Friday, December 30, 2016

Celebrating Rejection

Image © Lori Gravley, 2016.


Yesterday, I celebrated my 245th rejection of the year. I'm a poet, and I count individual poems rejected, but over 40 of these rejections are from agents whom I've sent a number of projects this year--Wish You Were Here, Knowing, Banjo Picking Girl, and The Fisherman and the Whale to name a few.

But yesterday's rejection was the best yet, so I'm hoping that means I'm getting closer. It included such things as . . . "This is truly a lovely text" and "You're a great writer and I'm happy to read this." It also included some advice on how to improve the text.

I'm celebrating all my rejections this year, all 245 of them, and thinking about my goals for next year. I hope you're finding some time at the end of this year to celebrate your creative self and all you've accomplished this year. See you in 2017.

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Writing Prompt Wednesday: Goals

Image © Lori Gravley, Grayton Beach, FL, 2015
SMART goals are specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, and time bound.  I don't make resolutions, but I'm always setting goals.  Now might be a good time to think of your own goals, write your mission statment, decide what you'd like this year to bring.  What we attend to grows.  I hope I've helped you grow your writing practice this year with my writing prompts.  What will you do next year?

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Writing Prompt Wednesday: Stop Here to Pray

Image © Lori Gravley, Murano, Italy, 2016

See the little coin left in front of the icon (the Virgin Mary and Jesus surrounded by angels).  Imagine the person who left the coin. Before, after, during the leaving: choose one.

Sunday, December 4, 2016

The Tribe Abides

Okay, PowerByPineappleJuice isn't a part of our weekly tribe, but someone needed to fill in that fourth slot.  


For over six years, I've been writing with a group of women on Sunday mornings from 7ish to 10:30ish every Sunday I'm in town.  We come and go, so we aren't always at our regular table at the Underdog Cafe and Emporium, but most weeks, one of us is there, laptop open, working away on our words.  

Sometimes we read each other's work (during the week, never on Sunday morning, that's writing time), but more often we're just there to share the trials, tribulations, joys, and celebrations of this writing journey.

This year, for half the month of NaNo November, I was traveling, but I got to check in with my tribe through our NaNo buddies page.  And I tried to sit down and write when it was time to write, even when 7 AM Ohio time was 3 PM Nairobi time, 1 PM Cairo time.

I talk to one member of my tribe almost daily, the other members of my tribe, I email weekly or check in on Facebook or Instagram.  And writing together (and apart) is a powerful motivator.  We all won NaNo this year, and I'm certain part of that is the support both active and passive, that we give each other in our writing throughout the year and throughout the month.

So, build your tribe. You don't need to write the same things.  You don't need to be critique partners, but you will support each other, encourage each other, compete (nicely) with each other, and you will all grow as writers.

I celebrate my tribe, the Wrimettes, and I'm so thankful to have them as part of my life.  I wish you luck in finding (or celebrating) yours.

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

NaNoWriMo: Time to Celebrate

Image © Lori Gravley
Maybe your words are on the page, all 50,000 of them.  Maybe some of them are on the page (1-49,999).  Maybe your story is still kicking around in your head.  Still, it's time to celebrate.  
Let lessons learned, new goals, and plans wait for tomorrow.  
Today, celebrate your courage.  Celebrate your words.  Celebrate your journey.  
It isn't over yet.  It's just the beginning.  

NaNo Daily Message 30


Image © Lori Gravley
"I hate writing.  I love having written."  Dorothy Parker

Writing Prompt Wednesday: Unexpected Spoon

Image © Lori Gravley, Clifton, Ohio, 2015
Write about things left behind.  Write about unexpected beauty.  Write about addiction. 

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Sunday, November 27, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 27

Image © Lori Gravley

"I thought I was going nowhere.  Now I can see there was a pattern." Kate DiCamillo

Saturday, November 26, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 26



Image  © Lori Gravley
"Creating a novel means moving into the past, the hoped for, the imagined.  It is an emotional journey, fraught at times with characters who don't always do or say what a writer wishes." Jacqueline Woodson

Catching Up/Momentum

A new day, a new reason to get the words down.  Image © Lori Gravley.
On Nov. 20, for the first time since Nov. 4, I actually caught up to that little upward line on the NaNo bar graph.  I had written all the words I was supposed to have written this month.
I breathed a sigh of relief.  Today, though I’ve had a lot of other stuff to do for my bill-paying work, I made enough time in my writing schedule to keep my personal word line aligned with the line on the chart. 
That’s momentum.  Pushing forward and meeting goals creates more movement, movement we don’t have to work too hard to capture.
Of course, there are always forces dragging us down—work, families, dramas, disappointments, fears, and many other physical, social, and psychological demands on our time and attention. 
But, if we pay attention, there are forces pulling us forward, too.  That’s part of the wonderful magic of NaNoWriMo.  Our friends and buddies pull us.  The National organization pulls us. The charts and forums pull us. Our own characters pull us.  We can feel torn between the pages and our daily lives, but during NaNo, we tell ourselves and our families that it will be over at the end of the month.  We’ll have finished the book, just a draft, and we’ll be able to focus again on all those things other people want us to focus on.

