Hi. I'm Jenna McGuiggan.
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Friday
Sep142012

"Writing Wish" Scholarships Announced

Thank you so much to everyone who entered the "What's Your Writing Wish? Alchemy Inspiration Scholarship Contest" by sharing a writing wish, by spreading the word through social media, or by doing both! Your passion and enthusiasm made my week so much brighter, and you reminded me once again how much I enjoy sharing what I've learned about writing with other writers and wish-to-be-writers. I loved reading all of your writing wishes, dreams, and goals.

--->>>I have emailed everyone who entered the contest a special thank-you surprise. (It's a good one!) That message should already be in your inbox if I have your email address, so please look for it now! If you don't see it, I don't have your email address (or the email went into your spam folder). Please check the list at the end of this post to see if I need your contact info.

Congraultions to the recipients of the five scholarship spots!

  • Karen Walcott, whose writing wish is "to discover why it's so hard for me to get writing. I want to be a writer. I have gone to school to be a writer. Writing full time is my dream. So why is it so hard for me to sit and write? So my writing wish is simply to get writing."
  • Robin, who wishes "to be able to weave my stories and thoughts into a beautiful web."
  • Paula, who described her writing wish this way: "I want my words to sing and dance across the page, to tell my story, and to create a need in people to nod their heads and say, 'Oh. Yes. I know exactly what she means.'"
  • Christine Marie, who wrote: "My wish is to get some of these incredible stories out of my head...and make room for more!"
  • Nitaa Inaabandam who entered on Facebook.

I need email addresses for the following entrants:

  • Beth H. (who left comment #3 on the entry post)
  • Adrienne (who left comment #4 on the entry post)
  • Karen (who left comment #36 on the entry post)
  • De'Nita Moss (who entered via Twitter and Facebook)
  • Raegan Mathis (who entered via Twitter)
  • Virginia Bell (who entered via Facebook)
  • Laura Smith (who entered via Facebook)
  • Karen Wilson (who entered via Facebook)
  • Rachel Sallee Parker (who entered via Facebook)
  • Kate Gronemyer (who entered via Facebook)
  • Sherry Lee (who entered via Facebook)

If your name is on the above list, please send your email address to jennifer{at}thewordcellar{dot}com so I can send you your special thank-you surprise! (List will be updated periodically.)

Again, thank you for playing along, for loving writing, and for sharing your wishes. You've all inspired me.

{Regular registration for Alchemy Inspiration: Start Writing is still open. We start this coming Monday (9/17). }

Monday
Sep102012

What's Your Writing Wish? Alchemy Inspiration Scholarship Contest

 

Big news: I'm giving away 5 scholarship spots in Alchemy Inspiration: Start Writing!

Let's call it the "What's Your Writing Wish? Alchemy Inspiration Scholarship Contest." (I know, what a mouthful! I have a thing for unwieldy titles.)

Class dates: Sept. 17 - Oct. 12

Contest deadline: 11:59pm (U.S. Eastern time) Sept. 13

Here are the quick details on how to enter. You can enter up to three times*. [Contest ends at 11:59pm (U.S. Eastern time) on Thursday, September 13.]

  1. What's your writing wish? Leave your answer in the comments below for one entry into the scholarship contest. (Any length of comment is allowed, from one word to a mini-manifesto. Use whatever words you need to express your wish.) (Important: Make sure you enter the anti-spam CAPTCHA code that shows up after you enter your comment. You have to enter that code and click "Confirm Post" for your comment to show up.)
  2. For one extra entry you can tweet about this contest on Twitter. (Include this link: http://bit.ly/Pc22Wg. And include the hashtag #writingwish so I can find your tweet and count your entry.) {See below for a few suggested tweets in case you'd like to use one.}
  3. For one extra entry you can spread the word on Facebook. Visit my FB page here, "like" the status update about this contest -and- share that status update. ("Sharing" is the only way I'll be able to track and count your entry. Update: I think I was mistaken that I can track all "shares," so please "like" the status update and share it. I'll count all "likes" (on the status update) as entries. Sorry for the confusion!)

Suggested Tweets:

  • I'm a wish-to-be-writer. Are you? There's a contest for us. Win a spot in the Alchemy writing e-course: http://bit.ly/Pc22Wg. #writingwish
  • Enter the What's Your #WritingWish? Alchemy Inspiration Scholarship to win a spot in this writing e-course. http://bit.ly/Pc22Wg
  • Win a spot in @thewordcellar's course. Enter the What's Your #WritingWish? Alchemy Inspiration Scholarship contest: http://bit.ly/Pc22Wg

Deadline: Enter up to three times (using the methods above) by 11:59pm on Thursday, Sept. 13.

Recipient announcement: I'll announce the winners Friday (9/14) morning.

Selection method: I will choose the five scholarship recipients randomly. Each comment, tweet, and Facebook "share" will be counted and assigned a number, and then I'll use the random number generator at random.org to choose five numbers. (I thought about choosing the "best" writing wishes or the ones that moved me the most, but that's not at all what Alchemy Inspiration is about. I hate the idea of ranking dreams and wishes! So that's why it's a free-for-all-randomness-choosing-kind-of-thing.)

