Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Telling Stories



By Elizabeth Musser @EMusserAuthor 




When I was a child, parents would warn their kids not to tell stories. By that, of course, they were speaking about lying.  

Thou shalt not lie. 


I was a good little girl, the one who wanted to please, to do things right, so I tried my best not to lie. But oh, how I told stories! Story after story as they galloped through my mind, like the horses doing the same thing in the riding ring behind my house.

I loved telling stories! 


I told them to anyone who would listen to, or, more often, read them. I still have the spiral notebooks of my scribbled stories of yesteryear.

When I was blessed with two little boys, I went back to telling stories, 


nightly stories about Blackie and Angelfoot, the adored ponies, and Slimy Green and Shiny Green, the friendly snakes, and Mr. Snodgrass, the befuddled but kind neighbor. Story after story. And always, somehow, a spiritual anecdote crept into these stories, a little something to turn my sons’ imaginations toward Jesus. During their naptimes, I’d write down the morning’s disaster, turning it also into some sort of anecdotal and redemptive story.

Our ritual of story-telling continued, 


along with reading them books, up into their double-digit days. Yes, they were reading on their own, but amazingly (and delightedly for this little momma) they still loved snuggling with me in bed for a book and a story.

The habit of telling my sons stories and writing them down, along with whatever spiritual tidbit I could grab onto

kept my imagination supple 


until one day, my sons both trotted off to school, and I had the morning to create and craft fiction with the Gospel subtly embedded in the story.

We writers are meant to tell stories, and what better audience to start with than our own kids? 


I am now a grandmother of three, and I once again have the delight of reading books and telling bedtime stories to these precious little people.



Yesterday was Mother’s Day and for this one year, we’re in the States, living right down the street (figuratively, but close literally) from the grandkids. They came with our son and daughter-in-law for a cookout. And late in the evening, well past their bedtime, I snuggled with the three in bed and began my story…

When their daddy poked his head in to say, “Time to go home,” they looked up in dismay until I explained we were in the middle of a story. Then he quickly backed out of the room with, “Okay, just come downstairs when the story’s over.”

I treasure these times for many reasons, but one of the less obvious ones is simply that

making up bedtime stories is keeping my imagination going. And oh, how we writers need that! 


For all of my twenty-five years as a published author, I’ve had another job, too, of missionary, as well as the cherished roles of wife, mother, manager of the manse, etc. So often my other jobs have crowded in to steal away my writing time. Sometimes months go by without me working on a novel, as is the case with these ten months back in the States.

Caring for our aging parents, being involved in family celebrations that we usually miss out on, visiting supporters and supporting churches, speaking about my novels to all different groups of readers, working with our missionaries in our pastoral role and many other things have all but pushed aside my mornings to write.

With my grandkids, I am once again

using my imagination to exercise my creative muscles 


so that they don’t atrophy, so that they’re in good condition when the space opens up for me to sit down and tell another story.



That’s what being a novelist is all about, isn’t it? I promise I'm telling the truth.


How do you keep exercising your writing muscles when life gets in the way of your actual writing?


About Elizabeth Musser 

 ELIZABETH MUSSER usually writes ‘entertainment with a soul’ from her writing chalet—tool shed—outside Lyon, France. For over twenty-five years, Elizabeth and her husband, Paul, have been involved in missions’ work in Europe. To be closer to family, the Mussers have moved back to the Southeast for 2017-2018 school year and are living in the Chattanooga area near their son, daughter-in-law and three grandkids. Find more about Elizabeth’s novels at www.elizabethmusser.com and on Facebook, Twitter, and her blog.


 

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Fuel Your Creativity By Scent

