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ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 13, 2007, 6:37 AM: |
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This is an 'addendum' to my Notes Along the Way. I was going to write a special piece about commenting on other people's work, but the thread inspired by Mary's poem Derby Day Noodles more or less states everything I wanted to write. I will copy my notes here, but it would be more useful and make more sense to you if you read the whole thread as it is really a discussion between myself, Ron and Tom. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Be careful of being 'personal' with comments, and by this I mean directly connecting what is 'written' with the writer- Tom, I'm going to use you here, I'm afraid - I'm sure you can take it, at least I hope you can.You wrote: all the people that Mary seems to think so poorly of. Although it's easy assume this is Mary's voice/opinion speaking, we do not know this. At all. When we read prose pieces that are written in the first person, we also don't know if it is the voice of the 'writer', the memories of the writer. Even if we are sure it's autobiographical, we don't know that, and even if it is stated to be autobiographical, we still don't know if what we are told happened 'really happened'. In fact , when you comment on the work, it's far more useful to everyone to assume that what is written has nothing to do with the writer. Ignore the fact that the 'writer' is listening here. Let the work stand by itself, and if you comment, say what is it about the writing that makes you feel excited, bored, interested, happy, angry and so on. If you are confused, see if you can say what it is in the writing that confused you. Your feeling of confusion may be exactly what the writer is intending - or it may simply be that the writer needed to “open up” an area. If you do not link the work to the author in your comments, the writer is able to sit back and receive the comments without having to justify, explain, thank etc. I often talk about how writing is deeply connected to our selves, our souls, our life journey. Poetry seems to express this journey more baldly sometimes than 'fiction' or other writing - but in fact it is no different. I have found it deeply supportive to this journey to treat the writing as 'art' - rather than as therapy. In other words, I do not go into the writer's personal process much - not directly. The writing does this, all by itself. I might make suggestions that lead the writer more closely to places where they fear to tread, or where the 'treasure' is (in my humble opinion), but I've learned, and am still learning, to stay away from connecting the 'work' directly to personal process, to the writer. We go far deeper this way, simply by looking at the writing, by letting the story stand by itself. I'm rattling on here, it's been a long day ( I just gave a half day Diving Deeper workshop) and It's been impossible to get onto Zaadz for hours, but I hope some of this helps. Mary, your poem is clearly very powerful. You do not need to explain what you wrote or what you tried to write. It stands by itself. I hope you will write more - of course you will, nothing is going to stop your muse, I know that. Let any comments sit for a bit - I don't mean ignore them, but you don't have to think them through too hard. If there is something there for you, it will take care of itself - you don't have to do anything about it. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tom responded:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ And I wrote back: ( I also refer to Ron's suggestion to Tom to remove the generalizations in the second last paragraph) I begin to feel some limitation in the 'online dialogue'. I sense that if we were all sitting here together something new could arise, something between the words. I'd hope to start by just sitting, in silence, our eyes closed, breathing. Listening to our breath, listening to the sound of our blood moving, to the sound of the room, the drop of a falling leaf outside, the clouds melting in the pale blue sky. We are exploring not only our art, but our souls, and the soul of the world. Letting the work stand by itself and commenting on it as though it had no connection with the writer is what they do in regular writers workshops, where all the atheists go. The poetry and prose works I've seen in Diving Deeper are windows to the writers' souls, and for me to pretend I'm not peeking would be disingenuous.
It may be better for the tender ego of the writer to speak of their work as if it wasn't the new-born baby of their heart. And it would be a horrible shame to drive someone off because of a personal comment. But how then do we get to the meat of our bone? For me, the soul is more important than the art.
