The Fallacy of Self-Destruction

Because I read this today, I found out that Quinn Cummings and I both love the book Geek Love by Katherine Dunn. Because I found that out, I thought that maybe I might not become a womanizing, drug-addled, mentally unstable, critically-acclaimed, poverty-stricken, lonely alcoholic writer by the end of next week.

Some of you may understand exactly how all of that makes sense. If you do, then I feel for you, because you have a brain like mine, and that isn’t always fun, even if it is entertaining. For those of you who don’t, allow me to explain the finer points of Being Tom’s Brain.

In the past few weeks I’ve been reading a lot about dystopian fiction. This is an area relatively new to me, and one which I’ve previously known about mainly through popular works such as Farenheit 451 and 1984. I love to do research, though, and while recently doing some Wikipedia research on 1984, I came across a list of 175 novels with the theme of dystopia. That’s a lot of grim future, my friends, and I dove into it with glee.

I started to make a reading list. In the process, I noted various authors: Jack London, Aldous Huxley, H.G. Wells plus many other lesser-knowns. One that rang some sort of vague bell of recognition was Philip K. Dick. I knew only that he had written the book “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?” which had become the basis for the classic film “Blade Runner.”

As I plowed deeper into the list of titles, Dick’s name appeared several times. His wasn’t the only one to do so, but I noted on several occasions, that when it did, it was accompanied by fervent enthusiasm on my part. It seemed that every idea this man had flipped an exuberant ON switch in my brain.

I was piqued as to the background of the man. What was he like, this machine that seemed to be able to not only crank out numerous novels, but come up with ideas for stories that I wished I’d come up with myself? This guy was on my wavelength. I mean, I was really digging his stuff. What was his life like? How similar might be we two? I clicked on the link to his biography.

Me reading: Hey! Hey, look! He won a Hugo Award. Sweet. He won a John W. Campbell Memorial Award. Nice. Thirty-six novels and 121 short stories! Damn – Blade Runner, Total Recall, A Scanner Darkly, Minority Report – all that stuff is his! It can be done! Here’s proof of literary success! He was awesome!

He was awesome, and…and divorced…five times.
…and lived most of his life in poverty.
…and…never lived to see any of those movies from his books.
Hmmm…history of drug use.
Uh…he thought he was…taken over by the, uh, spirit of the prophet Elijah.
Thought he was…living a double life? And the second one was as “Thomas,” a Christian persecuted by the Romans in the First Century A.D?

It was about this time that me head started to have great fun with me. Oh great, it said. THIS is the guy I like? THIS is the guy whose ideas seem like they could have come out of my own head? THIS GUY??? I’m doomed.

Clearly, my head said, I was hopeless, my path to literary greatness was predestined. If I loved the ideas presented by Philip K. Dick, it was unavoidable what should follow: My desire to embrace a life of creativity, of literary and artistic pursuit – this was all going to end horribly. Soon I would be losing my day job due to loss of work ethic. I would walk out the door with my little cardboard filebox of belongings declaring loudly, selfishly, that, “I just can’t cope with this sort of mundane existence! I must create!!!”

My foolhardiness would make itself known straight away by me not getting anything at all published for a year or two. During this period, I would boomerang between writing and alcoholic binges, turning out pages of dreck suitable only for immediate destruction and my own growing pool of self-hatred and shame. I would lose my house to foreclosure. I would alienate both friends and family as I stomped and raged through my self-involved wreckage, flinging aside offers of assistance, sure that my way was the only way and that society was ignoring me, that the world at large was against me!

Finally, when I was in darkest despair, and against even my best efforts at self-sabotage (like the time I would write to an editor and demand he publish me “Unless you want to be known for only ever printing the linings of bird cages rather than untested brilliance!”), I would be published. By this point, however, so energetically had I set about committing the arson of my many personal and professional bridges, the only places that would publish me were small rags, amounting to hardly enough for a month’s rent in one room of a run-down house in a seedy part of town.

My bitter hopes emboldened, I would crusade onward, declaring that, “They’ll see. I’ll show them all!” Somehow, good writing would still manage to come from pen, pencil, typewriter, or whatever writing instrument I could afford at the moment. My earnings would be spent on the barest subsistence of life, with the remainder thrown away on whatever libation happened to be cheapest that week at the corner package store. I would turn to the use of pseudonyms as a means of getting my work published, having managed to repel any and all publishers who might otherwise have considered my work worthy of print.

Upon death at an early age of 56, brought on notably by years of substance abuse and generally poor self-care, I would leave to my credit only a handful of known published works, most of these in magazines. It would not be discovered until more than a decade later that I had more than twenty novels to my credit, often published with houses so small that they were scarcely known to exist. Movies would be made from several of my books, and my family would profit well in the aftermath of my mismanaged life. I would become known as an unappreciated master, influencing a whole wave of fiction to come for a new generation of writers.

Nice, huh? I really know how to turn on the melodrama when I have an opportunity – and this from reading a single page of someone’s online bio! My mind works wonders, I tell you, wonders. I’m especially tickled at how I made me into an “unappreciated master.” I suppose, though, that it wouldn’t make much of a story if I simply became a drunk who wrote badly his whole life. I don’t think A&E would waste a biography on that one, nor would it merit a Wikipedia entry, and who wouldn’t want to be a Wikipedia entry?