But for now, we can use the momentum of this powerful month to pull us through to the next milestone (40,000 words? 45,000? a win?), the next scene, the next chapter ending and beginning. All of these things help pull us forward, and even if you aren't hitting that NaNo win milestone of 50,000 words, the work of NaNoWriMo has given you momentum.  
I find that momentum generally lasts well into the new year (leading to possibly overly ambitious goals).  But even if it ends on Nov. 30, it's helped pull me through a large portion of a book that didn't exist or didn't exist in this form before Nov. 1.  
I hope you're feeling the pull of your book. Let it take you to a strong finish.

Friday, November 25, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 25

Image © Lori Gravley

"Sometimes I scare myself at how easily I slip inside my mind and live vicariously through these characters." Teresa Mummert

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 22


Image © Lori Gravley
"Writing is a miserable, awful business.  Stay with it.  It is better than anything in the world." Ann Patchett

Monday, November 21, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 21


Image © Lori Gravley

"This is how you do it.  You sit down at the keyboard and you put one word after another until it's done. It's that easy and that hard." Neil Gaiman

Sunday, November 20, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 20


Image © Lori Gravley
 "The best time to plan a book is when you're doing the dishes." Agatha Christie


Saturday, November 19, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 19


Image © Lori Gravley
"Forget all the rules.  Forget about being published. Write for yourself and celebrate writing." Melinda Haynes

Friday, November 18, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 18

Image © Lori Gravley

"There are three rules for writing a novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are." W. Somerset Maugham

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 15

Image © Lori Gravley


"Don't get discouraged, it is often the last key that opens the lock." Unknown

Monday, November 14, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 14

Image © Lori Gravley


"A writer's job is to get the main character up a tree, and then one they are up there, throw rocks at them." Vladimir Nabakov

Sunday, November 13, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 13

Image © Lori Gravley

"There's always room for a story that can transport people to another place." J.K. Rowling

Honoring Your Storyteller

Nurturing the storyteller.  Image © Lori Gravley
In this week’s pep talk, writer Alaya Dawn Johnson says, “Telling stories can seem like not just a luxury, but an indulgence that’s shameful for you to even desire.”  I had just been thinking about a note I wanted to write to a former writing teacher explaining why it had taken me twenty-one years to send out a manuscript we had worked on together. 

My reasons for abandoning my writing for so many years are sound.  I’m not sure I could have done what I’ve done any other way, but the simple fact is, for nearly twenty years, I didn’t honor the storyteller who resides in me.  There are tears in my eyes as I say that.  The woman I was all those years ago couldn’t have made a different choice, but now that I’m able to honor my storyteller, we both feel grief for all the years when I kept her silent.  

I was afraid that if I let her speak, what she had to say would bring disastrous consequences. 

I know now that letting her speak might have been painful.  There would have been repercussions.  But we would have faced them together, and none of them would have been as dire as I once imagined. 

I know now that I honor that storyteller who lives inside of me by speaking and by silence.

And I do little things to take care of her as we work through difficult tasks together.

1.  Feed her tea and coffee.  Perhaps because I’m really tired after a long flight, but the first thing that comes to my mind about how to honor her is this. Maybe it’s because I’m a little ADD, but the judicious application of caffeine at just the right time in the process helps my storyteller get the work done.

2.  Feed her beauty.  This may be art. It may be a walk in a quiet wood. It may be reading poems to her or perfect picture books or an emotionally engaging novel or movie.   It may be stopping in the middle of a busy airport and appreciating the art installations or the architecture, but my storyteller thrives on beauty. 

Julia Cameron’s groundbreaking working, The Artist’s Way, builds in specific “artist dates” to help feed the storyteller, but for me those dates don’t even have to be specific or solo.  Visiting botanic gardens with my husband, going to concerts with my sons, or going to a gallery alone—all of those things feed beauty to my storyteller and help her thrive. 

