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Ellen A. Wilkin

Writer: Novels, Poetry, Essays, Biography, Memoir
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All content copyright Ellen A. Wilkin unless otherwise noted.

Me on the left in my fancy dress dancing in the Queen's Room aboard the Queen Mary 2 with table mate Bruce (because of his generous nature and that of his wife, Liz).

Me on the left in my fancy dress dancing in the Queen's Room aboard the Queen Mary 2 with table mate Bruce (because of his generous nature and that of his wife, Liz).

Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Dance & Sing & Meditate on Board

October 05, 2016

Days Three and Four, Wednesday and Thursday, 5/18 and 5/19 2011

Last evening, the first after a full day at sea, was marvelous – after I got passed my first reservations about appearing in public by myself, that is. A glass of champagne ordered to the room helped. And knowing I would meet up with my table mates from the night before helped as well. (What a generous, good-natured lot they are!) And by midnight I was at the Golden Lion club singing Barbara Streisand, Liza Minnelli and Beatles hits. Who would have guessed?

OK. Truth. I had it in my mind that I might end up singing when I saw that the club had scheduled karaoke that night. I felt I had to come down for at least one song.

Mike and Jane at the Commodore Club aboard the Queen Mary 2. They are originally from England, but now live in the United States.

Mike and Jane at the Commodore Club aboard the Queen Mary 2. They are originally from England, but now live in the United States.

But I am getting ahead of myself. Well before that, our merry band of Britannica Restaurant diners, table 140, finished dinner and embarked on a journey to the Commodore Club. From there, we headed to the Queen's Room, where a big band played until the wee hours. Liz was generous enough to share her husband, Bruce, who loved to dance. So I had the opportunity to stumble through some swing with Bruce, who was a good leader and enjoyed himself regardless of how "good" we looked on the dance floor. I remember laughing quite a lot and Bruce usually had a big grin on his face.

Toward the end of the evening, I was approached by one of the professional "gentleman" who scoured the ball room in search of solo ladies who were looking for dancing partners. He approached Liz first, and after they had danced one number, mentioned that I had not “date.” She returned to her husband, and the pro approached me. I accepted and we danced. He was a poor leader and not a great dancer. Liz confided the same to me later. He gave me one pointer: to peer over his right shoulder as we danced, which felt right, but I could not follow him. I was too glad when the dance came to an end and he led me back to our table.

Bruce and Liz cutting a rug in the Queen's Room on the Queen Mary 2.

Bruce and Liz cutting a rug in the Queen's Room on the Queen Mary 2.

Despite my less-than-elegant dancing, I was caught up in the romance of the evening: the gentlemen leading the ladies by the hand to and from the dance floor in very formal and gracious style. I am a romantic, and sometimes it is nice to absorb the nostalgic air of the grand ballroom.

Dancing with this professional partner had, however, left me with a lingering embarrassment. The only thing that would absolve me from the stain of being unworthy in the performing arts category was to go downstairs and join the karaoke party already in progress. I had a captive audience, and I made the most of it. These people did not know me, yet were generous in their appreciation for my renditions of Bab's "Don't Rain on My Parade" and Liza's "Cabaret." I closed down the bar with the Beatles, "Twist and Shout," even getting the karaoke jockey and another couple out there on the dance floor, twisting.

Before I went to bed at 2:00am, I sat on the balcony listening to the waves roll and wind grapple with the lashings of lifeboat to the side of the ship above me.  It was a strange feeling when I realized the sound of waves was our own ship's wake.  It seems there would be no sound if we were not here.  The moon hung like single pearl over the water in a crystal clear sky. It was the first night that fog had not hugged the ship like a mink stole. The only disappointment is that it wasn't the enormous moon, craters and shadow lakes standing out against its silvery crust, that rose over Joe stranded on his raft in the middle of the ocean in the film Joe Versus the Volcano.

The air is chill, the horizon gray, but I can see for miles and miles to a horizon defined only by midnight blue fading to a milky ribbon. No land nor boat nor sign of life nearby. We are out in the middle of the Atlantic far from anyone. We left the grave of the Titanic far behind us Tuesday night, after I went to bed.  To stay up to meditate on the passing over the final resting place of so many souls at midnight seemed a grim activity for such a pleasure voyage. The good news is that with climate change, we are unlikely to see an iceberg let alone run into one. The nearest was sighted on radar over three hundred miles away. We sail on!

Being on this ship is like being suspended in time and place. Being between worlds as in a Twilight Zone episode. Between the new world and the old world. Between ancient history and the modern era. Between continents. This in-between space is a tower of people speaking multiple languages where everyone learns how to communicate despite being from so many different lands and speaking so many different languages. Take that, Tower of Babel.

This vessel in the middle of the sea also represents a personal limbo between two realities for me: That of New York and my life in the United States and that of an unknown future in the old country, which for me represents a past I have yet to discover. A strange nonsensical journey of the mind and spirit that does not stand up to analytical scrutiny. My future somehow lies in the past.

Last night I was in my element. I needed to stay up late and express my inner diva once more, then meditate on the moonlit waters afterward. Tonight, however, it is an early bed because I am utterly exhausted. It doesn't help that each evening we set the clocks ahead one hour. Once more into the breach!