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Re: ON COMMENTINGHappiness said May 13, 2007, 6:49 PM: |
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Sandra: This is enormously compassionate, wise and thoughtful counsel. It sets a highly caring and also professional standard for our work here. Thanks to each of you - you, Tom and Ron for taking the time to express your thinking, and setting a high standard for our future interactions. Required reading for all Workshop members! Blessings, AJN |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 14, 2007, 5:15 AM: |
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Notes on Commenting:
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 14, 2007, 6:20 AM: |
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Notes on Commenting:
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Re: ON COMMENTINGRon said May 14, 2007, 9:17 AM: |
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This says it all Sandra. Thanks for all your thoughtful processing of this core idea surrounding mindful criticism and commentary on other's work. My silly glibness aside, I think if we want to be what this environment exudes we simply need to remember as best we can. If we remember each other it will be enough. File this page in the on-going Diving Deeper Development and Human Resources Library. May we always be in-process. Thanks to us. |
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ON COMMENTING - "oh I'm so sorry..."Sandra said May 22, 2007, 6:03 AM: |
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Thanks Ron. Yes, we need reminders… and I'm so grateful for Pirjo and Synergyz's posts which add yet more to this important part of Diving Deeper. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGLoni Love said May 23, 2007, 6:56 PM: |
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Sandra & Gabriele,
Gabriele, I thank you for your suggestion. I know that it was given with the kindest intentions. I hope you will note that while this thread had many comments there were only three different perspectives given. I find that this is usually the case, and had I not noticed that Sandra's post was a bit longish I would have made no apology for my comment's redundancy at all. I do not hold to any rule about the detail of my comments. Some are more detailed than others, as I feel the occasion calls for. Thank you for the intelligence that this is raw material, and is no where near the editing phase concerned with tenses, wording, spelling, or grammar. I suspected this, which is why I hazarded only one reference to it instead of walking nit-pickily through the whole. I figured that if NoNo wanted an edit like that in greater detail she(?) would ask for more suggestions of that kind. I agree that it is of the utmost importance to support each other through our comments. I am just not so quick to suppose that the very best way to do it is focusing only on the positives of any given piece. I see 'The Art of Commenting,” as you put it, as something much more to do with intuition than any set of rules or guidelines. It seems that you have the advantage of greater study of this topic, but I still hold true to my ideals. If I ever have the privilege of commenting on one of your pieces I will certainly take your advice to heart. For your writing I will review the comments, stay away from grammar, and focus only on the positives and why I think they are positive. Likewise I hope that if you should decide to post on one of mine (if I ever get around to posting any) that you will humor me by ignoring the comments completely, being very specific, asking as many questions as you can think of, and including at least three things that you see as needing improvement and why in addition to your positive assesments. We are all individuals, after all. I was rather hoping to get a positive or negative response from NoNo specifically to guide me in my future comments on her work, but I do appreciate your kind advice, and I hope that you will respect my decision to pretty much ignore it except where you are concerned. Now, here I am, commenting on the comments instead of the writing. This is just what I purport to avoid so studiously. I feel silly. Ah well, at least it did not cloud my critique. With much love and appreciation, -Loni |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 24, 2007, 12:53 AM: |
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Loni, Gabriele - |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 24, 2007, 10:18 AM: |
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ON COMMENTING: |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGMike said May 24, 2007, 10:57 AM: |
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To all discussing on commenting ~ |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGLoni Love said May 24, 2007, 12:04 PM: |
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Please, do not degrade the power of a well placed semi-colon. Life is not too short for them. You will certainly tear my heart in two! |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 24, 2007, 12:09 PM: |
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Thanks Mike. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGLoni Love said May 24, 2007, 1:19 PM: |
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Sandra, |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGLoni Love said May 24, 2007, 12:17 PM: |
