Sunday, September 14, 2014

Prompt Five: Revision


Examining "Leaky Bottles" 


This piece was an actual journal entry.  I did not pay close attention to the spelling and grammar errors.  This of course is part of writing. I just wanted to express myself onto the page.  I sought to have a full circle effect to my piece and feel it lacks slightly.  I believe that the transitions will need to be refined.  I have had time to reflect on the piece and have found several ways to add more concrete details for my readers.  I do think that the consistency is strong each segment pulls from the previous and then circles back to the start.  I will be working polish this piece not only with corrections to the errors in basic grammar but in the movement.  I think that the choppiness is from early stages of writing but as my ideas have been rolling around a bit since I put the first words to the page, I have had opportunity to see deeper into the ideas in my work.  I see potential in this piece and hope to make it more than just a journal entry (Hoorah!  That was my goal for the class!)

Friday, September 12, 2014

Prompt 4: Leaking bottles DRAFT



September for many means a start to school.  For those of us that dwell in the desert, we have been in classes for several weeks.  For me September means quilts.  I am a desert dweller but every September I meander up to the cooler plains of the Grand Canyon State to quilt.  I go with my mother.  It is our time, every year.  It is odd that as a child I did not think that one day I would long for time with my mom.  She worked and I was busy. That has changed. I realize the time is more important as her hair becomes a bit more snowy and her back a bit more bent.  I see her growing older and my time slipping away.  While I know our years are still many, I am painfully aware that the time slipping quietly through the cracks of each year.

I became a mother just a year out of my teens.  I was young but not too young.  I was blessed over the next six years to have four children.  Each precious. Each unique. Each grew quickly.  One day I was the mother of four children under the age of six Soon they were all in either middle or high school.  They kept maturing and growing. Each year as September rolled around, the school would provide an image of each of my offspring most often with a bland blue background.  I would purchase the largest package to pass on to the grandparents, aunts and uncles.  I would pry back the metal tabs remove the collection photos.  I would review the years quickly in those images and then place the current image to the top of the stack replace the photos cardboard back press down the metal tabs and hang them on the wall. The new photo would stand sentry for a year until the next years would take its place. Look how they've grown.

When I became a mother I thought the day they (my children) had grown and moved on I would miss them but had no idea what a longing I would have to share in their lives.  As of today, three of my four children have "flown the coop".  I realize that time is precious. I am reminded of the song "Time in a Bottle." Never were those words more meaningful than this year. My son informed us on a hot May afternoon that he had applied and was accepted to Northern Arizona University.  I swelled with pride.  I was excited when he told us that he had been accepted to the school of his choice. It seemed so very far away.  After all he had just graduated from high school.

  As August crept in and stole away my son.  He left for school. One day he was there, the next, gone.  I still walk in his room and miss him. I am trying to be strong, I try to not say how much I miss him when he calls. I don't want him to know how empty I feel without the burst of laughter that would come bellowing from his room.  The thud of his grownup frame as it tumbles down the stairs.  The hugs he always gave when my day was not going so well.  I realize that time has moved all too quickly.

There may come a day when September rolls around that one of my children join me on an annual trek. Perhaps not quilting, which is my mothers love, but something, something that we can enjoy together.  My eldest art, my next cooking, my boy, games and my youngest, perhaps a theater event.  But we will do it every year, it will be a way to cork the leaking bottle of time.  Today I sit looking at my mother, we are quilting today.  I watch as she pushes fabric through her machine, creating a quilt that one day may lie on my bed, and remind me of how we patched our own bottle.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Writers Top Five Important Elements in Writing

Five of my favorite posts on Padlet:  



"Accept Criticism: When you let someone read your work take anything that they say and consider what they are saying. The hardest part is don't become defensive over what is being said."    -- Brett Garden
I have never had problem with constructive criticism, in fact it has been my experience that when I have someone look at my writing the see the things I miss. Sometimes I forget that the reader may not know that my character is burdened.  I need to convey that.  Criticism is such a bad word, it really should be making your work stronger.  I welcome all the criticism I can get.  The great thing about it is you can take the advice or not, ultimately you are the writer but at the minimum you have at least considered the potential mishaps from your readers point of view!


"Point of view - I think this is the most important for me, especially as shifting POV can make an average story much more interesting. There are a few different types of point of view - first person, second person, third person and omniscient. One of my favorite exercises to do is take a story that has already been written and rewrite it in another perspective. Another fun thing to play around with is writing from the perspective of inanimate objects."  --Gabrielle Foster
I believe a good story can be made or broken depending on the point of view that the main character takes.  I once read a book that had to protagonist and they both took a first person point of view, it was terrible!  It was a series (the final) and it literally almost made me cry!  It was so hard to follow it broke the flow. I believe it was a major flaw in the writing.  I believe when you are considering your point of view, you must be careful to select the POV and for the love of all things good and right, if you are outlining and need to change the POV.. do it.



"Outline and Structure: This kind of goes along with the first one. Without a structure and outline as to what you want to write, and how the story will flow, the writing can feel unorganized and messy."   Carrie Jarnagin
 YES! Outlining is not for all writers, but in my experience outlining even if only a little helps keep stories on the right track.  I know non-outliners say it removes the creativity, the freedom I get that, but are you not being creative when you are jotting down your outline?  Yes!  It does not work for everyone and that if okay, for me however I believe it is essential to productive and concise writing.  Characters have a path, they are not wandering -- they do that in the outline process so you can then get very creative knowing what the plot points you are heading toward.  That does not mean that they can't find and follow a bunny trail but if the story is outlined you will discover that the bunny trail is not helpful much quicker. 


"Homonym Abuse- If there's one thing that drives me up the wall and around the bend crazy, it's homonym abuse. You know what I'm talking about. There, their, and they're, too, two, and to; you get the idea. I hate to go all English nerd on everyone, but you've got to admit. Homonym accuracy is crucial."  Olivia Pfeil
Ok I am going to jump on the wagon here. I believe as a writer you should know these simple grammatical rules!  It is important not so much in the beginning stages, during pre-write if you put your instead of you're that is fine.  Pre-writing is about getting the ideas down.  When we move to even the first draft I may let it go, as you are fervently tapping away on your keyboard.  However, by the time you are at the revision stage you need to have this worked out. It makes me crazy when I am doing a second peer edit and the same word is misused repeatedly.  Learning your own language will help you be a better writer and enjoy writing more! No more stops to ask yourself is is their or there?  They should be second nature.


"Have Fun!: If you are writing and are bored with your story, chances are others will be too. Throw some pizzaz in there and make it a good read! If you enjoy it, others will too, and if they don't, at least you are having fun with it!"   Carrie Jarnagin
While this is more advice than a writing element it is true for all stages!  When it is not fun for the writer, it is most likely not going to be fun for the reader.  So perhaps this idea is a part of each stage and is not just important but vital to the writing process.