Showing posts with label Quotes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quotes. Show all posts

Saturday, February 07, 2015

What's Important Is --Author Quote -- ROW80 Check-In



Now that the restart is done I've got journaling worked in to some of my days.

My Round 1 intentions: seek to regain my joy/Joy in writing and to prepare the soil for its blooming with these time investment goals:
  • Storydreaming 15min Daily (I never lost this one since instating it in my first round in 2012.  A ROW80 win!) 100%
  • Read/Study Craft 15min Daily 100% (reading blog posts on topic)
  • Move/Breathe/Meditate 15min Daily 50%
  • Personal Journaling 15min Daily20%  [this should be added before next check-in. yep, it was the needed restart making me reluctant to open another ap, file or tab beforehand]
  • Read Fiction 30min Daily 100%
  • Social network activities 30min Daily (writing Joystory posts doesn't count only social reaching out like reading/commenting on other blogs, guest posts and posting to fb, twitter, pinterest etc) 50% 
Current Joy Meter: under 30%  That is down from mid week.  Mood has been volatile.  Tho my mood is low I've still avoided a meltdown going on two weeks now.  Two weeks as of Tuesday.  The last one started on Sunday evening and lasted through the wee hours of Tuesday.

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Wednesday, December 31, 2014

2014: Forget Me Not

forget-me-not by Alice Popkorn  (cc)
So long 2014.

I will not forget you
but not for trying.
Your whirlygig antics have
ground my nerves raw.

Thanks for the memories...
urm...not so much...
well, one, anyway.
OK...two.

I guess you were an affiliate
of the School of Hard Knocks
and devotee of the theory:
'you must be cruel to be kind'

for you were generous with your cruelty
and stinting of your kindness.
Maybe someday I will thank you for the lessons
having found them crucial to my future joy.

but not today...

Today I say "Get thee hence
before I slam that door on your behind...
and take your 'kindness' with you
to where the sun don't shine."

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Friday, September 12, 2014

Friday Foray's in Fiction: Quote

Visions by Alice Popkorn -flickr

“The great Japanese film director Akira Kurosawa said that to be an artist means never to avert your eyes. And that's the hardest thing, because we want to flinch. The artist must go into the white hot center of himself, and our impulse when we get there is to look away and avert our eyes.”
― Robert Olen Butler
From Where You Dream

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Sunday, July 13, 2014

Sunday Serenity #397





"The best and most beautiful things in life cannot be seen, nor touched, but are felt in the heart."
Helen Keller


I first encountered this at flickspire.com Finding Joy Inspiration Slide Show
There was no embed option so I took a chance and searched YouTube

[This is one of the posts going up retroactively after the weeks long unintended hiatus that began the week after July 4th.  See She's Back for more detailed explanation.]

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Friday, May 30, 2014

Friday Forays in Fiction: Quote

yore memreez ai rewryt 4 u k?

I've been inundated by a flood of memories this week as I've been tending to our dying fur baby, Merlin.

It has struck me that memory is crucial to story.  It is in fact story telling.  Your memories are stories you tell yourself.  But the moment you put them into words you are telling a story to others as well as yourself and its no longer the same story.  It seems you can't avoid fictionalizing your memories when you capture them in words.

This flood of memories has dominated the theme of the last three posts:



This makes four.

I've also been contemplating the role my memories have played in my fiction and poetry and noticing how this current flood has been stimulating ideas for more poetry and fictional stories.

I've been holding this vigil with Merlin since Tuesday morning.  He's still with us.  Barely.  He's still drinking water but to my knowledge has not taken any food since the slivers of salmon off my dinner plate Tuesday evening which gave me a burst of hope.

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Friday, May 09, 2014

Friday Forays in Fiction: Quote

Warz teh wyteowt?


Yeah.  I kinda got rewrite on my mind this week.

Scrivener and the Whiz
My Other Desktops

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Thursday, April 17, 2014

National Library Week 2014: Lives Change at the Library


Lives Change at the Library
moar kittehs  caption share vote


This week is the 2014 National Library Week sponsored by the ALA  The theme this year is Lives Change at the Library.

The event began in the fifties (the spring after I was born) and is intended to raise awareness of all that the libraries and their workers do for individuals and communities and encourage the funding for those services.  

Now, during these economic hard times, this is more urgent than ever as libraries have been loosing funding and closing down.  In those that survive services, hours and materials have been cut.  Which translates to fewer librarians and their aides, fewer books and magazines, fewer multimedia items, fewer days open, fewer events held at local libraries.

It is the most astonishing shortsightedness on the part of library levy voters who can't see that the value they get from the libraries compounds the value of the money levied many times over even if they don't use the services themselves.  

And what can I say about the alarming arrogance on the part of community leaders, politicians and local business owners who are often spouting off about how they got where they are without setting foot in a library?

How can they all not see that even if they don't use the library themselves they are benefiting as much as anyone who keeps their card tapped out at all times?  Or that there are library services they could be using that could save them time and money if they didn't see it as a status step down or a violation of their libertarian doctrines?  Or that the services provided contributes to community health in ways that save hundreds of dollars for every dollar spent on the library?

