40 Days of 3 Questions – Day 7

Welcome to 40 Days of 3 Questions!

For the next few weeks, meet here every morning with a notebook or document to answer three questions about writing, about your status quo as a writer, or about the writing life. You can answer briefly and go about your day, or you can use this as a warm up exercise before your regular writing schedule. Whatever works for you, works for me.

Day 7 Questions

  1. In your current project, how is your protagonist tested?
  2. Is this challenge internal, external, or both?
  3. Will this test leaving a lasting mark on the character when the drama is over?

You may post answers in comments or keep your thoughts private–your choice!

And here is today’s pretty picture:

she needed a hero
A wonderful friend gave me this card. Sometimes a person–or a character–has to be a hero of her own making.

 

40 Days of 3 Questions – Day 6

Welcome to 40 Days of 3 Questions!

For the next few weeks, meet here every morning with a notebook or document to answer three questions about writing, about your status quo as a writer, or about the writing life. You can answer briefly and go about your day, or you can use this as a warm up exercise before your regular writing schedule. Whatever works for you, works for me.

Day 6 Questions

  1. Do you know the ending of your current project, or with each project?
  2. Do you need to know the outcome when you begin writing so you can write toward it, or does the story’s end come organically as you write?
  3. Have you ever changed a story’s original ending?

You may post answers in comments or keep your thoughts private–your choice!

And here is today’s pretty picture:

Zoltar
This is Zoltar, a mechanical fortune teller who lives on the Boardwalk at Rehoboth Beach. Maybe he knows your story ending!

 

40 Days of 3 Questions – Day 5

Welcome to 40 Days of 3 Questions!

For the next few weeks, meet here every morning with a notebook or document to answer three questions about writing, about your status quo as a writer, or about the writing life. You can answer briefly and go about your day, or you can use this as a warm up exercise before your regular writing schedule. Whatever works for you, works for me.

Day 5 Questions:

  1. What is the time and place of your current project?
  2. What do you hope a reader will discover or consider about this setting?
  3. Did you select this setting to fit a plot or vice versa?

You may post answers in comments or keep your thoughts private–your choice!

And here is today’s pretty picture:

francis in snow
This is a photo of a peaceful place, after an unexpected snow.

 

40 Days of 3 Questions, Day 4

Welcome to 40 Days of 3 Questions!

For the next few weeks, meet here every morning with a notebook or document to answer three questions about writing, about your status quo as a writer, or about the writing life. You can answer briefly and go about your day, or you can use this as a warm up exercise before your regular writing schedule. Whatever works for you, works for me.

Day 4 Questions:

  1. When you write, do you think about readers?
  2. Do you have an imaginary perfect reader? If yes, what is  he/she like?
  3. What does this imaginary perfect reader want from you?

You may post answers in comments or keep your thoughts private–your choice!

And here is today’s pretty picture:

imaginary reader
This is a soul collage, but also my imaginary perfect reader. She looks nice, doesn’t she?

40 Days of 3 Questions – Day 3

Welcome to 40 Days of 3 Questions!

For the next few weeks, meet here every morning with a notebook or document to answer three questions about writing, about your status quo as a writer, or about the writing life. You can answer briefly and go about your day, or you can use this as a warm up exercise before your regular writing schedule. Whatever works for you, works for me.

Day 3 Questions:

  1. Do you participate in any writing communities?
  2. What benefits have you gained from your community?
  3. What do you give back?

You may post answers in comments or keep your thoughts private–your choice!

And here is today’s pretty picture:

Biden Center tribe
My Delaware writing tribe.

40 Days of 3 Questions – Day 2

Welcome to 40 Days of 3 Questions!

For the next few weeks, meet here every morning with a notebook or document to answer three questions about writing, about your status quo as a writer, or about the writing life. You can answer briefly and go about your day, or you can use this as a warm up exercise before your regular writing schedule. Whatever works for you, works for me.

Day 2 Questions:

  1. What is your current writing project?
  2. What parts of this project are a joy, and why?
  3. What parts of this project drive you batty, and why?

You may post answers in comments or keep your thoughts private–your choice!

And here is today’s pretty picture:

VCCA installation path
Do you ever go on thinking walks? Just like writing a story, sometimes it’s hard to make out what’s ahead until you get there.

40 Days of 3 Questions – Day 1

Welcome to 40 Days of 3 Questions!

For the next few weeks, meet here every morning with a notebook or document to answer three questions about writing, about your status quo as a writer, or about the writing life. You can answer briefly and go about your day, or you can use this as a warm up exercise before your regular writing schedule. Whatever works for you, works for me.