All kidding aside, my head really does create excuses for me not to do this stuff. I vividly recall making the decision to major in Journalism in college. I reasoned that, “You can’t make any money as a writer. Well, some people can, but you have to be kind of born to that, or show some sort of miraculous gift for it early on. It’s no way to make a living. But you can get a job with a newspaper. That’s a real job.”

And so it went. You know what happens when you don’t really go for what you want? You don’t really get what you want, and you end up pretty disatisfied with what you choose. Now I don’t know about the whole “unappreciated master” thing (I’d actually like to be an appreciated one with a bank account to prove it), but I can say that I would enjoy at least having some stuff published. There is that. It may not make me rich, it may not even cover a month of my mortgage (though that would be sweet), but there’s nothing to say it wouldn’t be worth trying. There’s also nothing to say that I would become like Philip K. Dick if I pursued writing aggressively. I always seize the most negative aspects of something, which, not surprisingly, gives me all sorts of reasons NOT to do stuff. I’m kind of done with that. I’m ready to move forward and look for some positive stuff. After all, Quinn Cummings likes some of the same books I do, and she’s funny, can write well, and she has a husband, a child, and as far as I know she doesn’t believe she’s a resurrected biblical figure. There’s hope in that.

Words, Wonderful Words!

Just a few short weeks ago I was introduced by way of Editor Unleashed to writer Quinn Cummings’ blog, The QC Report, Notes from the Underwire. I became an instant fan. I’m not a former award-winning child star, nor am I a wife with a husband and small girl (not that I ever aspired to either of those), yet her writing appeals to me as much for its subject matter as for her treatment of it. She writes about the every day foibles, frustrations, and momentary near-triumphs of being a parent, a wife, and simply of being herself.

As she says in her initial post: “…my life, right now, can be summed up by a mathematical equation: PP+ 20m= PH(e)2.
That is, any Private Pride I feel about my ability to run my life, take care of my child, attend to my business or behave in a way that could be described as competent will be followed, in less than twenty minutes, by a Public Humiliation that is equal to the Private Pride squared.”

Not only does she write with a sense of humorous self-deprecation that is all too easy to identify and laugh along with, she does so while displaying what is, for me, an enviable vocabulary. (I shake my fist at the words that have somehow fled my noggin’ over the past fifteen or twenty years.)

It should go without saying that I love words, and Mrs. Cummings’ blog is a trove of wonderfully playful verbiage. It got to the point where I started writing certain ones down that I admired. In the course of a day I came up with some favorites:

riparian – having to do with the banks of a river or stream (Awesome! Far better than “a river with banks.” Blah.)
travertine – a type of striated limestone, also used to refer to marble (Lovely)
ziggurat – a terraced temple, Sumarian in origin (When used to describe a plate of food – hilarious!)
picayune – of small value, trifling (This big word makes the small sound even smaller. Love!)
Dorothy Parker – sharp-witted U.S. writer of the 20th century, known for her drinking as well
Sparkletts – bottled water (yeah, had to look that up)
Dorothea Lange – photographer noted, in part, for her depictions of life during the Dust Bowl era in American History (The visual counterpoint to Steinbeck’s “Grapes of Wrath.”)
traditional Ixtec – I wasn’t able to get an exact answer on this one. It’s obviously of an ancient culture or race, but it eludes me.
mendicant – beggar. (What an outstanding word for folks who come to your door at Halloween! I’d forgotten all abou this word!)
gelt – slang for money (Used by her as reference to Halloween candy. Literal and verbal sweetness!)
ecumenical – referring to the Christian church as a whole (Yes, being Catholic, I should know that off the top of my head – and now I do.)
brio – displaying enthusiasm for (I love this word!)

Mrs. Cummings continually tosses about such words with what appears to be such ease and comfort, if she weren’t so much fun to read, I’d dislike her intensely. Seeing as how I’m not one to hate another simply due to their awesomeness, though, she’s safe from any of my literary ire. I’ll save that for people like James Frey.

While it pains me somewhat to admit that I’m not familiar with all of these words, and while I continually say to myself, “Where did she learn all these?!” I can’t help but enjoy every one of them. The good that comes out of all of this pertains directly to what I just watched Stephen King say on a short Youtube video the other day, and what numerous other writers say repeatedly: You have to read in order to write. Even if I’m not creating much at the moment, at least I’m absorbing a few things.

Check out Mrs. Cummings’ blog if you are in need of some humor and some fine writing. I should note that she has a book coming out in January of ’09 as well. I think I might have to make a purchase.

On Winning NaNoWriMo, (Not) Finishing, and The Artist’s Way

Yesterday I posted a horrendously long, rambling, and only vaguely coherent comment on someone else’s blog.  I’m not telling you whose, because it was that bad, or at least it seems that bad.  Really, the length is what’s embarrassingly astounding about it, and it just looks heinous.  As a too-kind soul who reads that blog as well as mine immediately pointed out, I had not even put an entry up on my own blog in quite some time.  In an effort to drain myself of whatever wordery may be mucking up manky sponge that is my brain, I present to you what will likely be a long, rambling, and only vaguely coherent blog post.  Enjoy?

