Posts in March 2022
Write Like Freddie!
 

Valentine’s Day collage by Helen Sword

 
 

If you've attended any of my live Zoom events, you've probably met my dog Freddie, a snow-white bichon frise with a sweet disposition and a jaunty tail.  (Warm thanks to our 9-year-old neighbor Nouriyah for her lifelike drawing).  

No, Freddie doesn't spend long hours at the keyboard as I do.  But he's taught me a lot about how to live, breathe, and flourish as a writer.  

Here are 10 lessons about writing (and life) that I've learned from Freddie. 

1. Always dress for the occasion.

For Freddie, that means wearing a pink bowtie to my birthday party. For me, it means adjusting my writing style to reach my target audience.

2. Don't take yourself too seriously.

Peter and Anna sent this photo from Germany to show Freddie how silly he looks when sculpted out of snow. I guess I'd look pretty silly too.

3. Do yoga. Every day.

Freddie is especially good at the downward-facing dog pose; he also excels at savasana (corpse pose). I wish I had his flexibility and core strength!

4. Take your writing for a walk.

Freddie pulls me out the door several times a day. Every step we take together loosens up my limbs, my thoughts, and my words.

5. Write with friends.

I took this photo while on a writing retreat with my friend and collaborator Selina Tusitala Marsh -- and Freddie, of course. Writing can be a lonely business unless we open up and let others share our space.

6. Stay warm.

And keep your writing warm by touching your words every day, even if only for a brief pat. (Thank you to Sophie Nicholls for this lovely metaphor.)

7. Chill out.

Freddie has mastered the art. I'm still working on it -- especially when I've got a writing dilemma to solve or a deadline to meet.

8. Don't panic when things get messy.

That sticky black sand (and those sticky sentences, that cloying self-doubt) will all brush out eventually.

9. When in doubt, take a nap.

In Freddie's case, that means multiple naps throughout the day. For me, a short 30-minute kip works best to refresh my body and reset my writing brain.

10. Your fatal flaw may also be your superpower!

Freddie hates being left alone and loves to cuddle. He's the most anxious pet I've ever owned -- but also the most affectionate. How can I reframe my own anxieties and flaws and recognize them as my superpowers instead? (Agonizingly slow writer = craft-focused writer. Vulnerable writer = human writer. Etcetera . . . )


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What's Your Writing Roadblock?
 

Valentine’s Day collage by Helen Sword

 
 

This shimmering collage, with images by artist Corita Kent and words by poet Bernard Gunther, invites us to think creatively about the barriers that hold us back from taking flight.

How can you move past the "Do Not Enter" signs in your writing life and soar into the future, unencumbered by doubt or fear? How can you turn your avoid dance into a void dance, a celebration of possibilities?

To help you answer these questions, I've designed a new quiz that identifies your writing roadblocks and helps you refocus on the writing goals that inspire you. Get your personalized roadmap to pleasurable, productive writing -- and have some fun along the way.

This new tool is part of my ongoing effort to provide playful, craft-centered writing resources for writers in any genre and at any stage of their career.

See you on the other side!


Subscribe here to Helen’s Word on Substack to access the full Substack archive and receive weekly subscriber-only newsletters (USD $5/month or $50/year).

WriteSPACE members enjoy a complimentary subscription to Helen’s Word as part of their membership plan (USD $15/month or $150/year). Not a member? Join the WriteSPACE now and get your first 30 days free.


 
Writing to Connect
 

Valentine’s Day collage by Helen Sword

 
 

Only connect the poetry and the prose, and both will be exalted.
(E. M. Forster, Howard's End, 1910)

I was honoured and delighted to run this serendipitous WriteSPACE Special Event — a lively, wide-ranging conversation on the theme of “Writing to Connect” with singer-songwriter-author Amanda Palmer — on Tuesday, March 22.

If you're not already familiar with Amanda as the frontwoman of the legendary indie-punk band The Dresden Dolls, perhaps you're among the millions of people who have watched her amazing TED talk on the Art of Asking; or maybe you've read her New York Times best-selling book of the same title; or you might remember hearing about her as the first artist ever to raise more than one million dollars from a Kickstarter campaign.

With Amanda dressed in a flowing kimono and clutching her trusty ukelele, we sat on the sofa in my Auckland study and talked (and sang and riffed) for nearly two hours about authorship, social media, and the art of connecting with various kinds of audiences.


WriteSPACE member Nina Ginsberg captured the conversation:

For this month’s special event, we had over 200 people attend a lively discussion with special guest Amanda Palmer. As a musician and songwriter, Amanda is a solo artist and collaborator and best known for her work with The Dresden Dolls, Evelyn Evelyn, and more recently as Amanda Palmer and the Grand Theft Orchestra.  Amanda is also a well-known author, performer, creative, crowdfunder, collaborator, influencer and public speaker.

