The World of the Imagination and “Making it So”
- At September 20, 2021
- By Write in Community
- In Blog
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Make It So
Remember Jean Luc Picard, Starfleet Captain in Star Trek? When he and his officers hit upon a solution to get themselves out of a sticky situation—by going to warp speed, say, or activating the deflector shield to evade a hostile force—he instructed his crew to “make it so.” And it would be done. I love that. Determining a course of action and following through. Making it so.
Much of what we do in this life is based upon the decisions we make. Generally speaking, if we decide to pursue a particular dream, if we believe in it strongly enough and dedicate ourselves to shepherding it to fruition, that dream will come into being. Perhaps you want desperately to achieve a college education. What do you do? Study hard in high school, complete college applications and line up loans and scholarships. Or perhaps you want to write a novel. You go to work—preparing an outline, blocking out periods of time to write, and paragraph by paragraph, you write the book. You “make it so.”
Decision by decision, we create our lives—committing to relationships, buying condominiums, going on vacations to Hawaii or the mountains. We learn to play the guitar or the piano, create Japanese gardens or meditation gardens, convert basement rooms into art studios. Roadblocks appear, circumstances may necessitate we alter out plans somewhat, but when we act on our passions, we can create lives which are rich and full, lives full of meaning.
From time to time, however, we may find ourselves feeling a bit stale. Still, as Rousseau said, “The world of reality has its limits; the world of the imagination is boundless.” Maybe it’s time to stretch the imagination, look for ways to further complete our lives. One way we can do this is to set aside time to dream. Get your notebook, number from one to ten, and complete the following phrase: “If all the forces of the universe were with me and the odds were good that I would be successful, I would…” How would you complete the phrase? Maybe you would:
- complete a number of paintings and display them in a local art gallery
- start a series of poems about your garden and the natural world
- add a new sitting area to the first floor of the house.
Let your imagination go and jot down as many dreams as you can. Gloria Steinem said that “Without leaps of imagination or dreaming, we lose the excitement of possibilities. Dreaming, after all, is a form of planning.” So let’s dream, and allow more possibility into our lives. And then, let’s make it so.
For more inspiration, check out our website www.thewritingandcreativelife.com.
Or follow this link to purchase our latest book, The Fire Inside.
The Fire Inside
- At May 17, 2021
- By Write in Community
- In Blog
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The Fire Inside
Chapter One: The Fire Inside
We all have deep within us a yearning, a passion, a desire to make and to do, to create something out of our hearts and imaginations that did not exist before. To bring forth something new upon the earth. It is innate in us, this intense wanting, and when we are engaged in the specific type of creativity we were meant to do—whether it be painting, writing, making music or designing a new way to educate our children—we experience what Martha Graham calls “a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening.” It’s what puts the spark in our eyes, the skip in our steps. It is the fire inside.
Do you know that fire? Sometimes it manifests itself as restlessness, a vague dissatisfaction, a feeling that there is something important you must do, you have to do, to be true to yourself. It is the little ache you feel when you read a story that is heartbreakingly true and think I want to do that, or when you see a painting that stuns you with its power, and your fingers itch to pick up a paintbrush.
Maybe it isn’t exactly clear what is burning inside, what you want and are put on earth to do. Or perhaps you know in your bones that you must write poetry, you must dance or die, you must create gardens of incredible beauty, but maybe you’re afraid that if you try you will fall flat on your face. You doubt yourself and your abilities.
This is the way we humans are, having an intense wanting on one hand, fear and doubt on the other. But let us accept as an essential truth that we are all creative, wildly creative, each and every one of us—that we have vast reserves of untapped talents and abilities—songs only we can write, sculptures waiting to be born from the unique spirit that is us; and when we accept that belief and act on it, oh, then! We wake each day with a new animation, a vibrancy and passion. We feel like children let out of a stuffy classroom into a blue-sky spring day, and we can’t wait to see what we can do with it.
