honesty

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I have this tiny red digital voice recorder that I rarely travel without. Blame it on the journalist in me (and also the fact that I work freelance). You just never know when a moment worth recording is going to pop up, or a random, can’t-turn-it-down assignment will fall into your inbox.

So while I spent three weeks in Miami over the holidays, my recorder came with me almost everywhere. I’ve never really had to use it; most of the time I forget it’s there. But on one of the last days of my visit I sat down with my grandmother (my Nonna, as we call her, which is Italian for grandmother) and we got to talking.

It was a spontaneous talk that traveled to the past, to the days when she was a teenager and met my grandfather, to the details of what bus she rode that day, which girlfriends she was with as they went to the beach, what she whispered to them the first time she locked eyes with him. She told me about the first time they finally spoke, days later, and I remember thinking how romantic it must’ve been, to live in a time when even teenagers saying hello at a beach used their first and last names for introductions.

I’d never heard this story before, so I sat there and soaked it in. I asked questions, hoping she’d get into more detail, and by the middle of the conversation Nonna pretty much took the reins. We weren’t just talking anymore; she was telling me the story of her life.

For a moment, as this dawned on me, I thought about running to my purse real quick to get my recorder. I wanted to capture every word, the way her voice changed pitch and became more youthful at times, how it slowed down to follow her gaze in other moments when history became difficult to recall. I wanted to, years from now, replay her giggles (there were so many) and picture how she smiled so wide that her eyes closed up and her shoulders shook.

I kept wanting to get my recorder, but I never did. The moment never felt right. You can’t just push a pause button on life and expect it to go on interrupted. Disrupting the natural flow of the conversation for the sake of capturing it wasn’t nearly worth it. I told myself that I would write everything down later in as much detail as possible.

But we had plans that evening, and the next day was a rush of getting our luggage together and saying our goodbyes as we prepared to go back home. Once in Austin, with more time on my hands, I was shocked to realize I wasn’t ready to write it all down yet. It took me two more days. When I finally opened my journal to record my memories of our conversation, eight pages came out, cramping my hands.

I started how she started. I still remembered her exact words. But the more I wrote the more I realized I wasn’t just writing her history; I was writing about the experience of having it passed down to me. Her story became intertwined with mine, in the way family histories often do; her expressions became filtered through my perception of them.

My retelling wasn’t perfect, but in its own way it was. It occurred to me that the reason I waited so long to write it down was that I had to process it. A tape recorder or a camera might have captured the moment more accurately, but I wanted to write about it truthfully. That’s the job of the writer, isn’t it? Of fiction. We observe life but we do it a disservice by simply regurgitating the cold facts. Bringing something to life on the page is a craft, a careful process that pulls from every little piece of us. In sharing stories we share parts of ourselves, even if the story is about someone else entirely.

It’s like the quote in one of my favorite books, The Book of Embraces, says:

Recordar: To remember, from the Latin re-cordis, to pass back through the heart.

 

Creative Commons License photo credit: Denzil~

 

writing in the journalToday’s a special day for me reasons I won’t mention here. I thought about blogging about it, then realized I’m still working through it in my mind, figuring how (or if) I feel about it. Most likely I’ll work through it by writing it down.

When I do figure this out, it’s probably something I’ll never share. I say this not to be vague or cryptic, or purposefully mysterious, but just to remind us that there are parts of us it’s okay not to share.

Writing is always described as such a solitary act. But writers dream of being published and having their voices heard. We have blogs and Twitter accounts, which allow every thought to be broadcast for public consumption (or public indifference).

And while there’s something very beautiful in that because it helps us build a community, I can’t imagine sharing every last piece of me. I need something that remains my own, a quiet place I can go to at the end of the day and be completely alone.

I was looking through old journals a few days ago and it occurred to me that I have years and years of writing that no one will ever read. It made me sad not because it’s a waste, but because for the most part I stopped writing in those journals over the last few years. In the last few years, my life and my writing shifted. I started working as a full-time freelance writer, I started my first novel, I started focusing on establishing an online presence. Everything I wrote became something others would read. And that’s not a bad thing. It’s not like my writing’s suffered because it suddenly had an audience.

But I will say that yesterday, as I was driving around and thinking about what today marked, I realized I wanted to write about it in a journal. I realized I needed to write about it not so that someone might read it, but simply because I had to get it out for myself. It was the oddest sensation. It was like remembering I had a safe place I’d totally neglected, and now that I knew it was still there I ached for it.