My stateroom on the Queen Mary 2 05/17/11 crossing from NYC to Southampton. The champagne bottle sits in a bucket of melting ice.

My stateroom on the Queen Mary 2 05/17/11 crossing from NYC to Southampton. The champagne bottle sits in a bucket of melting ice.

Eight-Week Europe Solo Travelogue 2011: Aboard Wednesday, AM

September 28, 2016 in Memoir, Writer's Life, Travel

Days Two (PM) and Three, Tuesday and Wednesday, 5/17 and 5/18 2011.

I'm sitting in Sir Samuel's, one of the bars on Deck 3 of the Queen Mary 2, waiting to order some green tea and writing, but no one seems to notice that I am here. I wanted to just sit down and have someone immediately come up to me and ask me what I wanted. This is a cruise ship, isn't it? I am supposed to expect good service, right?

I watch the busy woman with the glasses and pony tail crossing the room from the bar to several other tables, serving coffees and teas. Perhaps you have to go to the bar to order something here. I stand at the bar, still not getting attention. I am still expecting someone to ask me what I want. I am about to be bold and brash and call out that I wish to have some Sencha Green Tea with Lemon when I notice the server go over to the area I had just been sitting in and begin to clean up. I stroll back over and call to the server, trying not to be the ugly American but wanting to get the service I expected. “May I order something, please? I was sitting here earlier, but no one came by.” She is surprised and apologizes. She seems harried, and I realize that she is just busy. And probably not expecting any new customers in the middle of the morning. It was about time I got over myself. My excuse? Tired from traveling. Tired already on Day Three of my travels of being overlooked because I was a solo diner.

I become suddenly charitable. When I was sitting there earlier typing away on my lap top, I must have looked like the last, and apparently abandoned, member of a larger party. When I got up from the table, the server took it as a cue that the party was now completely finished with their refreshment. But, as long as a bar is open, you should easily be able to get service, whether at the table or the bar. It isn't exactly Dublin in the late 1980's! (I remembered when my mother, sister, aunt, and I strode into a pub full of men and expected someone to ask us for our order and, after standing at the bar for several minutes, finally got the attention of the frowning bar keep who lightened up when we ordered pints of ale).

My tea has now arrived and I am trying to ignore the fact that it arrived as a tea bag and hot water instead of a steaming pot of fresh tea leaves brewing. I am expecting luxury treatment on a luxury liner. What a snooty individual I am! I am spoiled from visiting the Boulder Dushanbe Tea House. I am now remembering I had a complication last evening when I first boarded. I had arrived on the gangway at the time the Cunard instructions told me to, which turned out to be much later than the bulk of the passengers. By the time I came on board, my champagne (!) was sitting in a bucket of melted ice and very few people were about the halls. I had to check my large bag at the gangway and was expecting it to be waiting for me in my cabin. But it was not. The Purser did not know where it was. I had to leave for dinner before finding out if I was going to be wearing the same outfit all week. (Capris and a red button-down blouse with 3/4 sleeves would look stunning at the Royal Ascot Ball!)

The Statue of Liberty viewed from the balcony of my stateroom on the Queen Mary 2 as we leave port in Manhattan.

The Statue of Liberty viewed from the balcony of my stateroom on the Queen Mary 2 as we leave port in Manhattan.

Indeed, I am too influenced by BBC period dramas staring Helen Bonham Carter. Yes. I am truly playing the part of the decadent dreamer. Or is it the pampered princess? You choose. Please note that after lunch I am having a massage and manicure.

Despite my complaints here, I am enjoying the ship. I had dinner last night with my assigned dinner table companions in the Britannia Restaurant and discovered that one of them, a young woman, was, like me, traveling solo to Paris from the ship!  We promised to compare itineraries. She is going directly to Spain, though, from France, so we will most likely miss each other once we leave Paris. But it would be fun to hook up for dinner one night while there. The other folks are from all over the U.S. Only one couple is not. They are British and have lived in the U.S. for 40 years. Everyone was polite and very interested in my research and a couple of them knew a good bit about Eleanor of Aquitaine and British royalty.

With some of my dining companions in the Britannia Restaurant on board the Queen Mary 2.

With some of my dining companions in the Britannia Restaurant on board the Queen Mary 2.

After dinner, I went straight back to my room. A few minutes later, my bag showed up in the hands of my steward, Bianca, who was glowing with excitement. She had shared my frustration earlier at not having my bag before dinner, but had assured me it would arrive. I think she took personal pride in the fact that it did, finally, arrive.

Now as I sip my tea in the bar, I ponder the question, why am I here? This luxury liner with its jewelry and clothing and art boutiques, its spa and Queen's Ballroom, its restaurants full of servers in white linen jackets and bars that stay open until 2:00am, all seem to be a far cry from the atmosphere of serious research study that I craved and that sparked the idea for this journey. I was to use this ocean trip to prepare for my intense research later. At least partly. But this is only my first day on board. Time to get used to the ship and have some fun enjoying it before I burrow into its corners to read and write. I haven't even found the library yet! The last thing I want to do now is read the histories of France and Spain that I brought with me, orexamine the Dresden train system maps to figure out how to not get trapped in a train and miss my stop, ending in Berlin. (One of my dinner companions talked about a friend who came to visit them in Dresden and didn't get off the train soon enough and did end up in Berlin. It was a long ride back. Now I am nervous about a new something that might go wrong with my complicated itinerary in addition to all the other things I am already nervous about.)  

