Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Authenticity: The Key to Radiant Writing

Yesterday, I posted about one of the most important things you can do to make your writing shine: Write with passion. Today, I’m going to write about a second way to add radiance to your writing: Authenticity.

The authentic voice is the holy grail of writing. Passion isn’t a difficult thing to achieve, once you commit to it. But authenticity is challenging and elusive. It is one of those zen-like things that is difficult because it’s easy. It’s all about shedding the b.s.and just becoming who you are. It shouldn’t be hard but somehow it is anyway.

So how can you do it? Here are three tips.

1. Figure out what you want to say and say it. This sounds so simple. We all have points we want to make, right? Except when we actually sit down to write. Then it seems like our brains turn to cornmeal mush and we end up babbling pointlessly.

If you’ve ever been there—and you have, my friend, we all have—the absolute best thing you can do for yourself and your writing is answer this simple question in one, crystal clear, non-equivocal sentence: “What do I want to say?”

I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve sat with a student and asked, “What are you saying in this paragraph?” and been forced to listened to five straight minutes of hemming, hawing, and lavishly circumlocution followed by blank staring. I mean no insult to my students here because I’ve done my share of hawing and staring as well, many times, in response to the same question.

The simple fact is this: If you cannot say it in one sentence, then you don’t really know what you’re trying to say. If you don’t know, your reader sure as heck isn’t going to figure it out for you.

2. First thought, best thought.

Honestly, this Buddhist adage isn’t always literally true—some of my first thoughts are ludicrous—but going with your first thought, letting it spill onto the page, “trusting the gush” as author Tom Romano puts it, is a good way to get at your authentic voice.

Getting your ideas onto the page before you clip, snip, block, and bar them them can help your authentic voice escape before your editor brain locks it down. “Free-writing”—the term I use  for writing without editing, without stopping, without even thinking—is the best practice ever devised for setting your authentic voice free.

Sit down without expectation and spill it: Your first thought. Then your next first thought. Then your next.

3. Write the way you talk.

From time to time, I hear a person—usually someone prone to complaining about "these young folk today"—say that students write poorly because they write the way they talk. I'm not sure what put this idea in people's heads, but I don't know any actual writing teachers who say it, and for good reason; There’s not a bit of truth to it. In fact, learning to write more-or-less the way you speak is a skill that you should develop.

Of course, I don’t mean you want to be as repetitive, fragmented, and downright boring as most of us are in everyday speech. I mean you want to be as natural. When you're speaking, you’re usually just being who you are. Unless you're giving a presentation in front of your boss or addressing the graduating class of a major university, you’re not trying to impress anyone. Hopefully, you’re not trying to sound smart or witty. You’re just being you, saying what you want to say.

There will be plenty of opportunity to go back to your writing to polish and hone, correct your grammar and punctuation, experiment with sentence rhythm and find the perfect word. But first, just write as you talk. Naturally.

Authenticity is all about being yourself.

It's that simple—and that hard. That person who is you? The one inside who is free and natural, present and real? That is the person you want to bring to the page. Become that person on the page. Become you.





Monday, June 17, 2013

Write from Your Passion and See Your Writing Shine

How Do I Find Topics that are Going to Sell?

Years ago, I went to a small conference on writing for young adults. After a talk by an editor for a well-known publishing house, one of the participants got up and asked, “How do I know what kids are going to be interested in? How do I find topics that are going to sell?”

That seems like a reasonable question, especially in such a competitive publishing market. We’re all taught to write for an audience—some teachers have us imagine our “ideal” reader and write for that person.

But the editor gave an answer the questioner clearly wasn’t expecting. “Don’t sit around trying to figure out what kids are going to be interested in,” she said. “Write about what interests you.”

The Audience is You

I think the editor was getting at two things. First, “kids” aren’t some huge mass of identical humans. Even if you narrow the category way down to, say, 12-year-old girls, you’re going to find people who are interested in everything from action movies to ballet, soccer to fairy tales, dog breeding to fashion trends.

But there’s an even larger issue here, and that issue is passion. When you start with a topic that you’re supposing (and hoping) will click with a particular audience, you’re working from the outside in. How much better it is to start from something simmering inside you and bring it to the outside.

Find the Excitement

Back in the days when I was pitching ideas to magazines, I ended up writing many, many articles on topics I was only half-way interested in. The writing was a chore. My research seemed to take forever, and putting it together into a coherent (not to mention entertaining) piece made me want to pull my hair out. I ended up wondering why I was even pursuing the free-lance career—and, after about 65 publications, I left magazine journalism for good.

These days, I blog about one of the passions of my life: the relationship between spirituality and writing. Now, when I get up in the morning, I can’t believe I’m so lucky as to get to spend my day writing about something I love.

See Your Writing Shine

Not only has my writing life become more enjoyable now that I'm writing from my own passion, but my writing has improved. When you’re enjoying your work, it shows. It bubbles up onto the page. It can make the difference between writing that seems flat and writing that sparkles.

Write It and They Will Come.