I wondered how many of us forget this the deeper we delve into our online existences. How many of us obsess over what the next blog post will be about, what word count we’re at in our WIP so we can share it with our buddies, but then forget to nurture the part of us that made us writers in the first place, back when we scribbled thoughts (any thought) just for the sake of discovering them.

This isn’t a post about how, to do our best writing, we need to write for ourselves and without an audience in mind. It’s just a post about me realizing that I need to write for myself again, period. Not so that the writing will be better. Not so that one day it’ll be read by others. This isn’t about craft or what a story needs.

It’s simply about what I need. I need to write things that I keep to myself. And I suspect a lot of us need that, too.

Creative Commons License photo credit: redcargurl

I don’t exactly consider myself an expert on fashion style. I try my best, but sometimes an outfit works and sometimes it feels uninspired. When I can’t figure out what to wear I fall back on the ever-reliable jeans, white t-shirt, and cute accessories combo. But lately I’ve been thinking a lot about style, not just in fashion but in writing.

Low-Res is ♥I have a friend who, no matter what she wears, makes it look like the most chic ensemble ever. She mixes and matches items I would never dream of combining and pulls them off flawlessly. It’s a beautiful thing. Okay, yeah…sometimes I find myself envying her and wondering why I can’t make a parka seem glamorous. But for the most part I admire her vision, creativity, and the fearlessness that comes with pairing a $200 skirt with a $4 top found at a thrift store. Her style is hers alone. It can’t be cloned (trust me, I’ve tried).

It’s the same way with writers. The best writers have so much style you could probably pick up on it just by reading their grocery lists. Sometimes it’s in the form of a metaphor so surprisingly  true, you wonder why you never thought of it. Other times it’s just the rhythm of the language, a cadence so unique to them it’s like recognizing their footsteps from down the hall. You start picking up on a writer’s voice, their underlying cynism or wit, maybe their continuous exploration of a theme that, even when they’re writing about completely different situations, creeps into their words.

True style is difficult to pinpoint. You don’t know exactly why you recognize it. You just know it’s there because it’s powerful and awe-inspiring.

On the flip side of that, we have habits. Like style, habits can be unique to a person. They can become someone’s trademark. They can even be endearing for a while (someone who always answers a question with a question when they’re nervous, or a writer who makes the second person POV sing, stripping it of all its awkwardness) until they become overused and flat-out annoying. Habits are easily cloned and repeated; they’re clutches we can’t help but fall back on when we’re challenged. What’s worse is we hardly ever recognize them, or when we do, we mistake them for style.

Me wearing a white t-shirt with jeans and a funky purse anytime I want to look casual but put-together? That’s not style. If I wore that outfit every single day I can assure you the novelty would wear off. That’s why writers have to be aware of their habits. Make sure that that one thing you do really, really well doesn’t become the only thing you do, or the thing you do too much of, or the thing that eventually becomes so predictable it’s distracting to the reader. Don’t expect to catch all these habits yourself, either. Have your writing group read your work. Have an editor take a look (waves hello!).

And once they’ve pointed out your recurring ticks, don’t just eliminate them; think about why they’re there in the first place. Challenge yourself to come up with new ways to achieve the effect you’re going for. Go crazy and experiment. Read a ton and write a ton. Eventually you’ll find something other than habits creeping into your writing— something you can’t put your finger on but your readers recognize as your style. Then (and this is so important) don’t be satisfied that you’ve found it. Embrace it, keep writing and let it evolve over time.

Be honest, now: Do you know what your style is? Do you know what your habits are? 

Creative Commons License photo credit: mayrodrigo

I just spent an hour writing a post, and by the time I got the end of it I decided not to post it.

It’s not that it was a bad post, or that it reveals some big secret about me I don’t want to put out there. It’s just that it brought about the worst reaction a writer could ever have: indifference. (This is the part where I shrug my shoulders and say, “Meh.”)

austerity is over!This troubled me for a second because there’s a little blogger voice inside of me that says, post consistently! If you’re a writer then just write! Don’t wait for that inspiration to come.

The truth is, I am pretty inspired right now, but my mind is somewhere else. I’ve gotten into a rhythm with my new WIP and it’s been consuming me in the best possible way. Today it’s consumed my desire to blog and I’ve decided that’s okay. We need that permission sometimes, along with a reminder of what comes first.