The White Star staff on board the Queen Mary 2 is exceptional. Other than the busy woman in Sir Samuels, every staff person has greeted me with a hearty good morning. Every single one of them. And they work hard. Constantly. They seem cheerful about the work. Like they know why they are here and why they are working so hard. I hope it is true. Hope that they are sending oodles of money home or working towards university or an eventual Visa in the country of their choice.

The table service was exquisite. The White Star staff on board the Queen Mary 2 was always ready to lend a hand with a smile.

The table service was exquisite. The White Star staff on board the Queen Mary 2 was always ready to lend a hand with a smile.

There are so many languages spoken here. So many accents. People of every color and culture. And we are intimate somehow on this ship. We are all headed in the same nautical direction. We all trust the Captain and his crew to get us to Southampton safely. We all wish to have a pleasant time of it. Most of us are at our leisure. The rest are working their butts off. But, except for the uniforms, you can't tell who is on vacation and who isn't. Everyone is smiling or enthusiastic. Actually, the White Star staff is smiling just a little more. That's just not right. I and my leisurely comrades have expectations – high ones – that are likely too high to be met in any reasonable world. We are a little too tense.

The ship's bell just rang for noon. The Captain came on to tell us that the fog we began to encounter some time early this morning is starting to abate, but the weather report is only momentary on the Atlantic, and will change again, so stay tuned for the next report at six. Our route will take us quite close to Nova Scotia and we will pass south of the southernmost point of Newfoundland tomorrow.

The satellite connection to the wireless is horribly slow, so uploading photos takes three minutes each. And because they charge by the minute, I am trying to be picky about which photos I shareI have to content myself with little darts into internet connectivity. I have bought 130 minutes of internet time, and I am already down to 104 because it took me a while to realize how limited it was. But the epistles themselves are cheap, and I will keep them coming.

Based on an essay originally posted on electricrider.net on May 18, 2011

Tags: Solo Travel, Solo Dining, Transatlantic Crossing, Queen Mary 2
The Envoy Club Apartment-Hotel-Studio - New York. Unfortunately, now closed.

The Envoy Club Apartment-Hotel-Studio - New York. Unfortunately, now closed.

Eight-Week Europe Solo Travelogue 2011: A NYC Moment

September 21, 2016

Day One and Day Two a.m: Monday and Tuesday, 5/16 and 5/17 2011.

It's Tuesday, Day Two of my Eight-Week Europe Adventure, and I'm sitting in Java Detour on 3rd Ave sipping a mocha. No wifi! But at least they have a bathroom. That was the priority. The Starbucks down the way had wifi, but no bathroom. I forgot that the Starbucks in Manhattan are so tiny they barely have room for a table and a bar, let alone a customer bathroom.

The apartment at the Envoy Club where I spent Monday night was unusual but nice. Way too much room for one person. It was a cheap price for a room with kitchenette and dining nook, sitting area, and a bed with a good mattress. It also had plenty of closet space and a desk. The desk would have been a great work area, but I didn't have the energy to do any writing last night. When I closed the blinds and turned off the lights to get into bed, I could still see the glow from the buildings around me. Ah! NYC! The city that never sleeps! Seven years is apparently long enough to forget about the eternal night and the space restrictions of Manhattan Starbucks. But that night it didn't bother me. I fell asleep instantly and slept for an hour before my usual pattern of wakefulness started.

Inside my apartment at the Envoy Club. Beautiful view, lots of windows,large room, and fairly cheap.

Inside my apartment at the Envoy Club. Beautiful view, lots of windows,large room, and fairly cheap.

Yesterday, Monday and Day One of my adventure, was stressful. I left my house at 5:00am to catch the Super Shuttle to Denver International Airport. I had planned to schedule myself on the train from Denver to NYC instead, but it would add another day to my already long journey. One more day was one more day too much. I was going to be gone for 8 weeks, traveling by myself, and it would be hard enough to leave home and my husband that long. I would have to expand my carbon footprint a bit more than I had planned to make the trip happen. And the trip had to happen.

When I arrived at DIA that first day, I had two hours to wait before my flight. I got through my first full-body scan without too much trouble, although I thought the TSA employees were laughing at me because I lingered in the scanner, spreadeagled, not knowing when to leave, when the scan was done. The embarrassment was worth getting to travel to Europe to see the early renaissance sites I had planned. After all the hurry-up, rush-rush, my plane was delayed another hour and a half. I dozed at the gate and read Sharon Kay Penham's, When Christ and His Saints Slept, a book thatI had loaded on my kindle to keep me company while traveling. It is a fictional account of the generations after the Norman Conquest, when William the Conqueror's descendants fought to keep both Normandy and England. It was excellent background and a good warm-up for the research I would be doing on the woman who married one of those descendants and become Queen of England.

