Showing posts with label How To. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How To. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 02, 2014

Living Wholeheartedly: Brené Brown TED Talk



Brené Brown at TEDxHouston
Living Wholeheartedly
or
The Price of Invulnerability


I lost count of the ah ha! moments these twenty minutes gave me.

In a nutshell:

  • We're born to be connected.
  • Interpersonal disconnect defines our current culture.
  • What breaks interpersonal connection aka relationship?
  • Shame. Guilt. 
  • Why do some weather encounters with shame and guilt while others are sunk by it?
  • Those who are sunk have a deep-seated sense of unworthiness while those who weather it have a pervasive sense of worthiness.
  • That sense of worthiness keeps their hearts whole and resilient.

How do the wholehearted live?

  • With the courage to be imperfect.
  • With compassion and kindness beginning with themselves.
  • With connections rooted in authenticity--able to let go of shoulds be who they are
  • Believing they are enough just as they are
  • Embracing vulnerability--seeing it as the source of their beauty
  • With willingness to takes risks--love with no guarantees
  • Releasing need to be in control
  • Practicing gratitude and joy


Those without the skills of wholeheartedness attempt to escape the pain by numbing the difficult emotions through:

  • Addictions
  • Perfection
  • Control

BUT

You cannot numb selectively.

Attempts to numb sadness, shame, grief, anger, fear...
Will also numb love, joy, peace, gratitude, hope...

Without emotions life looses meaning and purpose.

Don't be satisfied with my synopsis tho.  Listen to her presentation.  The story she tells about the course of her research is priceless.  And there are plenty of points I didn't include.  Plus I paraphrased in places.

And she's funny.

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Friday, June 20, 2014

Friday Forays in Fiction: Lighting Your Writing

Use of Lighting in Casablanca to Reflect
the Pervasive Sense of Imprisonment
Public Domain
Growing Readership By "Lighting Up Your Writing" | Bestseller Labs:  'via Blog this'

This article over at Jonathan Gunson's  Bestseller Labs is fascinating.  In Gunson's introduction to the guest post by Claudette Young, he talks about how the use of shadows that look like prison bars in the 1942 movie, Casablanca, was purposeful on the part of the director to telegraph to the audience the sense of imprisonment pervasive in that town where the desperate yet hopeful gravitated in their attempts to leave the sphere of influence of the Nazi regime.


Claudette Young's guest post begins:
Anyone can write a story, but not everyone illuminates with their words. And learning to emphasize without red flags, spotlights, or extraneous punctuation is a skill worth the effort...  read on
She goes on to use examples from both screen and print.  The first third or so discusses the way each of the CSI series has it's own ambiance established by a signature lighting scheme.  As interesting as that was I was beginning to get impatient as I'd clicked on the link for the promise of 'Lighting Up Your Writing' and really wanted examples of how it's done with words that are meant to stand on their own to create the image and ambiance in the reader's mind--unlike script writing which is just a recipe for the director and stage lighting specialists to follow who inevitably interpret it with the mediums they use.

But the rest of the article does focus on the written word--stories and novels and non-fiction so it fulfilled the promise.

The article is well worth the read for any writer wanting advice on how to increase sensory detail (especially the lighting of setting) in their stories.

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Friday, May 23, 2014

Transformational Author Experience 2014

Trnasformational Author Experience
2014
Christine Kloser plus 21 transformational leaders, publishing industry experts and NY Times bestselling authors share their wisdom, insider tips and practical how-to on writing, publishing and promoting your transformational story or book of advice on how to create transformation in one's self, family, community or world.

I've been listening to this webinar series all week. Two speakers per day M-Th and 3 on Friday. After the first day I was wishing I'd done a blog post promoting it ahead of time. I wondered if it was too late. Were they still accepting registrations?

 I delayed until today to go check on that. It seems the invite page is still active.   I decided to do this post when I got the email today saying that, because of tech problems with the daily replays, they are going to make the whole week's worth available all weekend--until Monday at 4:30PM Eeastern or 1:30PM Pacific when they put up Monday's two immediately after the second is over, which would make it possible for late comers to catch up.

