January 31st, 2012

cluttered thinking?

I found this on Farnam

When your environment is cluttered, the chaos restricts your ability to focus. The clutter also limits your brain’s ability to process information. Clutter makes you distracted and unable to process information as well as you do in an uncluttered, organized, and serene environment.

Yikes. Better add “clean the frak up” to the list for tomorrow.

Now if I can only find the list. I’m sure I put it in this pile.

January 25th, 2012

from January 22 2012

My office is s space near the only window. I have a long L-shaped desk with my computer at the L’s foot. The riser on the L has a small shelf that allows a row of paper files underneath and stacks of reference books and a huge peace lily over top. The window sill is covered with mother-in-law-tongues which are growing so well that their top spears are bent over by the low ceiling. There is a small wall cut-out just over the end of the L of my desk which looks into the kitchen. Underneath that a small rolling shelf holds more reference books (non-English languages) and my scanner. Other than that, there are book shelves.

I catalog my books at LibraryThing.com and currently I have 1,865 books in this tiny “garden” flat. All the wall space is taken by books. I’ve had to put 4 tall book shelves back to back to make walls down the length of the living/dining room. I do have a small table but it is backed into a corner between a reading chair and another book shelf. The table holds plants which I water once a week and which the cats eat then disgorge in interesting places during the night.

There is always something that needs cleaning and my sense of obligation to that need is why I mostly start new ideas away from home.

When forced to think new thoughts at home, I retreat into my bedroom and start this way, by writing about something else altogether. Normally it would be just gobbledegook of the “I’m really annoyed at my fucked-up inner ears and why the fuck do I get dizzy every time I get so much as a sniffle and jeezus fuck I am upset because I really wanted to walk today and this means I can’t”. I keep going and more often than not something will surface that might turn into a poem.

On days when I can go out I will often just take my notebook. I prefer to write directly on a computer but there are days when I really just want to attend to what is around me so I leave books and computers at home and just take the notebook. I have learnt that if I don’t write down those phrases that surface, or those feelings, or odd images, then they will just float away and even if I can recall the sense they gave me, the specificity of the experience will vanish. So I take a notebook and pen.

On other days I will go to Waves or Calhoun’s with my my baby computer and just start typing what I notice. I treat reality like a dream and try to figure out what the dream characters (the table, the tree outside, the crow stealing crumbs from a cafe table) mean – and what this “dream” is saying. I wrote Rammstein like that, in a haze of migraine pain.

I only use music when working on a piece that has a specific feel to it. I’ve got the idea or phrase-seed outside somewhere and have brought it home to work it to what I call a first draft stage. Sometimes by the time I get home the feeling that came to verbal fruition as that particular bit of language has gone. If I can’t re-surface it, I go though my i-Tunes list and find something that is similar and write to that. That is often very successful. Other than than I prefer silence, or if noise, the kind you get on the street or up the mountain in a forest.

I seem to have two main areas of trouble when it comes to production. The first is that I am not a steady kind of person. I blow like steam in a high wind. I do not do routine well so some days I just walk, some days I just browse youtube, political sites, and photography blogs. Some days I read all day and stay under that particular sea. There are duty days too, in which shopping, cleaning, cooking things get done. So I can go many days without doing any serious writing. One of the reasons I started tailfeather was to make those breaks shorter. It works, but I still need to write more poetry.

I can say that writing poetry is hard, and that would be true. Revision is a bitch. But really, once I am in that quiet body zone, just attending to the world, the phrases surface regardless of whether I think I’m writing poetry or not. The trick is to go into the world prepared for that, to stop and write them down, to carve out time each and every day to shift from chore-world to attention-world. It really doesn’t take much to do that, but it does take at least intent.

January 24th, 2012

writing journal

For a number of reasons I’ve started a writing journal. I won’t be subjecting you to all my ramblings, but since I find other writers’ habits utterly fascinating, you may be interested in mine. So I’ve created a new category called “writing journal” and will be posting to it occasionally.

As always, I would love to hear your habits, thoughts, feelings on the topic. How do you manage that dark spring?

Comment here or email me at mary@tailfeather.ca

January 23rd, 2012

writing advice received

I found a wonderful article.

I knew it was wonderful when I read this.

Write when the book sucks and it isn’t going anywhere. Just keep writing. It doesn’t suck. Your conscious is having a panic attack because it doesn’t believe your subconscious knows what it’s doing.

Before that it was just great.

January 10th, 2012

it’s amazing how

moving can clear my head. Such a lovely day here, so I spent the daylight portion out-of-doors. I drove for part of it then, later, walked.

