Girls in the Basement

February 21, 2008

Class update--girls in the basement

There is still plenty of room in the Girls in the Basement class.  This is very nurturing, creatively freeing course.  If you are floundering because of too much external feedback, or a lack of direction, or you simply feel creatively worn out, this is a good way to connect back to your own "girls in the basement," and write more productively and happily.

From the syllabus:

“If you don’t write your books, they might not ever get written.” Madeline l’Engle.

There are a great many how-to-write courses and many great teachers of how to write a novel. This is not one of them. The Care and Feeding of the Girls in the Basement is meant to help inspire and encourage you, to help you learn (or remember) how to nurture your creative spirit. It’s a chance to renew your joy, tap into the original delight you once felt for writing, and make a powerful commitment to yourself and your writing. We’ll draw from several texts, including The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron; Women Who Run With The Wolves by Clarrissa Pinkola Estes, and Writing Down the Bones, by Natalie Goldberg, among others.

Class starts March 1, so hurry!  Read more about the class here.


January 24, 2008

Voice....last chance for January class

There are two places left in the Janurary 29th class.  Read more about it here.

And remember, if you want to take the class and really can't swing it financially, throw your name in the hat for a scholarship. No matter what, there are always two students drawn from that hat, and no one will ever know who you are. 

Without vanity, I know this class does a lot of good. It might be just what you need to start the new year on the right foot. 

January 13, 2008

Class updates

Still working on the Circles class, and have been tweaking the Girls in the Basement.    Voice II, first segment, is full.  Still room in Voice I Let me know if you're interested.

And remember, there are two scholarships given away for each class, so if you want to toss your name in that hat, send me an email with "scholarship" in the header and specify which class you're interested in. (I would love to be able to give them all for free, but they're quite time intensive and that's just not practical.)  You may also recommend someone else. 

For those who might not be familiar with the classes, I'm not a nuts-and-bolts kind of teacher.  You can get dialogue or structure from teachers who are much better at it than I am.  What I love is encouraging writers to discover how fabulous and unique they are, and what beauties they have to offer the world.

I was also exhorted by one of my spiritual teachers to help create circles of women to heal ourselves, heal each other, and heal the planet, and this is my small way of trying to do that.  Not every single class results in a tightly knit group, but some of them do, and many have helped create loose communities. 

If you have any questions, email me anytime.



January 04, 2008

New Class Schedule

There will no doubt be more work done and not all the classes are up yet, but I have created a new website for the voice and girls in the basement classes.  Check it out:

THE CARE AND FEEDING OF THE GIRLS IN THE BASEMENT

September 12, 2007

How to be a fabulous 80 year old

Melanie Scott, an Australian writer who finaled twice in the Golden Hearts this year, posted something terrific to our voice class yesterday and I asked her to post it to her blog.   

One of the exercises we do is to picture your 80th birthday party and how you want it to be and what your 80 year old self would tell you to do. Which all the fabulously talented gals in my course have duly done and I was trying to come up with some comments but really, they all sounded fantastic, and all our 80 year old selves are brilliant and wise and I really want to get to go to some of those parties, so all I could come up with was this, which is my distillation of what everyone said and a reminder of what we have to do if we want to live to be grand old broads at 80. And with apologies to SARK, who's 'How to be' posters are fabulous and kind of inspired me.

HOW TO BE A FABULOUS EIGHTY YEAR OLD

Check it out--it's luscious.   And if you want to have some fun, try the exercise:

In a timed writing (ten minutes, pen to the page, write fast, no editing)  imagine you are at your 80th birthday party.  What are you wearing? Who is there? What's going on in your life?   Now, let your 80 year old self give the self you are now some advice.  What will she say to you? 

This is not just for writers, by the way.  Readers can have fun with it, too.  Our 80 year old self is the one who has a lot of answers for how to live our lives today.   Have fun with it, and let me know if you did it.