After I finally boarded the Frontier Airlines jet, the flight to NYC's La Guardia airport was uneventful. I contacted the limousine service as soon as I reached baggage claim, and a car was waiting for me at the curb outside. After a little confusion, the driver dropped me off at the address of the Envoy Club, which looked like a regular mid-century apartment building sitting mid-block on the west side of Manhattan. It was 6:30pm by the time I got settled. I fetched a quick dinner at a deli counter next door, and, after reading a bit, went to bed.
I woke up early this morning, but I knew I could not board the Queen Mary 2 until about 3:00pm. I didn't have a definite plan as to how I would spend the intervening hours, so I lounged in bed until 8:00am. By the time I had done a bit of yoga, showered, dressed, and repacked, it was almost 10:00am. Heck. I was practically a New Yorker!

After a breakfast of an egg-n-cheese bagel at ths same cafe I had dinner at the night before, I strolled up 3rd Avenue toward 46th St, which would take me in the general direction of the New York Cruise Terminal, Pier 92. I figured I'd find a place where I could spread out and write and perhaps get an Internet connection and start uploading pictures and blogs, and connect to my email. I finally settled on the Java Detour, a little coffee shop half way across Manhattan towards the pier, and I began to write.

I felt like a fish out of water when I first arrived last night, but as I spend more time here on the street, talking to New Yorkers, I'm getting back into the groove. I've spent a bunch of time here in the past, often in the pursuit of information and inspiration for my writing. This trip isn't much different. I am not pursuing research on the Broadway scene of days gone by as I have done before (to research the life of a playwright whose biography I would love to finish one day), but I am here to begin a longer journey, a more in-depth journey, into twelfth-century France and Zaragoza, Spain. I feel the same sense of independence, excitement and wonder at my ability to be here, on my own, as I did on those journeys. But this time, it is no holds barred: I am going in a direction I would not have expected even a year ago. Not only am I traveling on my own, which I am loathe to do under normal circumstances, I am cruising on the Queen Mary 2, the luxury liners of all luxury liners, for 7 days across the Atlantic. There will be formal balls and fine dining. There will be spas and hot tubs. Such hedonism for a middle-class country girl from Upstate New York! I have trouble seeing why I deserve such a vacation when my husband is at home building furniture, working full-time, and tending the garden. I have to remind myself that I am also working.

But it is hard not to focus on the non-working bits: I am flying across the United States and the Atlantic, and booking passage on trains and buses and in cars. I will be driving a car in Burgundy, France. Such travel has become anathema to me since I adopted a philosophy of minimizing my impact on the earth. Fortunately, most of my journey will be by train. (I am really looking forward to using my EuroRail Pass in France, Germany, and Spain!) I packed for easy travel on train, bus, and foot by outfitting myself with an Eagle Creek ensemble purchased at Changes in Latitudes in Boulder. It consists of an internal frame backpack with a smaller knapsack that connects to it, either onto the back of the pack or onto it's shoulder straps in front. The latter configuration allows me to balance the packs back-to-front and walk easily for a couple miles if necessary. But I also sent a suitcase full of more summery outfits to my friends in Dresden because there was no way I could carry all that luggage from train stations to hotels throughout France and Spain where I will be traveling.

But how did I get started on this journey? I don't know exactly how it happened. At least, not the details. One day, my husband and I were sitting having dinner with friends on the patio of Sugarbeet, one of our favorite restaurants in Longmont, and I knew. I had had a couple glasses of wine and was high on the delectable sauces and savories prepared by the restaurant's chef, but it suddenly became clear to me: My struggles with my current sf/time travel novel, Saving Eleanor, were growing. Most of the story takes place in medieval France, which was presenting more challenges than previous novels I'd drafted. I didn't have confidence that I could place myself in the scene: in the cold stone castles or rustic villages along the Clain and Boivre Rivers or the battlefields of Zaragoza. I was also unsure of character motivations. I thought, these are intertwined: not only do I need to get into my characters heads, I must do so while getting into the character of the medieval French countryside and the city scape of old Zaragoza. I must go there. And I must do it with minimal impact to the environment.

I know! I would get passage on a transatlantic vessel, maybe a cargo ship! A very romantic idea, but not very practical. Passages on cargo ships are open-ended. Your schedule is completely at the mercy of the captain's schedule. He might decide to linger in a port just to get a good deal on a load of new merchandise. There goes your itinerary! And there was no ship that could drop me on the French coast.

It made much more sense to take the quickest journey across the Atlantic, on the QM2, in seven nights, landing in Southampton, England, and taking the Chunnel to Calais, then onto Paris. It also made more sense for me to fly to NYC to meet the ship rather than train there as I mentioned before. Finally, I allowed myself to do one transverse of the Atlantic by jet: on the way home when I knew I would be very weary after eight weeks abroad. Mother Earth, forgive me! But this was it: this was the one time I would travel to Europe. I was going to get it all done in one go, including visiting friends in Germany, and touring a bit of Italy where my maternal grandmother's family came from by cruise ship. Yeah. I had a plan. Work. Play. Travel. And I was going to be as efficient as hell. We'll see.