I've been listening to the replays all week because I spaced it Monday and forgot to tune in live. I listened to Monday's second with Panache Desai twice and I think I just may listen again this weekend after I catch up with Friday's three and Thursday's second which I missed when I was called away from the computer before noon today and didn't get back until after 2.

The event continues through Friday of next week and with a basic pass, like mine, it is free to listen live or to the replays for 24 hours. If you want to download the audios and PDF transcript to keep you would need to upgrade to Gold level.  At Platinum and Diamond levels there are a range of other extras, including, templates, live coaching, home study courses, special reports, live Q+A and training.

Also included in Gold and Platinum is an entry into the 4th Annual Transformational Author Writing Contest where the coveted prize is a Hay House book contract. Other prizes include other publishing packages, coaching, home study courses, live event tickets, a full edit package, promotional assistance, workshops, an agent, a conference and more.

What are Transformational Books? Think Hay House. Think Eckhart Tolle, Neale Donald Walsch, Louise Hay, Iyanla Vanzant or personal journeys out of grief, despair, bitterness, illness, poverty, ignorance or fear and topics like spiritual path, health and fitness, enlightenment, achieving wealth or success, Law of Attraction, Inspirational, or transforming fear, anger and depression into love, peace and joy.

When I first found the invite in my email, I was going to pass thinking it wasn't something I could use since my passion is fiction and poetry. [In my research for this post I discovered that spiritual fiction and poetry is included in the concept and accepted in the contest.] But when I realized: I have been recording the play-by-play of my lifequake and its aftershocks here since Valentine's week of 2013 and if I ever do pull my life out of the rubble I could quite possibly have a transformational story in a very rough draft. With that thought, I went ahead and registered.

I'm glad I did now because I'm finding the advice transferable to my self-pub aspirations for my stories as well. I mean topics like the following are pertinent to any writer:
  • Writing Through Fear
  • Self-Publishing vs. Traditional Publishing
  • How to Become A Hay House Author
  • Creating an Enlightened Best-Seller
  • The Millionaire Master Plan for Authors
  • Claiming Your Authentic Voice
  • Building Your Authors Platform
  • Discovering Your Soul Signature
  • How to Become a Powerful Speaker
  • Social Media for Authors
  • see more
Here you can listen to messages from five attendees of previous TAE events who took their book from idea to big success.

The following was provided as a suggested blog post for bloggers wanting to promote the event.  My original plan was to copy paste this and provide a short intro paragraph.  Ha.  When have I ever? I was about to delete it since I covered so much of the territory above but there is enough useful info in their copy to warrant leaving it in:

How to Grow Your Business as a Published Author… and Impact More Lives With Your Message
Have you dreamed of writing a book or becoming a successful published author? Do you have a valuable message that – if put in print – will help grow your business and transform more lives? If you answered yes, but don’t have your book written yet… keep reading!
There has never been a better time to write your book and become an author. The opportunities available for authors in the 21st Century are endless. Yet, the majority of entrepreneurs who say they want to write a book don’t actually do it. Why? Based on more than 900 responses to a recent survey by Transformational Book Coach, Christine Kloser, aspiring authors revealed what holds them back.
Most authors don’t know where to start or what to do first. They are overwhelmed with too much information and not enough action. Sometimes things like fear and doubt creep in. Other times, its confusion, lack of clarity or confidence that can stop an author in their tracks. Another big challenge for authors is feeling like their book has already been written… by somebody else.
Not to mention the maze of information out there about writing and publishing a book. Is it best to self-publish or try to get an agent and sell your manuscript? How important is it to build your platform? What are the first things to do to start writing your book? How can you leverage your book to grow your business? What do you do about “writer’s block?” How much will it cost to publish?
The good news is, it IS absolutely possible to write your book in a way that is easy, joyful and fun – without wasting your precious time, money or energy going in circles. It’s also possible your book will bring about profound personal, professional, and even planetary transformation.
Here are three steps to get started:
  1. Strategize Your Book - Don’t just start writing, rather know who you’re writing for, why you want to serve them and how you want to serve them. Having this clarity up front will help the book flow more easily.
  2. Write Your Book For One Person - Your book is an intimate conversation with one person at a time – as they cuddle up with your words. So, don’t set out to write your book for the masses – write if for one person and you’ll reach many.
  3. Keep Going - The only reason why aspiring authors don’t end up published authors is because they let themselves get stopped. The most important thing you can do it keep going… even if it means you write for 1 minute today. That’s better than nothing!
===================
if you’re ready to take the next step with your book (or even just a little bit interested in writing a book someday) you’ll want to join me for Christine Kloser’s 4th Annual Transformational Author Experience(r). Christine is offering one of the best FREE trainings I’ve ever seen for authors. Her faculty includes Bestselling authors like Lisa Nichols, Marci Shimoff, Danielle LaPorte, and Robert Allen well as publishing industry leaders like Reid Tracy (CEO and President of Hay House), Marc Allen (Publisher of Eckhart Tolle’s Power of Now), and Bill Gladstone (Neale Donald Walsch’s literary agent). And that’s just the beginning of what’s in store for you at her FREE Transformational Author Experience(r).
I hope you’ll take a look at what she’s put together for you and join us. It truly is a phenomenal program that has the power to transform your life if you let it… www.transformationalauthor.com
Christine Kloser “The Transformation Catalyst” is an award-winning author who powerfully combines spiritual guidance and intuition, with nuts-and-bolts transformational writing, publishing and marketing expertise. The result is a global movement of aspiring authors who unleash their authentic voice, share their message on the pages of a book and make their difference in the world. Trusted and celebrated by aspiring authors and publishing industry leaders for her down to earth, authentic and inspiring approach, Christine has become the well-recognized leader of the transformational author movement having trained more than 35,000 authors in less than 3 years. Get her free training at: www.transformationalauthor.com

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Friday, April 25, 2014

Friday Forays in Fiction: Les Edgerton's Hooked: Write Fiction That Grabs Readers at Page One and Never Lets Go -- Book Review

Hooked: Write Fiction That Grabs Readers at Page One and Never Lets Go
by Les Edgerton
Writer's Digest Books (April 12, 2007)
256 pages

My experience with this book is a good example of one of its precepts: the abstract won't reach the reader where she lives only the particulars that allow you to live the scene along with the protagonist will.

I received a free ebook of Hooked in early November 2011 as a NaNoWriMo participant.  After NaNo that year I began the book but got distracted half way through the second chapter.  A few months later I began it again and didn't finish the first chapter.  Half a year later I started over again and may have finished the second chapter before other books and passions preempted Hooked yet again.

I think there may have been a time or two after that.  I never got beyond the second chapter.

This time was different.  This time I had a purpose.  A very specific purpose.

When I began it again at the beginning of April it was specifically to get help for the structural rewrite of my story Blow Me a Candy Kiss as I knew the biggest problem with it was the beginning since several of my early readers had expressed issues with it. And I confess I was uncomfortable with it and also with the ending which is why I never submitted it anywhere.

This rewrite is my Camp NaNo project for April so my focus has been on it all month.  My usual method to prepare for working on a story is to daydream in the storyworld until it feels as real or more so than reality.  When I began Hooked again this time, I'd already reread the story twice and had been dreaming the story for several days while jotting down thoughts, insights, questions.  That is what made the difference for I was soaked in the particulars of the story and especially the opening scene.

Thus it was that as I reread the first two chapters again I was applying every suggestion, explanation and example to Candy Kiss and making notes on paper and marking up my hardcopy as I experienced on Aha! moment after another.

I am feeling fairly confidant now that I see where I went wrong and why and how to fix it.

The amazing thing is that I was much closer than I thought to being on the right track.  It isn't going to take a major rewrite only some tweaks scattered throughout, a change of emphasis here, a new image there, an added phrase or three, a new sentence or four or five and maybe three new paragraphs besides the rewrite of the opening paragraph.