So to all the other writers who blog: go ahead and miss a day. If you’re stumped over what to post, go back and keep doing what inspired you to start blogging about writing in the first place. The writing keeps the blog going, not the other way around.

 

Creative Commons License photo credit: {Guerrilla Futures | Jason Tester}

basil sproutsToo dark for a Friday?

Maybe, but let’s go there anyways. I’ve been thinking a lot about ideas, especially writing ideas, and how they’re often compared to sparks or plants or babies or marriages.

Clearly, we see ideas as living things. They’re born, they’re nurtured, they grow and evolve. They’re hard work—the second we stop trying to help them along or stop caring, they suffer. Like a birth or a lifelong commitment, the catalyst for an idea is usually an intense experience.

But a lot of times, the comparison stops there. Because unlike children, our ideas aren’t always loved unconditionally. Unlike in romantic relationships, we don’t always trust that the object of our affection will still be there for us the next day.

Ideas are there one day, gone the next. They take us on a roller coaster of emotions. One moment we see a glorious future ahead with them, the next we want to give up on them. We think they’re genius, we think they’re not good enough. We put every thought and bit of energy into them until one day we feel exhausted, and start to question if they deserve so much of us.

We never know where an idea will take us, and while that makes the creative process an exciting one, it also takes a huge amount of trust. Do you trust that every idea will be a great one? That you’ll reach “the end” and have something real to show for it? What makes us believe in one idea but not in another?

It can’t be as simple as looking over a rough draft and assessing if there’s something there worth salvaging. Just the other day I looked over the first draft of my novel and was astonished that I kept going with it. There are maybe four pages total that made it from first draft to final, but I still didn’t toss out the idea.

We can read countless books on craft and take all the writing lessons in the world, and still some things can’t be taught. That moment when you decide to keep going with an idea—even when it hasn’t given you a shred of proof that it’ll morph from a spark to a flame—that’s all instinct. I wouldn’t be able to describe it as anything more than a gut feeling and a trust (in the creative process and in myself). It’s a special type of blind faith that keeps me committed to an idea even when it’s offering no guarantees.

How would you describe it? How do you know to keep going with an idea or let it go?

Creative Commons License photo credit: NourishingCook

ExerciseLast week, I started a fitness bootcamp as a way to challenge myself beyond my normal workouts. Our class is a group of 10-15 people from all fitness levels, and our trainer is a freakishly strong man who wears shirts that say things like “Workout: There’s a reason it’s not called easy-out.”

Three times a week, we meet at a local park and form a circle while the trainer stands in the middle, demonstrating each exercise. Our jaws drop. We shake our heads. We say, “There’s no way my body can do that.”

And then we do it.

Bootcamp for Life

I know I’d normally talk about an experience and ponder how it relates to writing, but the truth is everyone needs a little bootcamp wisdom in their life. Below are a few of the tidbits I know will stick around long after the soreness is gone.

“You’re only competing against yourself.” –Our trainer

Don’t compete against others, but do find a group that will help you push yourself beyond your self-imposed limits.

A change of scenery can make all the difference.

Go even when you don’t want to go. By the time you get through the warm-up, you’ll find a rhythm and the hard part will be stopping.

Try not to get obsessed with counts—do what you can in the time you’re given.

Rest.

If it hurts, it means you’re finally getting somewhere.

And finally…

Pace yourself. Endurance will make all the difference.

Creative Commons License photo credit: Sebastian Fritzon

I’ve been told more than once or twice that I seem shy compared to my personality online. It makes me wonder if people feel disappointed, or deceived, because the voice they’re used to hearing on my blogs or on Twitter doesn’t match up exactly with the one in real life.

Most of the time, I feel the need to apologize for this. We always hear about how we need to be authentic in social media, how we need to represent ourselves in an honest way.

I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately and it kinda just hit me: These are all true versions of me.

Yes, maybe my writing voice is a little more outgoing than I am when I meet a person for the first time. But isn’t that the beauty of social media? What writer hasn’t felt more comfortable sharing pieces of herself with the world from the safety of her desk and computer screen? This is still me, just a version that, in person, might take a bit longer to come out and show itself. And it’s not something I can control: I might go to one event and feel totally in my element. I might go to another and wonder if I’m being awkward.

My husband, after hearing me worry on and on about this, finally blurted out: “It’s who you are. Why would you change that?”

