A Brave Writer's Life in Brief - Page 767 of 779 - Thoughts from my home to yours A Brave Writer's Life in Brief
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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

Writing Exhaustion

Writing Exhaustion: Fill the Well

My family has become affectionately attached to the local Shakespeare company in town. The name of the company is the Cincinnati Shakespeare Festival, though they are a year round troupe that performs in an indoor theater. We usher there, my kids go to their camps, participate in their high school performances, and we help with their newsletter. Basically, we’ve made ourselves supreme nuisances and they’ve grown to love us as much as we do them.

One of the actresses has become a close friend of mine. Over coffee one day, she told me that she had decided to spend the following year in England studying voice and taking a break from the demands of a full time acting schedule. Naturally, I was really sad to think we wouldn’t get to enjoy her performances the following season (which turned out to be this last year). So I expressed my disappointment that she would be gone in England for a whole year.

She said, “I’ve used it all up. My inspiration is gone.”

“What do you mean?”

“Everything I do on stage comes from being among people. I watch them, study them, copy them, know them. After two years of non-stop performing, I lose touch with gestures that are natural, motivations, facial expressions, and even lose the energy to create.”

“That makes sense.”

“I’ve spent it all. Now it’s time to fill the well. The only acting I can offer is that which I’ve grown inside among people. Time to get back among people for a bit.”

I’ve thought a lot about Anne’s words to me. As a writer, I hit the same walls occasionally. I’ve hit one this week. I am out of words. I’ve written and written and written so much this semester for Brave Writer, in grad school, completing the high school book, through teaching and suddenly, I’m all used up.

To replenish, I’ve been listening to novels on tape. I’ve been reading other people’s writing. But most importantly, I’ve been gardening. I’ve needed to step back from the printed word and re-engage with the non-verbal side of life to give my mind and imagination the rest they need.

Don’t forget to give your kids the same kind of breaks. Creative thought takes resources that come from the stuff of life. If your kids have been in high production mode for awhile and suddenly seem disinterested and listless, it may just be that they need a change of scene to re-charge the battery for learning and writing.

A Gracious Space
Inkwell image by Liz West (cc cropped, tinted, text added)

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Homeschool Advice | 3 Comments »


Tuesday Teatime: in Arizona

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

While visiting grandparents in Arizona we had a several lovely tea parties! My three little girls were made for this. They especially liked helping to set the table and preparing finger sandwiches. While on this visit we discovered the wonders of “vanilla” and “Irish Cream” flavored loose teas. We tried these at a tea shop and I am thinking now that I must find a source to purchase these – they were heavenly.

Brave Mom

What are your favorite teas? Please share in the comments section of the blog.

And remember, I’m still taking photos and teatime experiences to share on the blog. We’ll have a drawing in June for the one who will win a Brown Betty teapot. In the meantime, anyone who sends a photo and short description of her family’s teatime will receive a free back issue of the Arrow or Slingshot.

Julie

Posted in General, Poetry Teatime | 1 Comment »


On Writing

Writing is thinking on paper.
William Zinsser

You cannot depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus.
Mark Twain

How do I know what I think until I see what I say?
E. M. Forster

The reason one writes isn’t the fact he wants to say something. He writes because he has something to say.
F. Scott Fitzgerald

The author must keep his mouth shut when his work starts to speak.
Friederich Nietzsche

The work never matches the dream of perfection the artist has to start with.
William Faulkner

A blank piece of paper is God’s way of telling us how hard it to be God.
Sidney Sheldon

We are a species that needs and wants to understand who we are. Sheep lice do not seem to share this longing, which is one reason why they write so little.
Anne Lamott

Posted in Advice from the pros, Copywork Quotations, General | Comments Off on On Writing


Friday Freewrite: What is…?

For older kids

Look up the word “justice” in the dictionary. Read the definition.

Then write. Follow where it leads.

For younger kids

Look up the word “friend” in the dictionary. Read the definition.

Then write. Follow where it leads.

Posted in Friday Freewrite, General | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: What is…?


Preparing for the SAT Essay

Preparing for the SAT Essay

…so he’s like “Gurl, I am so busted.” and he starts FREAKING OUT and then she’s like spazzing and ANYWAYS that’s what I think Hamlet meant in this quote. –Jim Borgman (Zits Cartoon)

I couldn’t find the artwork to go with the above cartoon quote that sits on my refrigerator. The picture shows enormous stacks of essay tests to grade with the evaluator holding a gun to his head.

Here are a few quick tips to prepare for the essay portion of the SAT test:

Come prepared

    Pick three topics ahead of time in three areas: literature or history, current events and personal experience. Make sure that you know these topics well ahead of time.

Bend the topic to suit the question

    The SAT questions are values or ideals related. Tweak your topic to suit the value: sucess/failure, greed/generosity, passion/persistence, imagination/knowledge, education/talent. These are the kinds of topics the test will focus on so get used to bending your expertise to those kinds of areas.

Take a position

    It’s fine if you don’t feel fully convinced of the position, just don’t let the essay reader know that. Pick an “I agree” or “I don’t agree” posture and stick with it. The readers don’t evaluate arguments, but they will mark you down for not having a position.

Start with something visual

    If you set a scene or start with an anecdote, the essay will spring to life.

Use transitions

    First, second and third work but are flat-footed. Tie the previous paragraph to the next one by referencing the former and alluding to the subsequent:

And while television is important in emergencies, the reason it is so popular to today has more to do with entertainment…

Remember that two well-developed points are better than three shallow ones

    Deep and narrow, not wide and shallow.

Conclude with a bang!

    Finish with personal experience, a wish, a provocative question, or showing the larger significance of your topic.

Never

    end with “In conclusion…” For some reason, English teachers are hostile to those two words.

Get a good night’s rest. Take two pencils with erasers so if the tip of one breaks, you have another. If you freeze during the test, close your eyes and breathe for a moment. Allow words to come from within and start writing. You can always take the test again.

Good luck!

–julie

Brave Writer offers an online SAT/ACT Essay Class to help students beat the odds.

Check it out!

Image by Nicolas Raymond (cc cropped, circle of text added)

Posted in Tips for Teen Writers | Comments Off on Preparing for the SAT Essay


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