Finished reading: How to Make a Living with Your Writing Third Edition by Joanna Penn πŸ“š

Great advice on creating multiple income streams as a writer. Tons of recommended resources and helpful questions to consider.


Finished reading: Jane, Unlimited by Kristin Cashore πŸ“š

So great. Cashore gets five genres in this book and each one is a delight.


Finished reading: The Immune System Recovery Plan by Susan Blum πŸ“š


Finished reading: Ninth House (Alex Stern Book 1) by Leigh Bardugo πŸ“š

So good. It puts the academia in dark academia.


Finished reading: Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative by Austin Kleon πŸ“š

Again!


Finished reading: King Of Scars by Leigh Bardugo πŸ“š

I love it so much. Nikolai, Zoya, and Nina have always been my faves so it felt a little like Leigh Bardugo wrote this book just for me.


Finished reading: Sexism Ed: Essays on Gender and Labor in Academia by Kelly J. Baker πŸ“š

Highly recommend. Baker’s writing is always incisive and accessible. She’s one the writers that inspires me to want to keep writing.


Finished reading: Smoke Gets in Your Eyes: And Other Lessons from the Crematory by Caitlin Doughty πŸ“š


Finished reading: The Language of Thorns: Midnight Tales and Dangerous Magic by Leigh Bardugo πŸ“š

I definitely want to write a longer review of this one, but I need some time to sit with it first. I love it.


Finished reading: Truly Devious: A Mystery by Maureen Johnson πŸ“š


Finished reading: The Artist’s Way - The Basic Tools by Julia Cameron. πŸ“š

In this chapter, Cameron introduces the morning pages and the artist date, the two key tools for creative recovery.

Morning Pages

The morning pages are three pages of stream-of-consciousness writing completed longhand first thing in the morning. Cameron says that there is no wrong way to do these, but at the same time, I’ve seen her insist on her website that they MUST be done first thing, MUST be done longhand, and MUST be three pages. In my experience, having all of those requirements means they often don’t get done.

Perhaps many people doing The Artist’s Way aren’t awakened by a cherub raring to go most mornings, but I myself am often wakened in this manner. If M. is up, it’s hard to do the morning pages first thing. So I do them as soon as I can. This usually means right after getting home from dropping M. off at school. Sometimes it’s later. Sometimes it’s at night. Sometimes it’s not at all. Cameron claims that doing them in the evening “allows us only to reflect on a day that we’re powerless to change” but I find that doing a brain dump is valuable any time of day. Getting little anxieties out on paper makes headspace for me, even if it’s right before I fall asleep. My friend Jeanie said, “I think I got hung up on her demand that morning pages can only be done in the morning and went full on ‘you can’t tell me what to do!’” and I replied, “Yeah. Mine get done whenever. She’s not the boss of me.”

As for doing them longhand, Cameron says (again, on her website):

Typing Morning Pages may give us more speedβ€” but will give us less depth. Writing by hand connects us more intimately to our thoughts, and paradoxically is more efficient in terms of getting in touch with ourselves and opening the path to our most authentic selves and the day at hand.

This is a very nice ideal but it leaves out all of the people for whom writing longhand may not be an option ever or sometimes. There are days when writing longhand is a challenge for me; on these days I tend to put on a crafter’s comfort glove and only write until my hand starts to hurt. Usually these are one-page days. For people for whom this is always a challenge, I think it would be perfectly fine to do your morning pages digitally by typing into a service such as 750words or by recording a voice note to yourself - pick an amount of time to just talk stream-of-consciousness and go, somewhere in the 5 - 15 minute range, I would think.

So sorry, Ms. Cameron. I’m going to take you at your book’s word, not your website:

There is no wrong way to do morning pages.

Cameron talks about how the morning pages are a way to get around your internal censor:

…always remember that your Censor’s negative opinion and not the truth.

This reminds me of my favorite Calming Manatee meme:

An image of a manatee with text overlaid: DON'T LISTEN TO YOUR JERKBRAIN. YOU ARE SMART AND PRETTY.