The breakthrough for me was Edgerton's explanation of the difference between the surface problems and the story problem: The first can be encapsulated by a photograph but the latter exists deep in the protagonist's psych and any attempt to depict it other than telling the whole story would be nothing but abstract psychobabble or monotonous stream-of-consciousness navel-gazing.

But, goes on, the first surface problem triggered by the inciting incident needs to be rooted in the story problem.  And every surface problem thereafter stems from the failed attempt to resolve the previous surface problem. Neither the reader nor the protagonist is aware of the story problem until its resolution in the final scene but the author MUST know before she begins.

I must have had good instincts back in 1989 because I identified the inciting incident in my first paragraph just where Edgerton said it should be but I had intended that first surface problem to be the story problem.  Consciously anyway because I found evidence scattered throughout the story that I was developing the story problem all along.

And that explains why I got so confused when the story seemed to reach a good resolution without that final scene I was so attached to because it had been the storyseed for me: the image suffused with raw emotion that catapulted me into the story and served as its north star.  Because of that I couldn't bear to part with it and had to tack on that little epilogue like a tree that had been pulled up by its roots and replanted in a too small pot.

I finally realized that I'd set out to write the story in which the first surface problem was the story problem which would have made that final scene its resolution but the real story problem was also peeking out by the third paragraph.

I have, as well, developed a second story featuring Greg and Iris with Greg as POV protagonist which might carry that original storyseed scene.  Unless it turns out to belong to a third or even a forth story. Their story has been growing in my heart for decades and I've long suspected there might be a short novel's worth of story left; or a novella's length collection of short stories centered on Greg and Iris.

After I finish the Blow Me a Candy Kiss rewrite, I'm going to start moving through my fiction files taking each story or novel one by one, applying the inciting incident/surface problem/story problem paradigm.  I expect this to give me breakthroughs on every one.  At the very least I believe it will eliminate that fear I have of going back to play in my plethora of NaNo messes.

Yes Mr. E.  I used that word on purpose.  I understand you hate it.  I imagine you have good reason.  But I won't let you murder a perfectly good word because you've seen it misused by dozens of newbie fiction writers who probably plucked it out of a thesaurus with no true understanding of its dimensions in meaning, connotation, history, etymology and typical class/education level of it users.

I could go on.  But that would belong in a separate post.

The core reason for my defiance is a refusal to allow yet one more fear to be added to the already overabundance of fears I have about sending my stories out to be read.  That's exactly all the  knowledge that you, editors, agents and, in fact, every reader has a handful of trigger words that makes them stop reading is worth.

But, as usual, I digress.  So, in closing, I would like to thank you from the bottom of my heart for your little book. It has already had a profound impact on my concept of story-craft.  Only two others rank above it: Janet Burroway's Fiction Writing which I was reading for the first of many times as I wrote the first draft of Candy Kiss and Robert Olen Butler's From Where You Dream which taught me the storyworld dreaming method I've used for over a decade.

Burroway taught me how to make and use the jigsaw pieces of all the disparate elements of good story telling.  Butler taught me how to make the story live.  You have taught me how to arrange the pieces and put them together.

From the Publishers:

The road to rejection is paved with bad beginnings. Agents and editors agree: Improper story beginnings are the single biggest barrier to publication. Why? If a novel or short story has a bad beginning, then no one will keep reading. It's just that simple. 
In Hooked, author Les Edgerton draws on his experience as a successful fiction writer and teacher to help you overcome the weak openings that lead to instant rejection by showing you how to successfully use the ten core components inherent to any great beginning. You'll find:
  • Detailed instruction on how to develop your inciting incident 
  • Keys for creating a cohesive story-worthy problem 
  • Tips on how to avoid common opening gaffes like overusing backstory 
  • A rundown on basics such as opening scene length and transitions 
  • A comprehensive analysis of more than twenty great opening lines from novels and short stories 
  • Plus, you'll discover exclusive insider advice from agents and acquiring editors on what they look for in a strong opening. 