 

September 04, 2007

Playing with the girls in the basement

A new book is brewing.   Rather dramatically at times, as will sometimes happen.  My office is scattered with magazines and new CDs and paintbrushes.  I've scotch-taped a bunch of photos to the closet door while I'm letting it all brew.   To the outside view, this doesn't much look like work, honestly, and I can fall prey to the "just get busy" syndrome that can be so devastating to an idea that's winding its way through my imagination, sending out runners of silk to anchor itself here, there, all sorts of odd places.  This makes me think of the first trimester of pregnancy, when you're so tired and when you close your eyes for three minutes, you fall into that other world, the dreamer world, and it's hard to tell which is the real world.  There's a lot going on below the surface.  Hidden.  Quiet.  Gossamer.

This very morning, I was thinking, "I guess I should make a chart or something. So I have a plot. So I know what I'm doing."
 
And the Girls in the Basement, who've been playing Keb Mo really loud, and cutting things out to glue on the walls, and ordering CDs like Sonny and Terry  and Marc Broussard and getting SO excited about the storm map on the wall and practicing their accents, looked up and said, "Plan? We don't need a plan.  WE know what we're doing.  If you know, you'll fuck it up, so just mind your own business."
 
So I went for a walk with the dogs and listened to Lucinda Williams and smelled biscuits baking and remembered a really cool bit of woman-magic that always has intrigued me, and figured out the hero's name, and there is a big southern thread to this book, which has been missing from my books over the past few years.  Suddenly, it's just there again.   Maybe I am pining for my grandmother, or for my late mother-in-law.  They both passed in the autumn, two years and three years ago, and I wish I could have a chat with them.   Or maybe, the girls want to play with other material, taste new things.  Maybe I have no idea where books come from or why, but my job is to say, "Oooh, this one seems like it will be fun."
And I remind myself to play.  Just play.

July 25, 2007

The reassuring natural world

Yesterday, I walked to the YMCA for a yoga class.  There is a park system that loops through the entirety of the subdivision, connecting play parks with grassy sidewalks in a network that is miles and miles and miles long (and people still jog on the street...not sure I get that).  It was an excellent yoga class; it always seems to me that yoga nets about 10x what it should, and I was in a softly blissed state as I walked home.  I happened to glimpse a blue jay flashing through the trees, and stopped to admire him, taking it as a nice little gift from the universe--"here, have a visit with your favorite bird",   and saw there was a pair of them.  And then I saw their baby who had been shoved out of the nest and was none too happy about it.  Parent one nudged him along and the baby squawked, fluttered his wings and protested--"I can't, I can't!"--before lifting off maybe a foot and slamming into the fence. 

I watched him for twenty minutes or so, following behind at a respectful distance, which wasn't all thatBabyjay much, maybe four feet.  I was prepared to chase away a predatory cat or raven, but wouldn't have interfered in any other way.  He panted in the shade, then made another try, flapping his wings until he nearly captured the low hanging branch of a pine.  And missed. 

That's when I left him to the business of learning to fly.  But what a lovely gift for the girls in the basement--all those fluttering feathers; those flashing sapphires and turquoises and grays; all that effort and metaphor, the reassurance that baby birds, small and defenseless and vulnerable as they are, do mostly manage to figure it out, launch themselves and grow up into big blue jays. 

July 24, 2007

ORANGE!

Orienteering1Orienteering orange, that is.  I completed an orange course at Frisco on Sunday.  It took me three hours, which is hilarious, but I don't care.  I couldn't find control #5 but I was absolutely not going back until I located it, and finally I did.

And what does that have to do with the writing life, you ask (as well you might)?  Plenty.

Orienteering for those who have not been following along, is a sport that teaches map reading.  I know, I know, it sounds dull.  The reality is much more interesting, and highly rewarding.  It's highly empowering to use a map to navigate to a position deep in the woods and locate a particular position at the top of a hill or behind a boulder or at the top of --my favorite orienteering word--a reentrant. I felt ten feet tall when I finished that course.  I have a skinned shin and sunburned shoulders, but it's all mine, that finish.  I was alone in the woods with a map and a compass and I found the flags. All of them.  Every last bloody one.  With no help from anyone.   

CR, naturally, did two courses while I did one and was sitting there, changed into his regular clothes and worrying about me by the time I returned. (I think he took firsts in both courses.)   But he's a master, and a natural endurance athlete.  I am only an enthusiastic participant. 

