Monday, November 23, 2009

Anybody Can Write?

Many years ago as I was walking through my favorite bookstore, a title on the one of the endcaps caught my eye. Anybody Can Write, it proclaimed. The author, Roberta Jean Bryant, promised a playful approach. Since I was looking for something to read during a bus trip to a competition in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee with my son’s middle school band, I picked it up. It was the first writing how-to book I read. The title gave me hope.

It had been a long time since I’d been required to write anything but personal letters and most of those only at Christmas time. I love to read, but I wondered then, if I could write. According to Ms. Bryant, there are seven laws of writing. The first one is: “To write” is an active verb. Thinking is not writing. Writing is putting words on paper.

When the bus trip was over and we’d made it safely home, I started putting words on paper, spiral bound notebooks to be exact. This was just before computers took over our lives. Pen and paper were the first means of getting ideas out of my head and visible. It was a slow process and messy at times. Some of the pages had more lines through them than Walmart the day after Thanksgiving. I didn’t let anybody read them, either.

I have found out from being around other writers that whatever process you come up with to write should be your own. You might write a detailed outline or just start writing and see what comes out the end of your pen. You can write everything out long hand first or just start typing. There is no Right Way. As Ms. Bryant suggests, be playful with it and see what works for you.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

A Writing Journey Begins

Everyone has different reasons for wanting to write. Some people know from an early age that they want to be writers. These folks get degrees in journalism and masters degrees in creative writing.


Then there are those of us who wait until middle age to decide to write down the stories that have been running around in our heads. Maybe we've had interesting experiences and want to write our memoirs. Maybe we want to write down the stories we made up for our children when they were young and still listened to us. Maybe we want to fill a void.


When my daughter turned fourteen and started that separation thing adolescent girls go through it was painful, for me anyway. That's when I started writing. I tried journaling first, but you never know who's going to find and read it. I discovered it was easier to express my feelings about the end of my daughter's childhood with fictional characters. Those were extremely clumsy first steps and they have been banished to the netherworld now. Looking back though, I've discovered that every step, no matter how small or ugly, gets you down the road just a bit.


And that's all it takes to start the journey.