Tag Archives: creativity

Ramble on Writing

I just went to see the Inception movie.  The premise is that someone can enter your dreams and they can construct dreams which feel so real, you don’t know you’re dreaming. In the movie they use this to steal information or plant ideas.

Listening to them talk about this kind of dreaming made me realise that writers do this all the time. In fact, we’d do it all day long, every day if the rest of the world would let us. For us the dream (our stories) is more real than reality. Otherwise why would keep coming back to write?

I saw this article which said that gamers, if they play games directly before going to bed, they can control their dreams to a certain extent.

Well, isn’t that what writers are doing all the time? When we are ‘in the zone’ we are lucid dreaming. The only thing that holds us back is the speed we can type at.

Inception was good. I liked the layers of the story and some of the visuals were breathtaking. I liked the main character’s motivation and it was a change for a movie to have a happy ending. Or was it?

Did you sit through all the credits like I did to find out if the top stopped spinning?

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Filed under creativity, Fun Stuff, Genre, Movies & TV Shows, Writing craft

Mentoring Retreat in the Tropics

Good friend of mine, Sandy Curtis, is running a writing retreat at Kellys Beach Resort. So if you live up that way, near  the coast in central Queensland and you’d like to spend 3 days at a lovely resort with a published mentor going through your book, short story or play …

Writers retreat to the beach!

Three storytellers will each offer their unique insights into writing at a mentoring retreat at Kelly’s Beach Resort, Bargara on the coast near Bundaberg, in Queensland.
The Bundaberg based professionals will mentor emerging novelists, short story crafters and playwrights over three days from 15-17 October 2010.

Mentoring the Muse is proposed as an intensive retreat-style development program similar to iniatives like the Varuna Manuscript Development Awards in NSW or the QWC/Hachette Australia Manuscript Development Program. These have been highly successful at supporting writers to improve their work to publishable standard, resulting in numerous publishing contracts for participants.

There is nothing like getting away from family and work and concentrating on your writing in a beautiful environment with other writers, while being mentored by someone who ‘gets’ your writing!

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Filed under Australian Writers, creativity, Mentoring, Nourish the Writer, Publishing Industry, The Writing Fraternity, Writing craft

Telling Lies to reveal an Inner Truth

That’s what fiction writers do. They tell lies (stories) to give the reader an insight into the human condition.

Because, let’s face it, if you are anything like me your days are filled with endless running on the spot, just to keep from going backwards.

You run to get the kids to school, part time jobs and uni. You run to get the house work done (shopping, cooking, washing). You run to get to work with everything ready so you don’t let yourself or anyone else down. And you run to make the time to do the extra things that make life worth living. (For me it is writing and story related).

With all that running it’s easy to overlook the profound in the everyday. (We all need a bit of  time to sit back and watch the waves).

Writers who told lies to reveal inner truths:

Charles Dickens ‘Oliver Twist – recurrent theme of social reform and good versus evil.

Mary Shelley, ‘Frankenstien’ – What is human?

Jane Austen ‘Pride and Prejudice’ – The title gives this one away.

George Orwell ‘1984’ – The danger of a totalitarian state.

William Golding ‘Lord of the Flies’ – Golding claims the book was written to trace the problems of society back to the sinful nature of man.

Ray Bradbury ‘Farenheit 451’ – The repression of the questioning mind by the destruction of books (access to knowledge).

Ursula K Le Guin ‘Left Hand of Darkness’ – Explores the themes of gender, politcis and religion.

If you are a modern writer who wants to explore an inner truth this could be confronting for your readers. You have to overcome their unconscious prejudices before you can win them over to identify with your protagonist. Once they identify with a character they can feel empathy. And empathy is what leads to insight.

This is why the genres Fantasy and SF are so powerful. By removing nouns loaded with associations, the writer can introduce characters that the reader responds to and explore themes without risk if distancing the reader.

If you are writing a contemporary novel you have to do lots of research to get your facts right. If you get something wrong someone will know and it will throw them out of the book. Once you break the suspension of disbelief you lose your reader. But, even with all that research, you won’t be able to find the perfect set-up to put your character in so you can challenge the protagonist and explore your underlying theme because you are limited to the world as we know it.