There is a lot of endurance and patience (stubbornness) required to complete an orienteering course, or a book.  It's all in your head, too, thinking you know something that may or may not be true.  There are always those spots when you could give up, and feel frustrated. 

But mainly, the link to the writing life here is that I love being outdoors in the mountains, or on a beach, hiking and moving and seeing and feeling the air.  I am happier there than almost anywhere, which feeds my love of putting things in words.  It's also a great balancing activity, which all writers must have. We live too much in our heads if we're not careful.  Being outdoors puts me in my body and in the world.   It feeds the well, which is so very, very important if we are to continue to have new details to feed the work. 

You don't have to be an outdoor girl to have passions.  Maybe you like going to the symphony and you're happier there than almost anywhere.  Or on a cruise ship.  Or at Nordstroms.   What do you love to do? What puts you in your body and into the world? 



May 22, 2007

Desktop wanderings

I've had the luxury of time to read some of my favorite blogs.  Here are two you really must check out:

A Wandering Woman Writes From Spain, subtitled: A little voice told me to quit eht big city corporate gig and wander off to Spain.  I listened and these are my adventures.   

Her blog is filled with little tidbits of beauty, including photographs like this one, which just took my breath away:
Muralpatiosd










Another place I like to visit is not far at all from Christopher Robin's mum in Kent, a gentle-spirited blogger who has a wonderful eye:

Anke:Royal Tunbridge Wells  subtitled: A day away from Tunbridge Wells is a day wasted.   He, too, posts the most wonderful photos of his place.  This is one that speaks to me of The Green Man:

Bulls1



















That should spell you a little if you're stuck at work this fabulous May morning.   Enjoy.

March 28, 2007

News bites

BOSTON AREA EVENTS

I'll be attending the New England Chapter's highly regarded conference this weekend, teaching a two hour voice workshop.  There will be a booksigning, too, and I'll have copies of both Barbara Samuel and Ruth Wind titles.

NEC Book Fair for Literacy
Saturday, March 31, 2007
4:00-6:00 pm
Crowne Plaza Hotel
Route 9
Natick, Massachusetts

NEW BOOK OUTDesisrescue_2

Desi's Rescue, by Ruth Wind, is now available.  This is the second in the Sisters of the  Mountain series for Romantic Suspense, and it features wolves, mountain hot springs, and a sexy New Zealander with green eyes. 

Read more about it.

CLASS SPOTS STILL OPEN

A few spots are left in the Girls in the Basement class that begins May 7. 

LOS ANGELES VISIT

April 14, Los Angeles area
Orange County RWA
Topic: "Layering in Lusciousness"

March 15, 2007

Rio Grande and Sandias at sunset

7  In the Girls in the Basement class, the discussion this week is on love.  As it happened, I was scheduled to go to Albuquerque for a panel yesterday, and having emailed a big chunk of the book the my agent, I was free to take an artist's date. So I landed early and took a cab to Old Town. It was still early and quiet.  Daffodils bloomed in pots around the little secret plazas.  I drank coffee with an old man named Peaches, who shared his Albuquerque Journal with me.  He offered to drive me to UNM in his school bus, but I wanted to shop lightly, because the Girls really like cheap silver and turquoise.  I bought some silver studs, and a thin airy turquoise scarf and and a red stone heart for the writing altar, as was required for this week's exercises.   It was hard to find a taxi back, but I remembered there was a hotel close by and went there, and they got one for me.  The driver was named Sammi.  He had an Arabic accent and promised to come back for me for the trip to the airport.  He sent his friend, instead, a man who had come to Albuquerque from the Sudan to go to college at UNM, fourteen years ago.  We talked about Gov. Richardson and his chances for the presidency.

The photos are from my camera phone and not particularly 8 brilliant, but better than no art at all.   I'll spare you the sketches, though I liked a couple of them very much. 

Notes from the plane on the way home:

--The Rio Grande and Sandias at sunset.  The mountains to the east, sky that orange mango pink, the land austure, severe, pinons and arroyos and a sudden shimmer of lights all in a cluster at the head of a valley, like spilled yellow rhinestones. 

