Showing posts with label imagination. Show all posts
Showing posts with label imagination. 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.


 

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Just Imagine

by Ruth Dell


What's behind the green door? This question haunted me for many years after I watched a brilliant production in which students acted out scenes from several children's books. Their purpose was to bring the books to life and pique school children's curiosity, thus encouraging them to read stories for enjoyment. Their magic certainly worked on me, and I searched for a copy of "Behind the Green Door". This was before Google days, and I couldn't find the book anywhere. So I had to use my imagination to try and answer the question. Was it a puppy? A pirate? A land from the Magic Faraway Tree? A monster? A cave. . . 

And that's the wonder of the gift of imagination that God has given us. As readers we use our  imaginations to visualize the stories that we read, in so doing we bring our life experiences into play. For example, if an author mentions a field of yellow flowers, I may visualize the dazzling yellow of a crop of canola, another reader might see a field of sunflowers, while yet another sees a cheerful carpet of daffodils swaying in the breeze- the possibilities are endless. Each reader will experience the book in his/her unique way, and often in ways entirely different to the author's intention and ideas. Our life experiences will affect the way we see the settings, the characters and even the plot.

And writers would not be able to write their novels if it were not for their imagination. We have to imagine our characters' emotions, goals, motives, hurts, lies, appearance, speech. . . We have to use our imaginations to ask and answer "What if?" questions to find out what happens in our books. What if my heroine runs away from home? What if she is missing for two years and then returns with no idea of who she is? What if her experiences have made her into a liar and thief? We have to use our imaginations to adapt and flesh out real life settings, or create a totally new setting.

There are some wonderful quotes which give us some idea of what we can accomplish if we use our imaginations. Here are a few:
  • Logic will take you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere. Albert Einstein
  • Imagination is the true magic carpet. Norman Vincent Peale
  • You can't depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus. Mark Twain
  • Imagination is the highest kite that can fly. Lauren Bacall
  • There are no rules of architecture for a castle in the clouds. G K Chesterton
What Can You See in these Clouds?
  • but, I nearly forgot. you must close your eyes. otherwise. . .  you won't see anything. Alice
  • I saw the angel in the marble and carved until I set him free. Michelangelo
Sculptor Nick Speakman Set a Squirrel and an Owl Free

My favorite anecdote illustrating the power of imagination comes from Emma, a little girl in my pre-school class several years ago. The class said a prayer of thanks for their lunch and were about to start eating when Emma piped up,
"Teacher Ruth, Kyle had his eyes open when we said grace."
"Emma, if you saw his eyes open, then your eyes were also open."
" Oh no, Teacher Ruth. I used my imagination."

Before ending this post, I googled "Behind the Green Door". I discovered that it was written in 1940 by Mildred Wirt, who wrote several of the Nancy Drew books as a ghost writer under the name of Carolyn Keene. Guess what I'm downloading this afternoon! At long last I'll find out what's behind the green door.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

A Novel Change

Please indulge my 'writing' ramblings...

About a year or so ago I was watching a soap where a teenaged character was going through a very tough time emotionally. She learned at an early age that she was adopted and decided to leave home to look for her birth mother. Unfortunately her birth mother (not realising who she was)gave her a rather frosty reception. The young lady also met her maternal grandfather and learned that he was the one who put her up for adoption. Apparently he'd lied to his daughter that the baby had died. It was truly gut-wrenching to watch.

At the end of the programme there was a public service announcement offering the phone number for the Samaritans (a charity that offers support and counselling to people going through some distress or turmoil in their lives).

As most writers can attest, this (like much of life) got me thinking. It gave me a story idea. I imagined a character who works at a helpline, offering comfort, encouragement and advice to the emotionally weary. As I thought about this character, I naturally, thought about what her life is like and what type of person she is. I imagined that she is an irony, because while she works to sort out other people's lives, her own personal life is a mess.

In my mind my protagonist, let's call her Lisa, is in a relationship with a man who doesn't appreciate her. He is a layabout, who uses his dream of being a published author as an excuse not to work. So essentially she's his provider. She resents his dependence on her, but by the same token encourages it because it makes her feel needed. This coupled with the guilt she carries as a constant companion, fragment her personality. Her guilt is bourne out of the child she gave birth to in secret at the age of 16. At the time no one knew she was pregnant, not even her, until she went into labour in a lonely field a few hundred yards from her family home. She left the baby in the field believing it was stillborn.

Maybe the baby really did die, or not. Maybe someone actually saw Lisa in that field and has been biding their time to approach her. Or, maybe the child searches her out. I don't know. So many thoughts.

