Downtown Writing Studio

December 9th, 2011 Comments Off

Emerging and creative writers need a nurturing space for conversations about ideas, purpose, and audience.

……for young people (8-18) who want to tap into creativity, develop confidence in expressing themselves, and strengthen their literacy skills.

We will also learn and practice strategies to improve the clarity and precision of academic and personal writing.

Location:

LibertyTown Arts Workshop, 916 Liberty Street, Fredericksburg, Virginia 22401.

More details here.

 

Wise Words

February 23rd, 2012 Comments Off

I love Ira’s show, This American Life. He shares his thoughts about the writing (learning) process here:

Ira Glass on Storytelling from David Shiyang Liu on Vimeo.

Keeping my Notebook

February 16th, 2012 Comments Off

As I dragged myself to the gym this morning, my mind was filled with thoughts of my mother. And that’s another story.

But what kept coming to the forefront was a line:

She was the kind of woman who didn’t want to be alone.

I didn’t have my notebook with me, so I told David to help me remember the words. Why? Because you never know where those thoughts might lead.

I’ve been thinking about this woman for several hours now–who is she? why doesn’t she want to be alone?– and I think I have the kernel of a story.

The work begins.

Writing Our Stories

February 12th, 2012 Comments Off

You asked for it.

I was surprised how many people stopped by the studio last week, asking for adult writing workshops. I miss the writing feedback, too. Sooooo, let’s give it a whirl. Starting Wednesdays at 11am, it’s Wednesday Words!

Join us for a writing workshop-style class (gentle feedback) for whatever writing you want to share. I love the Amherst Affirmations that Pat Schneider developed:

Time/day: Wednesdays at 11 beginning March 14

Cost: $15/session Please call to register/space limited

540-907-9732

Writing in my head….

February 10th, 2012 Comments Off

Ever since I decided to spend more time writing, I can’t keep my brain from thinking about writing. Odd, isn’t it? The more we focus on something, the more we focus on it.

Today I labored over a poem about my grandfather’s workshop. Since my dad’s death nearly two years ago, the building and all the tools have remained untouched, forgotten. When I visited my mother last fall, I looked out the dining room window, staring at the shop, partially hidden by trees in the backyard. Abandoned, I kept thinking.

I’ve been trying to write the poem ever since. When I left the studio today to run some errands, images of the old building kept popping into my head, and I found myself trying to write and revise in my head as I drove around town.

A pleasant way to spend the day…..

On My Door Tonight

February 3rd, 2012 Comments Off

Frustration

February 2nd, 2012 Comments Off

I tell my young writers, “Don’t focus on the product. Work through the process.” This is how we grow as writers.

And, yet, this morning, I can’t seem to follow my own advice.

Each Thursday, I participate in what Elizabeth calls “An Art Experience.” She offers a small group of us the chance to explore various media in whatever way we choose. She challenges us to let go and urges us to take risks. This is what I tell teachers I work with all the time. This should come easily, I think.

But it doesn’t.

As I mix my watercolor paints, trying to get the perfect ocean blue or pastel green, I feel my anxiety and frustration. “It’s not working,” I think, as I struggle to find the comfortable space between the sky and sea or tree and leaf. My house looks like a tent, and my chicken looks frozen in time, ready to be covered with yellow sugar and placed in an Easter basket. Not what I’d envisioned.

Elizabeth smiles. She knows that continued playing and putting brush to paper (or charcoal to canvas) will eventually allow me to find myself in my art, to create whatever it is I am striving for. She applauds when I pull out my colored pencils and draw on a background of watercolor and grins when I decide to dribble water on the charcoal “just to see what happens.”

Vygotsky says “children tend to create only for themselves, whereas adults create both for themselves and for the world in which they live.” I wonder if this is the block, the filter through which adults try to create. We fear judgment.

Elizabeth reassures me today, and I try again. I think she would agree with this quote from a Scottish education site:

Creativity is not just about special people doing special things. We all have the potential to be creative….a skill that needs to be developed.

A Slice of Writing Life

January 26th, 2012 Comments Off

I am substituting for a sixth-grade language arts teacher today. As I wait for students to return from an assembly, I’m looking at writing resources and planning for my Friday poetry class in the studio. My thoughts, though, have wandered to an earlier moment today.

During Writing Workshop, students were to write a Tanka poem, which I had never heard of (not being a writer of “form” poems). Most began playing with words, hands up in the air as they counted syllables and tried to make their words fit. But one young man sat silently in the back of the room.

“I can’t do this,” he said, looking down. “I don’t write poetry.”

I could tell he was struggling, embarrassed to have nothing on his monitor but a blank screen.

“Do you have some ideas of what you might like to write about?” I asked.

“Yes,” he said. “But I only write essays. Not poetry.”

“Well, then write an essay,” I said. “Write a short essay. And when you have finished, take your pen and circle all the powerful words you’ve written but only the really good ones. Those can be the start of your poem.”

He looked up, his eyes widening. Nodding, he gulped and straightened his shoulders.

‘Does that work for you?” I asked.

“Yep,” he said, beginning to click away on the keyboard.

A tiny suggestion. A shift in perspective. A new lens.

A poem begins with a lump in the throat
Robert Frost

True

January 22nd, 2012 Comments Off

The Studio

January 17th, 2012 Comments Off


A place for everything, everything in its place.
Benjamin Franklin

Places to Explore

January 13th, 2012 Comments Off

Author Mary Amato shares a great list of writing contests for young writers.

I also love the NanoWriMo site for young folks. The November project is finished for the year, but the site contains fabulous links to explore. Check out the Young Writer’s Notebook free download.

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