Wednesday, 15 January 2025

With thanks to the curative community of ABBA - Rowena House

 

The mind bug that seems to be blocking new words in the work-in-progress infected this month’s ABBA blog too, and yesterday I spiked a thousand words of rehashed waffle about scene building which were meant to be this post.

In the dark this morning, I felt I’d let the ABBA community down. My 15th slot would be a sad gap in the New Year’s list. Lynne Benton had made the better decision, I felt, bowing out gracefully as she did yesterday. (Bye, Lynne. Very best of luck with the future.)

But then I read back further and found in Sheena Wilkinson’s post from Monday the wisdom of being in touch with your own working rhythms and the time of the year, and the lesson of knowing we are in dark days; productivity is allowed to slow down too.  Thank you, Sheena. Make me hardworking ... but not yet.

Then reading Paul May’s Ideas post from Jan 6 felt like a writer friend telling me all about his mind bug and how he overcame it. I hear you, Paul, about those brilliant night-time ideas that “evaporate in the cold light of day” and absolutely love that a peregrine falcon falling out the sky solved a plot problem about seagulls, which was really a story about so, so much more than a feare of seagulls.

After that, what I felt like doing was reading all the ABBA posts I’ve failed to read over the past year when I’d been juggling a complex business project with family commitments and the WIP felt like a refuge. A place to hide in. 

Instead, though, or rather beforehand, I decided I should thank all the writers who share their journeys, including (especially) everyone here on ABBA.

It is a community. A support group. A source of knowledge tempered by experience AKA wisdom. I don’t engage with you as much as I should but whenever I read your posts, I learn so much and am grateful as well as enlightened.

Like Lynne, I’ve switched from writing for young people with the current work-in-progress and wonder if I have the right to still be here. There is another WWI children’s book I would very much like to write – and should have done, even though my then publisher rejected it. So, perhaps, I’ll be a writer for young people again one day and Joel Castell will have his time in the light. Just writing his name makes me miss him!

In the meantime, my resolution for 2025 is to try and earn my place here by searching out ideas that might be useful to all writers, and avoid the more esoteric stuff I’m researching and experimenting with for the creative writing PhD.

Whoever we’re writing for, backside on seat is the same iron rule. But so is knowing when to back off. To slow down, to look around for inspiration, to have patience and trust in one’s creative instincts.

I think today is a reading day, not a writing day. And it’s dawn. Which is lovely.

Happy, Hopeful New Year, everyone. May stories be antidotes to the terrible realities out there.

 


 

 

I'm still on Twitter but not really for writing anymore.

Live blogging about the WIP on Rowena House Author FB page. 

Planning on joining Substack and Blue Sky.

4 comments:

Becca McCallum said...

Sometimes it's good to just down tools and play for a bit. My last blog post but one was about that. I'm not a 'working writer', my actual job is domestic cleaning, but I've been having to drop all creative stuff and just focus on work and housework, which wasn't making me happy (unsurprisingly). So when I had a week off and a friend staying, we both decided to do some writing. One of the things we did was giving each other writing prompts within a 15 minute time frame. While I found the lack of time scary (it takes me ages to write), I did massively enjoy it and it genuinely sparked my love of writing again in a way that didn't feel like work. So read the books, and go for curious wanders, and do some doodles, and take photos of things that interest you. The words will be there when you come back. (They were for me: I hadn't written anything in two years and no poetry in a decade).

Joan Lennon said...

My thanks to you and the community as well.

Rowena House said...

Wise words! Glad you found joy in writing. Giving myself permission not to write helped my write a couple of paragraphs! Dog walk next.

Rowena House said...

All the best, Joan.