NaNoWriMo has come and gone in its 30-day fourish of literary madness and caffeine.  I enjoyed it thoroughly, except for the part where I didn’t reach the end of my novel.  Oh, I hit the word count all right.  I nailed that fifty thousand word minimum with a big ten-penny spike on the 18th of the month, so winning the challenge was not really a problem.  Of course, in my head I figured that I’d battle out my novel with myself until somewhere around 50K, and I’d reach the finish line, exhausted but exalted at the end of the month.

No.

At 10K I wondered if I’d be able to make it to fifty. 
At 20K I realized I had finally actually started writing the real story (plot). 
At 35K I started to get jazzed that I was really going to make it to 50K!
40K…starting to get concerned that a major character still hasn’t shown up yet.
45K – realizing there’s no way on God’s green earth I’m ever going to wrap this up in five thousand words.
50K – pretty elated, for maybe thirty minutes.  Keep writing.
60K – realize that another ten thousand wasn’t going to do it either.  When will this end?!  Attempt to get through major plot points and scenes as quickly as possible.
70K – Nope, that’s not gonna be enough either.  Start furiously writing extremely shortened scenes in attempt to finish all major points by November 30th.
74K – Having written 2K in two hours, have a major revelation about the plot and several characters while brushing my teeth.  Immediately rinse mouth, return to laptop, and spend 30 minutes typing up the story I should have been writing 74K ago.  Feel elated.  Fall asleep.
76,884 – Written on November 29th whereby REALLY finishing it wasn’t seeming so dire or possible anymore.  Start forming plan to complete novel anyway following existing plot so I can say “I did finish a novel,” and then immediately start rewriting entire book all over again with the “real, good” idea that came at 74K.

I learned a lot, kids.  A ton.  A literary Spruce Goose full of information was handed to me via many mornings, afternoons, evenings, nights, and full weekend days of writing.  For one, writing takes up lots of your time!  (This is a newsflash you’ll surely pass on to anyone you meet in the next thirteen seconds.)  For B, a lot of the hard work of “crafting” a novel isn’t sitting there in front of the screen/paper trying to find the perfectly exact awesome way of describing the trees in Bloomington, Indiana on a fall day, or thinking up the perfect synonym for the “red” of a girl’s hair.  It’s actually going, “What?  They just met that dude, and now they figured out this thing, and it would be perfect if they met this other dude tomorrow, but they can’t run into other dude until Tuesday, and it’s Saturday.  What the hell do I have them do for three days?”  It’s also about sitting there going, “Uh, why did he just do that?  He wasn’t supposed to do that!  I didn’t even know he was going to do that.  Now all this other stuff has to happen, and I have to write about all this other stuff, and I really, really, really just want to GET. ON. WITH. THE. STORY!

Ah, the wisdom of the “been there, done that” scenario.  Now I have said wisdom.  What other lovely wisdom awaits me?  Rewrite wisdom?  Finishing the novel wisdom?  Writing the climax wisdom?  Figuring out how to tie up all the loose ends at the denoument wisdom?

Stupid wisdom.

What else has happened?  Let’s see, I finished the Artist’s Way.  Big yay.  I mean it.  I’m not overly overjoyed right now, but yay.  I wrote a lot.  A ton.  I hand wrote 270 pages worth of journaling.  This does not include writing that was required for the Weekly Tasks, or the Affirmations and Blurts stuff.  I used up an entire full-sized, college-ruled notebook and started on a second one before I was done.  Now I’m not done.  You are challenged to do at least the Morning Pages and Artist Dates for the next ninety days – three more months.  I’m on Day Four.  We’ll see how this goes.  The Artist’s Way got me a repainted kitchen door, a finished rolling ball sculpture, a trip to Bloomington, a trip to the Indianapolis Children’s Museum, some self-decorated pottery, a look at art work from the Ming Dynasty, a bunch of colored name signs for friends and family, a (nearly) finished novel…how long can this list get?  I’ll stop there.  I got a lot out of it, more of which I plan to blog about, since I already spent tons of time taking the pictures of it.  It’ll be out of sequence, but I hope you enjoy them just the same.

I hope that cures me of some of my apparent need to talk about everything and nothing all at the same time on other people’s blogs.  I hope.

Hitting the Wall at Two Thousand Words per Hour

Okay, so two thousand words per hour is me on a really good day, but I have done it.  The hitting the wall thing has really happened.  I’m still hard at work on my novel fro NaNoWriMo.  I started to get stuck last night, and this morning I’ve no idea how to move forward with my story.  I wrote out a bunch of thoughts, and they all seem to dead end into really stupid things.  I’m not sure what to do at this point.  I was going to write all day today, but I don’t know what to write.

On a happier note, on Monday, 11/24 I am going to be published on Jamie Grove’s blog How Not to Write: The Art of Writing Without Writing. Given that I wrote it on Thursday last week, it should sound much more positive than I feel at this moment.