3.  Take care of the body she lives in.  I recently saw Sharon Olds give a reading at the Folger Shakespeare Library in DC.  When asked what advice she had for young poets, the only advice she gave was “Take care of the vessel of your art.” She explained that a failing body or a body that complained too often made it difficult to do the artists work. 

Taking care of the vessel means different things for different people. Some people can’t tolerate caffeine.  I can’t tolerate sugar, so I’m working (sporadically, for years) on limiting my intake of sugar.  My body likes to dance  and sweat.  It likes to stretch, and it likes to swim.  Those movements feed me and my storyteller. 

4.  Listen.  I started to write “Even when I wasn’t caring for my storyteller” but I think I’ll change that to, as I was beginning to care again for my storyteller, I found I needed more and more silence.  I needed space to listen.  Quaker meeting helped some, but for a couple of years I also instituted a Day of Silence during the week--a day in which I did not speak to my family or to anyone. 

This Day of Silence in my life gave me space and permission to begin to listen again to what the storyteller was trying to say.  It gave me practice in cutting out the noise and chatter that were so much a part of my daily life.  It gave my family practice in having a caretaker who could choose not to meet their needs for one day a week. 

I don’t have a dedicated day for silence anymore, but I build silence into everyday.  Out of that silence, the stories percolate into my consciousness.  The words I want to bring into the world arrive.

5.  Take time.  Because I now take time for my craft everyday, I’m able to capture many of those words that are arriving. 

6.  Find good companions.  The storyteller, like all of us, likes to know that she's not alone. That's one of the powerful things about NaNoWriMo.  All of us, writing together, seprately in our own little spaces.  It nurtures the storyteller to know that what she is doing others are doing, too.  

Six years ago, during NaNo, a friend and I began to meet at a coffee shop to work on our novel at 7 am Sunday mornings.  Now our group has doubled and we meet every Sunday, all year long.  I have another friend who I've been meeting with for nearly eight years to write deeply together.  Holding space for each other's creativity makes the storyteller in each of us feel honored.  It's powerful to have companions on this journey to support, to nurture, to challenge, to listen.  

You may have just hit a challenging point in your storytelling.  Mine came early this year, but a friend said to me just the other day.  “I don’t know why I thought this was a good story to tell.” 

That’s just the middle speaking.  Keep telling the story, take care of your storyteller, remember that the words you put on the page aren’t the final words, they are just a start.  And drink more coffee. 

All will be well.



Saturday, November 12, 2016

Friday, November 11, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 11

Image © Lori Gravley

"Almost all good writing begins with terrible first efforts.  You need to start somewhere."  Anne Lamott

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Monday, November 7, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 7

Image © Lori Gravley


"Fairy tales are more than true: not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten." Neil Gaiman

Sunday, November 6, 2016

NaNo Daily Message 6

Image © Lori Gravley

"You might not write well every day, but you can always edit a bad page.  You cannot edit a blank page." Jodi Picoult

Week Two NaNo: The Stories We Tell Ourselves

November opens a new door to a new novel, but sometimes the stories I tell myself make it harder to walk
through that door with ease. (Image © Lori Gravley)
I don’t remember a beginning as bad as this one.  I feel like I’m in a Lemony Snickett novel.  Part of this is probably because I’m dreading that I’ll be traveling for work for 15 days out of November’s 30.
And writing that I realize that’s the problem.  The stories I tell myself.
It started with a story about how I needed to write 3,000 words a day to get ahead in order to be ready to travel.  It continues with a story about how difficult it will be to write while I’m also teaching a class by myself in Kenya.  It continues with stories about how I’ve failed in the past at doing what I wanted to do while traveling on business.  It’s furthered by worries about writing on the plane, in the airport, etc.
In order to convincingly tell myself these stories, I have to totally disregard all the times I’ve awakened at 5AM to get my words in before my work day starts. 
I have to ignore the tens of thousands of words I’ve written on the plane and in airports.  I have to ignore all the poems, blog posts, chapters in novels, essays, and other work that I’ve written in hotel rooms.
As is so often the case, the story is the problem.
And when I can recognize that, I’m able to come back to my work with renewed vigor and hope.
What stories are you telling yourself about your WIP or NaNo?  Are they helping or hurting your writing? 
When I can identify the stories and challenge them, my work often gets easier.  I let go of all the tension I’m feelin that I don’t need to feel and sit with what is.  Hopefully, I'll be able to do this during this week of NaNo writing.  

Here’s to a wonderfully successful and more comfortable Week Two.