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Gabriele, |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGTom said May 24, 2007, 7:04 PM: |
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Well, well, well, my darling Gabriele, isn't that convienent? Lost in cyberspace, eh? God bless our subconsciousii. I may be mistaken, or mad, which is a possiblity, but if my first hurried seruptitious reading at work was right, you asked Loni to rein in the length of her commentary. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 27, 2007, 2:32 AM: |
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I realise this is going over well-trodden ground, but I saw this crumb, I had passed over it the first time - too engaged with what *I* wanted to say. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGmary said Jun 3, 2007, 5:02 PM: |
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Tom, buddy, I am somewhat nonplussed at your response to Gabrielle. Your tone is condescending and competitive, as if it is some sort of “gotcha” game. And then you say: |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGTom said Jun 3, 2007, 8:58 PM: |
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Oh Mary, am I glad to see you back! Thanks for pointing this out to me again. I've apologized to Gabriele, though not quite as profusely as I did to you, since what I did to you was from anger and this was from what I misconceived as humor. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGLoni Love said Jun 3, 2007, 11:22 PM: |
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Mary, |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said Jun 4, 2007, 5:08 AM: |
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Mary, Tom, Loni. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGmary said Jun 8, 2007, 5:11 PM: |
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What am I supposed to say, Loni? Tom was browbeating someone's creative effort. I responded with my impression. It was not a critique of his writing, which would call for reflection of impression, but a comment on his criticism of another, which follows different standards. Perhaps I overstepped my boundaries. Or perhaps you overstep yours. Who can say, and what does it matter in the end? |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGTom said Jun 8, 2007, 10:08 PM: |
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I know what you mean about peace and safety, Mary. We all want that, I'm sure. Thanks for having the gumption to stand up and say what you feel, even if it seems hopeless. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGLoni Love said Jun 9, 2007, 10:17 AM: |
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Dear Mary, |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said Jun 9, 2007, 10:50 AM: |
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I would like to add my two bits at this point, which is to simply bring our attention to the fact that we are attempting to communicate using a medium that is very very limited. I don't know the specific statistics, but when we are together in 'real life' the much larger part of how we communicate is not through the words we use, but through our body language, tone of voice, energy fields etc. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGNono said May 25, 2007, 3:51 AM: |
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Your postings make me laugh - in this serous matter, Jesus! This is a wonderful discussion. And Tom… diving in wrong direction? Huh, man, we're still diving aren't we *LOL*? All the angels and dickheads together. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 25, 2007, 7:16 AM: |
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Well, wow. What can I say. I find this a remarkable thread and I don't know where to begin.. ~~ Sadly, or not so sadly, for me this kind of dialogue is my writing palette and canvas for now. So I will wade in, take a breathe, and plunge forward into these warm and silky and sometimes rocky waters. Nono, yes we are not only diving, we are flying - every which way. Do you know which way is up or down? Or even sideways? I don't. Andrew, who recently posted the wonderful Diving Deeper piece ”Listening at the door” told me about a means of transport “They” are working on. To get you from one side of the Earth to the other. By means of gravity. Shooting through the core and out the other end. This is a small digression but points to the remarkable versatility of Diving Deeper. Basically we are looking for uncharted waters, atmosphere, undiscovered galaxies, new dimensions. Whatever is your edge, we are looking to encourage you to cross it. Loni ~ What a delight it was to read your response. I sometimes have more regard for the words themselves than I do for any feeling intended by them. I recognize myself in you. Perhaps it is why I am here too - to move beyond 'craft' - not to discard it, but to climb over the precipice of 'good writing' and see what happens. The best writing I have ever done (and not only in my own opinion) was written when I took such a leap. I've destroyed pieces I've gone back over and 'cleaned' up, fixed the punctuation, added a 'better' word. The more I write from a space of what Stephen King calls 'dreaming the dream' - the words and sentences which come need virtually no editing. Have a look at Andrew's piece linked above, and Gabriele's piece, also written for 20 minutes on the line, “Yeah, that’s right, let nature take care of it.” Now, you may not have a preference for the style or content, but