Nancy Christie's Blog, page 44

October 7, 2020

Wednesday Writing Inspiration for 10.7.20

Words for writers from Ayn Rand


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Published on October 07, 2020 02:30

October 5, 2020

Thoughts on writing and life for October

Last month in my writing newsletter, I wrote about a variety of things:
• My disappointment with my garden (Probably my fault for not giving it enough water)
• My problems with technology (Resolved, but not without a lot of words my mother wouldn’t have approved of!)
• My struggles with finding an agent (Sadly, no good news on that point, although the feedback I’ve been getting from beta readers has reinforced my belief that the book has potential—Yay!)

I also wrote about my feelings after reading Alice Koller’s An Unknown Woman and my plan to incorporate some “Nantucket Time” into each day.

And I’m proud to say that, with a few exceptions, I followed my plan. I sat with my coffee and journal and did some writing each morning during my “Nantucket Time” and while not every day provided me with earth-shattering revelations, it did allow me to explore my thoughts and hopes, my goals and objectives.


It also pushed me to examine my regrettable tendency to believe that at my age (never mind what age that is!), it’s too late to achieve my writing goals.

The last was further reinforced by reading the New York Times’ obituary for the artist Luchita Hurtado at 99. Although she had been painting for years, Hurtado’s work was rarely exhibited until the 1970s, and she didn’t start to gain major recognition until 2016 at age 96.

The point I took away from her obituary was that she never gave up. It was the art that drove her, not the hope of fame or fortune.

Message for me? That my focus should be on writing. If my work gets published, that’s a bonus—the icing on the cake. But my first priority should be on doing the work itself, and not letting the rejections stop me from the act of creating new pieces.

As for my “Nantucket Time” strategy, while I intend to continue it, I am also expanding it to explore mindfulness—something I learned about when talking with author Camilla Downs for this month’s Living the Writing Life podcast episode.

Mindfulness isn’t meditation, but awareness: in essence, paying attention to where you are. Engaging all your sense in that awareness. Not multi-tasking—something I do almost automatically—but single-tasking.

By involving all your senses in the activity, you can’t help but improve your ability to be a more creative writer. I think of it like filling your mental pantry with experiences that you can draw on when it comes time to describe a scene or a character’s actions.

But it also is about paying attention to your own reactions: what emotions are sparked by those sensory experiences. The feelings come up, you allow them to be part of the experience and you not only perhaps gain a better understanding of events from your past but also, as a writer, incorporate that understanding when describing a character’s reactions or thought processes.

So I have started a list of what mindfulness activities I can engage in despite any COVID-19 restrictions. I’ll let you know next month how it goes, and if I have tried any others as part of my mindfulness moments.

And if this has encouraged you to try mindfulness, let me know what you did and how it turned out.

Did you enjoy this excerpt? Sign up for my
newsletter, The Writing Life with Nancy Christie, and receive a free writing-related tip sheet as a bonus!
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Published on October 05, 2020 04:16 Tags: writinglife

September 30, 2020

Wednesday Writing Inspiration for 9.30.20

Words for writers from Erica Jong


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Published on September 30, 2020 12:02

September 23, 2020

Wednesday Writing Inspiration for 9.23.20

Words for writers from Richard Bausch


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Published on September 23, 2020 08:22

September 16, 2020

Wednesday Writing Inspiration for 9.16.20

Words for writers from PD James


The post Wednesday Writing Inspiration for 9.16.20 appeared first on The Writer's Place.

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Published on September 16, 2020 02:14

September 9, 2020

The need for some "Nantucket time"

Read my latest article on Medium
on how incorporating some “Nantucket time” into my daily schedule may help me cope with the stress and uncertainty of life.
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Published on September 09, 2020 04:16 Tags: writinglife

Wednesday Writing Inspiration for 9.9.20

Words for writers from Cheryl Strayed


The post Wednesday Writing Inspiration for 9.9.20 appeared first on The Writer's Place.

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Published on September 09, 2020 03:48

September 5, 2020

Weekend Writing Prompt for 9.5.20

Coming or going?

Read the prompt and view the image at Focus on Fiction and then let it inspire you to write the rest of the story.
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Published on September 05, 2020 06:01 Tags: stayhomeandwrite, weekendwritingprompt

August 26, 2020

Wednesday Writing Inspiration for 8.26.20

Words for writers from Peter De Vries

Photo by John-Mark Smith on Unsplash


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Published on August 26, 2020 02:46

August 25, 2020

Connecting with Book Clubs in the Virtual World—Guest Post by Clifford Garstang

Many authors have had their book promotion plans totally disrupted by COVID-19—something I touched in my post, Tuesday’s Tips—Learning Curves on the Way to Doing Podcasts and Videos. And if one of their marketing tools involved in-person visits to book clubs, that strategy was put back in the toolbox pretty quickly.


But in this guest post, Clifford Garstang shares some advice for connecting with book clubs in the virtual world—something he had to switch to, given that his newest book, House of t...

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Published on August 25, 2020 02:10