Category: Creativity

  • Storylines: Voices in the Street

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    Exploring new places is one of my absolute favourite things to do. All those new little nooks and crannies to explore. Those new cafes and bookshops to discover. The hidden gems just waiting to be found. On the weekend I was lucky enough to be able to combine my twin loves of exploring and writing when I caught public transport to the Voices in the Street: Storylines poetry workshop hosted by Mothertoungue, a long running Naarm poetry night.

    It was a rare, sunny day here in late winter and I had an enjoyable stroll from the station to the Ivanhoe library where the workshop was being held. I found the cutest ever bookshop that almost took all my money (but not quite) and a bulk food store that had the best trail mix ever and gorgeous mini white Persian figs. Oh my.  They were so good that I went back and bought more after the workshop!

    When I walked into the workshop room I was greeted with a table filled with art supplies, flowers, leaves, feathers, an emu egg and a couple of coolamons made by Aunty Sharon. It was my first clue that this workshop was going to be anything but ordinary!

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    Aunty Sharon Hughes and Kristen Munro from the Storylines Aboriginal Writers Group were our facilitators. We started with a beautiful movement practice led by Kristin that called on the land and the elements. We were guided through a fabulous writing prompt to create five lines of poetry. We then learnt how to make mini books and spent the rest of the afternoon happily collaging and decorating our mini books with the art supplies on the table.

    It was so wonderful to be making something with my hands again. Poetry, art and books? I was in heaven!

    Thanks Aunty Sharon, Kristin and Mothertongue for a fabulous afternoon!

     

  • Spring, Again!

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    Can you feel it? Or rather can you smell it?

    There’s something about this time of year, when the flowers open their buds and show off their shiny new petals. With their opening, comes the heavenly smell of nectar borne on the breeze. It’s heady stuff I tell you and just what’s needed to wake up from the foggy winter slumber.

    I’m not sure what it is but I’m finding winter harder and harder to get through (it’s probably my age but shhhh! I’m trying to pretend it’s not happening!). During winter my energy levels get super low and by the end of the day all I want to do is sit on the couch and eat chocolate. Which I’m sure is not helping at all with feeling good and full of energy.

    But that’s now fading into the past because there are blossoms and bees getting busy, making honey.

    Time for me to start getting busy too! What are you excited about this spring?

     

  • Perth Poetry Festival Workshops

    PPF 2023 Poetry Workshops

    While I was in Perth for the Perth Poetry Festival 2023, I attended every workshop that was being held while I was there as well as teaching my own workshop, Beyond Words, a Liminal Spaces workshop.

    Western Australian poet and spoken word artist, Scott-Patrick Mitchell, summed up it nicely when they said that attending workshops is an integral part of their poetry practice. Mine too, SPM, mine too! Being in a room with other people, all writing our own pieces to prompts provided by the facilitator is heady stuff indeed. I find it so inspiring. Not just the content provided by the facilitator but also hearing the poems written by the other people attending the workshops. There's a real synergy that happens when people get together to create something new, even if they are working independently.

    The first workshop I attended for the festival was Healing Through the Power of Poetry with Samantha Melia. It was held at the WA Poets Inc office on the third floor of the fabulously rickety and run down Bon Marché Arcade on Barrack Street in Perth's CBD. Samantha is a psychotherapist and poet with a fast wit and so many interesting stories. As well as writing poetry, I learnt so many useful tips for doing with stress and trauma.

    Later that afternoon Arianne True, the Poet Laureate of Washington State, shared Hermit Crab Forms in Poetry with us all. The previous evening after I performed at the Gala, Arianne had complemented me on my Recipe for A Poem which apparently was a hermit crab form. I was very confused about that comment until I attended her workshop and discovered that a hermit crab form is one that takes on the shell of something else, like a recipe, to protect itself.

    On Saturday afternoon I was at the Centre for Stories to learn about the Poetry of Human Suffering and Politics with Juan Garrido-Salgado. He told us about his life, growing up in Chile under the brutal regime of Pinochet and being inprisoned and tortured. We were invited to write a poem of protest and then ended with the group taking it in turns to read a poem by Pablo Neruda. Juan and his friends had travelled around Chile, performing this poem when they were students.

    Sunday saw me up early again. This time it was to attend the Dramatis Personae workshop with Caitlin Maling. We looked at the origin of personna which literally meant mask in Ancient Greek and represented the masks worn by actors when they were performing. I really enjoyed leaning into myth and trying to bring to life a story about a historical woman my father told me last year when we were in Sri Lanka.

    The last workshop I attended for the festival was Inherited Treasure with Jean Kent. Jean started us off with a metaphor warm-up to get our writing muscles in prime form. She then read us one of her poems and handed out little boxes filled with intriguing objects. After selecting an object, we were invited to write a poem using our emotional response to that object as well as a detailed physical description of it.