The sky so vivid.  Like blood beneath skin. Alien skin.  (This morning I think of the name for that color: vermillion)   The depth of color is like melted crayon.

Then I wrote, with love splitting my heart (like a red heart afire, burning in my chest): "The west, the west, the west, vast and vast and vast. "   

What places split your heart open?

December 27, 2006

Scholarship winners

I've drawn the scholarship winners and sent an email to the two students who will now take the Girls in the Basement class.    If you did not get an email, check back mid-year for a second opportunity. 

December 26, 2006

Indulgences

On ARGH INK, Jenny Crusie writes a list of Indulgences for 2007 and urges us:

Make your 2007 Indulgences today, people. Because tomorrow, you're going to be stuck making those damn Resolutions and after that it's all diet and exercise and no flamingo bunny ears in sight.

Since I'm essentially a sybarite of the highest order, this strikes me as a delicious way to start the new year. My Indulgences for the year are:

1. Add more music.  There's a lot in my life already, but this is indulgences--I love music. Sing every day.  Take cello lessons.  Download more music and listen to the things my children (and their friends) recommend so I can be dazzled by new artists.Fountain_and_ice

2. Take more photos for the pleasure of it.  I got a nice shot yesterday in all the holiday madness.

3. Cook something spectacular every week--French or Italian or Indian, or whatever else looks cool.  Play with food.

4. Order really excellent staples and ingredients once in awhile, like an array of salts from around the world and fantastic vinegars.

5. Throw a party every quarter for some ridiculous reason like the second Saturday in April.  With a theme I make up and all the good food I want to cook and plenty of wine or something to make people laugh.

Well, that wasn't hard.  Go read Jenny's and post your own.  If you blog about it, come back here and post your blog address. 

December 11, 2006

Passions of the writer

FALLING IN LOVE

One of the great pleasures of being a writer is the ability to indulge our passions.  Most adults in modern society are expected to take on an area or two of mastery, with a few amateur areas of interest, and that’s that. 

Look around.  The neighbors on the left: he’s mastered accounting, and has an amateur pleasure in golf, the Grateful Dead, and his collection of toy cars.  She’s an ER nurse who knows everything there is to know about trauma, and she spends her free time puttering with her astonishing cottage garden and reading Regencies.  Long ago, he wanted to be a racecar driver, and for a brief, heady time when he was twenty, he followed the Dead around the country.  She visited England as a young girl and longs to return, and she considered studying history, but her mother wanted her to be sensible.


You, on the other hand, are a dabbler.  A jack-of-all-trades.  It sounds so immature, doesn’t it? A grown-up figures out how to focus instead of running from this to that all the time.  And look at you! You love ER medicine and watching surgeries on television and could have been a physician, but you also love pool tournaments and could have been a contender on the stick circuit.  You surely have the largest collection of something (I’ll put my Black Plague memorabilia up against yours any day).  You love water gardens and know how they work, including how to pour the concrete for the piping options.  You have an amateur’s talent for fine dance and an appreciation for a painter from the seventeenth century that no one has ever heard of.  You can pick out exotic fruits and know the names of all the pastas and recognize obscure castles and tidbits of slang from another language.  You’ve a large collection of things you hope to explore, too: maybe travel through Egypt on a camel or fashions in the 1910s.


Writers never give up an old passion for a new one.  We’re mental magpies, gathering new obsessions and passions to add to the existing ones. 


And yet, as time goes by, we can become like our neighbors—experts at one thing (say, ghost stories), amateurs at a couple of others (how-to craft articles, the odd time travel) and then leave the rest alone.  It’s often success that does it, too.  We settle in to be grownup writers, productive and focused.


There’s certainly nothing wrong with productive, focused work. Trouble is, the brain of a writer is a fine, bright thing, and it needs feeding.  It needs passions to keep itself awake and moving. Unfortunately, daily life and the pressure of producing can sometimes leave the writers brain a bit dulled.  I have seen this in myself sometimes lately.   I was shopping one afternoon in Santa Fe, browsing the shops without much interest, and a part of me—probably Hilary—leapt up and said, “What’s wrong with you? Look at all this! Remember when this would have set you alive with yearning and hunger and dreams?”  A few weeks later, I was in the local library for the first time and saw…. remembered….passion. 