Here’s hoping that I figure out what to do at some point in the next few hours, at least enough to get another scene written.

Thanks to Olivia and Genevieve for your recent blog comments.  It’s nice to hear from other writers working through the process.

NaNoWriMo – 50K and nowhere near the finish line

A bit stumped today, kids.  I reached the official NaNoWriMo “win” goal of fifty thousand words yesterday.  That’s great.  That’s awesome.  That’s actually incredibly in line with my goal to have 50K written before Thanksgiving so that I’d be pretty much done with the novel and wouldn’t stress about it over the holiday.

Except I’m not pretty much done.  I don’t even know if I’m half done.

I do know that what I said in the last post is true: it seems like my story started taking off around 40K or something like that, maybe it peeked in around 30K.  I don’t know, but there’s a good bit of story going on now, and I actually have all these little plot points that have to be written, events that have to happen, major s*** to go down, if you know what I mean.

Looks like my plans for a carefree holiday are not what they were, although I don’t have to choose to worry and obsess about it.  I’m going to do my best to just take it as it comes, accepting that I can only do what I can do every day, and that somehow I will finish it, like I finished the sculpture and raced at Bonneville.  I can do this stuff.  Somehow, I can do this.

I’ve been graciously asked to do a guest blog post over at Jamie Grove’s How Not to Write blog.  There will be a much more well thought out blog on this subject up there in a few days.  I’ll post the link here when it happens.  I’m rather excited about it.  It’s a cool opportunity.

NaNoWriMo – Screaming Toward 50K and No End in Sight

Holy cow, dudes!  I hit forty-five thousand words for NaNoWriMo today!  Gadzooks!  Call the papers!  Alert the military, or at least a comely lass with a penchant for reading horrid first drafts.  I’m deep into the home stretch on this bad boy, and it feels mighty good!  (For evidence of the feelings of mighty-good-ness, see the multiple exclamation-pointed sentences afore.)

During the past week’s period of time I’ve largely been doing writing in my free time and very little else, although I did find time to fit in a little fashion consulting to an elderly black gentleman at the thrift store yesterday.  I still think he should have taken home the Big Johnson Speed Shop T-shirt, but he opted for the Golf with a Weiner one.  Hey, I can only make suggestions.  I can’t help it if people don’t listen.

Yesterday was a sonic buzz of activity at Mo’Joe’s coffee house where I (kinda) buckled down with a bunch of other writers and (talked) wrote.  The last of my word smith comrades departed the land of caffeine and more caffeine at about 7pm, whereupon I took it upon myself to move to another table, pop in the ear buds, and write without stopping (much) until 11pm.  That last push got me another three thousand words added to the day’s total, bringing me to a grand total of 4K for the day, and an overall total of 38 thousand and some.  I’d wanted 40K by the end of the day, but that was plenty good to sleep on.

Today I was up early enough to get all my early morning journaling out of the way and be done with church and laundry and guitar practice by 12:45pm.  Without pausing to see if there was anything else that could possible allow me to procrastinate further, I threw my laptop in the bag, grabbed the Hohner 64 Chromatic, and headed for Monon Coffee Company with thoughts of getting absolutely as close to 50K as I possibly could.

Fifteen minutes later I sat before my laptop with an excellent hot green tea chai latte and fretted about where the hell to go next.  I fretted a bit more.  I sipped tea.  I fretted a bit more.

“If you type something, you’ll be writing,” I thought.  “You can figure out if it really makes sense later, but if you don’t friggin’ start writing, you’re not going to be writing.”

Faced with this rock-solid and irrefutable logic, I began.

Six hours and a cafe latte later I came up for air: 45 thousand and some couple hundred words.

In the past two days I’ve written over eleven thousand words.  My brain feels kinda squishy right now, but I’m okay.  I’m pretty happy.  If I wanted to take my time and finish on the 30th, I’d only need to do about 311 words a day for the remainder of the month.

The joke of this is, I’ve almost hit 50K and the story is just finally starting to take off.  It’s looking like it may take 100K (or more?) to help these kids figure out just what they’re doing in my story.  I…hope…I survive the experience.

Better go.  I’ve got some writing to do before bed.

NaNoWriMo Go, Go, Go!

NaNoWriMo - the well of insanity and glee

I’ve been busy, kids, very busy, and this is just a quick post to try and keep mildly updated here. National Novel Writing Month is upon us. The challenge: write a 50K-word novel between the dates of 11/1 and 11/30. That’s 1,667 words per day. This evening I hit 23,502, that’s *so* friggin’ close to where I’d like to be. Ideally, I wanted to hit 25K by day 10, so that I’d be on track to hit 50K by day 20, which I’m trying to do, because I know Thanksgiving will be busy around here for me.

I’ve been doing my Artist Dates, still doing all the other The Artist’s Way stuff, and, yes, it is REALLY keeping me busy!

Tomorrow I have the day off work, so I’m going down to Bloomington, Indiana to soak up the college vibe and do a little general poking about and visiting as some background work for my novel-in-progress. Should be good times. Then, in the evening it’s back up to Indy for another write-in with fellow WriMos at a coffee shop, and then, kids, THEN we shall see TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND WORDS BAHAHAHAHAHAH!