Eight weeks abroad! I cannot believe I am doing this. My brother Chris, after hearing my plans, put it in a nutshell: "You are traveling like the lady writers of yore" -- aboard an ocean liner and then by train. Taking the slow way through the world, taking the time to absorb it unlike most people in the twenty-first century. And the fact isn't lost on me, either, that I am, as one of my writing buddies said, "time traveling to twelfth-century France, just like the characters in your book!"

Yep. I am time traveler. A space traveler. A traveler through human experience. Traversing my own mind, its perceptions and conclusions. Creating new experiences. It is the duty of any writer, any seeker. I hope, ultimately, it is worth it to trample a bit on mother earth.

A version of this essay was originally published on electricrider.net as "NYC Moment" on 5/17/2011, while I was enroute on my journey.

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In 1998 with my writing desk in the bottom left corner with the still in-tact pen holder and three of my cats (from l to r): Cocoa, Eva, and Zsa Zsa.

In 1998 with my writing desk in the bottom left corner with the still in-tact pen holder and three of my cats (from l to r): Cocoa, Eva, and Zsa Zsa.

Write Everywhere Portable Desk

September 14, 2016 in Writer's Life

For eighteen years, I have had this little rectangular writing desk with the white acrylic surface and the bean bag cushion base. And despite the chipping paint on the corners and the loss of the plastic pen holder at the bottom, it still works perfectly. I have used this desk to write in bed and on the couch and in lounge chairs. It has provided me the ability to write in cushiony places, places where I don't have to sit up rigidly straight and eventually wind up slumping over my keyboard with muscle fatigue. Places that allow me to dream. Early mornings staring out of the dawn-filled window and gathering my thoughts or late at night cuddled in a puddle by the door and taking one last look at a scene to see if inspiration would hit. Sometimes taking a plot dilemma to bed and letting my subconscious mull over it during the night.

Worn and battered, my writing desk has survived eighteen years of me lugging it around the house.

Worn and battered, my writing desk has survived eighteen years of me lugging it around the house.

I bought the desk when I first moved to Boulder, Colorado in 1995. I wandered around town admiring all the independently-owned shops and fell in love with McGuckin's Hardware store. McGuckin's sits on the corner of Canyon Boulevard and Folsom Street, and it has been iconic of the character of older Boulder since the 1970's. In there, you can find anything from coloring books to patio furniture, seeds to humidifiers: Anything and everything that might make someone's life a little more comfortable and more. When I saw the little writing desk, I had to have it.

Interior of McGuckin Hardware in Boulder, Colorado. Photo by Ken and Allison of Spaces Real Estate

Interior of McGuckin Hardware in Boulder, Colorado. Photo by Ken and Allison of Spaces Real Estate

At that time, I wrote every morning before work, sitting on my futon couch, my feet up on a chair, my cats surrounding me. I wrote longhand in a notebook while one cat lay on my lap slightly off center to allow room for my notebook. Two other cats sat, one curled up on my lower legs, the other sleeping on the futon cushion next to me. The fourth would occasionally make an appearance, but never stayed for long. The writing desk was the perfect addition to this configuration because it gave me a stable flat surface atop my lap on which to rest my notebook and my writing hand, leaving my other hand free to sip coffee from and, occasionally, to scritch a cat. I couldn't move. I had cats! So I had to write, until my hubby brought me breakfast on his way to the office.

Me and the three cats during my first dive into National Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) in 2003. Notice the writing desk under the laptop.

Me and the three cats during my first dive into National Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) in 2003. Notice the writing desk under the laptop.

I no longer have cats to keep me stuck in one place writing, but I still have this little desk. It allows me to write anywhere. Now that I am a full-time poet and novelist, I use the desk for writing on my laptop in bed. What an invention! My coffee pot goes off at 6am and I am up writing my novel with my writing desk and laptop and my husband (the stuffed one, not the breakfast-bringing one). I am cozy yet I am traveling through time to the twelfth century watching through my characters' eyes as they meet Eleanor of Aquitaine and observe the intrigues of palace life in Poitiers, France.

In the afternoons, I travel from one end of my house to the other, keeping my writing desk at my elbow yet staying focused in one place in my writing: from living room couch to stairwell landing, from Edith Bunker chair in the family room to outside in the garden under the birch trees and among the flowering thyme.

Thanks, McGuckin and whoever designed and made this beautiful little desk! I hope it lasts another twenty years. I have never seen another like it.

Tags: Writing, Portable Desk, Cats

Escaping from the Self-Hating Negativity Jungle of Jealousy

September 07, 2016 in Writing, Anxiety

“All writers who write about writing are not writers. They go on seminar, conference, and lecture circuits. They pose as adjunct faculty at small community colleges, teaching their writing insights. But they wouldn't be lecturing and writing about writing if they were actually writing anything worth publishing. They'd be writing, you know, BOOKS: Novels, short stories, essays, poetry, biography, memoir, and history, all of which would be displayed proudly in every bookstore window, their shiny covers full of light and color. These writers would be PUBLISHED by one of the big houses in New York City. They would be guests on NPR's Fresh Air, featured in the New York Review of Books, and everyone would be talking about them. But they aren't. Because they aren't PUBLISHED. And to make things worse, they hawk their how-to books and seminars shamelessly. They just want to make a buck off you and me. They really don't care about helping other writers. So why should I listen to what they have to say?”