We are our passions.  Our work can only be real and true if we’re tapped into them.  I don’t know what it is that sometimes makes me put away my foolish exuberances, tamp down on my delights, try to act like a forty-something mother instead of a ardent dreamer.  It just happens every now and then.


And every now and then, I wake up again.


This morning, I am listening to Spanish guitar—two pieces, Asturias, by Albeniz, and Juegos Prohibidos.  One is melancholy and sweet and yearning, the other dramatically passionate.  Even after thousands of times, if I happen to hear one of them unexpectedly, I can find myself with tears of joy in my eyes.  There are many pieces of music that can bring joy to my eyes, a fact I’ve learned to hide since it seems to make others extremely uncomfortable.  Sometimes, it will steal on me before I have a chance, as while watching the movie Brassed Off with a friend last week, and in one scene, the band plays such a rousing rendition of The William Tell Overture (I know, I know, serious music fans sometimes think it’s corny, but I also like Vivaldi (a lot) so that should tell you something) that I had to sit forward suddenly, thinking, that non-thought of pleasure that make music so especially delightful for those of us who are often driven to articulate every thought that crosses our minds, every experience we’ve ever had, every….everything. 


In Spanish guitar, what I hear is yearning.  Love.  Big dreams. Passion. These particular pieces are on a CD I put together as a soundtrack for a book (The Goddesses of Kitchen Avenue, who really don't look anything like those charming 30-somethings on the cover) I wrote last year, about a woman who finds herself by reconnecting to her love for Spanish.  I can hear bits and pieces of the book as I listen, but that’s not why I want to hear it this morning.  It’s because I was reading Spanish poetry over the weekend, and then saw Il Postino last night (about Pablo Neruda) and then this morning, I happened to hear Joan Baez singing Pajarillo Barranqueno, and I remembered how much I like writing to Spanish guitar. 


But the truth is, I love Spanish guitar so much is because listening to Astrurias makes me think of a young man named Tim.  I do not think of him consciously, or at least not often, but the spirit of him.  He was a dashing guitarist who was legendary in his small Colorado town because he went to Julliard, a name we said as if it was “Oz.”  He was gangly and longhaired and gentle, and much too old for me—22 to my 15—but I was smitten beyond all reason. I don’t even remember why he came to my attention, only that it was the first time I’d been in love, and oh, I was!  He came into my grandfather’s gas station with his friends. He was connected to my young uncle in some way, and they all whispered stories of his tragic accident—he’d lost parts of two fingers on his left hand in a summer construction job, which ended his music future.  When he came into the station, I could not speak for the yearning in my throat, though he was kind to me. 


As fate would have it, my grandfather found a classical guitar in an abandoned car he towed off the highway.  The young man offered to give me lessons.  My grandfather, not knowing the depth of my passion, cheerfully offered to pay.   I did not exactly wish to turn them down, but I knew how it would be.  My heart stuck in my throat for an hour once a week.  And what if his hand strayed over mine!  I would faint, I knew it.


Somehow, though, I did it.  We became friends of a sort, my love fed like an underground stream on those long afternoons.  He must have known, I think now, and yet he was quite perfectly gentle, kind.  He told me things no one else in my world could know—things about music and New York and his life. Sometimes his hand touched mine, and I nearly did swoon.  At summer’s end, I returned home, and the lessons ended. 


Fifteen has  fickle heart, so when the lessons stopped as school began, I forgot him and fell in love with someone else, but the memory of buttered afternoons, carefully chaperoned by my grandmother clanking pans in the kitchen, remains.  Not his face, or his poor, wounded hand which I found so tragic, but the sound of the guitar, swelling like a dance, and my own heart, swollen twelve times its normal size with unrequited longing.   I fell in love with him, and with guitar, with music. 


Words, you see, were too weak to express my feelings. Only that Malaguena or Asturias could possibly express the layering levels of passion I felt for my teacher, and I made up my mind: music was the thing to which I would devote my life. I had studied already—clarinet for a brief moment, then cello for quite awhile, and choir for years and years and years.  (I wanted to be a soprano because they always got the solos and the attention, but my voice ever grew huskier and I was doomed to be alto and backrow my entire career). 