With Hooked, you'll have all the information you need to craft a compelling beginning that lays the foundation for an irresistible story!

From the Book:


  • This is the only scene in the story that the protagonist doesn't enter with the goal of resolving some type of problem, and that's simply because it's the opening scene's job to create the initial problem in the first place.
  • A good, quality story beginning is a microcosm of the work entire. If you capture the right beginning, you've written a small version of the whole.
  • What transforms a story is the inner psychological problem of the protagonist being laid bare on the page.
  • once the story-worthy problem is introduced, nothing can take precedence over it
  • As the author, you should have a firm understanding of your story-worthy problem before you begin writing



Les Edgerton

From the author bio on amazon:
Les Edgerton has published fifteen books, the latest being two novels from StoneGate Ink, the noir thriller "Just Like That", the thriller, "The Perfect Crime", the short story collection, "Gumbo Ya-Ya from Snubnose Press, and his latest, the noir thriller "The Bitch" from Bare Knuckles Press. His most popular book is the writer's text, "Hooked: Write Fiction That Grabs Readers at Page One and Never Lets Them Go." His own favorite is his collection, titled, "Monday's Meal," which received a glowing review from the NY Times in which he was compared favorably to Raymond Carver.
He has a blog on writing at: http://lesedgertononwriting.blogspot.com/ he invites you to visit.
He lives with his wife Mary and son Mike in Ft. Wayne, IN. He has two daughters--Britney and Sienna--from a previous marriage. He teaches a private writing class online as well as a class via Skype for the New York Writer's Workshop. In the past, he has taught creative writing for the UCLA Extension Writer's Program, Trine University, St. Francis University, and was Writer-in-Residence for the University of Toledo for three years.
Edgerton is an ex-con, having served two years of a 2-5 sentence at Pendleton Reformatory in the sixties for second-degree burglary. The sentence was the result of a plea bargain where it was reduced to a single charge from 182 burglaries, two strong-arm robberies, an armed robbery, and a count of possession with intent to deal. Today, he's completely reformed and you can invite him into your home and when he leaves you won't have to count the silverware... Prior to this little "trouble" Les served 4 years in the U.S. Navy as a cryptographer who had "up close and personal" experience with the Cuban Crisis and the beginning of the Vietnam War.
After making parole from Pendleton, Edgerton obtained his B.A. from Indiana University (Honors of Distinction), where he was elected Student Body President, and then received his MFA in Writing (Fiction) from Vermont College. He teaches workshops nationwide on writing, specializing in classes and seminars on the writer's voice and story beginnings. He also coaches writers on their novels and the fee is $100 per hour.
He was born in Odessa, TX on Feb. 13, 1943 and grew up in a variety of places, including Freeport, TX and South Bend, IN. He is the oldest of five and has two surviving sisters (his sister Jo passed away) and a brother. Growing up in Freeport, his family ate all their meals at his grandmother's bar and restaurant, and before the age of twelve, Les had worked every job in the bar, including serving alcohol and food (those were different times, before the government assumed the job of parenting and protecting us from ourselves). When he turned 12, his grandmother told him he was old enough to learn the taxi-cab business which she owned and he began his first day on the midnight shift. An hour after he began, one of the cab drivers shot and killed another driver who was tormenting him with a rattlesnake, and he made the call to the police. Later, he was called on to testify at the man's trial and the defendant was found innocent as he was acting in self-defense.
These days, he's working on a memoir, a new writer's how-to, several novels, several nonfiction projects and appearing at various workshops. He invites readers of his work to contact him. His contact info is on his blog at www.lesedgertononwriting.blogspot.com/. His newest novel is a noir novella forthcoming from New Pulp Press titled "The Rapist.
His novel "The Bitch" was a finalist in the Snubnose Magazine "Best Novel" in the Legends category and was the winner of the best novel in the 2011 Preditors & Editors award. His first novel, "The Death of Tarpons" was awarded a Special Citation from the Violet Crown Book Awards.

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