Tag Archives: paper

Writing writing writing

Several years ago, I took up cross-country skiing. The place I live, Saskatoon, is flat and snowy, and very sunny, so cross-country skiing was a way to get outside, to enjoy some sunshine, and to move across the frozen landscape. After falling over many times, getting covered in snow, and weeping once with frustration as how windy and miserable the whole experience was, I began to get the hang of it. I learned how to glide on my skis, moving gracefully (most of the time) and with pleasure (nearly all of the time).

Then, over the last year, I stopped skiing. I put the skis aside and, although I kept meaning to go, I just couldn’t quite get myself to go out and do it. Until this weekend. This weekend, I went to Waskesiu, Saskatchewan, with some friends. We rented a cabin, packed up good food, took bathing suits for the hot tub, and we waxed our skis. Yesterday afternoon, I found myself with my ski boots on, skis over my shoulder, the wide, white trail leading through the poplars ahead of me.

Sometimes writing just flows. It feels easy to get words on the page. Stories and ideas tap from my fingers into sentences and paragraphs and I feel confident and assured that what I’m writing is worth putting onto paper. But other times, writing feels stiff and difficult. The blank page feels like a snowy field, impossible to traverse. I don’t know how to move forward with a story. I’m stuck and out of practice.

Yesterday morning, I put on my skis and wobbled to the start of the track. It wasn’t easy at first, but soon I was gliding again. I wasn’t as fast as I once was; nor was I as confident. But the more I ski, the easier it’ll get. The more I write, the more fluid the sentence become. Writing isn’t always easy, but for me, opening a new blank document in Word is like getting on my ski boots. I just have to get on and do it.

Start a story or a poem with the words: Snow fell like feathers…

Or, free write for ten minutes on the subject of travel

Fill some white space.

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Filed under Thinking

Valentine’s Day

Is there someone who you are secretly in love with?  Someone who you could never tell about your feelings?  Someone who you think about even though you know nothing will or nothing could ever happen between you?

Write a letter to that person.  Write everything that you’ll never say.  Don’t hold back  a word.

Because you’re never going to give this letter to the person you love.

And then put that letter in a file on your computer called FOR MY EYES ONLY.

That’s what you have to do every time you write – write as if no-one’s ever going to read it.  Be honest and true.  Sometimes the pieces you write will go into FOR MY EYES ONLY.  And sometimes they’ll go out into the world to be read.  You’ll feel vulnerable and exposed.  It’s always going to feel like that as a writer.  And that’s okay.

Happy Valentine’s Day.

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Filed under exercises

Quickstart ideas are up

I’m getting this website up and running as the days go by.  I’m really enjoying putting together ideas for you to get you writing.  Now there are 10 quickstart ideas to get you going – all ideas that I’ve tried and tested in one of the workshops I’ve taught.  I started teaching another workshop last night, this one for adults, and they used one of the quickstart ideas (number 4) to get themselves writing.  It’s great to sit in a room full of people putting pen to paper, getting their ideas on the page.

I’ve been slowed down reading The Hunchback Assignments because of getting the workshop ready for my students, but I’m itching to get back to it.  Especially because when I finish it I get to interview the author, Arthur Slade.  Very exciting.

Get going on one of the quickstart ideas if you feel like writing.  And let me know how it goes!

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Filed under Quickstart