Right? Wrong!

This snippy little voice inside me chant-ranted this myth in my ear for over twenty-five years. I never spoke these ideas aloud. They weren't part of my conscious attitude toward other writers. But like a small dog yapping at my heels, this mantra of negativity urged me forward in my desperation to become a writer worthy of being published. Blindly I wrote for years, rarely happy with the results. Meanwhile I was so jealous of ANYONE who claimed to be a writer, who seemed to know something about writing, and who had a book to show for it.  And I doubted I would ever be a writer. I was all those things I hated and more: writing and unpublished, but not writing self help books or teaching, either. I was thoroughly lost in a self-hating negativity jungle of jealousy (SHNJJ), complete with other naysayers, monkeys and ninjas. And―oh, yeah―small dogs. And I never admitted it to anyone until now.

As a writer you may have also ranted, criticizing other, seemingly more seasoned, writers. We can all be jealous from time to time. That's okay. Let off some steam. But if that rant takes over your life as it did mine, it is ripe for closer examination. I discovered that when I wrote down the words in my SHNJJ myth, the ideas fell apart. After years of struggle, I am no longer writing in the jungle. I now focus on the process of writing, and I am much happier.

How is it a myth? you may ask. When you unpack it, you get a series of claims, most of which are obviously false. First is “All writers who write about writing aren't writers.” This assumption is self-contradictory.  If you agree that writers are people who write, then the statement “writers who write about writing aren't writing” has to be false. Because writers write. A basic tenure of rhetorical argument is that “A” and “Not A” cannot be true at the same time. If writers are writing, they cannot be not writing.

Next is “All writers who write about writing aren't publishable.” Who are these writers being referred to here? This statement is obviously false. I can name several writers off the top of my head who are popular, published and prolific writers (the Three Ps) and who write about writing.

Two other assertions are hidden in the myth. One is “writers who teach cannot write.” The other is “writers who teach are not published.” These statements are clearly false. Here's a starter list for famous writers who have achieved the Three Ps AND teach or give writer advice regularly:

Stephen King, who has published 55 novels according to Wikipedia, not counting his hundreds of short stories, wrote a phenomenal book on writing which is part memoir. He also gives writer advice regularly when he speaks in public.

John Gardner wrote “Grendel” as well as other novels, stories, poems, and biography. He also wrote two books on writing (“The Art of Fiction” and “On Becoming a Novelist”) and several essays on writing. He even taught writing at Southern Illinois University and Binghamton University for many years.

Annie Dillard has published poetry, essays, prose, literary criticism, novels, and memoir. She won the 1975 Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction AND taught for 21 years in the English department of Wesleyan University, in Middletown, Connecticut.

I could list more names, but I have already proven to myself that the claim that “all writers who write and teach about writing can't write” is untrue. From deep inside my negativity jungle, I could pick on an individual, follow her around with a notebook like Harriet the Spy, and try to prove she wasn't writing wonderful stuff on the sly, but it would not matter. I have already proven that it is possible to be a terrific writer and also write and teach about writing. If I did prove one writing teacher didn't write magnificent works during the finite period of time that I happened to be paying attention, I would not be able to prove she wasn't also writing a Pulitzer-prize-winning book once I looked the other way.

The crippling idea in the SHNJJ myth that “Good writers are always published” has a long history of proving itself not to be true. How many years did Thomas Wolfe spend writing and not being published (aka, not being a “good” writer) before someone hooked him up with the great editor Max Perkins? The result was “Look Homeward Angel.” And how about John Kennedy Toole, whose mother published his manuscript for “A Confederacy of Dunces” after he died? That book went on to win a Pulitzer Prize.

Another couple of assumptions in my SHNJJ myth are, first, “Ifa writer is a great writer, she will be acknowledged by the powers that be and be picked up by a respectable press.” Next is, “The press will handle all of the business end of things so that the writer doesn't need to hawk her wares like a street paddler.” I have learned that even if your book is published by a large house, if you are not a million dollar seller already like Stephen King, you will be hawking your book. Even King has to go to book signings as part of a book contract. The great poet, novelist, activist, and entrepreneur, Margaret Atwood, has developed a remote writing pen, the LongPen, to aid herself and other great writers who can't make it to book signings to sign their books remotely. Every writer has to hawk her wares to sell books.

When writers publish our books and essays on writing to social media, or through self publishing or small writing organizations and associations, we help keep our names in front of the reading public. This effort often means that when, with luck, our epic hits the shelves at the local bookstore (or the virtual Amazon.com elist), we will probably have a ready-made audience because of our e-verse efforts. This isn't cowardly or duplicitous, as I wanted to think to justify my not doing it myself for years. It isn't “small” and “mean.” It is smart business. And it is work. Hard work. This practical nature of writers does not negate our ability to hone our craft and create our art.

