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| Inspiration for Writers and Creative Souls www.memoriesandmemoirs.com October 2007 |
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Please visit my website to find new articles, events, new links. New phone number: New E-book Available My new ebook Memoir Writing as a Healing Journey is available for instant download. Find out more about writing to heal, the value of writing stories and going beyond journaling, and follow the writing invitations to begin your memoir today. Two creative and interesting women's organizations I want to share with you The National Association for Women Writers From their website: The National Association of Women Writers (NAWW) was founded in 2001. We have over 3000 members worldwide. We help connect and educate our members through books, CDs, tele-events, physical chapter events and much more. Our weekly newsletter goes out to over 3,000 women writers, editors, and publishers. - Do you need support from other women writers who share your passion for writing? - Would you like to start and finish writing your book? - Do you want to learn from the top writing professionals in the industry every single month via a live teleseminar? - Would you like to promote for free on our blog? As a member of the NAWW you can do all this and much more--learn about the NAWW today!
The National Association for Baby Boomer Women From their website: The National Association of Baby Boomer Women is the only association devoted to addressing issues concerning 38 million of the healthiest, wealthiest, and best educated generation of women to ever hit midlife, baby boomer women. NABBW is dedicated to: Empowering women to explore their passions and live life to the fullest. Connecting, encouraging, and supporting baby boomer women. NABBW promises: A membership package that includes information on self-improvement skills, free legal and financial advice using e-mail, exclusive member discounts on a variety of products and services, easy ways to connect with other boomer women, and MORE.. A sense of belonging to a creative, powerful, encouraging group of women that will leave you feeling refreshed, revived, and renewed. Access to information from an enthusiastic, energetic, wise, and warm panel of experts who have written books, founded Web sites, and coached women. As a new member, I am exploring both of these organizations, and want to share my discovery with you. Visit their sites and see the many things that are going on. You might decide to submit stories or enroll in a seminar. Have fun! |
Napa Valley Autumn How innocent were these Trees, that in Biographical note: Siegfried Sassoon, who fought in World War I, wrote this beautiful poem. He returned to France to fight again after taking time to recover from what would now be called Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome. Like Rupert Brooke and Wilfred Owen who died in the war, Sassoon was one of the major poetic spokesmen against the insanity of that war, and wrote a memoir about it. There are also books of poems by Sassoon, who lived until 1967. Everyone must take time to sit and watch the leaves turn.
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Retreating from regular life There are so many ways to think of a retreat. Here is one definition: An opportunity to remove yourself from your busy routine and re-connect to your Spirit. By taking the time to relax and clear your mind, you are restored in ways you never expected, returning to everyday life with a new perspective. From the dictionary: “To set time aside for reflection. To withdraw for purposes of meditation and spiritual contemplation.” During a retreat the forward movement in our lives is temporarily put on hold; we enter a period of choice and contemplation, disengaging from our usual frantic motion, the spin of time and . For the last thirty years, I would try to get away from the regular world of work, chores, child rearing, and being “on duty,” setting aside a day or two to escape the urban area, busy traffic, and responsibilities. Though I could never take a long time away from family and work, my soul needed refreshing so I could return and continue my work and raise my family with a better, refreshed perspective. I loved escaping to the Napa Valley and especially to Calistoga, where I’d be nurtured by the delicious aromas arising from the earth and the vineyards. There I immersed in delicious mud baths, squishy and warm. After I’d take time in silence to write, feel, think, and explore a new path. The scent of lavender water and the slightly sulfurous mineral and mud baths signify relaxation to me. It’s wonderful to surrender to the strong hands massaging me while music plays in the background. Afterward, I’d go to a restaurant to write. I discovered that the relaxation and mud bath would open up a lot of creativity for me. I wrote my first published story Calistoga Dreams at Bosco’s, a restaurant I enjoy sharing with my writer friends at the retreat. During the autumn, the vineyards hugging the hills are rampant with colors of red, orange, and amber; birds chirp from telephone wires. By a stream you can watch the water bubble around stones and rocks, over twigs and branches, the wild chaos of nature somehow a comfort. Everything slows down, and I can see what I missed zipping by on the highway. If you are in need of finding a way to listen to yourself and you want to invite the muse to whisper in your ear, please consider a retreat. And if you like to write and want to explore your creative voice and the stories of your life, please join me in November at my Calistoga retreat. You do not have to be experienced in writing to come. Just bring yourself and your pen, and the willingness to retreat from regular life. You might be surprised by the inspiration that a weekend like this can offer you. Please contact me if you have questions. I accept credit cards, and there are scholarship slots available. lindajoymyers@comcast.net 510-524-3898
The morns are meeker than they were,
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When you are ready to write about the deeper emotional material in your life, it helps to center yourself into the time, place, and physical space of your narrator voice. If you are writing close to the inside of the body and through the eyes of yourself as a younger version of yourself, it is important to “embody” yourself at that time and place. Writing from a memory, either a body or emotional memory, means immersing yourself in a movie-like flow of your memories. This is like a meditation, a focused entry into your point of view. Remember, you are the main character of your memoir.
