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Sonya J. Day

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Jumpstarting Creativity

June 8, 2024 Sonya Day
The Artists Way.JPG

I often find myself stressing over to-do lists. I’m constantly wishing there were more hours in the day. But, when I break down my projects into parts and start, I spend more time trying to figure out how to do what I want to do than just…doing it. Like with writing. I never seem to have enough time to get a chapter or short story written. At the rate I go, it will take much longer than I’d like to finish my novel or perfect a short for submission. It’s like the stress of the to-do list, the exhaustion of constantly carrying the weight of all I have to do, blocks me from actually getting anything done.

Or, at least, it used to feel that way. Then, I discovered a little secret to clearing my head and getting stuff done: Morning Pages.

Morning Pages is a concept taken from Julia Cameron’s book The Artist’s Way. In it, she explains that the goal is to sit down first thing in the morning and write three pages by hand (not computer). Three pages. No more, no less. By writing, you clear your head of the negativity and junk that comes with being an adult, and you reconnect with the child within, the creative nature you possess. So, the premise is, if you make a habit of writing three pages every morning, you’ll clear yourself up to “be.” To do what you are made to do without the mechanisms we, as adults, have succumbed to that inhibit us.

Let me just inject here that I wasn’t “all in” when I decided to do this. My entire adult (and part of my childhood) life, I’ve tried keeping a journal. Especially since becoming an artist and writer. I’d buy a new journal and start with the best of intentions, only to let life and a lack of anything to say cut me off. Or, I’d get overwhelmed with the negativity I found in the pages and think that I was cultivating a negative lifestyle by writing it. Or I’d just get plain lazy. I even tried keeping a journal with smaller pages and a goal to write just one page daily. I failed miserably.

So, when I started considering this concept of Morning Pages, I didn’t think it would work for me. Not only that, I didn’t see how it would help my creativity or writing at all. Plus, at the time I was starting this journey, I’d just had surgery on my dominant hand/wrist. How was I supposed to free hand three pages each day when I could barely hold a pen? I had every reason to chunk Cameron’s book across the room and get back to my normal. But I was exhausted with my normal. I was sick of what my normal was creating in me: an apathy for life and a wandering existence without hope or focus toward anything. And most importantly, a lack of belief in myself.

So, I decided to give this Morning Pages thing a trial run. I committed to writing every day for thirty days. I planned to reassess, at that time, and decide if I was getting anything out of it. And, if I wasn’t, I could then chunk the book across the room and move on. But, if I was going to try this, I knew I’d have to create a few guidelines for it:

1.     I gave myself freedom to be messy. Beyond the fact that I had an injured hand, I’d often struggled with journals because of my perfectionism. I wanted them to be neat, with beautiful penmanship and nary a scribbled-out section. This time, I told myself that mess was okay, that it didn’t even matter if my hand writing was illegible to me. The goal was getting words out, not making them a work of art.

2.     I gave myself permission to write about nothing. I’ve always wanted my journals to be these profound sources of information. Like, when I die, someone would find them and they’d become these artifacts in a museum. But I’m not George Washington, and nobody needs to see these. In fact, Cameron encourages that you don’t even read your pages, at first. Because in the beginning, you are getting rid of the junk holding you back. If you read that too soon, all you’ll see is how NONE of what you’re writing is helpful. So, I told myself that, if all I had to say was how tired I was over and over again, so be it. If the pages turned into a gripe session about my life, who cares. I was getting out whatever I needed to process to move on and be productive. Not even I have a right to judge what that looks like.

3.     I gave myself latitude with the “Morning” part of the habit. I’m not a morning person. My best self is around 9pm at night! And I currently have a job that requires I be up around 5am and, sometimes, has me going at full speed the moment I step through the doors. Because of this, there are days when I can’t even think about a journal, let alone write in one, until later in the day. So, I told myself that the goal would be first thing in the morning, but, as long as I finished before bed, it was okay. It was the habit of just writing I was looking to create, not another task I’d beat myself up for if I didn’t do it by the letter.

4.     I gave myself permission to not write in a day. This one, I kept with restrictions. I had a string of three days where I struggled with a migraine and just couldn’t do anything. So, I told myself it was okay that I didn’t write those days. Normally, this breaking of a goal would have made me berate myself, and that constant bashing would have led me to guilt and self-shaming. Instead, I gave myself grace. But I did so knowing that this grace and permission to not write was the exception, not the rule.

With these guidelines in place, I set to work. I wrote, jumping from topic to topic without line break or transition. I wrote free-style, penning whatever popped into my head. Some days, it looked like “I hate this stupid journal and Cameron is a moron. I have absolutely nothing to say.” Other days, it was reveling in something amazing that happened. Much of the time, it was a self-pity trip about whatever was causing me pain.

