Monday, April 18, 2016

Dancing With the Void: Five Ways to Outfox The Blocks - by Mary Sojourner

You’ve been writing every day. The work seems to insist on being done. There are a half-dozen stories waiting at the edges of your mind for you to bring them through. Then – on a day like any other day – there is Nothing.

You Google writing tips. You have a glass of wine – or you don't. You sit for hours staring into Nothing. Nothing works – at least in your favor. Here are five simple ways to be with the Nothing – and the stories, poems and creative essays that lie beneath it.

1. Fight the Power - Not: You don’t fight a creative block by attacking it directly. The block is part of your psyche, so if you go after it, you are committing aggression on yourself. Use Aikido, the martial art in which you enter your opponent’s attack and redirect it: http://ift.tt/1QA5JFI Give in. Walk away from what you have been creating. Literally. Leave your workspace. Wander without plan. When you come back, do whatever you do to relax yourself.

2. Put the Block in a Suspect Line-up: Take a notebook and crayons (or colored pencils) away from your workspace. As quickly as you can, sketch a line-up of at least four suspects. (Stick figures are great.) They can be human, animal, a memory of a teacher, a parent, or anybody who invaded your creativity.

3. Mess with the Block: Put your drawing away. Don’t look at until at least four days later. Same instructions re: notebook and crayons. Open the notebook to the suspect line. It’s almost 100% certain that one of the suspects will stand out more than the others. Copy that figure to a blank page and dress it up in a ridiculous outfit. Put a hipster soul patch on it; a clown face (unless you’re scared of clowns); a feather boa and a garter belt.

4. Honor the Block: Frame your drawing and hang it over your workspace. If you don’t have a central workspace, use it as a screen saver. Set a timer and write a thirty minute conversation with The Block. Write as fast as you can. When the timer goes off, sit doing nothing for ten minutes. Then set up two chairs. Read the dialogue out loud. Sit in one chair as The Block, the other chair as yourself. Read slowly.

5. Thank the Block: This step is crucial. The Block exists in you. You weren’t born blocked. You didn’t emerge from the womb and think “I better not do that.”, “I’m not good enough.” "I don’t have anything to say.” The Block has often kept you safe – or at least free from anxiety. Thank it in writing, mail the note to yourself. When it comes in the mail (real mail, real paper, real writing), read the thank you and burn it.

The only sure antidote to oblivion is the creation. So I loop my sentences around the trunks of maples, hook them into the parched soil, anchor them to rock, to moon and stars, wrap them tenderly around the ankles of those I love. From down in the pit, I give a tug, to make sure my rope of words is hooked onto the world, and then up I climb -  Scott Russell Sanders, Staying Put

Mary Sojourner is the author of three novels: Sisters of the Dream; Going Through Ghosts and 29; the short story collection, Delicate; essay collection, Bonelight: ruin and grace in the New Southwest; memoir, Solace: rituals of loss and desire and memoir/self-help guide, She Bets Her Life. Her short story collection, The Talker, will be published in 2017 by Torrey House Press. She has written and continues to write magazine columns, commentaries and narratives, as well as having been a national NPR commentator for ten years. She teaches writing - in private circles, at writing conferences and book festivals, and for Matador U, an international travel writing program. Writing is the most powerful tool she has found for doing what is necessary to mend - oneself and the greater world.

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