Passion is contagious. So is boredom. If there is a massive audience out there for works about new tech gadgets or hip-hop or island vacations, but you don’t happen to be into any of those topics, forcing yourself to write about them is not a good strategy. Your own lack of interest is going to show through no matter how hard to try to disguise it. Fake it, and you’ll come across as inauthentic, which is even worse than coming across as bored.

If a topic sends tingles up your spine or keeps you up reading even when you have an early day ahead of you, that is what you should write about. Your passion will spill onto the page. Readers who are already interested in the topic will find your work, feel that passion, and feed on it. And you’ll attract new people to the topic. Even readers who’ve never given a thought to it will be drawn in.

The history of writing is chock full of writers who started entire trends by writing about things they found exciting that others had overlooked. Imagine being one of those authors.Write from your passion, and you just might become the writer who sets an idea on fire.



Saturday, June 15, 2013

Resources on Spiritual Journaling

Today is Great Stuff for Writers day at Writing as a Sacred Path, when I suggest resources for people who want to explore a topic a little deeper.

This week, I've been posting about spiritual journaling, so today, I'd like to suggest four great resources for anyone interested in beginning or further developing a journaling practice.

How to Keep a Spiritual Journal: A Guide to Journal Keeping for Inner Growth and Personal Discovery by Ron Klug, revised edition. 

“A journal,” writes Ron Klug in this updated version of a classic book, “ is  . . . a tool for self-discovery, an aid to concentration, a mirror for the soul, a place to capture and generate ideas, a safety valve for emotions, a training ground for the writer, and a good friend and confidant.”

This simple, clear little book offers abundant tips on the benefits of journaling and techniques for developing a journaling practice. Kathleen Adams, director of the Center for Journal Therapy, gives the book a well-deserved 5 stars, calling it “a trail map for the soul’s journey.”

Journaling as a Spiritual Practice: Encountering God Through Attentive Writing by Helen Cepero. 

Finely written, vivid, energetic, and inspiring, Cepero’s book covers the growth of her own journaling practice while offering excellent suggestions for the novice or seasoned journaler. She compares journaling to panning for gold: “If you are willing to dip your journal into the stream of your life, even though it may mean getting a bit wet and muddy, you will find the gold of your own life.”

Keeping a Simple Spiritual Journal from BlogHer.

Don’t have time to keep a journal? Mata H. suggests you do. She offers a simple journaling technique that takes only a few moments a day.

How to Keep a Spiritual Journal by Michael Anne Haywood

Want a simple article with many useful tips on spiritual journaling? This post has been around for ten years, and it’s still fresh and helpful!

If you know of any additional resources for spiritual journalers, let us know!


Friday, June 14, 2013

Seventeen Reasons to Keep a Spiritual Journal, Part 3

How many reasons are there to keep a spiritual journal? Probably hundreds. In the past few posts, I’ve been listing a few—including some that are my own personal reasons for spiritual journaling. Here are seven more, in the final installment of this series.Why should you keep a spiritual journal?

11. To get the big picture. We are barraged each day with details. Our minds take snapshots of moments. How those details form patterns, the greater panorama in which those snapshots are embedded—these often get lost. Journaling over time helps to make those greater patterns visible. It helps us see how everything relates.

12. To foster discipline. Discipline is essential for any spiritual life—and for any writing life. Sitting down each day to write in a journal helps develop that discipline. It is like strength training—the more you do it, the stronger your discipline becomes.

13. For companionship. Yes, a journal can be a friend, a helpmate, a confidante, and spirit guide. Anyone experiencing loneliness can find much longed-for companionship in the trusted friendship of a journal.

14. To make resolutions. I’m not a fan of making lists of resolutions at New Year’s, birthdays, or other transitions. Those lists only frustrate me, as I end up overreaching—setting up goals I can’t possibly stick with. However, there are times when a single resolution can help us make a small, important change in our lives. Writing down a resolution helps us solidify our commitment to change. It becomes a kind of landmark we can go back to, to measure our success.

For example, I used to post to this blog only when the urge struck me, a couple times a month or so. But over a year ago, I made a commitment to posting regularly—at least three to five times a week. Writing down that commitment has helped me stick with it, as I have joyfully done for the past 13 months.

15. To be honest with ourselves. Getting at the truth—even when it is harsh, hard, or unpleasant—is essential to our spiritual growth and our development as writers. Few tools are as useful in facing our barest truths than keeping a journal.

16. To keep a log of how spirit is manifesting in our lives. It’s everywhere. It’s happening all the time. It’s evolving all around us. And yet, we can go through entire lifetimes unaware of how spirit is revealing itself. Journal, and see how apparent it becomes.

17. To deepen appreciation for our lives. Write with gratitude, and start to see how different your life begins to appear. Journaling unveils the blessings we often take for granted.

So there it is: Just some of the many benefits of keeping a spiritual journal. Tomorrow, I’ll offer some resources for journal keeping. In the meantime, I’d love to hear from anyone who has tried journaling. What have your experiences been like?