The trouble was, as deeply and passionately as I loved music (and still do), I discovered that my love outstripped my meager talents.  So now I weep when the music is beautiful.  And I write about music and musicians—a doomed Georgian composer, a blue guitarist who lost his fingers in an accident (hmmm, wonder where that came from?), another blues singer who ruined her life.  I sometimes chuckle over how much material I’ve wrung from a string of classical guitar lessons over a two month period decades ago.   


Music, whether I play or love, is one of my great passions, born that buttery summer when I understood its power.  It has given me some of my best books, this love.  Since I can’t produce the music itself, I use what I have to put music on the page, express my love for it in some other way. It’s a through-line. We all have them, usually a few of them.  In addition to music, my books have through lines about survival and Spanish and the meeting place between cultures. A friend of mine, Christie Ridgway, writes about lost fathers and California and our need to keep up appearances.  Although she probably doesn’t express it this way in her head, she’s passionate about the dynamics of ego and how that functions to keep people functioning. 


We fall in love with ideas, times, peoples, themes, dreams.  Indulging those affairs—long or short--is one of the great pleasures of a writing life.  We must make room for it.


The other night, I finished my pages for the day (yes, it's going a little better this week, thanks) and decided I deserved a reward.  I wandered down to the new library, just opened after a year of major construction and redesign.  It was just before sunset on a Colorado November day.   

Something about the weather or the time of day or year, or maybe all three, made me feel a bit melancholy, and I felt a yawning quiet inside of me, that quiet of being emptied out of thought or plans, all of it gone into the work.   The new library seemed just the right idea to nourish the quiet my brain yearned for, a simple treat that wouldn't be much of a challenge.  I'd just wander around, check out the arrangement, come back home and have supper. 

I should have known better.  There I was walking up to the library I've visited a thousand times, where I spent so much time as a student and then a young writer and a young mother.  It was where I ran when I was desperate for time alone, for a little space of something in my head besides meal planning, budgets, juggling writing time and family time and all the things that go along with all those tasks.   

I'm not sure when I let the library habit slide away.  For awhile, I had so much trouble taking books back on time that I ran up a stupidly huge fine and didn't let myself check books out.  I think that's what started it.   Whatever it was, it had been ages and ages since I'd been to the library, and it was a delight.

A delight, I tell you.  First of all, the new building was brilliantly designed, inside and out.  I wandered through the various floors, exploring the new set-up, the views through the windows-the Sangre De Cristos to the south and west, Pikes Peak and the Front Range to the north, the mountains vividly blue in the fading day.  For awhile, sunset poured through the windows, streaks of red and pink blazing through windows designed to show us just such a beauty.   

I admired the children’s section, then the periodicals, then climbed the stairs (vertigo dancing with me on suspended stairs and glass all around) and entered the adult collection.  Of course I had to see how many of my own books were there, and it was a satisfyingly large number.  One copy of a novel about the city is even set aside in the reserved section—not to be checked out.  Cool.  I wandered on, admired the dizzying number of videos now available, and DVDs. 


And then, I headed for non-fiction.  Quiet there on a Wednesday evening.  I needed to familiarize myself with the new order, so I just wandered up and down the stacks, nodding.  And there, suddenly, where old passions whispering around me like the ghosts of old lovers. 



How I loved things!  So many of them!

Here, in this stretch, is my passion for the middle ages.  I brushed my fingers over the spines, A Distant Mirror, Life in a Medieval Village, Cantor’s wonderful Medieval Lives, and I thought of the taste that drove me, night after night, to come down to these quiet stacks and read, and read, and read, trying to figure out how to resurrect it for myself, for readers, to share this drunken emotion with readers: here is my middle ages! What do you think?


The holographic image of my creation hung there in the aisle with me, a film in red and blue, edged with gilt.   I adored that period so very much, falling in love, dreaming in velvet and lutes, so much passion that when I first saw an illuminated manuscript page at a museum in Denver, I had to duck my head, embarrassed at my tears of longing and gratitude. 

