Meteorologically-speaking, 2012 will go down in
the Record Books as The Year of the Drought.
And metaphorically-speaking, as this series of
TeachingAuthors posts affirms, writers too face droughts at some point in their
writing lives.
But Bridget Doyle’s article in the August 18
Chicago Tribune last week emboldened me, the “Non-stop Finder of Life’s Silver
Linings,” (according to my Six-word Memoir), to
share my seemingly-simple prescription for
anyone suffering the pain and heartache of Writer’s Drought.
The Tribune headline read,
"GARDENS THRIVING IN DROUGHT – JUST ADD WATER."
"GARDENS THRIVING IN DROUGHT – JUST ADD WATER."
So, my Rx for writers wishing to thrive during their particular droughts?
Just WRITE!Yes, write.
Maybe not that
Great American Novel you know lives inside of you; maybe not that poetry collection you believe with all your heart you were
put on Earth to write.
But think about it, or rather, think about that
suffix “er.”
er
1.
a suffix used in forming nouns designating persons from the object of their occupation or labor ( hatter; tiler; tinner; moonshiner ), or from their place of origin or abode ( Icelander; southerner; villager ), or designating either persons or things from some special characteristic or circumstance ( six-footer; three-master; teetotaler; fiver; tenner ).
2.
a suffix serving as the regular English formative of agent nouns, being attached to verbs of any origin ( bearer; creeper; employer; harvester; teacher; theorizer ).
(www.dictionary.com)
A writer is
- simply - “a person who writes.”
A writer is - simply - a person who chooses and orders words to (fill in the blank) – tell a story, communicate information, cause a giggle, soothe a hurt, help remember, help remind, share an experience, define a purpose, amuse, entertain, encourage, inspire, copy, imitate, and on-and-on (see The Writing Workout).
(courtesy of www.etc.usf.edu/clipart)
Here’s my partial list of some of what I’ve written during this Summer’s meteorological
Drought here in the Midwest:
- Several poems, two of which, “The Writer’s Drill” and “Super Key Man,” were chosen to be published in THE POETRYFRIDAY ANTHOLOGY!
- Numerous comprehensive
manuscript critiques and narratives for the writers I coach
- Four TeachingAuthors blog posts (which I’ve surprisingly come to love)
- Three Program Proposals
- My CV
- My website updates
- Two Letters of Recommendation for students seeking their MFA’s
- A book blurb for a friend’s upcoming novel
- Postcards to my grandson!
- Letters – the kind that require a U.S. Postage stamp! – to family, friends and RCN Cable
- Thank You Notes
- Condolences
- Celebratory salutations
- Grocery Lists
- To Do Lists
- A Key Lime Pie Recipe
- Weekly letters to my middle grade novel’s character (Just what IS the internal issue you continue to confront as obstacles force you to turn away from realizing your dream of surprising the world?)
- And finally, emails, lots an’ lots of emails! – encouraging, supporting, apprising, affirming, praising, extolling, questioning, answering, clarifying, contributing, recommending, suggesting, explaining, teaching, pontificating, apologizing, empathizing, sympathizing and sometimes, just out-and-out catching up.
But...
I did
spend my summer, despite the drought, purposefully and creatively choosing and ordering a whole lot of words :)
I sure hope you did too!
Esther Hershenhorn, Writer
Writing
Workout: A Writer’s List Poem
Surprise yourself! See how much YOU wrote this
summer!
For starters, revisit this Summer’s days and
nights, noting your Writerly Behaviors.
Next create a list of Everything You Wrote This Summer.
And I mean everything! Contracts,
excuse notes, RSVP’s, contest jokes, directions, songs, tweets, poems, conference
notes, book blurbs, questions for your doctor, a letter to the editor, a magazine
article, letters to your campers, report cards, you-name-it.
Or, create a list of Everything You Wanted to
Write This Summer, but Didn’t – or -
Couldn’t – or - Wouldn’t – or - Shouldn’t.
Think about writing at your keyboard, in your
Writer’s Notebook, on your calendar pages, in the margins of your cookbook, even
on your sidewalk!
Writing in Your Head – i.e. Wandering and
Wondering – counts too.
Think conversations you so wished you’d had; words you wish you’d
spoken; words you wish you’d heard.
Finally, see if you can order your words to
create a list that reflects just who you are, how you come at the world, what
you find pleasant, what makes you smile.
Maybe arrange your actions in alphabetical order
– or by time of day – or by location or people groups.
Tinkering with the words and how they sound and
look is absolutely allowed.
The important thing is, as
Christopher Paul Curtis advises,
“Make sure the writing's got your own
natural funk all over it.”
Congratulations on having not one, but TWO, poems in the POETRY FRIDAY ANTHOLOGY, Esther. Very cool!
ReplyDeleteAnd thanks for another great Writing Workout!