Cameron says your inner Censor tells you, “It’s not Picasso.” This reminded me of the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode, “A Matter of Perspective.” In the teaser for this episode, Captain Picard and a few other crew members are participating in a painting class. Data, who tends to approach a problem by immersing himself in all the recorded knowledge about it and thus approaches his own paintings in that fashion, offers critique to the other participants. He has high praise for Ensign Williams and Lieutenant Wright, but when he gets to Picard’s painting, he just says, “Interesting.” Picard says, “Oh, thank you. In what way?” At which point Data responds:

While suggesting the free treatment of form usually attributed to Fauvism, this quite inappropriately attempts to juxtapose the disparate cubistic styles of Picasso and Leger. In addition, the use of colour suggests a haphazard mΓ©lange of clashing styles. Furthermore, the unsettling overtones of proto-Vulcan influences -

before Picard stops him.

Captain Picard holds a paint palette while Data looks at Picard's painting.

Y’all know I love Data, but sometimes his approach isn’t the one we need, and doing our morning pages is DEFINITELY one of those times.

Cameron suggests finding an image of your internal Censor that you can use to “pry loose some of its power over you and your creativity.” For over 20 years now, my internal Censor and any other negative voice in my head have looked like this:

A Thesulac demon from the TV show 'Angel': a humanoid demon with wrinkled gray skin, red eyes, and sharp teeth grins, wearing a cloak

That’s the Thesulac demon from the Angel episode, “Are You Now or Have You Ever Been.” It spends decades whispering horrible things to people about themselves and was exactly the externalization of a negative inner voice that I needed as I was first going into remission with my first strong bout of depression. It is still that voice for me. In fact, in Kim Werker’s book Make It Mighty Ugly, there’s an exercise where you make a physical manifestation of that voice and I made my own little Thesulac demon. You can see him on the far left in this group of mean voices here:

A group of creations representing the ugly voices inside the artists' heads

(For more details on this exercise, feel free to read the blog post I wrote about it.)

Cameron says the morning pages teach us this truism:

We have this idea that we need to be in the mood to write. We don’t.

I love this. It’s definitely true if you’re doing stream-of-consciousness writing. If you’re looking to do something slightly less random, I recommend trying Anne Lamott’s exercise from Bird by Bird where you start with your earliest memories and just write down everything you can remember. I haven’t tried that yet, but I plan to when I’m through The Artist’s Way, if not before.

Cameron describes the morning pages as a kind of meditation and says,

We meditate to discover our own identity, our right place in the scheme of the universe.

Identity is my overarching obsession so I really appreciated this.

Cameron says some people try to write their morning pages, as in create good writing, but instead that we should just do them.

Artist Date

The Artist Date is a weekly “outing” (shifted somewhat in the time of COVID), taken solo, to explore something out of the ordinary for us. It is a play date and meant to be delightful rather than dutiful.

When I started The Artist’s Way in September, I was saving my artist date for Fridays, which meant it never got done. I was treating it like a reward and I never felt I earned it. And I thought it had to be a solid two-hour block. It’s hard for me to book a two-hour block for anything.

This time, to guard against invasions or feelings of being not worthy, I’m going to do my artist date early in the week. On Sunday or Monday I’ll select and schedule it, and then on Tuesday or Wednesday I’ll do it. Also, I won’t demand that I reserve a two-hour block for it. I’m looking at no less than one Pomodoro (25 minutes) and up to 4.

Filling the Well

Austin Kleon says that problems of output are usually problems of input. Cameron says so, too. She suggests that the morning pages are output and the artist date is input, and that we must feed our brains with images in addition to words. She said:

In filling the well, think magic. Think delight. Think fun… think mystery, not mastery.

Cameron points out that focused attention is key for doing this. She says, “Many of us read compulsively to screen our awareness,” which, guilty. In the pre-smartphone era, I did all the things people complain about people doing when they’re focused on their smartphones. I just did them with books. (Did I walk into trees? Only a few times.)

This is a delicate balance when you have depression and anxiety, because it’s easy for the attention you’re focusing outward to suddenly turn inward and bring that nasty voice forth. I’m going to be working on finding that balance for a long time.

I’d like to close out with this quote:

Art is the imagination at play in the field of time. Let yourself play.


Finished reading: The Artist’s Way - Spirtual Electricity: The Basic Principles by Julia Cameron. πŸ“š

I don’t have a lot to say overall about this chapter, so I’m just going to share my annotations with you.