in my view these pieces are quite remarkable; they were not edited at all, during or after the writing. To my mind, they need virtually no editing ( remember that Gabriele is German, so sometimes there may be a small unintentional mistake). Both pieces have a fresh, raw feel which makes me want to read more. There is other work written in the Diving Deeper and Freefall manner which I do not have access to, but I know if you read it you would be astonished at the quality - given that NO attention was paid to craft. Craft comes from writing, rather than the other way around. I'm certainly not saying we do not need to have a look at what we are writing, - is it a short story? A memoir? A novel? What are the patterns which emerge from such sky-diving writing? What is the meaning underneath these words, what is it I'm trying to say? Is something missing? Can I develop a situation more, a character, a conflict? These are important questions to ask - but only once you have done a lot of writing without agenda. You see, if your intention is to make the writing better, or different then your preferences, experiences, and editor cap will be your best of friends. Possibly. It is my experience that most of us have a well defined 'reader' / 'editor', and this is not the aspect of our creative being which needs encouragement. And, if you do have something you wish to take to print, I would also suggest that you are not always your own best editor. I do edit my work. Of course I do. I actually LOVE editing ( I have that pointy black hat too, many of them!). And the more I write, the more I see that my writing self is far better served by simply writing. If I have an extensive amount of material in a more or less cohesive piece, I give it to my one or tow tried and trusted friends and mentors for editing. Actually, once I have a first draft of a novel, I'll then give it to a professional. I wonder When did I become that way? Was I always such an editor? I remember loving words, did that have anything to do with it? Who taught me to critique? Why did I listen to them?, foremost and with the most fun, What of these preferences of mine? Do they serve me as a reader? Do they serve me as a writer? What are these preferences doing? I have tingles reading this, Loni. Yes, yes. What do *you* want to do? You most definitely have a skill as an editor. This is rare and valuable, and you might decide this is your true love. Even if you do, asking these questions of yours will only make you a more remarkable editor. Or, right now, is your editing cap getting in the way of *your* writing? I'd love to read more of your work, personally. You wrote to Gabriele: This whole 'what doesn't work will fall away' thing….has that been explained somewhere? I have seen it mentioned in passing with great warmth, but I have yet to see an explanation. At this point I have to just say, frankly that, I don't believe you. All these years of fancying myself so very full of faith, and I dare not trust that fallible 'ol me is going to let anything fall anywhere. I….we, have to let each other know….we have to confront each other's smallness….we have to help each other on. Are these thoughts familiar only to me? I will also respond, since the phrase originally comes from me, via my own teacher, Barbara Turner-Vesselago. The suggestion arises out of many spiritual ( for want of a better word) teachings. One of my most profound mentor's told me we have but one choice: Where we put our attention. That's it. There is no other choice you have. Think about it for a moment. Is there anything else you can do? There is a consequence to this choice. If we put our attention on the smallness of our life, our life will seem small. If we put our attention on all the things we might have to be grateful for, our life will feel quite different. The 'life' stays the same - perhaps - but this placement of attention changes everything. If you wake up and feel upset that you have to go to work, it's possible you will be grumpy with your co-workers and have just the kind of day you expected. If you wake up and are thankful for the fact that you can see, for example - that light of many colors floods into your eyes, well it's possible your day 'at work' might be a little different. You may be more available to chatting with someone who might love your bright-eyed energy, and offer you the perfect job. I don't know. I do not subscribe to the simplistic version of “we create our reality”, but I do experience, time and time again, that I have a choice about how I respond to what is. And this response deeply affects how I experience reality (whatever this may, in fact, be). I believe - no, it's more than belief - it is my heart-felt experience, my soul-knowing, that encouragement is the greatest of all teachers. Begin here, and then all else follows. Regarding writing. If someone reads a piece of mine, and then shows me in detail where it's not working, my Muse just shuts down. I've learned over the years to erect a nice little diversionary shield for such situations, so my Muse is protected, AND I'm able listen to the suggestions. So, I'm definitely not saying no to editorial commentary. I am suggesting that Diving Deeper might not be the place for this kind of commentary - at least to any great extent. It could be, and is - a place to find true and trusted friends who might support your more finished work in this way - outside of the playbox of this pod. Diving Deeper is about discovering the wealth of material existing inside all