An invented world gives the writer the freedom to create settings and events specifically to test their characters and explore their themes. This is why fantasy and science fiction are such powerful genres. (With invented worlds you still do lots of research so that the worlds are consistent and believable).

In 2004, Le Guin gave a talk at the Children’s Literature Breakfast, where she described what she sees as the function fantasy serves in contemporary society.

“Fantasy is a literature particularly useful for embodying and examining the real difference between good and evil. In an America where our reality may seem degraded to posturing patriotism and self-righteous brutality, imaginative literature continues to question what heroism is, to examine the roots of power, and to offer moral alternatives. Imagination is the instrument of ethics. There are many metaphors beside battle, many choices besides war, and most ways of doing good do not, in fact, involve killing anybody. Fantasy is good at thinking about those other ways.”

So there you have it, writers tell lies to reveal inner truths. What books have made you stop and think?

Lots of analysis of books and their themes here.

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Creativity and your Surroundings

I’ve always loved this Lord Leighton painting Flaming June, dating from 1995. When you see it large on the wall it is just so lush and intimate, it just about takes your breath away.

(I’m the sort of person who can go to the art gallery, wander around for a couple of hours and come out feeling like I’m floating on air, there’s so many endorphins swimming around in my body).

I’m going to reward myself by buying a poster of Flaming June and getting it framed. I almost bought it 10 years ago but felt it was too much of an indulgence.

Here I have to confess that I love beautiful things.I always have. As a child I used to collect beautiful moments so I could take them out and think about them again at a later date. I thought everyone did this.

I found school depressing because the classrooms were so ugly and utilitarian. I grew up in Southport on the Gold Coast. In those days it was fibro beach shacks built on scrubby bushland.  I ached for beautiful things.

Here is a link to Dr Alice Boyes, a clinnical psychologist who believes how we feel affects our creativity. She says when we feel positive, we are more creative.

‘In an evolutionary sense, negative emotions like fear are designed to make us focus narrowly on a threat (e.g. is that moving thing a snake?). Positive emotions like feeling happy or upbeat are designed to make us want to explore, try new things, learn new information, and build relationships with other people.’

Which makes sense because to be creative we need to be open and let our mind make those lateral leaps that you just can’t produce by pushing for them. What makes you feel creative?

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Things you can’t forget

I live an ordinary life, in a safe ordinary suburb. I know when I go to sleep at night that, barring freak accidents, I’ll wake up safe in my bed.  But I’m always looking out at the world to find interesting facts about people and places and for interesting visuals to stimulate ideas. (To be honest, I’m just insatiably curious about everything).

I came across this web site. The photos are  real  (not computer generated). People used to live here. The picture of the piano keys is from this site.

Another place that is absolutely fascinating is Chernobyl.  Here is a link to a series of photos on the BBC site. I saw one documentary with a shot of  a sapling growing through the floor of an indoor basket ball court.

What visuals have you seen that you can’t forget.

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Writers and time management

One of my writing friends asked for a writing craft blog post about how not to waste time surfing the net and reading blogs when you should be writing. While being aware of the irony of this, I got into the spirit and confessed to having a LOL Cat addiction.

I actually think LOL cats is evidence that the world is not a terrible place. The news gives us this skewed view of the world full of disasters and politics and sport. But there are all these people out there taking pictures of their pets and coming up with funny captions, which proves that the world is not all death and disaster.

Here’s one that I just love. I think you have to be a cat person to really appreciate it.

Having been way too over committed recently, I thought  others could learn from my mistakes. So I gave the ‘writer and time management thing’ some thought, and did a post over at the ROR blog on the topic.

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Do creative people have more vivid dreams?

When I went to an acupuncturist, he asked me about my dreams. I told him I have lots of vivid fascinating dreams, complete with backstory, in full colour. I didn’t tell him they were sometimes stylized (if I’d been reading graphic novels) or, on rare occasions, set to music with rhyming dialogue. ( I know, weird).

He said it wasn’t normal for people to dream vividly every night. I’d thought my dreams were normal.

And perhaps they were for me.

According to David Watson, a professor of psychology in the UI College of Liberal Arts and Sciences,  “There is a fundamental continuity between how people experience the world during the day and at night,” he said. “People who are prone to daydreaming and fantasy have less of a barrier between states of sleep and wakefulness and seem to more easily pass between them.” In other words, creative people tend to have vivid dreams. See the full article here.

