Tips for you...

"Always leave enough time in your life to do something that makes you happy, satisfied, even joyous."

--Paul Hawken

 

 

Many of us busy ourselves doing things we don't really want to do, but feel we should.

 

Take a look at how you spend your time--and make a trade. Trade one way you 'kill time' with something your heart really desires to do.

There is never an ideal time, the perfect space, the right frame of mind. If you are to create, you must make time and space everyday.

If there is a voice inside you that calls you to write, then there is no better time than now.

Grab a notebook, anyone will do, and a decent pen, one that flows easily, and start writing.

Check out some of my tips for getting going...NOW!  

 

Waiting for Inspiration

"If you wait for inspiration, you're not a writer, but a waiter."

 

Start NOW. Grab a notebook and pen. Write in response to the following prompt. Don't worry about grammar or sounding clever, just write what comes to mind.

"I believe every woman, especially those over forty, needs the rejuvenation that a few minutes alone can provide."~ Sophia Loren, actress

Try this Writing Prompt ...

Write about a time you found yourself unexpectedly alone. Were you left waiting for someone? Were you lost somewhere? Write about being alone.

On Writing Daily

Writing daily changed my life.

I guess you could say that I am an Artist's Way graduate, meaning that I am dedicated to morning pages. The daily task of writing every morning is the powerful crux of this phenomenal book by Julia Cameron ( if you haven't read it, you should). Here's what Cameron says about it...

"What are Morning Pages? Three pages of whatever crosses your mind. That's all there is to it. ...Morning pages, writing for 15 minutes each day, teach the logic brain to stand aside and let the artist brain play...It is impossible to write morning pages for any extended period of time without coming into contact with an unexpected inner power....They map our own interior."

Even though I always wanted to write, I struggled with negative self-talk. Despite having accumulated dozens of journals, from my first cherished diary as a young girl to all sorts of decorative ones, padded, flowery, and leather bound (people knew I wanted to write), I still left many pages blank. It wasn't until I read The Artist's Way that I was able to let go of my overbearing expectations of what I should write and how good I thought it should be that I began to write every day.

What has it done for me?

It allows me time alone--to think and just BE.

It brings me closer to my true voice. It helps me resolve conflicts.

It lets me vent without hurting anyone else's feelings.

It makes me confront my bad habits. It lets me develop ideas for writing projects.

I use plain notebooks now, the cheap and easy ones that don't make me feel like I have to write a novel (like those leather bound ones do). I fill them, have several going at once, and feel free to throw them out if I want. I keep the ones that have nuggets of good stuff in them. But, I don't try to force my morning pages to be anything more than three simple pages.

I know now that it is the process of releasing my thoughts that matters. It is the process of listening to this voice that brings growth and heightened creative ability.


Have your written today?

 

Writing with emotion

 

“No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader. No surprise for the writer, no surprise for the reader.” ~Robert Frost

 

 

 

 

Try this Writing Prompt:

 

Write about the last time you cried. Don’t tell us what happened, show us. Take us there.