Setting as characterWhen you write a scene, the action takes place at a certain time and in a certain place. It is important to sense and feel that time and place as part of the verisimilitude of the story, the things that make the reader enter into what John Gardner calls “the fictive dream.” He talked about how words create an entire world that invites the reader to enter it and be unwilling to leave or to put the book down.
Harvest Your Wisdom Writing Retreat
Dr. Wilkinson’s Hideaway Cottages Autumn: the earth releases its fruits into harvest Immerse yourself in your memories. Explore the layers of your life and the meanings of your history. Our retreat gives you time to focus on your deepest being and capture the stories that have shaped you. You will be received with full presence and unconditional acceptance. Visualizations, memory exercises, drawing, and group sharing open up the well of stories for you to draw from. You will leave with several new stories, a timeline, and future writing plans. The retreat is inspirational and provides a safe place for you to explore. During the retreat there will be time for mud baths and walks, individual writing time, and consultation with Linda about your work. Wineries and wine tasting are minutes away. Contact Linda and the website for more about the weekend schedule, food, housing, and enrollment details. My deepest appreciation to you for helping me unlock my subconscious....and get it down on paper....it has helped me so much. A. McGrath It's been quite a journey. The writing and the space you create has had a News from my travels to England
Trafalgar Square, Big Ben in background In early October, I visited England to do some research about my historical fiction book. It touches upon WWII, the Kindertransport, and violin making. Because it is a historical novel, I felt that I needed to research quite a few facts about the war, London and the Blitz, and how refugees were handled by the British government. I was impressed by how important history is to the English people. In bookstores everywhere there are books sitting by the cash register about the war, an event still uppermost in the minds of the English people. I visited the special Children’s Exhibit at the Imperial War Museum where hundreds of children from France Germany and England were there too with their teachers and parents learning about history—it was impressive!
London was bustling and expensive, though exciting, and after six days, I visited Sussex County in southeastern England, about 26 miles from Hastings, where the Normans conquered the English in 1066. It is a quiet, serene area, with lovely English villages, emerald green downs, and chalk cliffs. In Newhaven where the River Ouse enters the English Channel, I stood on the gun embattlements facing France, feeling the sweep of history present there.
I was looking for an English village for one of my characters and found it in a place called Alfriston where you expect to see fairies and elves peeking out of the brush at any moment. There is the classical church, English graveyard, tea shoppes, and cobbled streets.
At Charleston House, the home of Vanessa Bell, sister of Virginia Woolf, I took the “Sister’s Tour.” I enjoyed being where the Bloomsbury group had hung out in all their amazing drama. It was said that they “lived in squares, moved in circles, and loved in triangles.” I picked up the memoir by Angelica Garnett, the daughter of Vanessa Bell, who did not know her father was Duncan Grant until she was 17 years old. She had known Duncan all her life and never suspected that he was her father. Vanessa’s husband Clive Bell had never evinced that much interest in children, including his own sons Julian and Quentin. Open communication was apparently not a trait of the Bloomsbury crowd, despite all the writing that went on. Her memoir is called Deceived by Kindness. If you want to read the “inside story” and very much her own point of view about that group, it makes a very good read. I knew instantly it was going to be a “healing memoir” though she does not call it that, but she acknowledges how it helped her to put some of the ghosts away that had haunted her all her life. She began the memoir when she was 59 years old. Enjoy the pictures!
_______________________________________________________________________ Are You Ready to Start Your Memoir? Join our classes, retreats, Berkeley workshops or online classes to help you begin your memoir, keep writing, and learn about the writing process. We talk about the power of writing to heal, truth and fiction in memoir writing, and issues of guilt, shame, and family loyalty when writing a memoir. From one of my students, Laura Singh … your work emphasizes writing as healing but I also want to say that there is another
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NAWW:
Expand Your Network--Develop Your Skills-- Nurture Your Creative Life Find out more here: http://www.profcs.com/app/?Clk=1994278 |
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Autumn is a good time to deepen your writing process as we all enter the silence and contemplation of longer nights and cloudy days. Keep a writing journal. Write your spiritual autobiography.Blessings for the new season. |
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| Contact Info Memories and Memoirs Linda Joy Myers Toll free: 1-877-ememoir 1-877-363-6647 510-524-3898 |
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