    So many prompts and poems and people crammed into the space of a long weekend! I have to admit that by the end I was flagging. Five workshops in three days was a huge ask. Especially since it's been a long time since I was a full time student! But I gained so much from all the workshops that it was well worth the effort. A huge thanks to WA Poets Inc for curating such a wonderful range of workshops!

     

  • Paint It Up

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    My daughters have been getting into the pouring paints recently. It looked like heaps of fun and once I found these cute little book shaped boxes I just had to give it a go myself. What's not to like about a wooden book that's hollow inside for storing all your treasures?

    It was really good to get back into making something with my hands and to be doing some art as well. I'd forgotten what it was like. Starting out full of hope, getting a bit despondent part way through when it all looks like a mess and then realising that it's finished and didn't turn out too badly. It takes a bit of time and distance for me to be able to think I've made something great. 

    I had so much fun that I've been making lots of these. Playing with different colour combinations and varying my technique slightly.

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    I'm going to use this box to store all my downloads from The Circus of Similes.

     

  • Literary Games

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    You know I love games. And writing. Imagine how excited I was to discover a whole lot of new writing-themed games! Forget about those old standbys, Scrabble, Boggle and Banagrams. I'm talking about the modern, new kids on the block that breathe life into the works and worlds of long dead authors.

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    I think my favourite games in this genre are the ones that pay homage to famous writers. The Shakespeare Game published by   Lawrence King and designed by Adam Simpson uses Shakespeare's plays, characters and quotes to imagines what happened in his missing seven years. That's the length of time Shakespeare disappeared from the history books. This one is a fun game where you get to try out your acting chops and recite quotes from some of the Bard's most famous plays.

    If like me, you're a fan of the golden age of crime and mystery novels, Agatha Christie themed games are hard to pass up. I really, really want to buy Agatha Christie's The Mystery of Hunter's Lodge but can't really justify the exorbitant price tag of $153 for the standard edition or a whopping $289 for the collector's edition which comes with high quality props and a velvet lined wooden box. Perhaps I should invest in Agatha Christie Bingo or Agatha Christie's Death on the Cards instead.

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    Possibly the world's most famous sleuth is Sherlock Holmes, created by English author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle who incidentally believed in fairies. At the time he was writing, interest in the occult and the supernatural as well as the birth of psychoanalysis had a big impact on authors of the day. As you would expect, there are a lot of games featuring Sherlock (as well as movies, tv series and video games). It always helps when a work is out of copyright!

    I recently bought Sherlock Holmes The Challenge Trilogy from Professor Puzzle. This cute little game looks like a boxed set of embossed books from an antique library. You know I love design and this game is just gorgeous to look at and to hold. Each 'book' in the box is a deck of cards with a different theme. You can choose between a testing game of deduction, a curious game of disguise or a tricky test of lateral thinking. There's not a lot of replayability in this set but once you're done, you'll feel a lot smarter and it will look great on your bookshelf! I've also had my eye on the game 221B Baker Street for quite some time. 

    I've just ordered a copy of the Polite Society: the Jane AustenBoard Game. This looks super fun and will be a great compliment to our reading of Pride and Prejudice. I can't wait to get all formal and haughty with this one!

    If you’ve got any good book-themed games to recommend, let me know!

     

  • Prompt This

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    Do you ever get stuck for words? Or ideas? I know I do. All the time! That's where writer's prompts come in super handy. Pretty much every writing class I've ever done was structured around a series of writing prompts to get my imagination firing and creativity flowing. 

    Think of a prompt such as 'What lies beyond the stars?' or 'Write about your day from the point of view of your shoe' or 'Where is home?' I just made all those up but it took me a while to figure them out. The brilliant thing about writer's prompts is someone else has already done the hard work of figuring out the prompt for you so all you have to do is to respond to it.

    So far I have added these prompt packs to my collection: The Writer's Toolbox, Writer Emergency Pack and The Writing Deck: 52 Prompts for Putting Pen to Paper. These kits are aimed at storytelling and writing fiction but you can easily use them to write poetry as well. Especially if you're interested in writing narrative poems.

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    On a slightly more poetic note comes Poems to Share II from Red Room Poetry. Red Room Poetry are a great Australian organisation that promotes and supports poetry through programs for schools as well as the publication of poetry on its website. The Poems to Share II prompt cards are brilliant. On one side is a short poem and on the other a prompt inspired by the poem. The deck comes with instructions on how to use the cards as well as a description of different poetic techniques.

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    What happens when you add dice and metaphors? Well you get metaphor dice of course! Taylor Mali is a genius and this idea is amazing. Roll three dice, get your metaphor and then expand it to create a poem. Brilliant!

    I'm hoping there are more prompt decks for writing poetry out there. Drop me a line if you know of any!