Day 1 Questions:

  1. As of today, where do you stand in your writing career/journey?
  2. Are you satisfied with your status quo as a writer?
  3. If yes, why? If no, what are you doing to make a change?

You may post answers in comments or keep your thoughts private–your choice!

And here is today’s pretty picture:

write-here-every-day
Do you collect journals and notebooks? Here are just a few from the many lined up on my bookcase.

Guest Post at the Happy Self-Publisher

cropped-ramonalogofinal.jpgI am pleased to be the guest of Lois Hoffman, aka the Happy  Self-Publisher, today to discuss writing routines. Check out Writing in Increments.

Mardi Gras Monday

I grew up in the land of parades. The weeks before Lent meant dressing up in homemade costumes, piling into our station wagon, meeting cousins on the roadside, and fighting for throws from floats decorated with scenes from mythology or the Wild West. Now I live in a place where Mardi Gras is a relatively foreign concept, but I wear beads in purple, green, and gold to honor my heritage. I am wearing them now, as a matter of fact.

When I was a kid, Lent meant giving up something: potato chips, chocolate, coffee. (What? I began drinking coffee when I was five years old. First day of kindergarten = first cup of cafe au lait.) As I grew older, I grew out of that Lenten tradition of sacrifice, but it’s in my blood to do something in the weeks between Mardi Gras and Easter, as winter moves into spring.

A project that reflects renewal works better for me, particularly since giving up coffee is no longer on the table. A few years ago, I did 40 straight days of book reviews. Last year, I did 40 days of submitting my work. The book reviews were meant to promote writing by women authors. The submissions were meant to promote my writing.

This year, my winter-into-spring blog project is for you, the working writer. For the next 40 days, early in the morning, I will post 3 writing questions. Each day’s questions will examine some specific aspect of writing or the writing life. The questions may be very specific or quite broad.

Grab a notebook or open a document, and each morning spend a little time thinking about these questions and how they apply to you. You can answer as briefly or in as much length as you wish. There are no grades, no feedback, no judgment. You can post your answers as a comment or keep it as private your teenage diary. Consider it a free mini-course in examining where  you stand as a writer, or in your writing, for the next 40 days.

I’ll also post some pretty pictures, to combat the end of winter doldrums.

Mindful tree

The questions begin on Wednesday. For tomorrow, Happy Mardi Gras!

Coming Soon at a Workshop Near You

“Near” if you are in Delaware, that is.

This spring, I will be participating in three programs at three different venues in the Delaware arts and culture scene:

Event #1:

Mindfulness for Creative Women at Newark Arts Alliance

Friday, February 16

mindfulness1

Join us for an exploration of ways to be aware and present in the moments of your life, and how to use that awareness to jump start or enhance your creativity. The class will participate in short meditation, journaling, and visual prompt exercises. The goal is to leave with a plan on how to make each day richer and deeper through the habit and benefits of creative awareness.

Friday, February 16. Time: 7–10pm Ages: 18+ Cost: $35 M |$40 NM Register here.

cropped-ramonagravitar.jpg

Event #2

Winter into Spring Writers Workshop at the Judge Morris Estate

Saturday, March 3 – 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.

JME front
Day long Writer’s Workshop for new and experienced prose writers with Delaware Division of the Arts Masters in Fiction Fellowship Winner and author, Ramona DeFelice Long. This workshop will allow writers to create and share work with an end of winter/coming of spring theme. Registration fee covers light lunch, beverages and snacks. One hour break for lunch.
$15/person. Registration required by Tuesday, February 27. Call 302-368-6900 to register.

cropped-ramonagravitar.jpg

Event #3:

                     World War I and America Writing Workshops                              at the Delaware History Museum

March 3 – May 5, 2018

World War 1

In March through the beginning of May, the Delaware Historical Society will offer six writing workshops to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I. The First State at the Front: World War I and the Road to Victorious Peace exhibition will be open through November, 2018, at the Delaware History Museum in Wilmington. The series will begin on March 3 with an opening event  and the first workshop offered by Dr. Samuel Hoff. I will offer workshops on April 7 and 21. More info to come on my workshops in the weeks ahead.

This workshop series is offered through the Library of America’s World War I and America program,  a “two-year initiative that aims to bring veterans and their families together with the general public to explore the continuing relevance of the war by reading, discussing, and sharing insights into the writings of Americans who experienced it firsthand.” The program is offered with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities.