Thursday, July 28, 2011

10. Reflections on the process of writing




Analogies of the Writing process



Alluvial gold mining


Sighting a terrain that was potentially gold bearing, the miners would ‘test’ their theory; they’d pan for gold in the nearest creek. If there was a sign, they would stake a claim and begin digging a shaft. They often worked in pairs, taking turns; one would dig in the shaft, and fill the bucket with the soil and gravel; the other would operate the windlass, winding up the heavy bucket and tipping the dirt onto a pile. It was hard work, digging deep in the ground, in that claustrophobic space. Once they’d dug a large quantity, they would start sifting through the dirt. They would take the dirt, one pan full at a time, down to the water, and pan for gold.




They was a great deal of dirt that would be useless – especially the dirt that came from above the gold bearing strata; that would be simply left behind, forming a mullock heap. (Mullock is one of my favourite words; why, I don’t know, except that I used to enjoy wandering around mullock heaps in Ballarat when we visited Uncle Gordon. I recall, too, finding an old, abandoned windlass in the scrub near Ballarat, when I went on a Scout camp there in the mid 1950s.)

The analogies with writing are clear enough. The writer mines his mind, digging up the contents of memory and imagination, and then sorting through the pile in search of the gold. Writing, like alluvial gold mining, takes place in two major phases. First, there is the collection of the raw materials, as the writer digs up all she can. This can be demanding work; it can be heavy going at times. But once a sizable mass of material is collected, the second phase can begin: the sorting and refining phase that we call editing. Here, the gold is separated from the mullock.

The Water Bore



The second analogy is the water bore. At Sandy Point, where we owned a holiday shack back in the 1970s, the Hendersons came and “put down a bore”. It took them a day to dig the bore. They had to dig down until they had found the water table: that level where water is readily drawn out of its surrounding shale environment. Once the bore is in place, a relatively small pump will provide sufficient energy to draw up all the water you might need. Once the bore is put down, and a pump is in place, the water flows. Each time the bore is stopped, it needs to be primed; the flow needs to be re-established. If the bore lies idle for a lengthy time, it can become blocked.


Again, the analogies with writing are clear. The underground source of material – memory, imagination, the unconscious – is almost infinite. As Malouf once observed, the first twenty years of our lives provide us with sufficient material to fill three lifetimes of writing. We have lots to write about. Once we get underway, once we tap that huge reservoir, once we have flow, the writing simply emerges. The trick is to establish flow each time we put pen to paper, or set our minds and fingers working on the keyboard of our computers.


The Mullock Heap/ The Storage Tank



The dirt and gravel gets piled up on a mullock heap. The water from the bore can be stored in a tank.



Once you've dug up the gold-bearing ore - once you've got the flow of water established - you have to store the stuff somewhere.



That's where the Writer's Journal comes in.



The idea of the Writing Agenda is to provide us with a storage area for our writing - for our false starts, our snippets of conversation, our plot outlines our outlandish ideas.



It's also a place where we can keep notes about OTHER PLACES where gold might be found.


I keep a WRITING AGENDA, and keep adding to it, as possible topics and projects slip into my mind. My WRITING AGENDA provides an endless supply of things to write about. And each piece we write throws up more items for our Writing Agenda, so that the growth is exponential.

Sample from my Writing Agenda





  • The Boy Scout camps I attended: left handed hammers and tartan paint


  • The hike to Arthurs Creek with Tom


  • The fog in Melbourne – coming home from Scouts


  • Moments of embarrassment: somersaults; farting in cubs


  • Working at Royal Park


  • Geology classes at Taylors, 1959


  • Dutch classes at Taylors, 1960


  • Uncle Ken’s house


  • Aunty Iris’ house


  • Aunts, Uncles, Cousins, Neighbours and Friends of the family


  • Swimming with the Kippings






Springs and Alluvial Gold




Whichever analogy, whichever metaphor we use to characterise the writing process, the notion is fairly clear: the writer taps the flow of consciousness, dips into the stream of consciousness and works with what emerges. It is not simply a “taking from”; what is drawn out is also changes in the process. Image, snapshot, memory, misty feeling/ thought, vague recollection is reworked. The idea is formed at the point of utterance; that was how John Dixon put it, yet that is not right either. The idea does “exist” in some form; indeed, part of the business of writing is to match the words on the page with the thought in the head, while asking the question: Have I said what I meant? Have I said what I seem to have meant, what I think perhaps I meant?





Our writing emerges out of the swirling currents of thought and feeling and intention, and takes form on the page or screen. This is Klauser’s Ariel in operation. Out of the Right Brain comes a seemingly endless stream of images, ideas, memories, speculations, all feeling-laden and motive driven … once we have tapped the stream and got them down on paper, we can then bring the Left Brain into operation. We bring our critical intelligence to bear. We can “interrogate” our own text: Does this make sense? Is it well ordered? Are our conclusions supported by evidence? Do our characters seem real?

Klauser argues for “writing on both sides of the brain” – for clearly recognising when we are in imaginative mode, and when we are in editing mode. She presents writing as a product of both sides of the brain working in cahoots. First Right, then Left, the Right and so on…



Writers march to a different beat: Left, Right, Left, Right ... and so on until the manuscript is finished and edited and sent off for publication...

Friday, July 15, 2011

9. EXERCISE 5: Another Splash ...



There's really no limit to what you might write in your journal. CHOOSE another purpose from the list below - a different one from last time.
 let off steam;
 draft a poem;
 wonder about what a wonderful / strange day you have had;
 wonder about what an exciting / boring day you have had;
 have a rant about something that gets up your nose;
 recall things that happened to you when you were a child;
 write the lyrics of a song;
 write about what you'd rather be doing;
 reflect on how your life is going;
 jot down snippets of other people's conversations;
 make lists of interesting words;
 reflect on how your writing is going;
 create thumbnail sketches of characters for a novel or short story;
 create mind maps;
 jot down quotations that you think you might use later ...and so on.

Writing down these ideas onto the screen is like dropping small stones into a pool of water. Each stone creates a small splash in your mind ...

Right now, choose ONE of these splashes - one of these ideas - and write for 10 minutes - or longer if you wish.

8. EXERCISE 4: When I was a kid ...












Close your eyes and picture yourself years ago, when you were a little kid. Let images of that time float into your mind...

Now, write a simple list poem. Begin each stanza with the line:

When I was a kid ...

and follow it with three lines, each consisting of an image [a word picture].
Here are a couple of examples:

When I was a kid at school
My teachers were all old and crabby
We sat in wooden desks with lids tha banged down like rifle shots
We kept tadpoles in a jar by the window

When I was a kid at school
I got the strap for throwing acorns at Karina Kerley
I had to sit next to a girl for a whole month!
The tadpoles grew legs.


Write for 10 - 15 minutes. Create at last 5 stanzas (or verses)

7. EXERCISE 3: Each moment is a Splash in Time



In his excellent book, On Writing Well, William Zinsser has this to say :
"You learn to write by writing. It's a truism, but what makes it a truism is that it's true, and it can't be repeated often enough. The only way to learn to write is to force yourself to produce a certain number of words on a regular basis."

That's the point of One Day at a Time; it's role is to help you to force yourself to produce a certain number of words every day.

So what you are doing is starting a writing journal. In your journal you can :

 let off steam;
 draft a poem;
 wonder about what a wonderful / strange day you have had;
 wonder about what an exciting / boring day you have had;
 have a rant about something that gets up your nose;
 recall things that happened to you when you were a child;
 write the lyrics of a song;
 write about what you'd rather be doing;
 reflect on how your life is going;
 jot down snippets of other people's conversations;
 make lists of interesting words;
 reflect on how your writing is going;
 create thumbnail sketches of characters for a novel or short story;
 create mind maps;
 jot down quotations that you think you might use later ...and so on.

Writing down these ideas onto the screen is like dropping small stones into a pool of water. Each stone creates a small splash in your mind ...

Right now, choose ONE of these splashes - one of these ideas - and write for 10 minutes - or longer if you wish.

6. EXERCISE 2: All About Me...









Today you get to write on a topic on which you are an EXPERT!