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By Morgan Tarpley Smith
Aromatherapy is not something this writer has paid much mind to over the years. I don’t particularly care for candles, and I only use a select few lotions and products of that nature, but the more I’ve heard about essential oils the more I’ve become interested in them.
The first time I saw an essential oil diffuser I was backstage on opening night of my theater group’s latest production. It was a tremendously challenging play, and we needed all the help we could get, so one of my fellow actors broke out her diffuser that puffed a little trail of pleasant-smelling near-translucent smoke into the air for boosting memory and mental clarity.
My diffuser at my bedside along with some research & reading
Over a year later, I decided to try it out myself. I bought a diffuser along with Eucalyptus and Vanilla essential oils. I’ve used it nearly everyday in the evening before bed to relax. It’s really comforting, and the visual puffs of steam combined with the sound and smell add to the calming effect.
My writing partner recently sent me a fascinating article about essential oils to use for focus and creativity for writers. I definitely wanted to learn more about it, and I thought so would you. The link to the article is here.
“Helping ourselves be creative as writers is not always as hard as we might think, we can of course challenge ourselves to try new things, explore new ideas and try new writing places, all of these can help with the flow of new ideas aiding our creative process immensely. But a very simple method to encourage creativity may be resting right under our noses.
“Aromatherapy has been credited for many different uses, from heath, relaxation, massage, creativity and focus and as a writer I know that I am always looking for a way to expand on those last two items. Creativity and focus.
“Essential oils have long been known to be able to elicit emotional response in many of us, helping to create moods, relax and of course uplift our mental attitude all of which can be a great aid in helping with the creative process of a writer. By using our sense of smell as a tool for creativity we are aiding our own natural senses with the process of memory, stimulating our emotions and activating our brain via the limbic system. The limbic system is responsible for pleasure, emotion and of course memory, the more times that we have smelt a particular scent the more we are able to retain a clear picture of a past memory or experience, create patterns of new habits and entice our senses towards the different moods and energy needed for the creative process that is writing.
“Choosing the right essential oils for you - There are so many essential oils available to us in this modern world that it may be a bit confusing to know which ones are right for you and the mood you are hoping to encourage within your creativity. So take a peek at the list below for some of the best essential oils known for their ability to promote focus and creativity.
Bergamot - this wonderful essential oils is a great aid with keeping you alert and focused helping to keep your flow of creativity constant, while keeping stress levels from rising
Cinnamon - a great essential oil for helping to raise focus and feelings of happiness as it helps to lift and motivate our senses, known for its ability to promote love and harmony
Cloves - This essential oil is well known for its ability to help with creativity and helping to create a greater understanding of self all the while creating an environment of contentment which is very pleasant to work within
Cypress - an essential oil which is great for its ability to help you focus while boosting your self confidence and self awareness in a calm relaxing manner
Eucalyptus - A great fresh smelling oil that is very useful in boosting creativity, understanding, mental clarity and even enthusiasm a great aid for many writers
Lemon - As an essential oil lemon is great for helping with concentration, creativity, focus and even helps create a joy positive attitude
Frankincense - an uplifting essential oil that is great for creativity, performance, concentration and helps to provide a joyful peaceful environment to write
Geranium - a great oil for helping with the self-esteem while creating a relaxing uplifting atmosphere (mixed into a carrier oil and applied is also great for relieving the symptoms of headache)
Grapefruit - a very useful essential oil, grapefruit helps with performance, alertness, confidence and of course inspiration
Jasmine - One of my personal favorites this essential oil is fantastic with boosting your confidence, raising your happiness and of course helping with creativity and performance. A must have in my opinion
Neroli - A good essential oil that aids in many types of creativity fostering a good sense of peace and personal contentment helping to calm nerves and reduce stress
Peppermint - A great essential oil for renewing the mind and lifting a flagging spirit helping to create an alert mind ready for new things
Rose - This essential oil is often used in massage for its ability to uplift the spirit and create feelings of romance and love, it is also very good in helping us writers to create in a joyful happy manner, especially if romance is your genre
Sandalwood - is a great essential oil for writers who are struggling with self doubt or writers block. This wonderful oil is very useful for lifting flagging spirits, instilling self confidence and self awareness while creating a peaceful work environment for which you can start afresh in

“Scent is a powerful tool in activating many different parts of our brains, so when choosing your oils start with the ones that appeal to you the most, and slowly experiment with others as you go. As time progresses you may even find yourself combining your favourites into scents that are all your own…”

Do you use essential oils? If so, have you used any listed above? Which oils are your favorite to use for writing?


Morgan Tarpley Smith is an award-winning newspaper reporter and photographer in Louisiana. She is also an aspiring inspirational novelist. Besides writing and traveling to over a dozen countries, her interests include acting in her local theater, genealogy, photography, and singing. She resides in Louisiana with her husband. For more information about Morgan, connect with her on FacebookTwitterPinterest, or Goodreads.


Monday, May 26, 2014

AN IDLE MIND . . .