Oh, sorry, got a little carried away there. (25K! Halfway!)

Ahem. Good evening.

Artist Date #6: Melting at the Gathering

On Wednesday night I was seated with all my critique group friends getting ready to start for the evening.  We were going over some pre-meeting pleasantries, and the group leader speaks up and says, “And don’t forget!  This Saturday is the annual Gathering of Writers here at the Arts Center.  We have 76 people signed up for so far, which is more than we’d hoped for.  Robert Owen Butler will be the keynote speaker, and we’ve got some great workshops as well.  It’s fifty dollars, and it should be a lot of fun.”

Oh, crap.  This was it.  I knew it.  The next New Thing I Should Try.

“Um, what time does that start?” I asked.
“It starts at 8:30am and goes until, I think, five.”

Just great – it doesn’t even interfere with anything I already have planned!  How am I supposed to try and avoid it if it doesn’t conflict with anything!

“Hmmm…maybe I should try and do that,” I said. 

The following morning I sat and stared at the sing-up screen on my computer.  Fifty bucks.  That expenditure was easy to justify, and it was only a single day.  Would I learn enough?  Would a day even help?  In order for me to improve as a writer, wouldn’t I need, like, a week?  Wouldn’t I need to sequester myself into some commune in the woods with no internet or phone access and discover my true self with a bunch of other neurotic author wannabes?  Sure I’d put a note on my fridge early this summer about wanting to go to the Iowa Writer’s Conference, and sure I couldn’t afford the time or money, but was this what I should be doing instead.

A little voice somewhere inside me, which is probably me, but seems far smarter than Usual Me, spoke up at that point.  “Fifty bucks, one day, and it’s a three minute drive from your house.  You’ve been wanting to go to a writer’s conference for a year.  The only way this could get ANY easier is if they offered to hold it in your house for free.”  

I signed up.

Saturday morning brough with it one of those blessedly gorgeous fall days that define the beauty that is the Midwest.  As I was parking my car, a woman, looking for the correct place to park, asked if I was attending the writing conference.  “Yes.  Yes, I am,” I replied, and then I thought, ‘Holy crap!  I am!  I’m doing this!’

Inside I got signed up, picked up all my materials, and noted the placement of the all-important coffee service.  I didn’t get to it for several minutes, however, because I became involved in a conversation with several other attendees, only one of which I’d ever met previously.  In the middle of it all I went, “Weird.  I’m having a very enjoyable conversation with other writers!  Writers I don’t even know!  And we’re all hung up about how we’re doing as writers and what we hope to learn!  And I’m enjoying this!”  There were lots of exclamation points in my head.  These were important thoughts.

The keynote speaker, Robert Owen Butler, gave us an hour about how we should forget everything we know, and write from the heart.  We needed to write two hours a day if we wanted to really get with it, really be serious about making good writing happen.  I was curious, a bit fearful, skeptical, and doubtful.  I don’t write two hours a day.  I don’t know where I’d find the time.  If I did (and I’m sure I could if I really, really put my mind to it), this would pretty much mean I didn’t do anything else, at least not during a work week.  Was I not serious?  Did I not really want it?  Was I not a real writer? 

I decided to leave all that unanswered for the time being.  I was not going to stop writing, but I wasn’t going to start killing myself trying to do exactly everything he said.  It worries me though, this two-hour daily dedication.  I know that applying yourself to a creative pursuit takes a self-induced repetitive regimen, and Butler was not the first one to drive that point home.  Stephen King’s book On Writing also notes that he spends a ton of time at the keyboard.  “If you want to write, you have to write.  A lot.”  That’s not a direct quote, but it’s pretty much the gist of what both gentlemen were saying.  I sat there still feeling the joy of my recently completed rolling ball sculpture, and wondered what the hell I was doing correctly, if anything.  I’ll just keep up with all of this stuff and see where it leads.  After all, writing a little bit is a lot more writing than none at all.

Following the keynote speech I attended a class on grant writing and then one on plotting for murder mysteries and thrillers.  I can now write a grant proposal that will keep you hanging onto the edge of your seat wondering who killed the starving artist.

After lunch my first afternoon class covered Finding Your Voice.  While it did outline some helpful strategies for getting started if you were totally blocked as a writer, overall I didn’t feel it helped me out too much.  I was also slightly disturbed by the leader’s admission that she had “a lot of unfinished stuff.  I start a lot of things, but don’t finish much, so that’s my new effort now.”  I was hoping to find my voice, not my unfinished manuscripts. 

So far the day had been largely positive.  It was fun to hustle from room to room between workshops, nodding hello to other writers, and gathering with a group of strangers who all shared the same purpose.  The classes were even in different buildings, so hurrying from one to the other felt like being in college again.  My mind felt younger, and I recalled that rush I had when I first went off to school and it seemed like everything was possible, which is important for me to remember.  Having the feeling of possibility is what makes stuff happen.  If it cost me fifty bucks and all I got was that, I’d still be money ahead.

