I sent off another story yesterday. Now I’m wondering if I sent it to the right place. It’s how the self-doubt starts. In a few weeks, if I don’t receive a response, the question will shift in a subtle way. It will become something very different. It will turn into “Was it ready to send out?" And then “Did I need to do more work on it?” And all of a sudden, like a trap door dropping
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: religious, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 6 of 6

Blog: wordswimmer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: making mistakes, silence, self-doubts, belief in yourself, how to keep writing, questioning one's self-worth, Add a tag

Blog: wordswimmer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: making mistakes, risk-taking, a writer's choices, act of defiance, playing it safe, Add a tag
Every time we sit down to write, we must make a choice. Do we play it safe or do we take a risk? Do we create a story that lets us feel safe and grounded, a story that removes danger (and threats of danger) from our world? Or do we create a story that forces us to climb a high wire and take risks, to reach into the dark box of our hidden (and not-so-hidden) fears and confront them?
.jpeg?picon=3680)
Blog: TWENTY TEN Bridget Whelan (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: grammar, Samuel Beckett, making mistakes, Add a tag

Blog: wordswimmer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: making mistakes, making mistakes, writing process, Add a tag
Mistake - (n) a fault in understanding, perception, interpretation, etc; blunder; error, misunderstanding. (Webster's New World Dictionary, college edition)Unless you swim in a pool with thick, black lines painted clearly on the bottom, or which has strings of egg-shaped floats separating the pool into lanes, you can easily swim off course. It's even easier to swim off course in a lake or in the

Blog: Sugar Frosted Goodness (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: sketchbook, josh pincus, religious, Add a tag
Here's my "angels and demons"
There is really no explanation needed, as I really had no thought process towards the end result.
But, I like it.
Do you like it? Let me know what you think.....
Read the rest of this post

Blog: Sugar Frosted Goodness (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: sketchbook, PYBOT, josh pincus, sacreligious, religious, Add a tag
Since today is PYBOT, I decided to post two of my favorites from my sketchbook. The "religious" themes are purely coincidental...
jesus on his day off
and
barbra streisand is the pope
Great post, Bruce.Okay, I'll jump in and share a recent experience with being reluctant to veer off-course, but finally giving in.I just finished the first draft of a middle grade novel. In my original vision of the story, one of the central characters was an adult (an eccentric, rather dim-witted adult). Since I spend a lot of time thinking about story before I put pen to paper, by the time I
Barbara,Your example is wonderful!Not only do you show how a writer needs to be open to swimming in new directions... but you reveal the process by which you let go of one vision and reached for another, not quite knowing what you were reaching for. That kind of reaching (in the dark) takes courage, and raises another question: how does a writer know when it's time to let go? Maybe others will
Interesting to read more of Barbara's writing experiences. I have to say that few of my original name choices seem appropriate by the time my character has revealed more of his/her self in the story.Also, I've gone back and changed first-person stories into third-person limited at least twice, and thought they seemed better, but who knows for sure which, if either, was a "mistake?" Even if the
Jack,Names, as you suggest, often change in the process of creating characters. Does that mean the earliest name was a mistake? Or was it instead a step on the path to learning the character's true name?Same for first person vs third person. Why should we say it's a mistake to write in one pov vs another... if, in the end, we find our story? Maybe the "mistake" helped us hear something different.
And addendum to my post about veering off-course: I had a long conversation with my editor yesterday (after which we will be starting contract negotiations - woohoo). When I told her that that particular character had started out as a dim-witted adult but I had changed her to a child, she said, "Oh, I'm so glad you did. Children are so much more interesting than dim-witted adults.":-)
Barbara, I feel like you've just announced the sighting of a new planet (filled with characters who I'm eager to meet). It's just lovely to imagine a new book of yours on the way.In the meantime, good luck with the negotiations. (A contract is one case where, perhaps, making mistakes isn't the best way to learn things.)
An interesting subject, this mistakes. Who defines what constitutes a mistake? Who says there is any such thing as a mistake, or that they are, in some sense, a bad thing.Is there any more creative 'person' than mother nature, who invented flying, the eye, swimming under water, and all sorts of other things... and what does mother nature rely on? MISTAKES. Evolution works by copying genes
Thanks for sharing your insights into mistakes. I especially enjoyed the phrase "mind-forged manacles" as a way of describing how our own expectations--or fears--can ensnare us.