    


   Forbes Magazine recently published an interview with  Andrew Smart, author of Autopilot: The Art & Science of Doing Nothing, in which he explained that all that multi-tasking, so beloved of the modern age, is detrimental to our creative side.                  Those who study these kinds of things tell us that brain activity is measured by blood flow to the brain and the amount of oxygen the blood carries.  Scientists have learned that when the brain is engaged in a specific task, like solving a math problem, activity in certain brain regions is suppressed.  They have also found that those same regions, become super active when not focussed on a specific task.  Conclusion?  An idle brain is healthier, happier and more creative than its busy counterpart.

      In order to have those flashes of inspiration that create music, write poetry or invent a new product, we must have time for day-dreaming.  
      Furthermore, science now believes that idleness is essential to good health.  Just like sleep deprivation makes a person sick, idleness deprivation will make our brains ill.  Perhaps that's why companies like Google provide rest areas, play areas and a lax dress code for their employees.  The old, rigid model of turning employees into robots who follow orders has failed.  

      Since my life, both secular and religious, has been filled with warnings about idleness, I am intrigued.   Yet even Einstein claimed that he  never made a discovery or learned anything new from his "thinking" brain. All of his great ideas,  that is inspirations, came from his creative mind, available only through mental idleness. When we are constantly thinking, we get in the way of original thought.
      Huh!
     Doing nothing is actually good?  Wow!  That's turning conventional wisdom on its head.  I can just hear all the school teachers and parents among us grinding their teeth.  "Johnny will never amount to anything if he doesn't buckle down to work and stop day-dreaming!"
   Of course, science is only catching up with what history has told us all along.  Among the factors at work in the flowering of art during Renaissance in Europe was an increase in leisure time, brought about by more wealth.  People who didn't have to spend every waking minute preparing and growing food, had idle time in which to dream of great art. 
  The Romantic poets were famed for their rambles, purposeless walking.  They weren't counting steps or taking their pulse rate or attempting to knock minutes off their time.  They were taking themselves on a walking daydream.  Thus Wordsworth saw his "crowd/ a host of golden daffodils." 

 
     When I first took up writing with the intent of publication,  I met a multi-published author who described her writing process.  It began with lying on the couch, staring at the ceiling, while dirty dishes piled up on the sink, dirty clothes piled up in the laundry room, and dust bunnies multiplied under the bed.  When her hard-working, rancher husband asked what in the world she was doing she replied, "I'm working!"

   So now that science has given us permission to slack off from the busyness of our lives and go day-dreaming, how do we use this newly granted freedom?
   I rather like that staring-at-the-ceiling thing, but my mind does tend to make lists of chores instead of roving freely in the land of imagination.  There is also the danger of just falling asleep.  
    I've found certain, repetitive activities make space for day-dreaming. Kneading bread, for example, keeps the blood flowing, but does not require a lot of concentration, leaving room for those flashes of brilliance.  Hoeing the garden does require enough concentration to separate the weeds from the potatoes, but it still leaves plenty of idle mind available for inspiration.  Vacations are good, so long as they're not filled with activities and timetables.  Lying on the beach gazing at clouds is a time-honoured cue for the idle mind.  I find air travel, too, can produce that half-aware state that frees to mind to roam in the land of make-believe.  

    So, what about you?  Are you an inveterate planner, plotter, chart-maker, and spread-sheet whiz or do you sometimes have an idle mind?  When are you at your most creative?  When do ideas pop into your head and surprise you?
    

Alice Valdal wishes to apologize to all the day-dreamers, chastised in school, who grew up to change the world.
www.alicevaldal.com

Published books: 

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Letting Go of Comparison

Photo courtesy of David Castillo Dominici/
FreeDigitalPhotos.net
One of the benefits of social media is we can get an insiders view of authors we admire. They will often share a lot about their writing routine. Many times I’ve marveled at some authors incredible ability to produce. Somehow between doing another job, managing their household commitments, being an engaged spouse, parent and friend, they’re able to pump out thousands of words every day.

I’m in awe.

Sometimes (well more frequently than I really would care to admit) the nagging green beast of envy rises up within my heart. It’s a similar feeling that may strike me when a friend appears to have everything worked out and their life appears to be a bed of roses.

Comparison.

Arrgh. Yes, I think we can all relate to it.