To say that this simple moment was an epiphany would be an understatement. Why would I change that?

Ever since I was young, I was the quiet girl and I loved it. I loved listening to people talk, watching their nervous ticks, the way their body gave them away. I loved staring out the window to take the world in, zooming in on details that others might not notice. I never once felt excluded; I was like the historian in a group, recording all the important bits.

It’s probably why I became a writer, and if it is, I would never take it back.

Do you ever feel like your personae don’t match up?

 

 

 

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Admit it—we all have some really bad writing out there, perhaps hidden in journals from when we were kids, or in the form of a bad first draft that got rescued and revised.

For this month’s issue of The Writer, I interviewed Vernon Lott, the director of the documentary Bad Writing, about how sometimes bad writing is a part of the process and deserves to be embraced. Check out the issue (on newsstands now) if you haven’t read it yet.

But in the meantime, I thought I’d share some of my own cringe-worthy musings. Watching the film and speaking with Vernon reminded me of the journals I’ve kept since I was 9. Here’s a gem from when I was 14. The purple ink! The i’s dotted with hearts on the pages where I wasn’t writing “poetry”! The last sentence that basically says, “oh, eff this.” Read the rest of this entry »

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Back when I was studying creative writing at the University of Miami, I faced one of my biggest fears and shared one of my stories with a family member. I handed the pages over to my sister and walked out of the room. When she was done reading, she said she loved it, but wanted to know one thing:

“The sister in the story, that’s not me, is it?”

Last week, Erika Robuck asked a similar question on Twitter and discussed this on her blog:

The discussion got me thinking about the other side of that question:

Do people in your life think your fiction is based on fact?

More than a few people in my life have tried to find themselves in my fiction. I think that’s where my fear of sharing my work with those close to me comes from. What if my mom read my book and thought she was the main character? Like my mom, my protagonist, Gabriela, pretended not to understand when her daughter spoke to her in English just so she wouldn’t forget her Spanish, but the similarities end there. And one of my characters’ memories is plucked right out of my own, but that doesn’t mean the characters are copies of people in real life.

They’re like any inspiration: a starting off point, full of endless possibilities. I’ve always thought one of the best things about writing fiction is that it can all feel true without actually being, well…true.

Has anyone ever suspected you of writing them into your stories? And…did you?

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Last week I got an email from a friend asking for some “writerly advice” about finding your voice. She works in PR and, because of the amount of writing her job requires, she was having a hard time letting go of the academic and marketing style of writing once she started work on her personal writing (which includes short stories and memoir).

I can so relate to her struggle. Even though I know I’m incredibly lucky to write for a living, it’s a luxury that comes with its own set of challenges. I write copy for clients across several industries, and each has a unique brand, audience and voice. When you’ve got that many voices in your head, is it possible to lose the one that’s truly yours? And even more importantly…

Can there really be only one?

I know that most people will say that a writer’s voice comes out no matter what she’s writing. And I agree—to an extent. If I didn’t have a unique voice, my clients wouldn’t hire me to write for them in the first place.

So maybe instead of asking how to find our voices we should be working on strengthening the one we’ve got, and channeling its honesty into our writing. Maybe from amongst all the little voices we have in our heads, the biggest struggle is finding the one that’s most authentic, the one that exists even when no one—no clients, no publications, no audiences—are asking for it.

And believe me, when you’ve been at your computer all day writing for someone else, it’s hard to pick The One out of all that noise. Here are tips I gave my friend about how I do it:

  • Write first thing in the morning, even if it’s really, really early, before your mind goes into work mode (or, writing-for-other-people mode).
  • Try writing by hand. As you may already know, I feel like my most honest writing comes when I’m just using a pen and paper. I’m not sure if this is because I normally equate my computer with work-related writing, or because there’s no delete key, but writing by hand seems to channel a different part of my brain and taps into my most creative side.
  • More than anything: read. If I’m not reading a great book I notice that my writing suffers. We need to read and absorb different types of writing so that we can reconnect with the artistry of it. In our daily lives we read tons of things—magazines, work emails, Facebook updates—but I think it’s important to also stay exposed to the kind of writing we aspire to.
  • I once took a workshop with Cristina Garcia, and she recommended reading poetry right before you start writing. This is one of my favorite things to do because reading beautiful writing inspires me even when I’m not feeling very inspired by my own.

Do you have any tips for reconnecting with your voice? Share them in the comments.

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