Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within
Rate it:
Open Preview
Read between February 21 - April 11, 2025
7%
Flag icon
take the plunge.
8%
Flag icon
Writing practice could hold it all: the gory rawness of my emotions and the fogged-over mirrors of my memory.
9%
Flag icon
‘The World Come Home to Me’?”
9%
Flag icon
“settle the self on the self.”
10%
Flag icon
Many people who want to write are unconsciously seeking peace, a coming together, an acknowledging of our happiness or an examination of what is broken, hoping to embrace and bring our suffering to wholeness.
11%
Flag icon
Writing can give you confidence, can train you to wake up.
11%
Flag icon
Where do thoughts come from? Memories, ideas, even the word the?
11%
Flag icon
Meditation and writing practice are coincident.
11%
Flag icon
(not take anything for granted)
12%
Flag icon
Accept loss forever Be submissive to everything, open, listening No fear or shame in the dignity of your experience, language, and knowledge Be in love with your life
12%
Flag icon
Write your asses off.
13%
Flag icon
Erica Jong.
13%
Flag icon
“Trust in love and it will take you where you need to go.”
13%
Flag icon
“Trust in what you love, continue to do it, and it will take you where you need to go.” And don’t worry too much about security. You will eventually have a deep security when you begin to do what you want.
13%
Flag icon
Learning to write is not a linear process. There is no logical A-to-B-to-C way to become a good writer.
14%
Flag icon
beginner’s mind is what we must come back to every time we sit down and write.
14%
Flag icon
Each time is a new journey with no maps.
14%
Flag icon
you have permission to write the worst junk in the world and it would be okay.
15%
Flag icon
you can try is speaking into a tape recorder and feeling how it is to directly record your voice speaking your thoughts.
15%
Flag icon
It is true that the inside world creates the outside world, but the outside world and our tools also affect the way we form our thoughts.
16%
Flag icon
Explore the rugged edge of thought.
16%
Flag icon
First thoughts have tremendous energy. It is the way the mind first flashes on something. The internal censor usually squelches them, so we live in the realm of second and third thoughts, thoughts on thought, twice and three times removed from the direct connection of the first fresh flash.
16%
Flag icon
“I cut the daisy from my throat”
16%
Flag icon
First thoughts are also unencumbered by ego, by that mechanism in us that tries to be in control, tries to prove the world is permanent and solid, enduring and logical.
16%
Flag icon
So if you express something egoless, it is also full of energy because it is expressing the truth of the way things are.
17%
Flag icon
Don’t stop at the tears; go through to truth. This is the discipline.
17%
Flag icon
Why else are first thoughts so energizing? Because they have to do with freshness and inspiration.
17%
Flag icon
Inspiration means “breathing in.” Breathing in God. You actually become larger than yourself, and first thoughts are present. They are not a cover-up of what is actually happening or being felt. The pr...
This highlight has been truncated due to consecutive passage length restrictions.
17%
Flag icon
Sit down with the least expectation of yourself; say, “I am free to write the worst junk in the world.” You have to give yourself the space to write a lot without a destination.
17%
Flag icon
If every time you sat down, you expected something great, writing would always be a great disappointment.
18%
Flag icon
All of you is moving; there’s no you separate from the runner. In writing, when you are truly on, there’s no writer, no paper, no pen, no thoughts. Only writing does writing—everything else is gone.
18%
Flag icon
“We must continue to open in the face of tremendous opposition. No one is encouraging us to open and still we must peel away the layers of the heart.”
19%
Flag icon
Katagiri Roshi said: “Your little will can’t do anything. It takes Great Determination. Great Determination doesn’t mean just you making an effort. It means the whole universe is behind you and with you—the birds, trees, sky, moon, and ten directions.”
19%
Flag icon
Understanding this process cultivates patience and produces less anxiety.
20%
Flag icon
“Don’t get rid of them.”
21%
Flag icon
If you are not afraid of the voices inside you, you will not fear the critics outside you.
21%
Flag icon
Yet it is good to know about our terrible selves, not laud or criticize them, just acknowledge them.
21%
Flag icon
If you give your mind too much time to contemplate a beginning when you sit down to write, your monkey mind might meander over many topics and never quite get to putting a word on the page.
23%
Flag icon
If those characters in you want to fight, let them fight. Meanwhile, the sane part of you should quietly get up, go over to your notebook, and begin to write from a deeper, more peaceful place.
23%
Flag icon
It is important to have a way worked out to begin your writing; otherwise, washing the dishes becomes the most important thing on earth—anything that will divert you from writing. Finally, one just has to shut up, sit down, and write.
24%
Flag icon
“Talk when you talk, walk when you walk, and die when you die.”
24%
Flag icon
Write when you write.
24%
Flag icon
“Teach in order to learn.”
24%
Flag icon
You can make up all kinds of friendly tricks. Just don’t get caught in the endless cycle of guilt, avoidance, and pressure. When it is your time to write, write.
25%
Flag icon
The Norton Anthology of English Literature
26%
Flag icon
Writers, when they write, need to approach things for the first time each time.
26%
Flag icon
How to generate writing ideas, things to write about?
26%
Flag icon
Own anything you want in your writing and then let it go.
26%
Flag icon
“Capability is like a water table below the surface of earth.” No one owns it, but you can tap it.
26%
Flag icon
We learn writing by doing it. That simple. We don’t learn by going outside ourselves to authorities we think know about it.
« Prev 1 3 4