I was looking forward to the final workshop, Fictionalize Your Own Experience.  I was thinking of my experiences in the world of hot rodding, of being in a band, of racing my motorcycle at Bonneville.  These experiences are a little unique, and I’ve always hoped I could bring something different to my writing by somehow incorporating some of those elements, or at least the feelings I’d experienced through them.  I’d hoped I could learn how to do some of that in this class.

We met in the printmaking room of the arts building, pulling our mismatched chairs around a table scarred from the multitudes of cutting blades that had been pulled across it.  This class was going to contain some writing exercises, we were informed.  After a short rustling, we sat, pens and paper poised, awaiting our cue.  The leader paused, smiled, and spoke.  “Write about a woman stealing at Walmart.  The woman is your grandmother.”

Um…oh crap.  This is not what I was expecting.  This is not my experience!  I don’t have any shoplifting history (okay, that one time at Kroger when I got nabbed after suddenly deciding that lifting a candy bar would be “fun,” but that’s it!).  And while my grandmother was tight as hell and wouldn’t pay 89 cents for a bag of jellybeans, because “That’s too much!” she sure as hell wouldn’t steal it.  What do I do with this?!?

“Try to fictionalize your grandmother as this woman who is stealing,” the leader explained, suddenly seeming like much more of a writer than my humble self.

Ah, I see.  Well, that’s tough, but I came to be challeged, didn’t I?  I can do this!  I scribbled and scratched.  I came up with a fictitious person who had some characteristics of my grandmother, but was quite different in a few ways.  It took me a few minutes, to mentally get there, and we only had ten total.

“Okay, let’s see what we have,” I heard.  Damn.  Only four sentences.

Readings were called for.  A couple of women offered theirs and read.  On the third query, I raised my own.  I was not going to let this thing beat me.  The only way to get this was to confront it head on.  I read my four lines aloud.  They sounded very short.

“What did the woman look like, Tom?”
“Oh, um, I don’t know.  Just…glasses…gray hair.  I, ah, I guess I’m not too good with description,” I finished, managing a bit of a smile.
“Okay.  That’s fine.  Does anyone have some description in their events?” 

Hands went up.  People read.  Descriptions followed.  Oh well, maybe not my strong suit.

“Now do a description of this same woman getting caught, and add a character trait to her that your grandmother didn’t have.”

Aww…Argh!   More of this?!  How-what-argh!

I sat there for ten minutes, trying to come up with something.  How do I describe this woman?  What are words for kinds of coats beyond color?  What does her face look like?  What are her hands like?  Do I have any vocabulary AT ALL?!?!?!?!?!?!

I managed four sentences again.  One of them was just standard dialog.  Collectively, they kind of sucked.

“Tom, would you like to read yours?” 
I declined.  “My description isn’t very good.”
Other people read.  Description seemed to be bountiful.  It filled the room except for the apparent descriptical vaccum chamber that surrounded my head.

“This time, write a scene in which a person is steppping onto an elevator.  As the person steps on, he or she notices another couple engaged in some sort of playful physical affection, and notices that one of them is a person he or she had an affair with some time in the past.  Make the person stepping onto the elevator out of a friend of yours.”

I sat and stared at my paper.  I could hear scribbling all around me.  No scribbling noises emanated from the vicinity of my fingertips.  I didn’t have friends who would get involved in something like that, did I?  How do you write that?  What are they wearing?  How would someone feel?  What would they feel?  Why would they even care – it’s ancient history?  How do I write this!

I wouldn’t be beaten.  I could do this somehow.  I could.  I stared.  My mind whirled around and around.  I was very conscious of the prosaic excellence that was most assuredly going on around me.  One of the women in the room was in my critique group.  She was writing up a storm.  Surely it was something good.  I put pen to paper and, “The doors to the elevator opened, and Janet was met with the sight of a couple nuzzling and giggling inside.  She let her long, dark hair fall across her face before the two could look at her, and quickly stepped inside and turned to face the front.”

“Let’s see what we have.”

Two.  Two sentences.  Great. 

A number of people read.  They were masterworks of literary triumph!  I stared at my two sentences.  As each reader finished, the leader looked around the group for another.  I avoided her eyesight.  No way.  No way was I going to be called on.

“Tom?  Would you like to read yours?”  Something inside me got very tight.
“I – I only got two sentences,” I smiled weakly.
“Can you read them?”
“There’s nothing there.  Like, the elevator doors open and she gets on.  That’s all I got.”  I was allowed to pass, but discouragement stayed.

“For the final exercise, take a person you know and give them a different trait from another person you know.  Try to make this trait as different as possible from the main person.  Create a situation where they are confronting someone of authority.”

Machinery ground together, but nothing moved.  I was totally locked up.  As writing went on around me, I steamed, fretted, and didn’t write.  How do you put two people together like that?  How can you make someone act a way they would never act?  What – ?

I scribbled desperately.  “‘So what do we have to do to fix this?’ Bob asked.”

“Okay, who wants to read?”

One.  One sentence.

Mercifully, I wasn’t called on.  We listened to others read their examples, and each one seemed to hammer home the fact that I had no clue whatsoever what I was doing.  Why was I at this conference?  Did I think I was a writer?  Why did I think that?  It was plainly obvious I was lacking in basic skills.  Why did I even show up?