I wrote on, anyway.

Then, something shifted. I started writing about my hopes. I started hashing out concepts or ideas I had for a story, things that were not working, things that I needed to think through in order to create.  I started telling myself I could do this. I started pointing out the good within me and my projects. Sure, there were still moments when I went on negative binges, but, more and more, these entries contained sparks of inspiration.

And I filled an entire journal. Still, I kept on writing.

And, here’s what I noticed about the rest of my life: I was becoming more creative. I wanted to write. I broke through stagnant moments, and I found how to plow through plot points giving me heartache.

I became a productive writer.

Nothing else in my schedule changed. In fact, if anything, life became more hectic. But the practice of creating became easier and a higher priority.

It didn’t just help with my writing, either. I’m beginning to see the effects of Morning Pages in other aspects of life. I’m not weighed down by things as easily. I’m seeing ways to improve relationships and be more productive at work. I’m becoming more confident in who I am and what I have to give this world.

Coming from a type-A personality who makes lists of lists, who would have thought that the one thing to increase my productivity most would be something chaotic and, seemingly, unproductive? Yet, it was just what the doctor ordered.

In Creativity, Life Lessons, thoughts, Writing Tags creativity, creating, writing, productivity, writing tips, life lessons, habits, journaling, confidence
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The Hurt of Rejection

February 15, 2024 Sonya Day

Last month, I received a rejection for a writing contest I’d entered. This, of course, is nothing new in an author’s life. But this particular rejection hit me harder than usual. Sure, I had other difficult things going on, and the rejection just added to the misery. But it was more than that.

What is it about rejection that hurts so much?

It’s not losing a contest or publication. We know those are tough to get. I knew, down deep, that rejection would be my constant companion, so it wasn’t as if I believed it would never happen. And I’m smart enough to realize that, if I keep at it, I’ll eventually win/get published.

Every time I submit something, despite the odds, I still have a spark of hope that this time will be different. This submission will be the one that finally works out. Most authors I know operate with that same hope. Why else would we keep trying? But, for me, this time the rejection extinguished that spark.

I didn’t question the quality of my submission, I questioned my quality as a writer.

Reacting as I did, rejection can smother any hope you have in yourself. For many like me, writing is a personal thing. We pour our hearts out onto our pages, and creating stirs hope within us that someone, somewhere out there, might just understand where we are coming from. Someone might just see the twisted, weird, deep, or unlikeable parts of ourselves in the story, and say, “I thought I was the only one.” We want that connection. Isn’t that what everyone wants? To know and be known?

But, the rejection comes and it is a giant slap in the face. We forget that they are reviewing our words and instead feel the dismissal of our voice, of that connection we threw out into the cosmic universe in hopes of someone commiserating. And, after one too many times experiencing that dismissal, we lose hope that we’ll ever be known. In turn, we question our writing. Maybe it won’t eventually pan out.

Our industry tells us rejection isn’t personal, and we scold ourselves because we are somehow less. Because, for us, it is completely personal.

Separating our work from ourselves is vital to a writer’s longevity. A rejection is not about you. It is about your work; the readiness of it, how well it works within a whole (journals), or if it fits stylistically with that editor/publication. Somehow, we as writers have to grasp this fact.

I’d like to say there’s a magic formula for realizing EVERY time the separation that exists between rejection of our work and rejection of ourselves. But if that were the case, I wouldn’t have wallowed away most of last month, eating cookies and contemplating the superior writing of a friend’s three-year-old.

So how do we move past what we perceive as personal rejection?

Here’s a few things that have helped me:

  1. Surround yourself with people who believe in you. Not just in you as a writer, but you as a person. When you doubt yourself, their encouragement can snap you out of your gloom.

  2. Keep a list of things you love about yourself. Give yourself a way to see your true self outside of writing.

  3. Keep a list of things you do well when writing. Remind yourself of your talent.

  4. Read something terrible. Sometimes seeing a book in print that has no business being in print is encouraging. If they could find their niche, so can you.

  5. Read something that moves/inspires you. Feed your longing for beautiful language. It will make you want to create something equally beautiful.

  6. Now, go write. The beauty of creating a story is that it fans the flame within you, and, before you know it, you believe in yourself – and your writing – again.

What helps you get over rejection? Share your tips in the comments below.

In Creativity, Life Lessons, thoughts, Writing Tags writing, attitude, focus, motivation
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Writing Prompt - Photographs

August 11, 2023 Sonya Day

Sometimes, all you need is a little push to overcome writer’s block. One simple push is in your phone: your photographs.

You can create your own writing challenges with a photo and a probing question.

Step 1: Scroll through your photo album until you find a picture you like.

Step 2: Ask a question based on the picture. You’ve got six starters – who, what, when, where, how, why. Pick one and build a question with it. 