of us, it is about being willing to see yourself, your internal and external life (lives?) as your paintbox - and being willing to mix the colours in ways that might shake up your whole idea of who you are - and perhaps shake up your readers in the same way. Once again, I'm going to quote Harlan Ellison: “… the act of writing with serious intent involves enormous personal risk. It means one will walk forever on the tightrope, with each new step presenting the possibility of learning a truth about oneself that is too terrible to bear.” Returning to what you say, Loni. we have to help each other on. Most definitely yes. Why else are we here? My slight shift is that we help each other to see the light in our work, our selves, our hearts. I do not mean ignore what is painful or dark, on the contrary. I'm suggesting that the concepts 'bad' or 'good' do not exist - outside of our own conditioned thought patterns. So we can encourage each other to write in all kinds of ways - but we do not label them as 'better' ways. Take this process out into your life beyond writing. Notice every time you judge something as being 'bad' or 'good'. Ask yourself, “What do I feel?”: about that noise, this person, this situation, that colour, this sentence, and so on. Climb in, open up, surrender to the fullness of experience, say Yes to all that is, and see what happens. With love, Sandra |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 25, 2007, 7:37 AM: |
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Tom, I meant to include this from you: In my opinion if we try to eliminate all dissension or hurt, with the most positive of intentions.. then we could be diving in the wrong direction. The wound is the resource.Yes, I agree. And something a wee bit tricky is going on here, something I can't put my finger on. Perhaps it is simply your agenda - made naked by the word 'wrong'. Have you read my latest blog called The Magic in the Middle? It's important to remind ourselves that we here at Diving Deeper did not come together with a shared intention. Many of us just want to write. Some want an audience. Others want to learn. Some of us want a life-change. Some have not read any of Alex's Writing Practice or my Notes Along the Way. I suspect some haven't even read the Newsletters. I do not have a judgement about this - these things will be discovered by those who need them. It is my hope that we flow more and more together towards a clearly lit space of “we” ( no, not that kind of wee…) See Mushin's blog, referenced in my blog above about this We space. This 'we' space does not exclude hurt. Most definitely not. This 'we' space does ask that each of us here attempt a shared intention: to discover and create “a 'free space' for something new to happen.” I believe that this new thing can arise out of our combined being and attention; it can become manifest in our art; and even more, arise out of our attention to our art, our willingness to listen as deep as we can. Love, Sandra |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGLoni Love said May 25, 2007, 9:03 AM: |
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I am currently in the wake of an Aha! moment. A lot of the things that Gabriele and Sandra talk about have long been beliefs that I hold, or at least understand. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 25, 2007, 9:58 AM: |
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You are all so beautiful, |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGTom said May 25, 2007, 10:29 PM: |
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Such marvelous work/play Sandra, and everybody in this thread, thank you! I read your blog posting Sandra, and totally resonate (okay, with some fearful under-buzzes) with the concept of creating a “WEI” space, as Sharon puts it, where a bunch of I's form a WE that is kind of a giant I in itself. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 26, 2007, 6:07 AM: |
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OH, I love that. A WEI space. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSynerjyz said May 26, 2007, 7:47 AM: |
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Ok. We-ward we go! It took me a day or two to dive into the coral reefs of all that’s written here. As I dive, deeper and deeper, extracting raw pearls & golden nuggets from this thread, I pop up to the surface almost gasping for my next deep breath. I have taken one. I think it is powerful in its complex simplicity. Let’s see if I can lay it out on this page. I write. I’m not exactly sure why. I know it started long ago. I’m not at all sure how to write properly or for what purpose writing serves in my life. I just write. Privately, almost always privately, this is and has been not only my experience with writing but my promise – a promise made in secret, a dedication of commitment and protection – I promised my muse that I would let her be if she would source me to write for my healing. Here comes the breath… ~It was a lie! She never needed my protection. I needed her’s. the truth? -the bloody, raw, unpleasant truth? My ego is a wordiholic. I suffer my muse to deal me an ever deeper fix. She is not the fearful ego, I am. I am afraid of not getting what I want, desperately in need of healing. I use my muse for healing, my healing. She’s grown tired of my narcissism, my incestuous private affair and has suffocated in seclusion for far too long. She, frankly, doesn’t give a shit about the rules, the fame, or the published status. But I do. I dream of applause. I edit and correct and labor her to death for even the slightest accolade or brief comment. She doesn’t give a crap about flowers, sunsets and pretty pictures growing from her words so I can be seen and admired. But I do. I’ve even been known to pout for months and stomp about the floor like a foolish adolescent when I don’t get the strokes this addiction craves. I told myself my role was to keep her safe -safe from the critics, the naysayer’s sword and the vultures that might steal her words and fashion them for profit. The best way to let her be – to keep her gifts pure and rich and alive and abundant was to hide from the reader. But she has almost died a hundred times since she first arrived so many years ago. {I can feel her bones ache even as I lay that line upon this page} Her only passion is to come alive in the ear and the heart and the belly of her reader. And I must climb into the writing deeper ~ climb over the precipice of 'good writing’ because I am the greatest force fighting against that passion -NOT the reader. *Notice even the singular tense I use. I wonder if she would write the word ‘readers’. Yes. I have labored to write this entry. I’ve spent all morning Type, read delete type cut, paste delete backspace cut delete damn the red line perfection no that isn’t it, that’s not what I meant, ok that is what I meant but it sounds so stupid, wait I see another place where “m unclear, clarity is vital, don’t you know that, don’t you see how important it is for to write well, you have to get it! The reader must get me! I mean the message I mean message get the message can you hear the message, the last 30 seconds have moved so fast, I’ve never type so hard, wait I mean fast, damn it! Can’t you hear me! I not invisible. I must be with We I am so alone without the words of my muse… pause, stop, just stop and let her write awhile. Ok? “OK” (tears fall as exhale) ok |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGNono said May 26, 2007, 8:25 AM: |
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Wow Synerjyz… |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 26, 2007, 12:51 PM: |
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Synergyz. I'm with you all the way. All the wei. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGTom said May 26, 2007, 5:03 PM: |
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Synerjyz, |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 27, 2007, 5:02 AM: |
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I'm reading Ray Bradbury's Zen and the Art of Writing (highly recommended). |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGTom said May 27, 2007, 10:44 AM: |
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Then I'd have to say this workshop is one amazing muse, or at the very least, a cornucopia of delights with which to regale her, a feast beyond imagining. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSynerjyz said May 27, 2007, 2:42 PM: |
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I second the one Tom, |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGLynn said May 31, 2007, 8:36 AM: |
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pheeewww! I just read this thread and think a lot. I wouldn't dare possibly comment on all we have to say about commenting, but as it pertains to this post, I will use the suggestions we have to one another on commenting to do some of my own. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGTom said May 31, 2007, 9:58 AM: |
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Welcome to the gang, Lynn, a whole lot. That you took the time to read this entire thread shows how committed you are to the process of diving deeper into your art and your Self. I can guarantee you this is a wonderland of humanity. It's like a little magic crystal hidden in the wondrous depths of Zaadz. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said May 31, 2007, 12:49 PM: |
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I ditto Tom, dear Lynn. Thanks for reading all this and adding your voice of support & clarifying some areas. |
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Re: ON COMMENTING - and commenting to the commentsSandra said Sep 5, 2007, 12:21 PM: |
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This is a copy from this thread that should be read as it 'shows' what I'm writing about. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGLoni Love said Sep 27, 2007, 8:01 AM: |
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“Thank you for wondering where I have gone. I was wondering, too,” was all she could muster for today, but it was something! It was a sentence, after all. It was past-tense. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGTom said Oct 13, 2007, 1:22 PM: |
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I knew I was missing a bunch of very valuable stuff by not coming here more often lately. |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGJim said Oct 13, 2007, 7:38 PM: |
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yes Tom … |
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Re: ON COMMENTINGSandra said Oct 14, 2007, 7:00 AM: |
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Big YES to reading. Isn't it fun that reading is part of our 'work'? what a gift! (and quite frankly, in my, ahem, book, a prerequisite to the art. life and craft of being a writer). |
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