What I “discovered” is that to a large degree intent has much to do with where my mind goes – whether it is into dream-land or otherwise.

I need to get back on the page and write more now that I’ve had my holiday break, so I just packed my book bag with a notebook and nothing else. No novels, no easy escape fun-books. When I stopped for lunch during the drive, I pulled it out and – voilà – the words started popping.

When I was driving again (actually waiting to cross the border) I just kept going, and despite being mobile for most of the day I produced more yesterday than in the previous two weeks.

I think it’s a bit like clearing the blockage in the sink – once you do that the water goes down hill. Surprise!

January 9th, 2012

in a dreamy place

Since the end of December I’ve been in a kind of dreamy place. Not unpleasant, but definitely unproductive. I haven’t read much really, nor written much either and that has to stop asap since I have huge production deadlines coming up.

I’ve been wondering about the slow-down. I suppose part of it is just a natural ebb and flow, but I think there is something rooting in the dark of my head. I keep having weird-ass dreams, for one thing. For another, I keep getting surprised by these little snippets of language that seem most un-Mary.

I think I’ll probably need to do some automatic writing or something akin to that to pry it up. Don’t have any more time that I can really give to this dream state.

Oh well.

July 16th, 2011

other people’s words

In the last several days I’ve been trying an experiment. I spend several hours every day without books.

I know right! Me without books!

It’s probably a short-lived experiment but so far it’s had interesting results. The thing about other people’s words is that they are not one’s own. Not a revelation, or it shouldn’t have been, but it was a bit, I have to admit.

I had begun to notice that these ideas for poems, little phrases, bitty images, kept circling in my head, popping out of rose bushes and sneaking around the corner of my bedroom door, but they were not writing themselves down. Even worse when I tried, for a few minutes, to get them pinned to a page they refused! Gosh. How annoying.

So I had to leave other people’s words at home, go walking, find a dry place (with coffee if possible) and force myself to sit still and not read for a minimum of three hours at a time. You know what happened? After the first twenty minutes or so things started to get a bit better. Who knew?! You have to actually work at writing!

June 5th, 2011

writing poetry

It is so much easier to read and think about poetry than to write it. This is not a surprise to you, I’m sure.

Part of the problem is how much one knows, I think. I am compelled by the way words do their thing. Their sound, meanings, history, rhythm, grammatical hierarchy,the way they transform when they jump between cultures, the way they feel in the mouth, when they bounce inside the ear, all these bits are part of what makes a poem work, or not work. Knowing that, reading poems where it all comes together to erupt as a river from the rock of normal language, I find myself overwhelmed by the feeling I get when that seed which is a poem to come springs out from my dark mind.

I’ve had to make an actual list of steps in the writing of poetry in order to moderate the flood of despairing humility I feel in the  presence of what could be a poem. Ok I tell myself just do this little bit today. Then you can let it settle into the page for a while. You don’t need to get it flowing right now. And I have to let the words settle, sometimes for months, and in some cases, it appears, for years before I can make coherent that initial impulse, that feeling which surfaced into awareness from some chance alignment between my senses and the world. And if I go back to it and the words no longer make sense, I just consider the words as rain, vanished into a karst landscape, running down some stalactite deep in my wordless world.

But if there is still some sense there, something to speak about, then I take the next step. Because really poetry is only that when communicated. Like water is only a river when it is running between places, poems only exist between readers. Otherwise they are feelings, bits of knowing, assumptions, perhaps, but not poems.

I’d be happy if I wrote one really good poem; ecstatic if two. Then it might mean I had learnt to dance. But of course  the more I read, the more I learn, the further away one good poem seems to get. I feel like Scott Carrier chasing antelope.

I loved this little 7 minute Ted Talk.  The first segment, on gov speak (government documentation of process supposedly for the public but in fact for each other) (0:49) compared to a Nike ad is hilarious. I also really like the idea of redefining apathy as something not an inherent problem of a single individual but an institutionalized set of barriers and limitations. It seems to me, if nothing else, worth playing with as an idea.

via Wimp

OMG! OMG!

I downloaded Scrivener about two hours ago and I already have the structural outline of that first little book my daughter wants me to write.

I’ve always been an index card kind of writer when it comes to bigger things and the idea of starting all that work and organization for this little guy (A Witch’s Guide to Celebration) proved too much for my tired (post-return-to-work) self. But now I have Scrivener, and there it is. Done. I even have most of the writing seeds in the digital index cards that are part of the software design so, should I have some energy left after my volunteer gig at the charity telethon tomorrow (I’m manning a phone line), I can just write that little section – address that one little seed.

Now I have to figure out how to update across computers so that I can take my baby laptop and then update my home system when I return.