Consider these few:
  • Help with tax forms.  Besides those on fixed income like the elderly and disabled there are the employees of local businesses whose peace of mind translates into more efficiency at work.  But not if the library is never open when they are off the job site.
  • A source of information on the people and issues on the next ballot.
  • Fact check via phone or email.
  • Activities for juveniles that keep them safe and the community safe from their boredom fed shenanigans while inspiring their imaginations toward their future contribution to the community and expanding their aspirations.
  • Resources for study and homework help for the students who will be the next generation of employees and entrepreneurs.
  • Resources for teen and adult hope-to-be entrepreneurs in learning all the requirements to setting up and running a business.
  • Resources for homeschooling families who are also heavy consumers of specialty products provided by local business.
  • Help for non-native speakers of English in becoming proficient at communicating in English enhancing their value to employers and the community at large.  Not to mention relieving one of the stressors contributing to dysfunctional behaviors that break down family and neighborhood cohesion and clog the justice system.  How do those costs compare to the few dollars per month asked of local property owners for a healthy vibrant library?

I blogged several times about the Southern Oregon Library System's closure in April of 2007 and how it reopened that fall with most of the 15 branches cut to less than twenty hours over two or three days.  It has yet to bring those days and hours back.  Several of the branches opted out of the system and closed altogether.  It still saddens and angers me.

But I'm currently living in Longview, WA and using the library of my childhood and it seems to be as vibrant and bustling as ever.

I've talked often here about how much I owe to the library systems I've patronized.  
  • I've called them my universities.  
  • This autodidact has depended on libraries to satisfy her every craving for story or knowledge.  
  • I've checked out several thousand library books over my life-time and without libraries I'd never have had access to most of the several hundred novels I've read.  
  • 95% of everything I've learned about the craft of writing and storytelling I owe to library books and media.
  • The research for my stories depended entirely on libraries before the Internet and it is my belief that the Internet will never completely replace libraries for serious researchers*.  

*Research librarians with advanced degrees in media storage and information technologies still outshine and outsmart the search engines--especially now that most of the common free ones are now sponsor driven or the top tier in search results achieve their positions not because of their relevance or usefulness or even truthfulness but rather because someone with something to sell has paid for the slot.

Read more...

Monday, March 24, 2014

One Big, Bad Want

dat is a big bad wuntz



Dwell not upon thy weariness, thy strength shall be according to the measure of thy desire.
- Arab Proverb

I found this quote in one of my quote collections and knew I had to do a post with it as it is so relevant to the theme of most of my posts since last Wednesday.  Especially Friday's.

One of the things Ed took note of over the past weeks and months was how often I complained about a wave of overwhelming fatigue every time I thought about certain tasks.  So when he agreed to renew the coaching in time management he set out to provide me with a number of small early successes to demonstrate their energizing effect.

The first time it was quite an amazing ah ha moment.

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Friday, March 07, 2014

Friday Forays in Fiction: Quote

hao sad hoominz mus b remyndud ob dis troof
Ever since I read Shan Jeniah Burton's Monday pep talk on Row80 a couple weeks ago, I've been ruminating on the role of play, improv and imperfection in the creative process.  Which has led me to search out book titles and quotes on the theme.

I discussed the impact of  that pep talk on me in my 145th ROW80 check-in February 23 and the imprint of that impact persists.  Maybe this time I won't loose sight of its importance.

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Friday, February 28, 2014

Friday Forays in Fiction: Quote

soon az mai pawz stops maykng mi pauz ai tayx teh plunj
I've been thinking a lot recently about the role that doubt, fear, anxiety, and the need to be in control has played in my tendency to collect unfinished stories, novels, essays, book reviews and poems that never seem to reach the publishable stage.  All told there are several dozen now.

This is a huge issue for me and I plan to take it by the tail this year.

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Friday, February 21, 2014

Friday Forays in Fiction: Quote

Wish...Wonder...Will...Woo...Voila

This is a quote from Marina Warner, author of Stranger Magic: Charmed States & The Arabian Nights  which I've just checked out of the library for the third time in a year.  It is actually from a different book--From the Beast to the Blonde: On Fairy Tales and Their Tellers.

I've just explored all of Warner's books on Goodreads and now I want to own them all!  My first encounter with her work was in the late 80s when I was in college with Alone of All Her Sex: The Myth and the Cult of the Virgin Mary.

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Friday, January 31, 2014

Friday Forays in Fiction: Quote

moar Lit Kits
Nao wud B gud!


I've always loved that Ray Bradbury quote.  I've seldom been able to implement it.  I'm constantly in the grip of analysis paralysis.

Maybe I should include working on this issue in the ROW80 2014 Round 1?

Can't quite picture what that would look like...

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Friday, January 24, 2014

Friday Forays in Fiction: Quote

Kitteh Wants a Yarn Yarn
If there's a book you really want to read,
but it hasn't been written yet,
then you must write it.
 ~Toni Morrison

One of my all time favorite writing quotes from one of my all time favorite writers.