Step 3: Now write a story that answers that question.

Step 4: Now that you’ve done the predictable, rewrite the story changing something so that the outcome is unexpected. For instance, if the picture looks like a romantic setting, write about a serial killer who goes there to bury his victims. The unexpected will grab a reader, shock them, engage them.

Here’s some writing prompts I’ve created from my phone album:

What lies around the bend?

Who brings the protagonist here, and why?

Why did the lights go out?

From where does the protagonist know the person they meet on this path? Are they happy to see them? Why or why not?

 

Share your stories and any pictures/prompts you create!

In Creativity, Writing Tags writing exercises, Writing Prompt Wednesdays, writing
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All Hail the Great Muse

March 7, 2023 Sonya Day

I’ve been a creative long enough to know that inspiration comes and goes in waves. (Anyone else just read the end of that sentence to the tune of Greg Laswell’s Comes and Goes [In Waves]? But more on that later…) One day, I’m consumed with too many ideas for stories or paintings. The next, I’m curled in a ball on my couch, eating cookie dough ice cream from the tub and crying because the women of The Real Desperate House Wives are cleverer than I. Okay, maybe that is a stretch. Especially since I have very little patience for reality TV. But you get my drift, right?

I’ve also been a creative long enough to know that, if you want to soften the waves, you have to douse them with a little fire. For me, nothing strokes my creative fire like other creatives.

I’ve sparked an idea for a story from watching movies, seeing paintings, reading other books, enjoying really great food, even through the wonder of a beautiful sunset. But the most consistent source of inspiration, for me, is in music.

What is it about a song that can overwhelm you? There are some treasured favorites that bring me to tears. Every. Single. Time. Even though I listen to them frequently. Others catch my breath with their peacefulness or hope.

A simple search on the web will give you endless articles about the effect of music on humans. Some, like this article, link it to a primal need we had to communicate before language existed. Whatever the case, there is something about a melody that connects with us.

What music inspires you?

My favorites, truthfully, vary according to mood. But there is something about Claude Debussy’s Claire de Lune, the haunting trumpet wail of Miles Davis, the poetic lyric of Passenger, the realness of Gang of Youths, the instrumentation of Cody Fry, the creativity of Conan Gray, or the raw emotion of Johnny Cash that make me want to rise to their level of creativity. They get my fingers typing, and the plots reveal themselves.

In Creativity, thoughts, Writing Tags music, creating, Inspiration, writing, motivation
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Short Story - Unknown

June 10, 2021 Sonya Day
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I’ve been remise with my blog as of late. My apologies. You know how life gets crazy and passes you by without your knowing? Yeah, it was something like that, along with a pandemic thrown in. As a piece offering, I’m giving you a short I wrote. I wrote it for a contest where I had to create a story with 300 words or less and include: a comfort food, a song lyric/reference from the 70s, a mountain range, a new year’s resolution, and a horse reference. Can you pick out them all?

Hope you enjoy!

Unknown

“Stay,” he said.

She stuffed in one last box. Metal numbed her fingers as she closed her car’s trunk. She inhaled, drawing in the cold and hardening her resolve.

He sulked, but followed as she strode inside.

On the table, bowls of macaroni and cheese congealed. Crab dotted the surface, trapped in the yellowed paste. She scraped her nail around one chunk, catapulting it free. Jealousy towards the crab overwhelmed her.

He misconstrued the slight uplift of her mouth and embraced her. “Stay.”

She breathed in his scent, woody and warm. Familiar yet foreign. His lips brushed hers, savoring. A tear pooled in her lashes, and the riot within her began anew. She pushed him away before it ripped her in two.

A new year, a new start. She’d sworn it.

His shoulders drooped and his face paled. “Stay,” he murmured. “Please.”

The yearning in his voice choked her, and the tear slid from lash to cheek. She bit her lip. He searched for signs of concession.

Instead, she cut the tether. “We’re superficial.”

“We’re not.”

 “Your code is still symbols on a screen,” she said, “and my Van Gogh is still splotches of paint. We’re everyday aliens, you and I.”

Her finality unleashed his resentment. “Why don’t you come to your senses?” he said. “You’re not getting any younger.”

“I won’t die unknown.”

She grabbed her keys, but paused at the door. “One day, I hope you understand,” she said.

As the Cascades shrank in her rearview mirror, the road flattened and opened before her. Out the window, she spied a mustang, wild and unhindered. Its galloping feet drummed the rhythm of a new day. Pressing her foot against her pedal, she smiled and hurled herself into its dawning.

In Creativity, Writing Tags writing, creating, short stories
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Unless otherwise noted, all images and texts are © Sonya J. Day, 2013. All Rights Reserved.  No images or text may be used without consent of artist.