After receiving some overall instruction, the lead acknowledged that it was a tough set of exercises, and that she usually performed the same set during a four hour long class as opposed to our fifty minutes.  I ignored that largely.  I gathered my things and headed off to the panel discussion on publishing.  Why, I didn’t know, because I certainly was in no shape to have anything of mine published.  I couldn’t even describe what an old woman who’s shoplifting looks like.  However, as with Masterpiece in a Day, I was determined to stick it out.  I was not going to leave until I’d attended all the events.  That was my goal, and I was sticking to it, sucky writing or not.

I sat down in the conference hall, and another writer took his seat next to me.  He’d either recently gotten some good news, or was just in a pleasant mood that day, as he was a bit talkative.  I, having just been pulverized in a fifty-minute workshop, was not.

“So, do you want to exchange manuscripts?” he asked.
“Not today,” I answered, eyes staying trained on the largely empty stage in front of us where nothing was happening.
“I’ve only got twenty-five copies in my car!” he smiled.  I said nothing.  A minute or two later he moved one seat away from me.

As the panel went on, I cooled somewhat, or maybe I warmed up a little again.  I listened to Tom Chiarella talk about getting published with Esquire.  I listened to an agent discuss how to present story ideas, and in the process hand off a compliment on an idea from that same girl who’d been scribbling up a storm in my previous, humiliating workshop.  I couldn’t be too mad.  It was an excellent idea.

As the panel ended, I split.  I still wasn’t feeling chatty.  Besides, I had my NaNoWriMo group was meeting in half an hour.  I didn’t want to be late for talking about November’s novel challenge, especially since coffee would be involved.  I might have smiled a bit at the realization that, while I’d felt humiliated a mere hour beforehand, I was now eagerly darting off to a meeting of writers. 

At the meeting, conversation turned to my conference attendance.
“How’d that go?” one of my NaNo compatriots asked.
I smiled, “It went pretty well, really.  I had a great time.  Totally melted on this one exercise though!  It was this descriptive exercise, and my brain locked up completely.  Apparently, I’m terrible with description in a story setting, which means I should never be a writer,” I paused and smiled, “which I am now describing…while sitting in a meeting with a group of writers.  Yeah, it’s obviously turned me off of writing for life!”

Piling the Plate Full

I’ve been remiss in posting for a couple of weeks, and it shows. I have tons of news, and I’m afraid if I don’t do it quick and short, well, it’s not gonna get done for another two weeks. So here goes…

I survived a night of criticism at my fiction group. The group overall seemed to really enjoy my flash fiction (it was only 1 1/2 pages long), though I did get some thoughts from one member that hit me a little negatively. This isn’t to say that the guy was being out of line. I think he said what needed to be said, but naturally, all I heard was, “You’re not good enough.” The good news is, after being down about it for about sixteen hours, I let that go, and decided I’d just keep working at it, and that all kinds of criticism are necessary for my growth. After all, if no one ever said I needed to improve, it wouldn’t be very helpful. I came to the group to learn to write better, so it’s working.

I have not had much time to work on the RBS, which has pained me greatly. Hugely. Horrifically. However, I’ve survived somehow, and today I was able to put in a few hours, and I’m overjoyed to say that I finally got all the tweaks out of my first piece that I feel I could manage. Then, I took a deep breath, clamped everything in place, lit the big torch, and gave the soldering another shot. It is with boundless happiness that I report the soldering is a success! This is not to say that’s it’s perfect, or even very pretty, but it is a solid joint that will do the mechanical job it needs to do of holding the pieces together. This means I can move on to more of the assembly process. Woot! Can I get an “Amen?”

This week has been huge with creative revelations/realizations of opportunity. One, I was clued in on a challenge called National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo, for the initiated), and decided that I would embrace it and take it on. The crux of it is that you are challenged to write 50,000 words and create a novel between the dates of November 1 and November 30. Cool, right? Crazy, right? Fun, yes? YES! I am so excited! I actually got all signed up online and today was able to meet some fellow NaNo-ers at a coffee shop here in town. They all have experience with it, and each one has completed the challenge. It sounds like it’s going to result in nothing but an excellent time. I can’t wait to get started! (No, you are not allowed to start ahead of time.)

In other art-within-a-narrow-timeframe news, just this afternoon my brother and I were having lunch, and I was relating NaNoWriMo ramblings, and he says something about “Masterpiece in a Day.” I said, “What are you talking about?” He says, “Artists get together down at Fountain Square and make a piece of art work in one day.” It took me about 90 seconds to decide that I was all in on it. While the contest is open to writing, visual, and music arts, I have naturally decided that I will be devoting my energies to an RBS. I so want to have a completed piece! It’s September 27th, and you can find out more about it here.

There you have it, kids, the ten-minute update on my creative life. I have plans to finish my current RBS by the end of September, and I’ll have the second one completed at Masterpiece in a Day, and by December first I will have written a novel.

Oddly enough, when I go to the buffet, I don’t really pile my plate high. Guess I make up for that in other ways.

Changing of the Venue #2 – “Latte, please.”