  • Writing is Thinking

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    During the very first lockdown here in Melbourne in March 2020 I was filled with a sense of peace and relief at the free time I had spreading out to become large enough to breathe and craft and think. Leading up to that lockdown I had been super busy and pulled in so many different directions that I gladly took on the chance to press pause on all my commitments.

    During lockdown six (!) in August 2021, I was trying to recapture the feelings of the first lockdown by doing the same things but unsurprisingly it didn't work. I didn't feel like doing the same things because I was in a different place mentally and emotionally. Instead of being relieved to be at home, I was dying to get out of the house. To be able to spread my wings, see people and explore.

    And I only realised why it didn't work and why those projects are gathering dust when I started blogging here again. Writing about my experience and what has been happening for me over the last few months has allowed me to get it out of my head so I can see it clearly. Writing really is thinking for me!

    How do you process what is happening to you? Do you write or move or sing?

     

  • When To Let Go

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    In the last couple of years I've managed to create a few things that I am quite proud of. But there's one project from this year in particular that's still hanging around, haunting me. It's almost but not quite done because I haven't had the time to finish it. Or, if the truth be told, I haven't made the time. 

    I keep planning a certain month when I will clear the slate and focus on getting this project done. I tell myself, 'Oh yes. In November I will have done x,y and z and I will have time to finish this thing.' And then November rolls around and I manage to find other more urgent, more important things that need to be done.

    There's another project that's been hanging around even longer and I keep forgetting it even exists. I have no idea if or when it will ever get finished. Which raises an interesting question about which projects get finished and which never see the light of day. It's not always the best ideas that come to fruition either. I wish there was a magic formula for figuring out which ones were the best so I could focus on them but unfortunately my creativity doesn't seem to work that way.

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    After my recent trip to Wye River I came home without any urge to check my do list or tick off items. I faffed around the house for a bit. Lay on the couch with a mystery gastro bug for a bit. Stared mindlessly out the window. Got lost in some internet rabbit holes. Pretty much just messed around not doing anything much. And then one morning while the rest of the house was still asleep I woke up without any clear goal or intention. I thought to myself, 'I'll just sit down at the computer and see what happens.'

    These are my favourite days by the way. The ones where I don't have a set plan and I just noodle around following my curiosity and seeing where I end up. It's at times like these that my creativity feels the most bold and free. Its when I get the most passionate and excited and lose hours at a time.

    I ended up starting a grand, new project. One that's going to mean going and learning a bunch of new skills like essay writing and creative non-fiction. I think I'll need to buy some books and do some research as well. So basically all my happy things – writing, books, reading, learning new things – wrapped up in one new project!

    And just like that, I suddenly found myself thinking of ways to finish the project that's been bugging me. It turns out I can't let go of one project until I have another that I have started or lined up.

    And you know what? I know this about myself but I forget it every time! Maybe I need to trust the process more 🙂

     

  • Between Pen and Paper

    When To Let Go 2

    When I start a project I have heaps of creativity and enthusiasm. After the initial rush wears off, I settle into a bit of a groove and find my focus. Towards the end I get bored and have to push myself to finish. If I don’t, there’s a feeling that I won’t ever complete it. However, if I rush through the end, there’s the risk that I will botch it or don’t do it jsuctice.

    It’s a delicate balancing act between getting the thing done and making it as good as it can be. I have a tendency to say, it’s good enough and claim it’s done. I’m wanting to push through that initial feeling of near enough is good enough and get to a new place of wow, this is brilliant!

    But keeping the enthusiasm going can be hard. After a while doubt starts to creep in. For me the real danger is letting that doubt take hold and abandoning the project. I haven’t yet quite worked out how to push through the doubt and keep working on something that I know needs that last little bit of oomph to make it shine.

    What do you struggle with in your writing or creative practice?

     

  • Trust The Process

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    Creativity is a strange beast. I always forget parts of the process until it's time for them to happen again. It's like my mind has a series of rooms that lock themselves when I exit and I don't get the key until the next time I need to enter the room.

    Actually that's a terrible analogy. But I don't know what's better or how to put it into words so let me tell you a story instead.

    I've spent most of the last 6 months pushing hard on various creative projects. My ambition definitely outstripped my energy levels and I was feeling burnt out but I was too terrified to stop and give myself the break I so desperately needed. I could feel how thinly I had stretched myself but I just couldn't seem to get off the treadmill of early mornings and doing even though I was over it.

    When I get super exhausted from all the creating, I feel like if I stop I won't ever start again. At the same time, I desperately need a break or I'll go mad. I know that I'm not working at my best or being effective but I just can't seem to stop doing or give myself permission to rest or do something else. What I should have done is read this post I wrote back in March last year on the cyclical nature of creativity and the need for rest and recuperation.

    I was feeling that way the other day and I tried to convince myself that it was okay, it would turn out fine. I reminded myself to have faith and trust in the process. I'm not sure if I believed me, but hey, at least I tried!