Noone in the world knows more about this topic than you. The topic is: YOU.



All about ME

Write for TEN MINUTES. Tell as much about yourself as you can in that time.

5. EXERCISE ONE: The First Story I Ever Wrote



I've always been a writer. That is to say, for almost as long as I can remember, I've wanted to write.

Here is the story of the first story I ever wrote:
I was very young. I can see the scene vividly still, even though it was almost 60 years ago. I am sitting on the sofa at Aunty Vonny's house. It is Christmas, I think. all of my cousins are there, and my aunts and uncles – my father’s side of the family. The adults are sitting around Aunty Vonny’s lounge room; my cousins are outside playing. I'm on the sofa, in the lounge room, the only child among the grown ups. I have a duplicate book, with white and yellow pages, and I am writing my story on the back side of the sheet. The duplicate book is one my father has brought home from work; he is a labourer with the Melbourne and Metropolitan Board of Works.

I think it must be the Christmas of 1949. I've finished grade one. I’m six and a half.

I'm asking Uncle Charlie a question. Charlie Beale has recently married my cousin Verna – Aunty Vonny’s daughter. I am vaguely aware that my mother doesn’t altogether approve of Charlie Beale. He’s older than Verna by ten years, and he’s been married before.

I ask Uncle Charlie: "How do you spell one?"
He says, "Which one?"
People laugh, and I'm embarrassed.
"There are two ones," he explains, and he is laughing too.
"There's WON - like in 'He won the race '. That's W …O…N. Then there ONE - like 'He only had ONE leg.' That's O …N…E."

I bury myself in my book, in embarrassment.

The Farmer and the Crow




Wun day a crow sat on a fence.
The farmer said, "Get off my fence."
But the crow did not move.
The farmer said, "Get off my fence or I will shoot you!"
But the crow still did not move.
So the farmer shot the crow.
Bang! Bang! Bang!
But he missed.
And the crow laughed and laughed and laughed.
Ha ha ha, he he he, ho ho ho, haw haw haw.

The End.



A lot of water has passed under the bridge since then.

I've written millions of words, and hundreds of stories, articles, poems and songs. And I've had around 70 books published. I've also taught writing and editing - to children and adults, in primary schools and secondary schools, TAFE Colleges and universities, and in community groups.

Some people find writing difficult. They get uptight and anxious. They worry about their spelling. They feel tongue-tied. They don't know what to write.

Writing is about getting ideas out of your head and down on paper. And that's what this program is all about.

I'm not going to pretend that it's easy. Sometimes writing is really hard - really, really hard. What I hope to help you see is that, while - yes, it is hard - it can be done.

Your first writing task

TOPIC: Writing and Me
Write for just TEN minutes on that topic

Write about your experiences of writing.
Here are some ideas to get you started:
* The first story I ever wrote
* Writing at primary school
* How I feel about the task of "writing"
* The kinds of writing I like to read

Good luck.

4. LESSON ONE Questionnaire

























1. Why did you choose Creative Writing as an elective this semester?

2. How long have you been interested in Creative Writing?

3. Do you remember the first story you ever wrote?

4. What has been your most enjoyable/ most satisfying writing experience?

5. What do you think are your STRENGTHS as a writer?

6. How would you rate your level of interest as a writer in the following genres?

Here is a SCALE from 1 -5 for your Degree of Interest in writing in particular styles or genres.
1 Not much
2 Some
3 Quite a bit

4 A great deal
5 Extremely high level

Please rate EACH of the following Genre (1 - 5) in terms of how interested YOU ARE in writing in this genre:

Children’s stories
Young adult fiction
Short stories(fiction)
Experimental writing
Longer stories (novels, novellas)
Poetry
Memoir & Autobiography
Biography: people’s lives
Romance
Science Fiction
Fantasy
Adventure/Action
Creative Non fiction (journalism)
Myths & Legends


List any OTHER genres you are keen to write in:



7. What aspects of your writing do you believe you need to work on?

8. What would you like to learn from this Creative Writing unit?

9. Do you have any particular writing projects you would like to work on this semester?