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Friday, December 13, 2013

Friday Forays in Fiction: Quote

...iz gotz powyr pawz! Y ai needs powyr wurdz?














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Friday, December 06, 2013

Friday Forays in Fiction: Quote


This is My Heart. Take! Eat! Chew On It.
Isn't that the way of it for all artists, all creators?
We finish a piece and hand it over and then feel as
tho we're being consumed by the consumer of it. 
Wouldn't you just love to hear the riff 
Joseph Campbell could have done with this concept?



Read more...

Friday, November 01, 2013

Friday Forays in Fiction: NaNo Tip #1 (A Quote)

moar lit kits
NaNo Tip #1: Look for victims, find your story.

NaNoWriMo Day 1: word count estimate = 3-5 hundred. Far from record shattering but it was something and not nothing.

But because the words were trickling and splattering all over pixel and paper pages I often got restless and instead of sitting in place with my hands in my armpits I got up and continued the endless project of decluttering, organizing and rearranging the spaces in this room:

  • cleared the mini-tramp again and the path to it so I can go to it on impulse to clear the fog and webs and daydream the storyworld.
  • unpacked my winter clothes and found homes for everything but one heavy coat.
  • created more elbow room at my desk so I can swivel freely
  • cleared off the desk on my left so I can spread out papers and reference books.
  • corralled and organized my art supplies so I can draw maps, floor plans, structures, clothing etc
  • made space for and set up a third desk surface on my right for writing by hand on paper.  I discovered recently that the world building work I did thirty years ago comes back to me clearer and quicker when I'm holding a pen or pencil and scribbling or drawing.  Probably because that is how I did it before.
  • made minor rearrangements with the 'desk' my laptop sits on: a board atop a swivel piano stool.  The board had been stationary with items blocking and weighing it down.  Now I can swivel it towards which ever desk my focus is at.
  • and I reorganized the front half of the middle drawer in Mom's desk as I got tired of looking at the mess every time I lifted the board laid across it for setting my food and drink tray on.  And I was responsible for at least half of the mess as last spring I'd rummaged around in it to look for Mom's braille punch and since then have been dropping in small objects I found loose in the room as I moved things about--pennies, paperclips, photos, small slips of paper with writing, business cards, gospel tracts, memorabilia, membership cards, state ID cards, pens and pencils, rubber bands.
I don't think it's an accident that working at that project while thinking about The Wailing Womb coincided with the flow of new ideas and old memories of the story.  After all both require being in problem solving mode in the order of a puzzle.  Each time I got frustrated or blocked (literally physically blocked with the room project) by one puzzle I switched back to the other and the problem I'd turned away from with a mental Charlie Brown "Arrrrgh" was  either already solved or the solution came within minutes.

*********


Arrrrgh!

I was falling asleep over the keyboard at 11 last night as I was prepping this post.  Had to walk away before I could edit or get the pic in place.  I also didn't get to update my word count on NaNo first.  Came nowhere close to the daily quota but it wasn't zero.

By the time I remembered it I was too brain numb to play with numbers and my words were scattered in multiple topic windows between two aps (WhizFolders and The Marshall Plan Program) and multiple pages in two notebooks.  Some said topics or pages containing a single sentence or less and a few several.

I'm going to need to come up with a system for keeping track of all that or that will become an issue all month and by the last week I won't be able to collate it all for the word verifier.   I have a concept but I want to set it up before I talk about it.  I'm hoping that will be by the time I prep my ROW80 check-in this  (Saturday) evening.

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Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Qualities of a Writer

moar lit cats and critz  see share caption vote

The Sylvia Plath quote spoke to me as self-doubt is the biggest obstacle I have.  But I've covered that elsewhere.

Enough said.  Further commentary would just be redundant.

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Friday, October 11, 2013

Friday Forays in Fiction: Quote

Flannery O'Connor
Mystery and Manners: Occasional Prose
From one of my favorite authors and my favorite of her books.

I really can't linger to go into the whys and wherefores.  The Dewey's 24hr Read-a-Thon starts in less than 8 hours.

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Friday, September 13, 2013

Friday Forays in Fiction: A Quote

Get Carried Away -- Open a Book
moar literary kittehs
I just had to renew the batch of library books I checked out of the Longview Library on my sister's card for the second time.  Last renewal.  Means I've had them for six weeks and now have three weeks left.  I've barely cracked their covers since the first ten days.

What with the computer issues, the room reorganizing the AWAI coursework, health care appointments, duty days with Mom, headaches and eye-strain I've just not had the time for them.  I realized today while spending hours, reading and replying to email, fussing with my email labels and filters and trying to winnow out another hundred or three from my inbox, that this was using all the same resources in time, energy, focus, eyestrain and thought as does the reading and research I love and that I was thoroughly fed up with it.

I need to unplug.  I need to get lost in a story or a complex thesis or a research project that involves multiple open books and no search engine other than my brain and the index in the back.

Read more...

Thursday, September 12, 2013

A Likely Story

A Likely Story
moar liturary kittehs
It's been a long day and its past my bedtime so I'll let the LOLcat and Patrick Ness own this post.

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