Now, it seems,  video game players might be able to control their dreams up to a point. Jayne Gackenbach, at Grant McEwan University has been doing research into dreams and gamers. She found that lucid dreamers and gamers tended to have better spacial skills. Both groups had a high level of concentration.  According to a 2006 study, people who frequently played video games were more likely to have lucid dreams and to be aware that they were dreaming.

“A second study tried to narrow down the uncertainties by examining dreams that participants experienced from the night before, and focused more on gamers. It found that lucid dreams were common, but that the gamers never had dream control over anything beyond their dream selves.

The gamers also frequently flipped between a first person view from within the body and a third person view of themselves from outside, except never with the calm detachment of a distant witness.” See the full article here.

I’ve been reading a book on current knowledge about plasticity of the human brain. It looks like game players have been rewiring their brains specfically for this ability. The more you do something the more this sinks into your brain and becomes second nature.  So keep reading, keep day dreaming and keep dreaming. It is all tied into creativity, even if we don’t understand how or why, just yet.

I’ve used scenes from dreams as leaping off points for stories. Do you experience vivid dreams? Ever had a dream where everyone is talking in rhyme?

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Back refreshed and ready to tackle a recalcitrant book!

You know how your mind gets when you’ve been working too hard. Seen the same thing day after day, done the same thing day after day and tried to be creative on top of that?

My mind felt stale.  Taking a trip to Tasmania was just the thing I needed to refresh myself.  The air was crisp and cool, something we don’t get much of here in Brisbane, and everywhere I looked there were scenes worthy of photographing. Not that I’m much of a photographer. Daryl took this one of Ross Bridge.

It was built by convicts back in the days when a soldier who had served at Waterloo could find himself on the other side of the world in a tiny town in the middle of Tasmania, guarding the female convicts.

I took this picture at dawn from the top of a hill at St Helens on the east coast of Tasmania. It was beautiful, the photo doesn’t do it justice. The people inthe house below had a fire going to keep warm and I was trying to capture the dawn sun shining through the smoke.

The other thing that I did a lot of was writing. I took my lap top and wrote about 60 pages of my latest WIP (work-in-progress). I did want to finish the book and I’m about a chapter off the end but I can’t finish it.

I know how I want the story to end, but the characters are refusing to go in that direction. I’ll have to return to the beginning and rewrite it, tweaking as I go, to get to know them all over again, because they have grown and changed as I wrote. Now they have a better idea of what is true to them, than I do and forcing them  to do something just because I’d planned it, is only going to make the writing flat and boring. Sigh.

Do you have recalcitrant characters?

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Holiday to restore my Creativity

I’m about to leave for a driving holiday around Tasmania. And frankly, I need the break. I will be taking photos but I’m sure they will never be as good as these. So I’m going to leave you with them for inspiration.

From Travel Point.

From Gondawananet.

Meanwhile, I’ve done a post on creativity and promotion over at the Mad Genius Club blog. And there will be a post on the ROR blog on Sunday about Dialogue, and another one on the MGC on Tuesday about Characterisation.

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Recharge your Batteries

If you spend all day running like I do, juggling family, work and commitments that you took on because you thought they were a good idea t the time, then you probably need to recharge your batteries. It’s hard to be creative when you’re running on empty.

Here Jeffrey Baumgartner suggests 10 way to boost your creativity. For me numbers 9 &10 are most important.

‘Stimulate your mind by reading as many books as possible.  And exercise your brain by arguing with people (among other things). ‘ I don’t argue with people, LOL, but I’m always exercising my brain. If I don’t I get restless and seek out stimulation.

Maybe what you need is more time to do the things you really want to do. Here Michael Stelzner talks about time management skills for writers. And Annette Young talks about planning your writing day.

Maybe it is time you took one afternoon a week, just to do what you want to do — write that book, plant that garden, see the new exhibition at the art gallery.  Perhaps it is time to take a course in something completely frivolous that you’ve always wanted to do like making stained glass windows, quilting, or rock climbing. If you’re like me, you don’t have the time, but wouldn’t it be good to have one thing to look forward to all week?

How do you recharge your batteries. Me, I indulge in books and magazines about beautiful houses. Sigh.

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