The fire inside is the “something” that fascinates you, intrigues you, so that you go to sleep and wake up thinking about it. You want to study it from all its interesting angles and make it central to your life, keep working at it, falling short in your aspirations at times, but trying and trying again. And if you are not currently involved with something that brings with it such zeal, if you’ve kept your fire tamped down, unable to act on your passion for whatever reason, know that it is still there— the beginning of days filled with intense purpose and meaning, waiting for you.
You can take a closer look at (and pre-order) The Fire Inside here. For more about the writing and creative life, you can visit our home page.
“The Fire Inside” Creative Exercise:
Each of us was put on this earth with certain innate talents and abilities, things we were meant to do. Some of us can identify almost immediately what these might be, what is “calling” to us. For others of us, it may take a little time. The best way to do so is to follow the love trail.
What do you love? What puts the shine in your eyes? (And there will be more than one thing.) Find some meditation time, some time alone, and consider what you love, what might be calling to you. Maybe it is spending time messing with watercolors, or taking pictures and arranging them in a scrapbook to tell a story. Maybe you love figuring out the plots in mystery novels. Jot these down in your notebook. Try this exercise several times a week, several times a month. You’ll begin to see patterns and themes and it may become clearer what you love to do.
Announcing…our Book Trailer!
- At April 26, 2021
- By Write in Community
- In Blog
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As you may know, our new book, The Fire Inside: A Companion for the Creative Life will be released June 1. It is the second of our “Essential Writing and Creative Series,” and we are excited! To announce our book, we’ve ventured into new territory, and began working with an excellent designer to create our book trailer. Check it out!
Books to Inspire Your Best Writing
- At January 18, 2021
- By Write in Community
- In Blog
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With the new year, one of your resolutions may be to get to your writing desk more often, and write faster and better, and more! If you’re like me, it helps if you have a little inspiration to get going. I believe in reading as preparation for writing, and want to share with you some of my favorite books for getting the writerly juices flowing.
Read More»Staying Creative During the Pandemic
- At November 23, 2020
- By Write in Community
- In Blog
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When the pandemic really “hit home” to me and the lockdowns were announced, I was concerned. Okay, I was a little scared. And how could I make it not seeing my friends and family? Not being able to go to movies and coffeehouses and concerts? But wait, I thought, I’m a writer. I can use this time to double-down on writing my novel; I can immerse myself in poetry and be productive. Take advantage of this time and write like mad.
Advantages of Creativity in Hard Times
Creativity can help us get through difficult times, we know this. First of all, when we absorb ourselves in music or writing or painting, we can let go of worry. We may find ourselves connecting with a greater power. Finding more meaning in every day. There is something about art and the creation of art that “lifts us,” calms us. Perhaps it’s the time spent with what is beautiful and pleasing. We breathe a little easier; we feel better.
But What If You Can’t Do Your Art?
Still, in spite of the advantages of losing ourselves in creativity, in difficult times, it may be that we just can’t. For those trying to balance work and child care along with a creative life, the pandemic can create even more obstacles to getting to your writing desk. Many parents and grandparents have taken on additional roles in child care and teaching, and while that in itself can be fabulously rewarding, it will take away from creative time.
Even if time is not a problem, there are other issues that might get in the way. When we are under stress, the thought of another thing you have to do, and you want to do well, may add an additional layer of tension. I’m not making the dramatic progress on my novel I thought I would, or writing as many poems. Perhaps it’s the same for you. You might be frustrated, perhaps even angry at yourself.
Give Yourself a Break
If the thought of getting to your creativity is causing more stress than it would potentially alleviate, perhaps it’s time to take a break. Instead read, watch a good movie, indulge in a leisurely walk outside, then have a cup of tea and listen to some music. Julia Cameron encourages artists to allow time to “fill the well.” More than ever these days, we need that advice. And, “In filling the well,” she writes, “think magic. Think delight. Think fun. Do not think duty.”
The Bottom Line
So, strive to allow a little creativity into every day. It is satisfying, affirming. Being creative is one of deepest yearnings of the soul. But if it just isn’t happening, don’t sweat it. Relax and surround yourself with beauty, surround yourself with what you love. Take care, everyone, and stay safe. Wishing your good health and peace. Wishing you calm.