After a warm ukulele welcome song, we heard about Amanda’s extensive, explicit and experimental forays connecting art and audience. She and Helen covered a huge range of topics, with a focus on creating, making, and connecting to audience(s). There was much to talk about and the attendees were very engaged. Throughout the session, the chat was overflowing with ideas, suggestions, resources, encouragement and questions and we ended up (happily) going over time.

Amanda explained that she sees her artistic practice as a house. The outside street is ‘the world’, the space where artists sell and share their work. The foyer is where social media resides; the forward-facing living room is ‘the artspace’ where Amanda spends time creating and making; and the kitchen out back, where she takes time to reflect and recharge, is the place where she invites her most trusted supporters. (For Amanda these are her Patreons). The kitchen is a place located away from the world (street) where you can sit with friends at the end of the night with a glass of wine and review the day with support and honesty. It is the kitchen that reveals the process. (See the recording in the WriteSPACE Library to hear Amanda’s full description of this metaphor).

 From there, Amanda and Helen discussed:

  • inpaid labour and creative work as the common ground between artists and academics

  • life lessons from anxious dogs

  • using social media to build and connect to audiences

  • how long (and how much effort) it takes to ‘make/create/write a thing’ versus how long it takes to share and promote it

  • writing for academics, non-academics and the role of blogs, social media and the importance of sticking your toe in and developing a social media practice that has boundaries and supports your art, rather than sucking the life out of it

  • the challenges of voice, legitimacy, vulnerability, visibility, authenticity, and using ‘correct’ vocabulary

  • How she overcame ‘a dark night of the soul’ moment in which she thought ‘I am not qualified to write this book’

  • Who is your audience and how to find (your) voice to connect with people.

Amanda generously shared her experience and advice on using various platforms (Twitter, TED, Tik Tok, Instagram, YouTube, Patreon) and what to consider when ‘sharing yourself’ in the process of putting your work out there. Amanda spends a lot of time inviting people in and engaging with everyone, and this of course led into discussions of how much to share of yourself as a creative and where, how, and when to be vulnerable.

At one stage, Amanda asked the audience if anyone was waiting for permission or instruction from someone else to make the next move. Later she asked: ‘What does my work mean to you? What does it look like to you… the world of Rock ‘n’ Roll and the world of academia?’

Amanda spoke about her creative and writing processes. It took her six weeks to write her book “The art of asking; or, how I learned to stop worrying and let people help”, but over a year to edit due to many ups and downs along the way. She explained how her approaches and identity have developed over time: she used to identity as ‘a musician’, but she now refers to herself using words like ‘connector’, ‘creator’ or ‘broadcaster’ to show how creative agencies blur beyond the distinct limits of only know as a ‘poet’, ‘writer’, or ‘author’.

Quote of the session (Amanda): “All your choices go into the compost of art-writing-making”.

Amanda recalled how her early-career choice of writing an email to fans in the first rather than third person became a pivotal ‘cleave in the road’ moment in deciding what kind of artist she wanted to be. This led to the deeper probing of choosing which voice to write in, why academic writing is historically so cumbersome and the tension between using Plain English and ‘learning the language of a discipline’ - which many attendees could relate to.

Amanda told a number of tales from the crypt that show how her thinking and practices continue to evolve. One was what she learned after a recent Tik Tok video of her passionately singing a song from Encanto went viral, and the amusing and confusing questions it raised. Another was when, as a first-time author, she started thinking: ‘I am not qualified to write this book.’ To counter this, she told herself: “But you have learned something. Don't try and teach people something in this book, just tell them what you learned. You do you, Boo.”

We spent a lot of time talking about audience, connection and being a capable and confident creator – regardless of what you are working on. Amanda often shares with Patreons when she is struggling with her work and explained how the image of ‘a person doing the runway lights’ was helpful for thinking through next steps.

Final one-word poem

We closed out with our usual one-word poem sung by Amanda playing the ukulele as it emerged in the chat:

armadillo, love, empowering, bravery, do, village, sunflower, unexpected, musikology, artcast, confidence, vulnerability, soft, collages, sunmadillo, connection, art, soft belly, broadcast, gesamtkunstwerk, dare, hug, funflower, sunadillo, innocence, explore, backbone, people, natural, heart, spit, merlin, authentic, brené brown, biglove, so awesome.

 A few other ideas bouncing around were:

  • The German word ‘gesamtkunstwerk’ to describe a full(er) body of work.

  • Being selectively vulnerable

  • Slow down, dig in, go for quality

  • The smokescreen of vocabulary

  • Amy Cutty, Brene Brown and Steven Pinker - academics going mainstream

  • The difference between supporting a person/creative and not a product/outcome

  • Seeing hashtag(s) as the internet card catalogue

  • How much of doing social media is ‘work’

  • Is it nobler on the web/to suffer the trolls and comments of outrageous potential?

