Category Archives: Motivation

Saturday LIFE Assessment

FLASH FICTION CHRONICLES

The new EDF Flash Fiction Chronicles has been launched with some excellent posts and I’m finally getting into a routine with getting it out there. Still open for submissions, of course, from writers of flash, published or not. The blog will hopefully be an archive of articles on writing from a variety of perspectives. When we have enough posts to warrant the set-up, I plan to add a page to the blog that will be organized by topic rather than by date only. This way if you are struggling to get writing on any particular day, you can click on that index page and go to a list of articles on motivation or process and hopefully, this will be the tilting point to get you typing away at a work-in-progress or a brand new story.

But we’re not ready for that yet.

WHAT CAME BEFORE

What’s that all about? Oh, yeah. The neglected novel. January saw me swearing to the keyboard that I would put in the hours to shape the 400 pages I’ve produced on that project, yet after I prepared the first fifty pages for a contest or two, I set it aside once again for the sweet pleasure of writing short.

What I have to do is decide, do I finish my opus or ignore it? Decide. Listening to Tony Robbins a few years ago, I was struck by the simplicity of one of his “tenets.” Decide, he said and I’m paraphrasing here, is to choose one option and cut off all other possibilities. The root of the word “decide” is to “cut off.” I liked that. Could life really be that simple?

Can we really just decide to follow a path and then do it thereby achieving a goal? This must be what determination is, to raise the priority of one activity over others in order to finish it to the best of our abilities. The question is, can I do it for the novel?

Why not? I’ve kept writing for years despite much floundering, shit product, and little confidence. If I can still be at the computer, writing and talking about writing, then I must have that determination. I just need to decide where my focus is and follow through.

So I’m going to decide. My focus needs to be the novel. I’ve gotten myself published in the short market which by the way I regard as a wonderful accomplishment. I’ve met the goal to submit to the new anthology at Sisters in Crime. I’m almost finished with a piece of flash I’ve promised to one more person. I must stop trolling for motivation to write something short and gear myself for the long journey to Novelland.

I’m going to do it. Starting? Today! And as Tony probably didn’t say, no ands, ifs, or buts. Except maybe I should do that index page for the Chronicles because then I’d be searching out the motivation blogs and reading them I’d feel motivated…

September Sentiments/Georgia Review/Hillary, and I don’t mean Clinton

SEPTEMBER. In the old days, September meant school, me walking out the door on Mayor Drive heading toward Calle Mayor K-8, and later in the opposite direction toward South High. Usually it was foggy in the morning living that close to the beach, only a mile away, and rarely hot in the AM, except of course, on those first days of classes. Record heat. Always.

I wanted to wear my new clothes, wool skirt, turtleneck, knees socks in high school, but on the occasions when I couldn’t resist, I ended up feeling–and looking–like a Good Humor Bar left forgotten on the grass in the broil of August.

Eventually, September meant school for my kids, me driving carpool every third day, and dropping them off on Mentor. They wore uniforms, neat and tidy at 8:15, wrinkled and stained by 2:25 or whatever that odd pickup time was. And I ended up back at school too, teaching English, except the community college starts in August, dog-day hot, me wearing pants and a jacket despite discomfort because of my need to look professional–and vanity still intact–to look thinner.

But now, in September, no more school in my family, everyone launched in their own directions, so I stay home in shorts and tank-tops, no shoes for most of the day. I miss that old discipline, the preparation for a new year, new adventures, new successes and even new failures. The rhythm of September works if one can capture it, and that’s what I’m going to try to do. I’ve been “lolly-gagging,” my mother’s word, and now it’s time to work. September, hmmmm.

GEORGIA REVIEW. A couple of weeks ago someone I don’t know left a comment on this blog. I’d written about submission season and my dilemma: What to work on, book or short stories? Organizing writing priorities is a problem for those who must also support themselves with day jobs and therefore can’t spend full days over the computer. About the same time, Kev received some advice from one of his favorite authors who championed “the novel” because the readership of short stories is small. Here’s one response to that discussion:

“What a sad approach: give up writing short stories on the chance of getting more readers and I suppose more money with novels. Then, when the novels don’t work out, you can just give up writing, since apparently that wasn’t what mattered in the first place. Shrink the artist’s world; yes, that’s just what’s needed.”

I don’t know the author of the comment: Stephen Corey. I thought, hmm, isn’t that the name of a short story or a poem? (Richard Cory is a poem) I googled it. And was shocked at what I saw! Stephen Corey turns out to be the editor of The Georgia Review, one of the holy grails for short story writers!! This man read MY blog?!? Holy ***t.

I sent Mr. Corey a note, thanking him for taking the time to comment, then I danced around the site and decided to order a recent copy of the mag and when it came, there was a note from him. He hopes that if I like what I see, I’ll blog about the Review. Me!

I will, but first I must say it is a little intimidating. When I used to go to Iowa in the summer and spend hours with my buds at Prairie Lights, we’d order double-shot capuccinos and dig though lit mags for clues about how to turn readers on. One of those lit mags was The Georgia Review. Slick production, the cover satiny under fingertips, sophisticated art. And inside. Clear font on quality paper. Beautiful. It even smelled good. Sounds like I’m sucking up, doesn’t it?

We writers know where the stories for the America’s Best series come from, and we want those mags to publish us, and The Georgia Review debut their share, but in the new issue I received, there is only one fiction story. One. Lots of interesting articles, a feature about Richard Hugo, poems, essays, reviews, but only “The Color of Darkness” by Alexandre Mas with a killer first line: “Many years ago, when I was little more than a girl, my eyes failed me” made it in. What are the odds for writers to get into these quality lit magazines? I think I actually moaned. But…

That’s the way it is. I’ve always accepted this fact. If an writer wants to make it at that level, then he or she has to be enormously talented and self-disciplined. Not one of those things, but both. It’s a reality check, not a bad thing. However, typing this, I feel a little down, reminded that this is a big world filled with many, many talented writers all struggling to do the same thing. So what can I do to keep my heart in the game? Really? Read the best, learn from the best, and not think about the publishing side of the scoresheet. If I worry about the where, I will end up playing Spider Solitaire all day and sucking up episodes of Law and Order all night. After I read Mas’ story, I’ll report whether it blows me away or not.

HILLARY THE DAUGHTER. Today’s final note is about my daughter, faithful reader, chief advisor, straight-talking editor for my stories. She never lets me down. She tells me exactly what works and what doesn’t in my work in such an honest, compelling way, I can’t afford not to listen to her. Since we share DNA, she seems to get what I’m going for even when what I’ve emailed her is an embryotic disaster. Thanks, Stalwart Hill. And Jane. You too, thanks, sis.