Since leaving the SHNJJ and the other naysayers, monkeys, ninjas, and small dogs behind, I can focus more on the writing process itself rather than on its results. Focusing on my writing process helps me relax about my own writing and be less jealous of others. When I was writing, I began to feel like a “real” writer. Once I rid myself of hate for a fictitious person pretending to be a writer, I stopped hating myself for the same reason.

Why did I have to go through all that to get to where I am now? I don't have a ready answer, but I think it has something to do with unintended consequences and a very sensitive young writer: me.

My mother was a teacher, writer and devoted reader. She instilled in me and my siblings a love of great writing. My mother supplemented our school reading with her favorite authors. Some of these became my own favorites: Dr. Seuss, A. A. Milne, C.S. Lewis, and Charles Dickens. As I got older, I moved onto Jane Austen, Isaac Asimov, Ursula K. Le Guin, Stephen King, Margaret Atwood, and Stephen Donaldson. In school, we studied Theodore Dreiser, Henry Adams, John Steinbeck, and Mark Twain. I remember a life-changing class on Emily Dickinson in college. I found most 19th-century poetry impenetrable, but by the end of the semester, Mrs. Graham had converted me to a Dickinson-phile through her insights and clearly articulated understanding of what appears to be simple lines of verse.  I now knew what great writing looked like, but how to do it? In studying these great writers, I understood that only certain writers get to be great and the only writing worth doing had to meet an ill-defined level of perfection.

About the same time, my mother wrote a wonderful manuscript for a children's book and got some interest from publishers. When they wanted to make changes, she didn't pursue it. Years later she told me that she was “not a writer, but a reader.”  Her experience underlined for me that writing worth publishing was something above the norm, hard to reach, and not every one who tried for it made it. If my mother wasn't published, then few others should be.  Experiences later on fed this idea. When I told people I was a writer, their first question often was, “Where would I have seen your work?” If I admitted that I was writing novels, I heard the more generous “Where can I buy your book?” I was pleased that they wanted to support me by buying my book, but crestfallen that I have a shiny book to give them. It seemed that I was not a real writer after all.

One thing I missed in the writing and literature classes was the understanding that learning how to write is an art in itself.  It was not until I was mid-process on a novel with several other novels drafted, and an active member of a critique group, that I began to see where I was: in the middle of a journey and on my way through a learning experience that I couldn't get in any class on writing or in a critique group. Classes teach craft. Critique groups give you different feedback based on the individuals present, including style and mechanics. They cannot teach you how to write―how you write. Craft, mechanics and style are very important. The how-to's for these elements of good writing are everywhere. The art of writing is harder to know.

I am now learning the art of writing. I am learning how to glean wisdom from others and how to incorporate that wisdom into my own process. Instead of thinking something is wrong because what I am doing doesn't match what another writer is doing, I acknowledge that my writing process is unique, as is true for each writer. I acknowledge how important it is to the growth and development of a writer to understand her own process.

Learning about my process made me realize that sometimes I am not ready to hear the words of other writers speaking about the craft. There are times when I am in a place in which any advice, whether pointed directly at me or focused more generally, makes me anxious and I hide. This is my cycle. But when I do come out of my cave I am ready to listen. Ironically, it was while I was listening that I heard the stories writers tell about trying to protect their process and their art, and I gradually saw the fallacies I based my writing career on.

Only I can say what I want or need to be doing to be a writer. Only I can say whether I am successful or not. I do not define success by whether my writing pays my bills or not. Getting paid regularly for writing is a harder job, and I bow to those who do it. It often means working a 9-to-5 job and writing in your spare time. Sometimes you get lucky and find a writing niche which turns out to be a money maker. Some writers find two niches: a money-maker niche and a heart niche and balance both. For myself, I must focus on the heart niche.

The heart niche is all you, all the time, one that you write in because you have to. It's the one you can nestle right into in the morning, afternoon, evening or night and feel at home with. But it is also the one you must fiercely protect. Fight off any demons, monkeys, ninjas, or small yapping dogs that try to change or take away your heart niche. Keep that niche work safe in a lock box while you do whatever else you have to do to survive. Then open that lock box and take out your work when it is safe and quiet (or loud if that's how you work), and when you can feel free to work it the way you feel it. If you look around you, you'll see that you are not alone. There's a bunch of us other heart-niche writers writing and living all around you, keepin' the faith, any which way we can. And there is always the possibility that your heart-niche is also a money-maker niche. Just don't count on it!

Protecting your heart niche is also important in countering naysayers like I used to be (and I can still fall into the SHNJJ―nobody's perfect). Even well-meaning people can crowd your niche. You gotta be tough to be a writer. You have to get used to critics of all kinds. And you have to watch yourself to keep from falling into and staying in that self-hating negativity jungle of jealousy.

Remember: There is no one-size-fits-all for how to write. If you write, you are a writer.

