating to travel back to an important event or experience and reconsider it from different angles, but you also need to maintain a critical distance in order to turn it into art. This is especially true when you are deciding what to include and what not to include; what serves your story and what is superfluous.

    Once you have your story, the next hurdle is getting it out in the world. And I’m not just talking about the infuriating scramble to find a publisher. Writing memoir involves a HUGE degree of personal exposure. It is not for the faint of heart. (I had a number of heart-stopping anxiety dreams after my book was bought and sometimes wondered if having a publisher was worse than not having one.)

    But whenever I found myself fretting about having sold my soulnot to mention the souls of various family members—I would remind myself of why I wrote the book and whom I was trying to reach. So many people go through some version of my story and I liked to think that reading about how my family made these difficult end-of-life negotiationsimperfect as they weremight be useful and perhaps comforting for someone else. I certainly hoped so.

    Holding on to your personal, complex truth is especially important when your book is published and the story that you wrote while comfortably ensconced in your private writing bubble is suddenly blasted into the public domain. You no longer have any control over who reads itor how they will respond to it. And once you start the invariable mad dance of promoting your book, you can feel like you’ve turned your life – and even your self into a commodity.

    Which brings me back to my original assertion that I am a reluctant memoirist. And it explains why I am currently at work on a novel.

    You can take a memoir workshop with Zoe at Writers Grotto in San Francisco: “Taking Your Memoir to the Next Level.”

    Zoe FitzGerald Carter was born in France and grew up in Washington D.C. She is a graduate of Columbia Journalism School and has written for numerous publications including The New York Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, Salon and Vogue. Zoe teaches memoir writing at workshops and conferences. . . . scroll down for conference information. In addition to her novel on self-help culture, Twenty-One Days to A Perfect Life, she is working on a nonfiction book about race and elected kinship.

  • Something missing . . . Prompt #223

    Susan.Jumpstart.Jan 25.2

     

    I had the good fortune recently to “sit on the other side of the table.” I attended a Jumpstart Writing Workshop facilitated by Susan Bono.

    Susan talked about how there is tension between what the reader knows and what the narrator/character doesn’t know.

    Photo of Susan at Jumpstart Writing Workshop in Copperfield’s Bookstore, downtown Petaluma. Photo by Breana Marie.

    Susan read Shel Silverstein’s poem, “Something Missing.”

    I put on my socks,
    I remember I put on my shoes.
    I remember I put on my tie
    That was painted
    In beautiful purples and blues.
    I remember I put on my coat,
    To look perfectly grand at the dance,
    Yet I feel there is something
    I may have forgot—-
    What is it? What is it?. . .

    Do you know what the narrator forgot? If you don’t know, read the poem again.

    It rhymes with “dance.”   . . . Pants!

    Susan talked about how, in writing, there can be tension between what the reader knows and what the narrator/character doesn’t know. In the poem for example, the reader knows what the character doesn’t know . . . he forgot his pants.

    Susan next talked about “yearning for an answer.” I think she’s on to something. . . readers yearn for answers as do writers. When writing, especially freewrites, we can learn about ourselves and as we write, truths can be revealed. Or, we might see an old situation in a new way. That’s what happened for me while writing on this prompt.

    Writing Prompt: Write about the feeling of something missing.

    Part 1 of 3. The next two prompts will continue with this subject of reader knowing, narrator not knowing and what’s missing. Stay tuned.

    A reminder for making comments on The Write Spot Blog: There is no judging, no critiquing, no questions asked for clarification. With this type of freewriting, we are writing for ourselves, not for an audience nor for the entertainment of others. This type of writing can result in polished writing that is published, but that’s up to the writer to decide whether or not to share his/her writing. The first inklings of freewrites are kernels . . . ready to pop, or newly hatched, kind of like newborn babies seeing the world for the first time. Be kind with your comments.

    And be gentle with yourself, dear writer, you are doing important work.

  • weirderary . . . encourages creativity

    weirderaryweirderary is an online literary magazine dedicated to high quality creative work. “We publish writing, comics, art, and hybrid pieces, favoring fresh and uncommon forms, subjects, and points of view. Over here, “weird” is a compliment, not a pejorative. weirderary comes out three times per year: March, June, and October 17th.”

    Accepting submissions now and up to March 1, 2016.

    The genius of weirderary: Jessica Thompson, TJ Murray, and Colleen Kolba.

    “Send us your weirdest stuff, whether in content or form. We want the unusual. We want to be surprised. We appreciate humor, but that doesn’t only mean light-hearted and goofy. Feel free to go dark. Get serious, just do it in a form or from a perspective we don’t see very often. Cross genre lines and experiment. Send us the work you don’t know how to define.”

    Submit by email: submit-at-weirderary.com. Put the category and title of what you’re submitting in the subject line. If you’re submitting more than one item, please send a separate email for each piece.

    A partial list of  submitting guidelines:

    In your email, please tell us the word count (if applicable) and whether or not the submission was previously published.

    We prefer previously unpublished work, but will occasionally accept published work if it is an exceptionally good fit.

    Categories:

    FLASH (fiction or non): max 498 words

    FICTION: max 2,976 words

    NONFICTION: max 2.333 words

    POETRY: bring it

    COMICS: yes, please

    ART: def go for it

  • Happiness Recipe . . . Prompt # 222

    Recipe BoxWhat is your recipe for happiness?

    Oh, I know there is no “Happy Recipe.”

    But let’s say there is  . . . what is the secret ingredient?

    What makes you, or your fictional character, happy?

    Interesting article on happiness (if you have vertigo, quickly scroll past the swirly circling thing). I love the quotes from Elvis and Jim Carry. Ted, Moreno’s Happiness and the Hypnosis of the Culture, Part I

  • What’s so great about being happy?

    Today’s Guest Blogger, Ted A. Moreno, writes about how “happiness is our natural state of being.”

    What’s so great about happiness? Why are most of us always striving for happiness? Why is it so hard?

    Wikipedia defines happiness as: a mental or emotional state of well-being defined by positive or pleasant emotions ranging from contentment to intense joy.

    What I think is interesting is that when we are happy, we don’t notice it as much as when we are unhappy. To me, this suggests that happiness is our natural state of being.

    We are very aware of when we are experiencing negative or unpleasant emotions or when we are not content. We try to do something about it. We seem to be more motivated to avoid unhappiness than to pursue happiness.

    I also think that for many, unhappiness can become a habit.

    What is your habit of being?

    Bob Dylan said that happiness wasn’t the point. In one sense I agree with him, because we will often sacrifice our happiness to gain something. For example, we’ll push our bodies during exercise so that we might have health, which could add to our happiness.

    However, I think that it’s safe to say that we want those pleasant and positive emotions as often as we can get them.

    The Big Question of course is, how can we be happy most of the time?

    I’m happy when I’m still and peaceful. When I’m walking out doors. When I’m holding my children, hugging my wife.

    What makes me really unhappy is a lot of noise, disorder and chaos. I’m unhappy when I think I’ve hurt someone’s feelings. Lack of sleep increases my unhappiness.

    I think the thing that most contributes to my happiness is being free to do what I want and need to do.

    Moreno.GuideWhat about you? I’d like to hear your thoughts about happiness.

    I explore this topic in my podcast Ted in your Head. You can listen on my website: Tedmoreno.com/podcast. From there you can find links to subscribe or download via iTunes or Soundcloud or just listen on Stitcher.

    Have A Happy Day!

    Ted A. Moreno, C.Ht.

    Creator of the Moreno Method for Life Transformation

    Hypnotherapist and Success Performance Coach

     Check out Ted’s book:

    “The Ultimate Guide to Letting Go of

    Negativity and Fear and Loving Life”

    Available at Amazon.com

     Offices in South Pasadena and Covina

    (626)826-0612 / (909) 257-8260

    Phone Sessions Available

     

  • What I Learned . .. Prompt #221

    A Kind Word Warms The Heart

     

    So many possibilities for this prompt. You can write what you learned, what someone else learned, what your fictional character learned. Just write!

    Writing Prompt: What I Learned