Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
Publish
or Perish: It's Not Only for Academia,
Part 2 |
by:
Emily
Hanlon |
The
Writer's Journey Is the Biggest Payoff of
All!
There are ways, too, to share our writing
short of being published. Several come to
mind. I think of Terry, a writer in one
of my weekly workshops. He'd been working
on his book for several years and during
that time, the make-up of the group hadn't
changed much. All five of us had pretty
much been with Terry throughout the creation
of his novel. When he read the last chapter
for what he hoped would be the last time,
we listened, wanting it to work for his
sake, but knowing if it didn't, we would
tell him that, too. I remember my heart
beating faster as he read. It's working,
so far. so far. I kept thinking. And it
was! When he finished, we spontaneously
burst into applause and cheering-there were
even a few wet eyes! The ending was perfect.
Grinning, Terry said, "This is as good as
it gets, isn't it?"
I have to agree with him. For what agent,
editor or reader is going to know all that
it took for Terry to triumph as he did?
No one else, but Terry himself, can love
his characters so deeply as those of us
who had shared in their creation.
I think, too, of my own experiences during
the writing of Petersburg. My daughter was
a freshman at the University of Vermont.
She was quite unhappy the first semester,
so my husband and I made the seven hour
trip to Burlington at least twice a month.
During those drives, I read chapters and
chapters of the book. He gave me feedback.
We talked and argued over characters. He
challenged me, as he is wont to do. Our
love for the characters as well as the characters
themselves grew with the sharing. And together
we developed the plot. (I called him "The
Plot Meister".) We cried, too, as events
brought pain, sorrow, joy, redemption and
finally resolution into the character's
lives. I remember the day I read him the
last chapter of Petersburg. We were driving
down a highway banked in snow and tears
were flowing so furiously, my husband had
to pull over to the side of the road.
Another memory. It was eleven o'clock at
night and the phone rang. I picked it up
and my daughter shouted at me, "How could
you? I'll never forgive you! Never!"
"What? I asked. "What did I do?" She was
very angry and I couldn't imagine why.
"You killed him! You killed _____!" (I won't
tell you who, in case you haven't read Petersburg
yet and would like to. Don't want to ruin
the suspense!) "How could you kill him off?
I loved him. I'll never forgive you for
that. Never!"
I smiled. My Inner Writer and I were taking
flight!
Even now, writing this brings back the intensity
of these experiences, none of which would
have been diminished if the book had not
been published. And each of which hold far
deeper, more tender places in my heart than
any publication kudos.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
One of the great challenges that we face
as writers is to understand in the core
of our beings that the journey of being
a writer is the biggest payoff of all. That's
when the magic happens, when unknown corridors
within open, when writing becomes the song
of the soul. There is inexpressible pleasure
that comes from the unleashed imagination;
the effortless flow of words; the appearance
of characters who say the unexpected and
do the unpredictable. There is inexpressible
pleasure in waking up in the morning, hungry
to return to my characters and their stories.
Then there is no such thing as a "bad writing
day." Then there is only the writing, and
my doing what feels as natural as breathing.
I have come to believe that the "bad days"
only seem more prevalent than the "good
days" when I am dry of passion. And that
only happens when the insidious brute, Publish
or Perish, sneaks up on me. I hope one day
soon to be fully free of the brute, to know
as surely as I breathe that every day I
write will be a good day, simply because
I have written.
In closing, I am taking lines from a cumulative
poem, Why I Write from The Message Board
of The Fiction Writer's Journey.
Why I Write.
A cumulative poem
Writing is soul, breath, it is the way into
self and the universe.
Words become like one-way mirrors,
our characters see their reflection,
while we see through the mirror,
in search of the I
I do not know I am.
Giving life to imagination,
filling it with color, texture, passion.
Sipping the wine of words with the Muse
I am emboldened, enlivened,
at one with the Universe.
Inside there is chaos waiting to be understood
...
waiting to be written into order.
And there is also order waiting
to turn into wildness and freedom through
words.
Writing is a WOW!
It is the punch of life pulsing through
minds.
To add flames to a fire that burns inside.
To explore parts of my soul that I have
not yet touched.
To satisfy something with-in. To find a
voice. To dig deep. To be.
To revive the lilting, longing
of the impervious soul.
To feel my pen glide across the paper
To become more human
And somehow less.
Less afraid to be the real you,
Less willing to give into others.
More willing to grow as a person,
More able to fight your demons.
I write because then I can be heard, and
fully known
....heard by the universe of my mind.
To give in to the desperate longing
of my soul to reveal itself.
To provide a voice
For silent thoughts
That scream to have a choice
I write to remember who I am.
to drink in the light of the moon.
to illuminate the day
and extinguish the night
to fight fright.
I write quite simply, because my characters
want me to.
They have a tale to tell, and have chosen
me to tell it.
Who am I to ignore such generous offers
of story telling?
About the author:
Emily Hanlon is a writing coach who works
with writers all over the world on the telephone.
She is the author of 8 books of fiction,
including Petersburg, translated into several
languages and reached the best sellers list
in England. She leads writing retreats for
women and workshops in this country and
abroad. Her websites are: http://www.thefictionwritersjourney.comand
http://www.awritersretreat.com
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|