This highlights the beauty that is the imagination and the ability God has given to create stories and relationships that move us, cause us to examine ourselves and to ask question.

Thinking about a helpline adviser, who has bigger problems than some of the people she helps leads me to think about myself in particular and Christians in general. Matthew 7:3-4 asks a pertinent question, "And why do you look at the speck in your brother’s eye, but do not consider the plank in your own eye? Or how can you say to your brother, ‘Let me remove the speck from your eye’; and look, a plank is in your own eye?" Some of us are people who others gravitate to to ask for advice and guidance; others are people who like to give advice and feel 'in the know', while yet others have an intellectual awareness that makes them dig deep to find the answers to life's tough questions without being heart-touched (they know what to do, find it easy to share what they know, but never follow their own advice).

I admit I sometimes give advice that I find difficult to take. I hope I can learn from Lisa how to be true to what I say. Maybe the process of developing this character and writing this story will prove therapeutic.

By God's grace I will learn and grow.

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Ufuoma Daniella Ojo is a Technical Author and Software Trainer. She lives in London. She is working on some new stories about relationships and is trusting God for connections leading to publication.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Motive-free imagination




Once, I was challenged to complete an exercise which involved making a list of my favourite childhood activities. Here is what I came up with. Reading books, acting out books (I'd pretend I was one of the characters and walk around with the book in front of my nose 'playing' the book as if it was a movie), playing handball against a brick wall pretending I was a tennis star, playing memory games, drama lessons, playing pretend games with friends, visiting playgrounds, riding my bike and pretending it was a horse, art lessons, cooking sweet treats, pretending my life was a story book.

I could see that even as far back as then, my fascination with stories was thriving. It was my natural way of expression from a very early age and I used to do it spontaneously. The point of the memory exercise was to prove that God has planted our future roles and destinies inside of us way back when we're in the secret place of Psalm 139 (implanted in our mothers' wombs). It certainly showed me that but I noticed something extra too.

Part of my adult life has been tainted with wanting to achieve something impressive. In my childhood, I simply did all of these activities because they brought me joy and pleasure. As I grew up, I couldn't help adding a certain heaviness to the joy, making life more of a burden. One day I was stewing over how I can possibly get my books "out there" more, when I heard my 16-year-old son humming. He'd finished his study commitments for the day and was happily checking his footy tips and beginning his computer games, getting involved in his cyber-world just because he loves it. I started thinking, I need to take a step back and ponder, because I'm missing something.

Perhaps my point is that worrying over how many people we're touching or affecting with our work moves into the arena of arrogance and pride. It's freeing to think that God intends us to keep our youthful enthusiasm, delighting in our activities for their own sake without getting hung up on the notice and attention we're receiving. We need to trust that our creativity is being directed exactly where it needs to be. I want to move back into the beautiful childhood attitude of getting fully immersed in something just because I love it.

The word, "success" is an insidious blood-sucker that we never think much about during our first ten years on this planet. We're down-to-earth and sensible, simply doing what we enjoy whenever we can. When "success" is introduced into our vocabulary as something to strive for, that's when we begin deciding we need to do a heap of other things. I'm sure it's also when we begin to open ourselves to depression and neuroses we were never designed to carry.

I started having a closer look at some of the Biblical folk who God promised to bless abundantly. Many of them seemed to have a different heart attitude, wanting to take themselves out of the picture, simply using their skills and talents to celebrate God and give Him the glory. Whenever they moved dangerously into the domain of worldly thinking, it was never a good thing and was always rebuked. I'm thinking of King Saul burning the sacrifice before Samuel arrived, out of fear of how he would appear to the people if didn't; of King David organizing a census simply because he wanted the personal security of being able to gloat over the size of his army; of James and John being gently rebuked because of their striving for the right and left-handed positions next to Jesus. Similar attitudes to these sometimes get themselves entrenched in my thought processes. I believe I need to keep alert and weed them out of there.

I need to remember the simple motivation of my childhood, creating through my writing simply out of love and pleasure, not being overly concerned about positive feedback, catalogue appearances, numbers of sales or literary attention as gauges of how I'm going.

How about everyone else? What were your favourite childhood activities? Do you notice a thread between them and your current life occupation?

Paula Vince is an award-winning fiction author who lives in Mount Barker, South Australia, with her husband and three children. She enjoys her lifestyle of writing and educating her children at home. She has written seven novels for youth and adults. Paula values her faith, family and fiction and believes that nothing has more power to delight and inspire people than a good story with lovable characters. She likes working with the background hum of the washing machine and dishwasher, to give the illusion that she's multi-tasking.