We tend to think, or at least fear, that creative dreams are egotistical, something that God wouldn’t approve of for us… If your mom or dad expressed doubt or disapproval for our creative dreams, we may project that same attitude onto a parental god.

I think me not really fitting the mold of a lot of the people Cameron is addressing is going to be a pattern for a lot of this program. My parents were incredibly supportive of any creative dream I might express. A lot of this came from my mom’s own experience of her parents treating creative activities as frivolous pursuits, I think. She took great care to support myself and my siblings in our creativity. My dad did, too, though I don’t think it came from the same place as my mom’s experience. They still are both very supportive of our dreams.

As you work with the tools in this book, as you undertake the weekly tasks, many changes will be set in motion. Chief among these changes will be the triggering of synchronicity: we change and the universe furthers and expands that change.

This reminds me of a beautiful quote from Bakara Wintner’s WTF is Tarot? and How Do I Do It?:

In The Fool, we say yes to the universe and in The Magician the universe says yes back to us.

I’m not big into manifestation talk or The Secret or whatever, but I do think deliberately setting an intention subtly moves us in ways that make us more likely to meet that intention.

We are, ourselves, creations.

I really think this idea aligns well with my whole cosmic art mom thing. Every human grew in some other human’s uterus. I like to imagine my kid as his own person, of course, but also as a collaborative work of art to which I’ve contributed. (I feel like that sounds icky. I don’t mean it in an icky way.)

You probably won’t have time to complete all of the other tasks in any given week… In choosing which half of the tasks to do, use two guidelines. Pick those that appeal to you and those you strongly resist.

In earlier attempts, I found that I struggle with choosing tasks because none of them seem to evoke responses in me. Since I’m doing this on my own timeline, and I have such a hard time picking, I’m going to try them all.

We begin to excavate our buried dreams.

I’ll be interested to see how I respond to this. I haven’t made my decisions based on what’s expected or nice. My mom instilled in me a deep sense that being “nice” is not as valuable as it might first seem. (As a young person, people always told her how nice she was.) Nice and kind are not the same thing. I think it’s important to be kind. I don’t think it’s important to be nice. I don’t think of my dreams as buried as much as shelved. I know what they are and where they are, and sometimes I take them out and play with them. I have never allowed work to drive my creative interests out of me.

How do you know if you are creatively blocked? Jealousy is an excellent clue. Are there artists whom you resent? Do you tell yourself, “I could do that, if only…”

More often than not, instead of jealous, I feel inspired. If this person wrote a book after 10 years of not writing anything, so can I! If this person built a comedy career with only a bachelor’s degree in theater, I don’t need any extra training to start doing comedy! If this person only started writing their novel after two years of research, it’s okay that I’m in a research phase and haven’t started writing yet!

Stop telling yourself that dreams don’t matter, that they are only dreams and that you should be more sensible.

I wonder how much of this isn’t a problem for me because I have divorced the notions of art and money. Not that people shouldn’t get paid for creating art, but that I don’t have to wait to create art until it’s my job. I do all kinds of things that aren’t my job because they bring me joy. My job doesn’t have to be the vessel for my dreams. If it can, neat! If it’s not, that doesn’t mean I can’t find other ways to live my dreams.


Finished reading: Not Your Average Hot Guy by Gwenda Bond πŸ“š


Finished reading: One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston πŸ“š


Finished reading: Writing the New Ethnography by H. L. Goodall, Jr. πŸ“š


Finished reading: The Dark Tide by Alicia Jasinka πŸ“š


Finished reading: The Last Wish by Andrzej Sapkowski πŸ“š


Finished reading: Fan Fiction by Brent Spiner πŸ“š


Finished reading: Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan πŸ“š


Finished reading: The Four-Hour Work Week by Tim Ferriss πŸ“š


Finished reading: Harrow the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir πŸ“š


Finished reading: Mostly Dead Things by Kristen Arnett πŸ“š


Finished reading: Succeeding Outside the Academy πŸ“š


Finished reading: Wonder Woman: Warbringer by Leigh Bardugo πŸ“š


Finished reading: The City We Became by N. K. Jemisin πŸ“š