Saturday, October 17, 2015

Collecting ideas

I just finished reading a good book, Harriet Wolf’s Seventh Book of Wonders by Julianna Baggott.  In the acknowledgements, the author mentions some inspirations for parts of the novel, including a newspaper clipping about a plane crash that she read as a child and a book's footnote about the Maryland School for Feeble Minded Children.  Baggott collected ideas, from childhood through adulthood.  And then she connected them, along with other ideas collected and imagined along the way, into a larger story.  She made something new.  That’s what good writers do, I think, whether it's poetry, essays, short stories, novels. 

Writers are idea collectors.  We collect and observe and ponder.  Who knows where those ideas will lead?  Artists collect ideas too, inventors, scientists, business owners, researchers...anyone working on a project for work, for school, for home, for fun.  Most of us collect ideas in one way or another, intentionally or not.

basket of notebooks & folders for collecting ideas

I have a few ways that I intentionally collect ideas for writing: 

a file folder in a drawer labeled “writing ideas” - I haven’t added anything to this folder for at least a few years because the file cabinet is no longer near where I work.  Things got moved around over the years without much thought about location.

a “writing projects” folder on the desktop of my computer - Here I save a variety of documents – quickly written notes, planned stories or essays, stream of consciousness diatribes, unsent letters or rants or editorials, journal entries, memories, etc.

the “Notes” app on my smart phone – I occasionally jot down something when I'm out and about - snippets of ideas or a few lines or overheard dialogue.

notebooks and the accompanying scraps of paper shoved into these notebooks – At times, I’ve been pretty consistent about writing “morning pages” in a spiral notebook.  I sometimes jot down blog ideas in another notebook.  I also have a composition notebook that I use as a commonplace book to copy down quotes, poems, favorite passages from books, etc.  I haven’t used these notebooks with any regularity in the past several months.

my brain – This is often the least reliable idea collector, but it’s the most accessible.  Maybe I remember the ideas that I want to make note of later.  Often I don't.  But sometimes I do remember, or the idea keeps coming back to me in various ways. 
 
 


I enjoy reading about the processes of other idea collectors.  There are books and websites and exhibits that let us take a peek into the notebooks, journals, sketchbooks and scrapbooks of artists and writers.  It’s inspiring.  My own idea collection could use some refinement.  Although I can see myself getting too caught up in the method or vehicle for collecting ideas rather than the collecting part, so perhaps it's okay if I stick with my haphazard methods.
Which leads me back to Harriet Wolf’s Seventh Book of Wonders.  Julianna Baggott mentions the clipping about the plane crash that she saw as a child, and also her main character Harriet clips and saves articles in a scrap book.  Reading this motivated me to get my “writing ideas” folder out of the filing cabinet downstairs.  Inside is a short article from a parenting magazine, “A Chart to Make Getting Dressed a Breeze.”  The author created a weather chart on an erasable calendar, which also included a list of appropriate clothing for specific weather.  There were guidelines, as in - if it’s below 50 degrees, you must wear long sleeves and pants and a fleece jacket. 

I didn’t clip the article because I thought it was a good idea.  Not that it’s a“bad” idea, but it struck me as curious that someone would do this.  I knew that I would never create or compel my children to follow such a chart.  The kid who had sensory issues and needed to wear clothing that felt right.  The kid who refused to wear shorts one summer.  The kids (including the same one who refused shorts one summer) who insisted on wearing shorts once the temperature hit about 45-50 degrees in the spring.  The kids who wore sweatshirts rather than winter jackets at the outdoor ice-skating rink, because they really were warm enough.  The kid who would only wear sweatpants and never jeans, because he didn’t like the feel or fit.  Then a few years later – it was vice-versa. 

Maybe I clipped and saved the article about the weather chart because I thought I might write a humorous essay about my children's clothing choices.  Or maybe the clipping would inspire a more philosophical essay on the extent to which we do or don’t give our children choices.  Or perhaps the clipping would help describe a fictional character in a story, a mother who would create such a chart. 

I had no clear purpose for what I might do with it when I tucked that article into the folder, but I'm glad I did.  It helped me write this blog post, and it illustrated my point about collecting ideas very well. 

Saturday, October 10, 2015

No such thing as unready & uninspired


This quote, attributed to actor Hugh Laurie, has shown up on FB a lot recently.
Last week, I finished the #30PostsHathSept blog challenge.  My goal was to write fifteen blog posts in the month of September, and I did.  I approached the challenge somewhat haphazardly with no particular plan of what I would write about.  That's part of what's so great about a blog challenge.  I couldn't wait to be inspired or "ready" as the quote above says - I just had to write.

When I wrote my fifteenth post of the month last Wednesday, I thought I'd take a break for a few days.  I know how important momentum is when it comes to writing and blogging.  I wrote about that in my one year blog anniversary post:  "Momentum is key, as it is with so many habits.  The more frequently I blog, the more motivated I am to keep up with it.  It's very hard to get back to blogging after neglecting it for weeks or a month at a time."   

On the other hand, I convinced myself that I "deserved" a few days break after completing the challenge.  This is a common trick people use to convince ourselves not to do things.  You can read more about that in the excellent book The Willpower Instinct by Kelly McGonigal.  Well, a few days became a week.  And now it's been a week and a half since I've blogged.  During that time, I told myself that I was too busy, too tired and uninspired.  Let me examine those statements, which are all true but also false: 

1)  I'm too busy.  Yes, I am.  But I was about the same amount of busy - give or take - during the weeks I participated in the blog challenge.  Some of the busy is of my own choosing or because I'm not making conscious decisions about how I use my time.  Maybe I'm spending too much time checking email or news or Facebook.  Or maybe I'm letting my paid work seep into my entire day, rather than putting parameters around it.  Perhaps I'm saying yes to too many volunteer commitments.  Or am I spending too much time worrying about things I cannot control?

2)  I'm too tired.  Yes, I am.  But continuing to tell myself how tired I am, will only make me more tired.  And writing fuels and energizes me.

3)  I'm uninspired.  Sometimes.  But as we all know, inspiration isn't going to come if we don't sit down and do the work.  Every book or blog post or piece of advice about writing comes down to that.  I know there are some great quotes from writers on this topic, but I couldn't think of any off the top of my head.  Here's a good one from artist Chuck Close:
 Inspiration is for amateurs - the rest of us just show up and get to work.
And it's so true.  During the September blog challenge and during a similar challenge last year - when I committed to blogging regularly, inspiration came.  Revisiting old themes, cultivating new ideas, sharing life stories, sketching out humorous pieces, trying new formats, incorporating dreams...when I invested time in writing and made it a priority, the ideas came.  Some posts did flow easily; others were hammered out with difficulty.  The quality of the ideas and the writing varied widely, of course. 

On the other hand...

I can't find a source for this quote, but I love its good & simple wisdom.

So...no, I'm not ready.
I don't even think this post is quite ready to publish. 
But I'm going to do it anyway.

*****

Another good quote about being ready comes from Amy Poehler:


Also, check out this really great Zen Pencils cartoon of Amy Poehler's quote.  And if you haven't yet, be sure to check out the Zen Pencils website for lots of "cartoon quotes from inspirational folks."