Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

don't worry


I think it's just a run-of-the-mill chest cold. Still, it's perfectly crappy timing, what with the reading on Friday and Ohio next week. I hate bringing germs to Ohio and my mother and her borrowed lung and compromised immune system. Hopefully I'm better by then.

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I did something unwise over the weekend, and I think I'll continue to do unwise things all my life because they are oh-so-good for poem starters. Like the little half-egg carton full of fire-starters that girl scout leaders take to camp, I carry all my stupid decisions with me and pull one out when the kindling is damp. If everything I did was premeditated and made perfect sense, I would definitely not be a writer.

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Tomorrow is the deadline for the Juniper prize, which I had originally planned to submit to, but I've been lazy the last few days (blame it on the cold) and am not totally ready. Then I was looking over the guidelines and realized the Juniper prize isn't a first book contest, and well, maybe I don't want to enter open competitions. Am I just making excuses so I can miss another deadline, or am I being smart and saving $25 on a contest I have no chance of winning?

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Time to go to Italian class. Ciao.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

The Road

I started my day by crying over the end of The Road. I tried to finish it last night, but fell asleep with about 40 pages left. Eric was right. It's amazing. I won't do any kind of mini-review, because I'm sure that there are many already out there, but will say that McCarthy is so good at the fragment sentence, at the occasional philosophical observation, at layering simple images to make something more complex, that every writer, regardless of genre, should read this book over and over.

What I'm thinking about this morning, though, is the toll writing a book like this must have on the author. There's been a lot of talk lately about how troubled Heath Ledger was before his death because of the difficult role of the Joker, and I think that writers must go through a similar process when working on an emotionally difficult or intense project. I don't know about you, but for me to recreate an emotion with any kind of accuracy, I have to force myself to feel that emotion. That's one of the many reasons I've turned to poetry in the last few years--the format allows me to capture what I need to capture without wallowing for too long in something ugly.

This is also one of the reasons I'm hesitant to start working on this nonfiction project I've got rolling around in my head. It's about me, my mother, my family, and the events leading up to my mother's lung transplant. It's about the greatest fear and the greatest sadness I've ever felt, but also about hope and faith. To really get it on paper, I have to go back to a version of myself that I'm very happy to have left behind. Can I go there without getting stuck?

So I wonder--are there writers who can deal with bad feelings without feeling bad feelings? Have I just not learned the art of detachment? Or is this part of being an "Artist"--that stereotypical narcissistic persona who must suffer in order to create?

Saturday, November 03, 2007

The Biz

Lately, I seem to have forgotten the root of all this madness in my life: an absolute obsession with writing. When I decided to go to grad school instead of going on the HR job market 4 years ago, it was so I could find out if writing could be more than a hobby for me. Could I stick with it? Would I continue to enjoy it if I didn't have to steal the time from something else? Would I be able to hone my tiny gift into a real talent, a skill that might bring someone (besides me) some enjoyment?

The answer to all those questions is a resounding "yes," but I haven't written a poem just because in months. Everything has been about finishing my thesis. Will this poem fit? Will my workshopping buddies approve? Will my profs/thesis committee be proud of what I've done?

That's not to say that I don't like the poems I've written for my thesis--I LOVE most of them, I'm amazed at what I've learned and what I've managed to accomplish these past few years... but today, I'm feeling like everything I do is a business transaction. I'm tired of weighing priorities and itemizing every minute so I can keep up with it all. Where's the spontaneous creativity, the blood-pounding, skin crawling need to put pen to paper? Have I intellectualized it away?

This isn't a crisis of faith or anything; I'm not changing my plans for pursuing a PhD and I'm going to continue trying to publish, I'm just worried that I'm taking myself and this part of my life much too seriously. I need to let the joy back in. Maybe throw away the to do list and just follow my whims. But that's not very practical, and I still have a lot to do if I want my plans to work out the way I think they will.

Maybe this has to do with the fact that I completely, completely bombed the subject test this morning. I'll be surprised if I'm in the 40th percentile. I care only because I usually do better, because I usually try harder...but I chose not to study and what can I expect after making a decision like that? I'm still hoping that the other parts of my application out weigh whatever the outcome of this test was, but I'm embarrased that I didn't put in more effort.

Alas, there's nothing I can do now, except go pour a glass of wine and try to relax. I can start stressing out again in the morning, right?

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Idea Garden

I've been wanting to do Jeannine's 10 books that influence you meme, but for some reason, I'm having a hard time with it. I think something is wrong with me.

Two books that pop in my head are Swimming the Witch and Miracle Fruit. Both books help me eke out ideas about my own life, help me make connections that I wouldn't normally. But I don't think there are any other books that do that for me. So often, even if I love a book, I can't go back to it for ideas, they only come on the first reading.

Most of my poem ideas come from conversations, my old journals, and pictures. That's why I worry that I'll run out of poems. I don't really, though, not lately, because the ideas are coming so fast my primary concern is whether or not I'll have time to put them on paper.

Speaking of having time, I have a lot of work to do today. I shouldn't be blogging.

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Like a Virgin

Every week, I rush to get my reading, grading, and class plans done so that I can focus on my poems for a day or two. I carry around a folder marked "THESIS" in big black letters. I keep an excel spreadsheet full of poem titles, revision dates, submission dates, rejections, editors, publications, themes, where they're saved on my computer...and I update this on an almost daily basis. I have become neurotic about poems. neurotic about my thesis, a chapbook, a manuscript...which is which? where do the poems belong? does everything I put in my thesis have to end up in a book? where are the rest of the poems going to come from, and when?

