Thursday, January 22, 2015

     Biting off a piece of the Writer Within and spitting out the bones. There's a lot of meat on Natalie Goldberg's newest edition. It's been delightfully fattened and when served up it offers a complexity of deep flavor for not only the aspiring writer, but for anyone who seeks a deeper perspective of their every day life.
     The location for much of this perspective comes through the form of repetitious practice. Goldberg equates writing to many things, all requiring practice, she say's "like running, the more you do it, the better you get at it." The words we choose to fill our pages grow as we grow, they see as we see. The more comfortable we are with ourselves, the more we learn to trust our inner voice. But what if nobody gives a shit about that voice? Should it be silenced or should it be given the opportunity to wander around, with a blind vulnerability that desperately yearns for something worth saying? Let it wander I say, and I think Natalie would agree.
     Most of what we actually experience is inhibit by our brain, things it intuitively decides to disregard as critical for our survival. These small observations, the detection of nuance between ceiling tiles, the silence of stars in a brightly lit city, the perpetual taste of the inside of our mouths, are probably things your brain would filter out under normal conditions, unless you were open to them. These occurrences are what Goldberg would consider the ingredients for making a cake. Together an unorganized collection of experiences such as these may seem like "goop" but if you keep adding more, "a beautiful cake may rise out of the mixture of your daily details."
     The point that she makes regarding adding, the "heat" to the collection of experiences or daily details is an abstract concept. What is the heat? It isn't some literal mechanism you can activate in order to produce an engaging piece. Much of the book is directed at kindling the fire that will produce a lifetime of our own deeply personal brand of heat and then finding the guts to cook ourselves over the flames.

1 comment:

  1. great response here, keep going! and don't forget to post every week...

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