When the Going Gets Weird…

…The Weird Get Going How’s your writing project going? Do you have one? It’s been a weird time for me lately, what with my mom being diagnosed with dementia (that explains a few things!), my income gradually crawling up from its summer dip in the cold lake of WTF, and a stream of daily small complications …

Read more

3 Steps in Any Writing Project

A theory, with a case study (n=1) Here’s a silly situation! I started A Writer’s Roadmap (AWR) in 2019 as a subtitle for what I pictured as a few nonfiction e-books in the how-to genre, specifically how to write and publish a book.  I obtained the URL and made a website for it with no real …

Read more

Let Your Subconscious Help You Write

I’m sitting in what feels like the dark (my office / flexspace, which is in fact a large closet), still riding a bit of a high from the International 3-Day Novel contest (3DN for short), which ran over the Labour Day weekend. Everyone I know who’s tried the 3DN either does it once and goes, “not …

Read more

Writing as a Parent

I’m not a big fan of artists who complain about parenthood as an obstacle to creating. In a 2009 essay in Poetry magazine entitled “As if Nature Talked Back to Me,” poet Ange Mlinko writes: “…the plethora of conferences and grants and brief residencies by which cvs—and social networks, and reputations—are built, are no less restrictive to the poet-mother who …

Read more

Writing, Money, and the Olympics

The Summer Olympics are on TV! And they’re happening in real life, too, OF COURSE…over in Europe, over in Paris, over where baguettes grow on trees et le fromage, c’est magnifique.  I was going to write a bracing postcard about how Olympic athletes get their stuff done. Ability + decision + dedication + support in …

Read more

Your Writing Goals & Ambivalence: Don’t Quit Too Soon

The road leading to a goal does not separate you from the destination; it is essentially a part of it. —Roman Saying, quoted in Charles de Lint, Dreams Underfoot, 1993 Yesterday I met a goal six months in the making–my podcast buddy James Buchanan and I “soft launched” Gifted Underachievers, a podcast for midlevel creatives with delusional ambitions. We “gentle launched” …

Read more

How to Fake Your Own Death So You Can Write

…And Why You’d Want To Maybe I should qualify that: How to fake your own death if you’re stifled / frustrated / stuck in your creative life. Here’s a four-stage process I recommend: 1. Before the how, consider the why 2. Rate your days, alien-style 3. Analyze & prioritize 4. Remove & replace Stage 1: Before …

Read more

How to Build Your Creative Ecosystem

Quote attributed to either John F Kennedy (1917-1963) or Gail Devers (1966-). In the last Postcard I was all over the idea of having a creative ecosystem for yourself, so you can make the thing you want to make. Brace yourself for some possibly weird suggestions on how to set one up!  Personally, I used to …

Read more

Who’s In Your Circle?

Who do you hang out with, and how do you feel afterward? This is a question I’ve been asking myself after I read a quote attributed to the late great Nipsey Hussle:  “If you look at the people in your circle and you don’t get inspired, you don’t have a circle. You have a cage.” The people …

Read more

How to Write a Book

Let’s blether about the ether. I’m not going to sugarcoat this. Writing can be hard.You’re taking little black marks and making an experience for someone you don’t know. You can’t really see it objectively for a long time. In fact you can’t see it, period, for most of its creation. Knitters have wool, sculptors have clay …

Read more

The Great DEVO’s Writing Process

Now that we are one-twelfth of the way through 2024 and all the shenanigans about New Year Resolutions is over, it’s time to talk about how to create something you love and send it out into the world. Forty-plus years ago, the band DEVO made an album that took them from near-obscurity to the top of the music charts. In …

Read more

Persistence in Writing Pays with Progress

I had a writing teacher named Benjamin Percy who, according to Wikipedia, is “an American author of novels and short stories, essayist, comic book writer, and screenwriter.” I am old enough to have been Ben’s babysitter. By that, I mean I was sixteen when he was born. I met him when I was forty-six and he was thirty. …

Read more

When to Burn Your Manuscripts

My friend Doug, whom I met in a writing class about eighteen years ago, asked, “How long can you put aside a story and still return to it, legitimately? 10 20 30 years? When to burn shit?” A brilliant musician and writer, Doug is a very creative guy. Probably quite prolific. I don’t know how many stories he’s got …

Read more

The Writer’s #1 Roadblock

Guess what the writer’s #1 roadblock is! It isn’t lack of time. That might be on the list, but it’s not #1. It ain’t lack of resources. Lots of people have written books despite lacking external resources. It’s not lack of money. Money can buy you time, coaches, and feedback, but it can’t help you actually write the book. …

Read more

When Your Writing Needs a Reset

I’m supposed to go somewhere tonight (by “supposed to” I mean I said I would). This morning I diagnosed myself with intercostal muscle strain, which came on suddenly during a weightlifting workout 11 days ago and sent me to emergency with what I (and the ambulance crew! I’m not a hypochondriac!) thought might be heart attack. Even 11 …

Read more

Thought Experiments with Writing

Sometimes the fridge in my new domicile oozes water. This fridge is gigantic, I’m not sure how old it is, and I don’t know why it cries in the night. I’m torn between investigating it and replacing it. Both would take time and money. When you’re faced with something that you have to deal with, whether it’s a grieving …

Read more

For Writerly Solitude, Plan Ahead (Links to Creative Residencies)

How much time alone are you getting to write? Do you feel sated with solitude? If not, you might be ready to pull your own head off your body and stuff it in a suitcase. I usually avoid blanket statements, but here’s one I believe in: Writers need solitude. So if you didn’t get enough this …

Read more

When Betsy Lerner Left the Building

She’s Gone…oh why…oh why… My favorite emailer in the world is Betsy Lerner. I don’t know what to call her…a blogger? She’s a writer, prize-winning editor, literary agent, prize-winning poet, umm…now that I read her various bios, I’m feeling intimidated. But let’s put that aside. Lerner’s emails are short, unfiltered, and often extremely funny. I get a dopamine rush when I see …

Read more

Trust the Reader

Trust the reader to get your writing, no matter how weird or intellectual it might be. Let them pick up what you’re putting down! You can trust the reader by avoiding these two things:1. Overexplaining2. Editorializing Overexplaining Overexplaining comes when you don’t stop at the end of a sentence, but go on with more words. I …

Read more