I love when people open up — give me stories about your divorce, depression, cancer treatment, or dysfunctional childhood. And then half-way through your writing, lay it on me about how you handled the whole thing with faith, resilience, humor, or alcohol.
Better yet, write about your most embarrassing moment — the time you felt so humiliated you thought you’d never crawl back into civilized company again. You’ve got an epic fail? You’ve got an epic tale.
The stories of our struggles are the ones that will get published, get a laugh, get a tear, get a friend to open up on her crappy/crazy/resilient/hopeful life.
I’m not saying we wrote about any of these things (Maybe we did, maybe we didn’t!) at the Westport Creative Writing workshops, which I offered the last three Saturdays of August 2011 at the Heritage House.
But even if we did, I wouldn’t tell you, because the rule in my writing classes is confidentiality.
I will tell you generally what we wrote about — in the first class, among other topics, we wrote about a safe place from our childhoods; the second class, we wrote about our mentors from high school; the third class, with Hurricane Irene on her way, we wrote about riding out a storm (literal or metaphorical).
At the first class, we had 6 people, then 3, and then at the last class, 8. Hooray! It felt great. There were so many brilliant writers with brilliant life stories. It was an honor to be a part of and facilitate a creative writing experience for non-writers and professionals alike.
I believe there is something healing and transformative about writing your life story. It is sometimes unbelievable, but never never dull.
I will offer these “Story of Your Life” workshops (inspired by Dan Wakefield’s book of the same name) again.
So, who did you query besides the Charlotte Observer during your query-a-day week?
Wow! You are busting me. I sent out 1 query last week. This week I will send out 2. What about you?
I never signed up for that competition 🙂
I challenge you to not write a single blog post again until you send out seven queries.
…on ANY blog. Can you handle the challenge???
Wow!!! I am tempted. I love a challenge, but I on the bus today I already started a very funny blog post. And I hate not to post it (I simply cannot stop sharing!). And what about my postaday habit? Okay, I’m on. Oh this is going to be so tough!
Okay, I’m back to blogging. I sent 7 queries out since Robert challenged me. Sent to The Baseball Chronicle, Ladies Home Journal, Salon, New Yorker, Christianity Today, Parents Magazine, City Scoops.
Done. Now back to my regularly scheduled blogging schedule — Blogging every day in September. Querying once in a while. Working on my novel for a measly 10 minutes a day.