Every morning I can be found in the same
spot. It’s usually after my first taxi
run where I’m taking the girls to work, but I’ll be there before 7:30 on most
days. With my mug of coffee and a cigar,
I can be found perched in my little nook on the back porch working on some
current storyline or catching up on yesterday’s news. It’s my little ritual and without it, my day
somehow feels slightly off.
It’s those little idiosyncrasies
that make us unique, those little habits or needs that we all have that help us
function and remain balanced. Everyone
has them, especially writers. Those who
don’t understand may see these superstitious rituals as meaningless, not
finding a logical point to them. Yet, we
know their importance, the depth of peace that they fill us with that allows us
to put pen to paper and create from within.
Writers have all kinds of rituals
and behaviors to help release the muse.
Most deal with time, place or behavior in order to promote a sense of
control that reduces writer’s block while unlocking the freedom of
imagination. Sometimes it’s all about
what happens in the beginning as we sit down to write. We surround ourselves with prompts to help
get us out of the gate and into the story.
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Kicking back |
Time sometimes plays a part in
the ritual, determining when a writer is at their creative peak. Some prefer the wee hours of the morning when
the house is still asleep and others prefer later in the day when the activity
of family provides a soothing white noise to the murder that’s being plotted
out on the keyboard. Everyone has a time
of day when our minds are at their best and we tend to schedule our work around
those hours. Between two and four in the
afternoon is my worst time to do anything and all I want to do is nap. I could force myself to write between those
hours, but I know it would all be wasted ink.
Therefore, I choose that period to have lunch, watch an old television
episode, and rest. Afterward, I pick my
pen back up and continue writing with a freshness I would not have had
otherwise.
Objects sometimes play a part in
a writer’s ritual. Perhaps the object is
a piece of clothing, a certain pen, or wearing their lucky underwear, hopefully
clean. Some may wear a hat or have to
drink out of a certain mug. I prefer
drinking coffee when I write and have a certain brand of gel ink pens that I
just have to use. For Least Heat Moon it
was cedar pencils made by Native Americans.
There’s no rhyme or reason to any of these and to an outsider it may
seem ludicrous. A pen, after all, is a
pen. Right?
Rituals are important to the
person performing them, whether they are a writer or not. Because it means something to us it has
meaning, and that meaning is to bring us peace that we may travel the path of
imagination that can sometimes be a dark and scary place.
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Other posts you might enjoy ~ Jumping from the High Dive
Thanks for visiting The Mess! Keep chasing your dreams!
I was inspired in a way that surprised me at first when I read your post that turned out to be the kickoff for me this morning. Here's a link to what i wrote http://preziosofrye.wordpress.com/2013/10/15/cool-runnings-which-i-hope-means-what-it-said-it-means-in-that-movie-because-thats-what-im-trying-to-say/
ReplyDeleteAlways nice to help someone else kickoff. Popping over to peek now.
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