Events transpired much more quickly than I could have anticipated. When I wrote the first Change of Venue blog on Friday night I knew I was going to visit a friend in Ohio on Saturday. I did not know that the following conversation would take place once I was in Ohio:

Friend: “You need anything? ‘Nother drink?”
Me: “Eh, maybe. Not sure what I want though.”
F: “Another diet Coke?”
M: “Nah.”
F: “Coffee?”
M: “Hmm…maybe.”
F: “There’s a great coffee shop down the street.”
M: “Really? You know, on my latest blog I’ve been saying I was going to blog from a coffee shop…”

I didn’t go right at that moment, but the thought stayed in my head, and today when my friend asked, “So, wanna do anything in particular?” I said, “Well, I think I’ll go write from that coffee shop. Not only is it a change of venue, it’s a change of state.”

So here I am, hanging out in a place called Stauf’s drinking a latte and enjoying the hell out of myself. It’s been a fabulous weekend hanging out with my friends, and this makes the desire to write rise to the surface. It’s pretty easy to sit down and scriptulate when I’m not in my house with its many ready distractions (finishing the shower, cleaning, laundry, replacing the oil pan on the Chevelle – you know, the usual).

This place is pretty much how you’d want a coffee shop to be. It’s an independent, so it looks suitable cool and funky. There are the requisite 20-somethings with appropriately unkempt-looking hair working the counter. Without moving my head at all I can spot four other laptops. A red-haired girl sits to my right working on something out of a school text, and the necessary dude in dreadlocks just walked in with his canvas man purse slung to one side. It’s all rolled together into a cliche with which I’m quite comfortable right now (oh, and by the way, if anyone can instruct me as to how to put the accent marks over the “e” for latte and for cliche, I’d sure love to know. The incorrectness is driving me nuts.)

I can’t be much of anything except relaxed right now. I’ve got air conditioning, caffeine, and a laptop. I’m doing one of the things I love to do most right now, and it is physically impossible for me to be removed for some other task at this moment. Call it escapist if you like, but I really think it’s just exploiting a window of opportunity. I love my window.

Speaking of, there is a wall of windows immediately to my left. This is an old store front along a row of similar buildings. It could have been a grocery in the past, or a hardware store, or a dress shop, but the idea back then was that you’d have all your wares displayed in the windows so that when folks walked by (as there were no malls back in those glorious days) people could see things that might attract their attention, and then come inside for a look, and hopefully a purchase.

What this affords me in the present day is a gorgeous view of the street outside. The weather this weekend has been unbelievably gorgeous – cool, breezy, hardly any humidity. It’s the definition of perfect Midwestern weather. As such there is a large amount of foot traffic, and I have the opportunity to do some people watching, plus some machinery watching as various cars and motorcycles wheel past.

I have no desire to leave this place. Actually, several times when I’ve visited here I’ve thought that this town, and this particular part of this town, is really where I should move to, and really for no reason at all other than the fact that I get a good vibe from it. Then again, my friends and their kids are so awesome, maybe I just take those feelings and throw them out into the area.

It’s probably a combination of factors, perhaps just the desire to escape from the reality of some of my responsibilities back home. Tomorrow will lead to yet another day at the same old job, the job that doesn’t encourage growth in any of my natural abilities. Hell, last night I had the greatest conversation with another woman at my friend’s house. She’s running an art studio, and so we talked about various creative pursuits, and she was very encouraging of my desire to build some kinetic art – those rolling ball sculptures that I’ve got in the back of my head. She asked me why I hadn’t done any of it yet, and I said, “Well, I got some parts made up for it, and then I realized how big it was going to have to be, and I don’t have room to build that big!” And she said, “It’s too bad you don’t live around here or you could rent one of my studios. We need someone like that in there.” And in my head there was this little voice going, “YES! That’s what I need! I need a place to build these things!”

So I said, “Yeah, I can’t find space like that close enough to my house to make it worthwhile. But I still want to do it. I was thinking last night, ‘I really don’t use my dining room furniture. I should just get rid of it, get rid of my stereo, some other stuff, then I could just build the whole thing in my living room.”
She said, “You should do that! You obviously want to build it!”
I replied, “I did think about it, and I would do that, but then I’d have to tear up the carpet, ’cause I’d set it on fire with the welding.”
She said, “Is it nice carpet?”
“No. It’s gross. It’s turquoise.”
“Then you should totally do that!”

I love that. I love that thinking. ‘Tear up your carpet, sell your furniture, and build something.’ Really, the world works for me like that. I’m still probably not going to do it, but to have a conversation with someone who thinks that’s a good idea – that just makes the world a better place for me to live in.

What we did discuss me doing is working, or at least starting, on a smaller scale. We talked about copper wire as opposed to recycled car and motorcycle parts. I’d like to make a tabletop design for a relative of mine, a little boy who loves to sit still and watch things. I’m going to go to the hardware store and see what I can find in the way of materials.

My latte has nearly bottomed out here, my friends. I believe it’s time for me to go. I’m glad you could all come along with me for my off-site, outta-state litscribblings. Stay tuned for posts from the shop, and – Kevin’s ultimate curiosity – the meaning of writing “from the pits at the drag strip.” Rock on.