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Rabia Gale

alchemical fantasy

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inspiration

unlocking creativity

Scientific American interviews three experts on how to boost creativity.

Most interesting to me were these comments by Robert Epstein:

There are four different skill sets, or competencies, that I’ve found are essential for creative expression. The first and most important competency is “capturing”-preserving new ideas as they occur to you and doing so without judging them. Your morning pages, Julia, are a perfect example of a capturing technique. There are many ways to capture new ideas…

… The second competency is called “challenging”-giving ourselves tough problems to solve. In tough situations, multiple behaviors compete with one another, and their interconnections create new behaviors and ideas. The third area is “broadening.” The more diverse your knowledge, the more interesting the interconnections-so you can boost your creativity simply by learning interesting new things. And the last competency is “surrounding,” which has to do with how you manage your physical and social environments. The more interesting and diverse the things and the people around you, the more interesting your own ideas become.

Of course, I immediately started applying these to myself and writing. My capturing technique consists of ideas and notes spread over half-a-dozen notebooks and as three-liners in random Word documents. I have also done a few different types of journaling that are akin to Cameron’s morning pages–I’ve kept running novel journals in which I pour out my frustrations over character stubbornness and plot murkiness, I’ve prayer-journaled for a number of years, and I’ve also done some topic-specific timed writing.

(As an aside, I bought a new pink notebook for scribbling in a couple weeks ago. I haven’t figured out what exactly to do with it, but it’s small enough to fit in my purse so it might become my ideas-on-the-go journal.)

Next, challenging. I think every story I write is challenging; they sure seem that way! I’ve branched out into darker, fractured fairytale-like stories; I’ve developed a liking for the first person present tense; I’m seriously considering writing a science fiction romance (have had these characters in my head for years!). I also try to claw my way deep down into my characters (which often means taking a good hard look at myself, too) and to give a plot some unexpected (and yet subtly foreshadowed) twists. I could be more adventurous with my writing–which is why I’m so interested in boosting my creativity.

I’ve broadened my knowledge by reading more and more non-fiction. A sampling of my recent reads includes books on beekeeping, the American Revolution, and homeschooling. I’d say that my fiction/non-fiction reading mix is about 50/50 right now. I am not including picture books because that would throw my “grownup” books ratios off completely *grin*.

The last area–surrounding–is my weakest one. I hate conflict and like to be comfortable, so the people I hang out with tend to be a lot like me: homeschoolers, Christians, other moms, homeschooling Christian moms… It’s not that I am unaware of other ways of thinking out there; it’s just that I prefer to engage them through books rather than with people. As for my physical surroundings–well, my decorating style is what is commonly known as Contemporary American Kiddie Clutter, my walls are a (mostly) blank boring off-white, and the only interesting things are what turn up in my dustpan, as in “How long has that grape been under the couch?” I’d love to hear any tips from the more visually creative people out there to spice up my surroundings a little.

So, questions (there are always questions :D): What kinds of risks do you take in your writing or other creative endeavors? What sorts of things do you surround yourself with that jumpstart creativity and keep those ideas flowing? Where and when are you at your most inspired?

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I wrote

Today, I started a short story. I wrote:

My daughter stalks me through amber chambers shaped from the secretions of our ancestors.

And promptly stalled out.

Funny, that. It seemed like such a cool and well-put-together story while I was nursing the baby at 4 am this morning…

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keeping the spark alive

Last post I talked about how I’ve (more or less) come to terms with the fact that there are certain phases of my life (ie: pregnancy) where I don’t have the physical, mental or emotional energy left over for writing. What few resources I have are given over to taking care of my family (I have two under four! and a husband who needs some wifely companionship every now and again) and that’s just as it should be. I have learned to shake a stick at the Specter of Writer’s Guilt that insists that a REAL writer would find the time and space and energy to write. (Of course, a REAL writer would be under contract and making money from advances and royalties, too, but we won’t go into the rest of my insecurities right now).

This time I want to talk about how I keep that writing spark, that yearning for making and telling stories, alive during my Zombie Times.

First off, lots and lots of reading. While the Year of the Zombie is a time of guilt-free not-writing, it is also a time of guilt-free READING. I read in my genre, outside my genre, and wildly outside my genre. All kinds of fiction teach me about the craft of writing. All kinds of non-fiction give me content that I can sink my teeth into: premises to follow to wild conclusions, nuances of politics and society and economics to give my worlds that extra edge of realism, character complexity. This pregnancy, my reading has ranged from fantasy (Sherwood Smith, Robin Hobb, Diana Wynne Jones) to biographies of Revolutionary heroes to books I pulled off the library shelves “just because”. And picture books. Lots and lots of picture books. (You may think that I do it just for my children, but I assure you picture books are my secret weapon in the mad scramble to get published–and wouldn’t you like to know why!).

Secondly, continuing to daydream. Sitting in the car, lying awake in bed, taking a shower–I let my mind wander freely from character to character, story idea to story idea. Stories that I would have otherwise rejected as being too bizarre, too out-of-genre, too hard for my current skills have grown and blossomed to the point where they actually have made it into my to-write queue.

Keeping in touch with the writing community. Writing is a such a solitary pursuit and, as a stay-at-home mom, I often feel so disconnected that it really helps to keep up with writing blogs and forums. Just knowing that someone out there is writing, revising, submitting, angsting, rejoicing, being published keeps that fire alive in me. (So keep blogging all you writers out there!)

Tinkering with already-written short stories. I have no brain for original work, but I can revise and edit and submit some of my shorts. I came to this strategy late–but it has gained me two acceptances and one rewrite request in the last month. Wonder why it took so long for me to get to those…

Writing exercises. More on that later, but I discovered one writing prompt that has worked really really well for me. It hasn’t led to any story ideas, but it has given me insight into the themes and metaphors that keep cropping up again and again in my work.

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Rain Through Her Fingers

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