As the annual book award season is about to start in earnest it is very easy to start wondering why others books have received more accolades that ours. Forget accolades, what about the number of reviews such and such has received for their latest work?

“Comparison is all about conformity and competition,” Brene Brown says. “When we compare, we want to be the best or have the best of our group.”1 Even the disciples (and members of their families) struggled with similar impulses. Recall how James and John’s mother asked of Jesus that her sons be seated at his right and left hand. The other disciples were “indignant” at such a request. (Matthew 20: 20-28)

So how do I deal with the green-eyed monster of comparison?

  1. I thank God for the author whose situation has prompted the negative emotions in me. It is amazing what happens when we start being thankful and praising God for the blessings another is experiencing. Something magical happens and those pesky negative emotions subside.
  2. Encourage the other author in some way. You may not know them but these days with so many methods of connecting with people sending a tweet or FB comment usually isn’t too difficult. Once again, this encouragement acts like an anaesthetic to the wound in our heart.
  3. Get back to my writing project. God has made us to create (yes, all of us) and it’s in using our creativity that we can leave our own small original imprint on the world. No one else can write the story that He has placed in our heart. Yes, it is risky as Erwin McManus states, “We cannot create without  risk.”2 But it is only in leaning into the discomfort that comes with risk that we are able to experience the joy from obeying the call that burns within our hearts. The call to create.


How do you deal with the green-eyed monster of comparison?   

Note: 1. The Gifts of Imperfection, Brene Brown, Hazelden 2010 p94-95 2. Article in RELEVANT Magazine,  May/June 2014, titled “Everyone is Creative”, Erwin McManus.




Ian Acheson is an author and strategy consultant based in Northern Sydney. Ian's first novel of speculative fiction, 
Angelguard, is now available in the US, UK, Canada and Australia. You can find more about Angelguard at Ian's website, on his author Facebook page and Twitter

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

We might be incubating


Like baby chickens encased in the shells of warm eggs, we writers go through times of incubation. The process is also like seeds buried deep in the ground. Nobody can see anything visible happening, yet our minds are rife with energy, ticking away on something great that might not come into being for a long time.

I had my idea for an amnesia story way back in 2000 when I'd finished writing my first draft of another novel, Picking up the Pieces. I found the new idea intriguing and fully intended to get stuck straight into it. I even wrote several chapters and phoned a friend in the police force to quiz him for several details I'd need to know for my plot, especially how they set about discovering the identities of people who don't know who they are. Even though I devoted a few months to this book at the time, I finished up putting it aside. For some reason, it wasn't gripping me as much another sudden new idea to write a young adult trilogy entitled Quenarden. When I finished work on those three books, I re-wrote The Risky Way Home, the first book I'd ever written. Then I had an idea about combining two of my contemporary romances into a sequel, which became A Design of Gold. When I'd almost finished writing that, this amnesia idea suddenly bobbed up in my consciousness again. After eight years of being pushed to the back burner, my enthusiasm to work on it was brimming again.

I knew its time was right. The details about an antique shop background were clearer in my head and characters motivations were falling into place, while they had been strained all that time ago. It was as if the fruit had taken eight years to ripen in my subconscious mind. I went through those old chapters I'd written and found lots of waffle that could be deleted. Better still, I'd learned some extra skills as a writer which the experience of five extra books had taught me. And best of all, my kids had grown up a bit and real life experience had taught me my hero's lesson - that our thoughts shape our world and what we choose to focus on grows in our outer worlds. I'm sure I wouldn't have been as well-equipped to write that eight years earlier. The book ended up being called Best Forgotten.

I am incubating a few other ideas which will require some scientific research while I'm working on something that I'd been incubating while I wrote Best Forgotten. There are also ideas knocking each other around in my brain about a book of reflections to encourage fellow writers. I like the way Madeleine L'Engle expressed this incubation process in her reflective book, Walking on Water, in which she likened her creative process to having several pots bubbling away on the stove's hot plates at once. She sprinkles and stirs ingredients into each of them as they occur to her, and eventually the one which becomes complete in her mind and enthusiasm first gets taken off and worked on while the others continue to simmer.

Are any of you being incubators at the moment? I wonder what invisible germs of wonderful books are already simmering among us.

Paula Vince is a homeschooling mother and award winning author who live in the beautiful Adelaide Hills of South Australia. She writes mostly contemporary drama/romances with elements of mystery and suspense.