creativity

  • Don’t Judge Your Process

    A few years ago, I had a meeting with one of the professors in my MFA program. We were meant to discuss an idea I had for a novel, but instead, we talked mainly about my process. I’d just been at a craft session where a writer talked about how you should be writing, strongly

    Read more →

  • Moving Lessons

    Moving Lessons

    I spent most of May moving from one space in my house to another—and doing all the tasks that go along with any sort of move. Packing, cleaning, lugging, re-painting, unpacking, figuring out what goes where, wracking my brain to figure out what box the one thing I desperately need had been tucked into. Over

    Read more →

  • Cradling Earthworms

    Cradling Earthworms

    It rained last night, and on my walk this morning, there were several earthworms who had been forced out of the ground. Earthworms always make me think of this period in my life when I was working as an Assistive Technology Tutor. I travelled to different schools, and I worked with students in small groups

    Read more →

  • I can’t

    I can’t

    When I was eight, I decided I wanted to be a writer when I grew up. I still have my earliest efforts, the covers made out of old scraps of wallpaper, stories of missing jelly beans and mysteriously oversized pumpkins and making friends with a green alien named Bob. My classmates wrote encouraging comments in

    Read more →

  • A project that terrifies me

    For the past month I’ve been working on a project that terrifies me.  Which means, of course, I haven’t really started it.  It’s an idea I’ve had for two – or maybe it’s three years now. I think I’d half-convinced myself I never would write it.    And then, spurred by some outside forces, I

    Read more →

  • On Rituals: My Magic Writing Shawl

    This morning I pulled my (as I once called it) ‘magic writing shawl’ out of the closet. It’s from a time when I would sit on the floor to write, snuggled in the corner, happiest when I could nearly fully enclose myself with walls on two sides, a wall of books (inspirational texts for whatever

    Read more →

  • Nah-nah-nah-nah-nah-nah-I-can’t-hear-you

    For weeks I’ve been struggling with the point of view of my current short story. For a Story is a State of Mind exercise, I chose a first person central point of view, but that exercise has blossomed into an unruly narrative with over 8,000 words of freewriting that I’m now trying to rein in. And I

    Read more →

  • Excuses, Excuses

    Excuses, Excuses

    I’ve been reading Dorothea Brande’s Becoming a Writer as part of my weekly craft reading.  In his introduction to the text, John Gardner writes that the problems facing new writers haven’t changed much from 1934 (when the volume was first published) to today.  There are four key difficulties Brande discusses early in the text: the writer who

    Read more →

  • A metaphor for the writing life

    I saw this time lapse video by Jean-Michel, Timelapse: une araignée tisse sa toile, via BrainPickings several weeks ago and have been meaning to post about it ever since.  It seemed, when I watched it, such a perfect metaphor for my process when I enter the drafting stage.  I move forward bit by bit each day, spinning

    Read more →

  • (Over)Planning

    (Over)Planning

    I just finished The Creative Habit by Twyla Tharp.  I’ve been reading it since late December. It started as a way of trying to go back to basics and establish a more positive routine.    And though it’s been helpful in that regard and routine is the foundation of much of what Tharp talks about,

    Read more →