I don't know if it is because I am consumed by this idea of being "A Poet" or if it is an actual problem, but things are just not moving fast enough for me. Strange thing is, I've written two or three poems in the last couple weeks that I really like and think are ready to send out--which doesn't usually happen so quickly--yet I'm frustrated, tired of waiting for inspiration to strike, tired of waiting for ideas to come to me. Aren't I poet enough to make the poems come at will?

I sent out a bunch of poems at the end of winter break, and most of them have come back to me already (which is what I wanted), rejected. That's okay. I know I'm just starting out and I know that rejections are part of the gig. I'm not complaining. But, now that I'm in the business of collecting rejection letters, I also need to be in the business of sending things back out. And I'm having a terrible time deciding which poems to put together and which journals to submit to. I was just reading Kristy's thoughts on on-line vs. print journals (a debate which I was only vaguely aware of) and I'm realizing there are journals that I "should" want to get into more than others. I don't really have any heirarchy in mind--except whether or not I like the stuff I see in them. Maybe I'm not paying enough attention to what is going on around me. Maybe I should know that journal A has a better reputation that journal B. But I don't. And I kinda want to keep it that way. Maybe it's altruistic, but I think if my work has merit, it will be appreciated regardless of where it is published (or where my degree is from--which is important since I'm getting my MFA from a relatively unheard of program).

I guess what I'm saying is that I'm having a little "coming of age" moment as a poet. I'm still excited, more excited than I can explain, to be writing and trying to get published and feeling proud when I tell people that I write because finally I can say yes when they ask if I'm published. However, I'm also becoming aware for the first time of the politics involved, of the strategy behind submissions, and that no matter how much I want it to be, it's not just about the work. I've always been good at working the system, learning the rules and making them work for me, so I'm not worried. But I am a little sad. Just like when I was 18 and realized that my first "true love" wasn't going to last forever. It opens up a world of opportunity, but leaves behind an innocence and naivete that I'm going to miss.

Well, I think that's enough pontification before breakfast.

Thursday, February 08, 2007

As promised...

a happy blog!

I finished all my homework for the week except for my poem. Now I have until Saturday morning to let my creative juices flow.

Just 3 tiny weeks til Hotlanta...where the world isn't frozen.

I was reading some theory last night...and it made sense! I think there's a saturation point where if you read enough of it, you just start to get it. Halle-freaking-leujiah. PhD's, here I come!

The sun is shining, and has been for several days. If I never go outside, I can pretend it is nice out. This is very unusual for February in Akron.

Now, it's time to watch Dawson's Creek while I eat my breakfast. What could be better?

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Muse-ings

I found myself wandering this morning to some blogs I don't usually read, and found this: cafe cafe's December Poetry Challenge. I've decided to play along, although not all the way, since I'm posting here instead of there, but whatever. This is what I know about my muse.

She doesn't have a name--at least not one that she tells me--and she is a hopeless romantic, a lonely girl obsessed with tears and broken hearts, and I think she may be a little bipolar. She first crawled out of the pages of Little House on the Prairie and whispered that I could be like Laura Ingalls if I tried. She made me notice that equal parts of snow and afternoon sunlight made diamonds, and my first poem was born. She was with me when there was no one else to play with, when Mom was busy, and Dad was at work or sleeping off 3rd shift, and my older sister was away at school. My muse and I would play in the back yard. She would tell me stories that I never thought to write down, but still linger in the sleepy parts of my mind.

As teenagers, my muse and I would sit in my bedroom with the door shut, and she would hold my hand to paper until my wrists ached. No one understood us except the paper, so we stayed shut away from the world as often and as long as we could. Later, when I thought I was a grown up but didn't understand what that meant, she helped me to learn. She told me when it was time to leave the guy I thought I'd love forever, and helped me put myself back together.

For the next few years, my muse and I didn't spend much time together. I was in college and working full time and I only made time for her when she insisted that I listen, when she noticed something that I didn't, or figured out the answer I was seeking before I was even aware of the question. When we started grad school, we were both a little rusty.

My muse is a little miffed that I went looking for help. We'd always gotten along fine just the two of us, she said, and why was I asking all these outsiders to read my work? She took an unscheduled vacation for a few weeks and left me floundering for something to say. She was pretty upset when my first workshop poem got torn to shreds. We had worked on that poem for hours. Eventually, she cooled down and came back to me, realizing that the poems that had held us together during all those lonely times weren't the kind of poems I needed to be writing.

Still, my muse is happiest when I am at my worst. When I'm sad, or feeling sorry for myself, or so stressed out that I can't sleep, then she is there, standing behind me, or sitting on the edge of the bed, whispering "isn't there a poem here?" She still makes me write about broken hearts and lonliness, but these poems I tuck away. When I try to write something else, something outside of my own experience, or at least a little more universal, she still sneaks tears into most first drafts. We fight a lot these days. I keep asking her why she won't move on, and she keeps telling me I'm not ready to leave behind the themes that forced me to write in the first place. The problem is, neither of us knows how to write a poem about tears that hasn't already been written.

In the meantime, she's come to accept the plan that I created...the one where I flesh out family secrets and childhood memories...and sometimes decides to help. She whispers in my ear at readings, so that I stop listening and start jotting things down in my notebook. She makes connections that I would miss, puts two unlike memories in the same poem and makes it work. But she's lazy, and most of the time, I do this on my own. When she's around, poems feel organic and first drafts don't usually change much during the revison process. When she's not, I work hard to put words together. I make plans, take notes, and force the pieces to fit. She sits in the corner, smoking a cigarette and shaking her head. She says she can't help me if I won't listen.