  • Giving art away is so much like Poetic Mischief in the Park

  • Finding the little breadcrumbs of source or whatever and empowering others to find their own breadcrumb path

  • The idea (possibly myth?) that Kahneman and Tversky would go visit EACH of their critics and design a study WITH them to settle (whatever) question and that's how one of the attendees wanted to grow and challenge themselves - dialectically engaging with people who challenge them

  • Being a ‘Hot Mess Artist’

  • Just write your story - 30 mins a day without references

  • Using ‘I’ is like stepping off the stage to crowd surf as an academic

  • The Queen doesn’t say/use “I” – how lonely

  • How to find your voice …literally, as a singer/performer/artist, and figuratively, in my artistic expression/writing?

  • Lessening the feeling of being inferior, not being academic (enough), and doing something messy

  • The Invention of Yesterday by Ansary (an Afghani-American historian).  Lovely narrative and a favourite of many.

  • How do you refer to your influence [s] in a creative writing piece without spoon-feeding the reader/audience?

  • “We are not nouns, we are verbs. I am not a thing - an actor, a writer - I am a person who does things - I write, I act - and I never know what I'm going to do next. I think you can be imprisoned if you think of yourself as a noun.” Stephen Fry.

  • Being selectively vulnerable

  • Helen’s metaphor: self-preservation (an armadillo) versus openness to new learning (a sunflower). Amanda’s translation: strong back, soft front. Some other suggested variations on the armadillo-sunflower combo were a Funflower or a Sunadillo or an Armi(Sun)flower.

The full video of this inspiring session is now available in the WriteSPACE Library.

Not a member yet? Register here to receive an email with the video link.

Better yet, join the WriteSPACE with a free 30 day trial, and access our full Library of videos and other writing resources.

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Emergency or emergence?
 

Valentine’s Day collage by Helen Sword

 
 

When I first looked at this collage by WriteSPACE member Gail Prasad -- created during a virtual workshop at my Valentine's Day Extravaganza a few weeks ago -- I saw only a scene of destruction.  The EMERGENCY sign from a hospital crashes into the roof of a tilting suburban house already half-submerged in rubble and half-covered by rampant jungle of green.  

But then I looked again.  In fact, the sign says EMERGE, with a hint of EMERGENCE.  Leaves, lattices, and fragments of words emerge from the page, richly textured and layered.  If you gaze long enough at the block of inky blue towards the top of the image, you'll see the faces of children emerging from the darkness.  Below them, caught in the crumbling latticing, we glimpse the inspiring word inspired.  

I asked Gail to tell me about her process of creating the collage.  She replied:

  • I started with the image of a hospital emergency wing that I’ve had in a collection of images that I’ve been gathering over the past year. I spent this past summer at the hospital with my father as he battled a rare and aggressive form of lymphoma. In the midst of grieving his loss, the practice of “making” has been healing. What surfaced through this collage was the idea that in “EMERGENCY” and crisis there is also the possibility of the EMERGENCE of new life worlds. While they may not be the same, the past is woven into what grows up from the ashes.

An assistant professor of education at York University in Canada, Gail uses collage as a research method to help children, youth, and their teachers express social representations of languages and language learning.  Here's an excerpt from a recent article on plurilingualism in children’s collages, in which she describes her own collage-making practice:

  • As a researcher-artist, when I relax into the creative process of gathering, layering, (re)combining and juxtaposing images, I am able to make new connections and allow ideas to surface that are substantively different than when I try to make sense cognitively of multiple pieces of information in the classroom or at my desk in my office. Rather than my head guiding my hand about what it should write, when I collage, the directionality of my thinking moves up first from my sensing of the materials in my hands as a I rearrange images, cut away parts or cover up pieces, up through my eyes as begin see new ideas, patterns and possibilities take shape, and then connect them in my mind and heart to what the composition reveals. (p. 908)

Reflecting on our Valentine's Day workshop, Gail noted further connections between collage-making and writing:

  • Your instruction that our collages could be photographed without actually gluing the layers down was freeing. It allowed me to take a picture of the work in progress and to see connections emerge – all with the assurance that I could make adjustments and additions to polish it later. I see the parallels to my writing. Sometimes I need to simply get thoughts on the page so I can take a step back to see the connections I am making both explicitly and more intuitively. It takes time for the ideas to settle into one another.

At a time when so much else in our world seems unsettled and askew, what new words might emerge from our emergencies? How can we use our writing to help ourselves and each other heal?  

I'd love to hear your thoughts!    


Subscribe here to Helen’s Word on Substack to access the full Substack archive and receive weekly subscriber-only newsletters (USD $5/month or $50/year).

WriteSPACE members enjoy a complimentary subscription to Helen’s Word as part of their membership plan (USD $15/month or $150/year). Not a member? Join the WriteSPACE now and get your first 30 days free.