I know so much more now than when I started -- most of it acquired by doing it (“it” being WRITING not getting PUBLISHED) But if it weren't for the advice and feedback of other writers-- some in person, some through their books or essays on writing, some through their blogs–I wouldn't have gotten here. I had to come out of my cave, but it was worth it. These are amazing people and amazing writers. They are so smart about writing–who knows why some don't have a BOOK PUBLISHED, let alone a bestseller. Some are published with small presses or self-published.  Some have professional web sites and blogs which they update regularly with canny insights and news about the writing and publishing industry. These people are serious professionals. Some are published through major publishing houses. But most importantly, they are writing every day and sharing the wealth of their knowledge. These folks are working writers. And I'd like to count myself among their ranks as I share this blog with you. Not every writer has something to say to each individual writer, but so many of us are out there sharing our experiences that you stand a good chance of making a connection.

These ideas aren't new. Many others have discovered and shared them in the past. I hope my particular story of escaping the SHNJJ and the analysis of the illogic that held me in there for so long connects with you. I hope it helps you see where you are in your writing life and how you can leave any demons, monkeys, ninjas, or small yapping dogs behind.

Here is a list of some of the writers and writings that have helped me. There are so many more that I can't possibly list them all. My apologies to those left out:

Stephen King, On Writing
Jodi Calkins
Marj Hahne
Debbie Ridpath Ohi (@inkyelbows)
Becky Black (junkfoodmonkey)
John Vorhaus, Creativity Rules
Jennifer Cruisie
Holly Lisle
Jami Gold
Julia Cameron, The Artist's Way

Updated from Writer, Heal Thyself: Emerging from the Myth That Those Who Aren't PUBLISHED Can't Write originally published on electricrider.net on 08/11/2011.

Tags: Writing, Jealousy, Process, Art of Writing
Singer Marilyn Hall walking down Hollywood and Vine. Hollywood, CA, US August 1944 LIFE magazine

Singer Marilyn Hall walking down Hollywood and Vine. Hollywood, CA, US August 1944 LIFE magazine

So, You're Walking!

August 23, 2016 in Humor, Poetry, Performance

I wrote this poem as an internal dialogue, and for some reason the voice I heard in my head as I wrote it was a cross between Fran Drescher and some Boston lady. So, I had to read it that way. Enjoy the recording.

Park the car
And do the last half mile on foot
So, You're Walking!
Kick off the high heels
And plant them flat feet
In some Merrell's
So,You're Walking!
Maybe you get a stone in your shoe
Sit on a park bench
Remove your shoe,
shake it out for a while
A long while...
Enjoy the trill of the creek
And the scent of tree blossoms
As you sit in the park
Maybe people drive by
And see you sitting there...
Smile at them
Show them how much you enjoy
Sitting there in the soft breeze
Surrounded by birdsong

Then You're Walking!
Breathe in deeply
Don't choke on the exhaust,
Maybe hug the creek a little,
Yeah, So You're Walking!
Get a good rhythm going now
You have to cross a thoroughfare
It's okay
The light turns green
And You're Walking
A motorcycle crashes through a puddle
Right in front of you
Splashing your Anne Taylor slacks
It's Okay!
Maybe the dry cleaner can get out the stains
Maybe not!
Don't worry about it!
Send it to ChaRM in Boulder
They'll take care of recycling that material
Probably give you a discount
On your next trip in...
Cause You're Walking!

Ten minutes late for your lunch date?
Well, now you know, Sweetheart!
Leave yourself more time
the next time.
So, You're Walking!
We all had to learn
At some point in our lives
Your friends will forgive you
After they finish giving you parakeet looks.
You'll out live them anyway, Dear.
'Cause
You're Walking!

Tags: Lifestyle, Nature, Walking to Get Somewhere, Low carbon, Humor, Self Reflection
2 Comments
From Total Content Blog

From Total Content Blog

Not Enough Daves

August 10, 2016 in Poetry, Performance, Humor

In response to Dr. Seuss' Too Many Daves and to all the times that "Dave" is the name of the villain of the piece, whether in a movie or a TV show or a memoir or a novel. And for my husband, Dave, who is bloody well sick of it.

Have I told you about my husband named Dave?
He wasn't the twenty-third son of Mrs. McCave,
The fact is he was born alone of Dave-kind,
the youngest of three and I am sure you will find,
He's unique, one of a kind, not ubiquitous.
And it's despite his name that I make a fuss:
He is true beyond what a name can endow.
It is his brilliance, kindness, wisdom, and know-how--
Not having a name like Dave--that gives him perks.
For why else are there Daves who are outright jerks!
It's the true Daves who should lay claim to the name
Not some cur who deserves nothing but all the blame
True Daves could have been called any name at all
Be it Harvey or Corey or Jim or Paul
It would not matter a bit or a mere jot
if his name was Theodore,  Sam, or Pol Pot:
A true Dave is a true Dave is a true Dave
(and the name is starting to become my fave).
There are certainly Daves who are shifty thieves,
Who are liars or have something up their sleeves,
But a true Dave is something other than that,
He's as iconic as the Cat in the Hat.
And like a flower with any name smells sweet,
A true Dave doesn't need a name to be neat.

 

Tags: Relationships, Dr. Seuss, Daves
2 Comments
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Photo by Retro Perspective Studios

Photo by Retro Perspective Studios

Welcome to my blog. I write about writing, performing while being an introvert, science in every day life, nature next door, low-carbon-lifestyle, gardening and cooking, relationships, travel, depression/anxiety, and feminism. With Humor. Mostly.

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