A Creative Exercise For Tough Times
In this exercise, we’re going for what is out of the ordinary, whatever brings you a smile and is not a “big deal.” We’re going for just plain fun. If you’re a painter who works in oils, buy some glossy paper and finger paints, and see what happens. If you’re a poet who writes in free verse, write in rhyme. Get a little rhythm going and see what happens. Try something like this:
I woke up today and I was feeling good,
I thought I should write, yes, I knew I should,
But the sun it was bright and the birds on wing
And I thought I could do just about anything….
Give this a try. What is your “I woke up today and I was feeling good poem?” Or your “I woke up today and I was feeling “fine” poem? Or “feeling silly” poem?
Try something that is out of the ordinary for you. Know that creativity is inside you. Create and know that better times are coming.
Exciting News for the Writing and Creative Life!
- At September 21, 2020
- By Write in Community
- In Blog
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Exciting News for our Writing Community!
from Lucy Adkins and Becky Breed
Hello friends, we have some exciting news to share! Since the publication of our first book, Writing in Community, we have become more and more interested in all the ways we and those around us express our creative powers. Not only in writing (which is still our creativity “go-to!”) but also in painting, making music, all the traditional ways we think of creativity, and in the very way we live our lives. We use our creativity every day. To solve problems, to create more beauty in our lives. To find the right words to say to a friend who is hurting. Our creativity is vital, essential to who we are. And the good news is that we are all wildly creative, each and every one of us. Let us repeat that. We are all wildly creative, each and every one!
Poetry for These Times
- At June 15, 2020
- By Write in Community
- In Blog
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A poet’s work is to name the unnameable, to point at frauds, to take sides, start arguments, shape the world, and stop it going to sleep.—Salman Rushdie
The last two weeks have been ones of strong emotion and calls for change, the brutal death of George Floyd making it impossible to go on as before, to maintain what seems to have become the status quo in this country: systemic racism, social injustice, and police brutality. While we as a country may denounce such racism and the awful fruits of it, we haven’t done enough to make it stop.
Read More»Kindness in the Time of Quarantine
- At April 20, 2020
- By Write in Community
- In Blog
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Unexpected kindness is the most powerful, least costly, and most underrated agent of human change.—Bob Kerrey
Lately, I have been thinking about “Kindness,” the moving poem written by Naomi Shihab Nye and published in 1995. “Before you know kindness,” she wrote, “you must lose things…” For this is a time when we as a world and we as individual people are going through loss. For some, it is deep heart-wrenching loss when a loved one passes away. For most of us, it is loss experienced in other ways–loss of financial security and loss of freedom of movement, loss of the loving contact of friends and family, the solace that comes from talking things over.
Read More»Finding the Poet Within: Writing Workshop Reminder
- At February 26, 2018
- By Write in Community
- In Blog
0
Led by Lucy Adkins, the two part writing workshop, “Finding the Poet Within” will be held Saturday March 3rd and 10th, 1:00-3:00 pm in the Art Room at First Plymouth Church in Lincoln, Nebraska.
Explore the world of poetry in this workshop of inspiration and encouragement designed to help each participant find the poet within. Together, we will tap into the world of imagination, learn ways to jumpstart the creative process, and working from writing exercises, we will write our own poems. In addition, we’ll discover insights into ourselves and the practice of creativity, and discuss ways to make poetry and the writing of poetry a part of our lives.
Workshop cost: $40 per person
Registration is required. Contact addie@firstplymouth.org. or call 402-476-7565 , Ext 239 to register for the class. Hope to see you there! –Lucy Adkins
The Loneliness of the Writer
- At January 22, 2018
- By Write in Community
- In Blog
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Writing is a solitary occupation, and one of its hazards is loneliness. –Joyce Carol Oates
Some of the best times of a writer’s life come with long hours of uninterrupted work, a story unspooling before you on the computer screen, becoming one with the characters, the words flowing freely. But then the writing day comes to an end and you look up from your work, feeling strange, disconnected. As if you didn’t know where you belong.
Read More»
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