I still love the middle ages, or in my case, it narrowed to the first half of the 14th century. I still enjoy visiting, immersing, falling into the pages someone else has created.  A fragment of song or a line of poetry can carry me off and I'm lost in it once again.  Not the way you sit down to have a civilized lunch with an old boyfriend, but as if you've fallen right into bed with them.


Smiling to myself, I wandered on a little further, and there was another love, another time, another drunken rush of hungry devouring.  There is my World War II period, triggered by the war tales of an old black man who’d been sent to Italy out of the deep South---and I wandered down the aisle with my breath in my throat, thinking of my collection of D-Day statistics (there was an obsession all by itself!), the letters from home, and London stories that did turn into a book I have not published.  It was a bit ahead of its time when I wrote it, and I say that without modesty.   It simply couldn't have been published then.  I don’t know that it ever will be, but that doesn’t make the passion I spent on it any less valid. 


I turned a corner, and laughed.  Here is my disaster period: earthquakes, tornados, hurricanes; ah, and another--obsession of obsessions--Titanic.  Which reminds me of another angle of our passions: there is a tendency to limit ourselves to falling in love with things we might be able to use in our work, and that’s a foolish economy.  I could not possibly use Titanic or write anything fresh or new about it, but boy did the girls and I have a good time finding out every detail we could, just for the sheer pleasure of understanding some new thing that had previously escaped our notice.  (For the record, no one in my family will speak the words D-Day, Black Death, or Titanic in my presence.  I’m sure there are such subjects your own relatives and compatriots avoid.  There’s that geek thing again.)


There they all were, piled up around me in those lovely stacks,  my obsessions and passions:  cultures, countries, time periods, ideas.  Herbs, greenhouses, midwifery; Atlantis and ancient Egypt and Merlin the magician.  Ancient Ireland and Celtic folktales. Ghosts, reincarnation, spiritualism.  Rocks, jewels, gems.  Ah, and here—yes! Joy!---here are diseases:  black plague, tuberculosis, the 1918 influenza epidemic.


What are some of yours? Have you thought about them lately, your old lovers and passions? Which ones still call you into bed with them?  Have you given them any time lately, just for the pleasure of it? 


And what new ones are calling to you?  I stumbled on one quite by accident—World War I.  I’ve been trying for months to not indulge it, after wandering into the Scottish National War Memorial at Edinburgh last spring.  I’ve seen a thousand war memorials, I was raised in a military town, I dislike war and don’t want to think about it (especially at the moment).  But the girls don’t seem to care.  I turned a corner in that memorial and entered the area with the WWI dead, and I don’t know if it was the sheer numbers or the drama of the area or what, but it slammed me so hard I couldn’t speak for a half hour, and it haunted me terribly.  Then I happened to see Lawrence of Arabia, and my heart was plucked again.  And then…it sounds so silly, but I saw an episode of a British comedy, The Black Adder, an episode about World War I soldiers.  The characters had to go above ground, and they died.  It was quietly done, with a fade to black, then the modern day fields where the trenches once were dug.  I was absolutely demolished. 


I’m stuck, I know it.  It’s quite likely there isn’t much to be done with it in terms of a novel, but I decided I’m going to indulge it anyway, for the pleasure of learning, feeding my brain, for the delight of discovery.  Perhaps the girls will figure it out, and the drive to share something of the world, to say, “did you know about this? and isn’t it tragic, and what did we learn?” will show up somewhere after all.


That’s partly what we’re doing with our passions, too, of course, trying to communicate them to others.  Have you ever noticed that Spanish guitar sounds exactly like you feel at fifteen when you’ve first fallen in love?  Did you know that fashion is a way of protecting ourselves? This is what I have observed about small communities and how they function—is it like your observations?


These passions of ours are what make our novels unique and rich.  The fact that we can indulge them is also one of the great gifts of the writing life.  Go ahead—let free a reckless hunger, an ardent yearning, a delighted curiosity.  Ride an elephant, listen to some piece of music you haven’t heard in awhile, open the shutters and see what spirit climbs into sleep with you and whisper in your dreams. 


What is a passion you have left behind, or one that’s tugging at your heart now?  What happens when you write about that?


(Originally published in Novelist's Ink Newsletter)