Class starts next Monday, September 17 (and runs for four weeks, until October 12). All the details are over here

I'm really looking forward to working with a group of you to help you move past fear and general stuckness and start putting words together. This is a fun, no-pressure course. Okay, so all of my courses are meant to be fun and low pressure, but this one in particular is all about the permission to seek inspiration. In fact, it's about making your own inspiration and taking itty-bitty steps toward your writing wishes. I mean it when I say that Alchemy Inspiration is meant for writers and wish-to-be-writers. No expedience is required, dearies.

Good grief, I must be feeling extra jolly: Did I just call you "dearies"?

Forgive my smarminess. I just really want you to feel my excitement about this session of the course. I've been reading the "get to know you" surveys from the current registrants, and their enthusiasm is contagious.

This is going to be such a great group of writers and wish-to-be-writers.

I'm really looking forward to this session, and I want you to join us.

As I've said, this may be the last time I run this course online, so please join me if you've been thinking about it.  If you definitely want a spot in the course, hop on over here and sign-up!

If you want to play along and enter the scholarship contest, have at it!

*About the entry methods, a confession: I don't always love it when people run contests like this and ask you to Twitter or Facebook (yes, I just used it as a verb) for extra entries. But I'm doing it with this one because I need your help in telling people about the What's Your Writing Wish? Alchemy Inspiration Scholarship Contest. It only runs for three days, and class starts in just one week, so I need the collective power of this community to spread the word quickly. 

Okay, your writing wishes....go!

Wednesday
Sep052012

Textures (an Everyday Essay)

This post is part of my series called "Everyday Essays." See below for a description of the series, or read other essays here.

Sometimes I wake up with the texture of a dream still wrapped around me. This might last until I take a shower or have my coffee, the sense of all but the most powerful dreams dissipating as I walk around in the daylight. But often when I lie back down at night, the feel of the previous night's dream envelopes me again and it's as though I instantly smell-taste-touch the dream world.

It's impossible to fully explain your dreams to someone else. Maybe you manage to pin down some general plot points or even name the emotion the dream evoked, but you can never truly communicate the heart of a dream, the visceral texture of the world that you created in your sleep.

I keep coming back to that word: texture. It's the best way I can describe this feeling of something that is at once so encompassing and so elusive.

Dreams have textures the way memories do. Lying down might trigger a dream texture, while a certain scent or a piece of music can bring on the texture of memory. Texture itself is a difficult thing to describe unless you and the person you're describing it to have the same referent points. Think of wool, linen, silk, or felt. How would you describe these textures to someone without referring to the material in quetstion? You might use words like wooly, scratchy, silky, or fuzzy, but what does that tell us? What would it tell someone who had never felt any of those fabrics? If I tell you that something feels smooth, would you know what that meant? Both woven cotton and polished granite feel smooth. Besides, how can I ever be sure that you experience the feel of cotton the same way I do?

That's why dreams and memories are so solid in our minds and so flimsy in description: They're composed of textures you can't recreate because no one else has lived inside of your dream or memory.

I've been thinking lately about how music has this textural quality, and not just in the music itself, but in the way it attaches its fibers to the details of your life at a certain time and place, and how all those textures (song + place/time) weave themselves together into something new, a customized fabric for you to wear whenever you hear that song.

When I hear "Raining in Baltimore" by the Counting Crows, I'm always and again a melancholy 18-year-old, and it really is raining -- a slow, misty kind of night rain. (Of course it's so much more than that. It's the ridiculously green grass on the center quad. It's puddles of light underneath lampposts, the smell of old wood in a chapel, and the soft glow-hum of the vending machine at 1:00am, all of it there in Adam Duritz's desperate voice, singing a stilted melody that simultaneously heals and breaks my heart.)

And then there's music that is the soundtrack to memory, even when the music itself may not have been part of the memory. I don't remember hearing David Gray's "White Ladder" album when I lived in England, but whenever I hear it now, especially the song "Babylon," with its traffic lights turning from red to green, I'm right back in Walthamstow, the London borough where I lived for a year after college. I'm standing on the corner of Forest Road by the Bell Pub, waiting to cross the street, reminding myself which way to look because the traffic is opposite what it should be. I may notice that I'm one of the few white people on the street here in a neighborhood with many Pakistani and Indian residents, and suddenly I'm aware of being different in two ways: white and American, a double foreigner. Maybe I'm coming back from the market or from a day in the city, or from my friends' house around the corner, walking back to the YMCA where I live. I pass townhouses with gauzy white curtains, and it's just turning to twilight outside, and the lamps are lighting up those gauzy white windows, turning them rosy and golden, soft and loving, and my loneliness, my feeling of being outside of things, deepens with dusk as I think about all of those people inside those houses, because even if they're not happy families, from out here on the gritty street -- the one in all of London on which you are most likely to get mugged, at least so I once heard -- from here those windows are entryways to homes. And as happy as I am to be here, living abroad for a year, doing volunteer work and having an international adventure, I miss home. But it's deeper than all this, of course. (It always is.) I miss home in a way beyond time and place, for even in my American hometown I've never felt at home. And now, 14 years later and just down the road from that American hometown, David Gray sings it all back to me, brings it all back into focus, even though I don't remember hearing him while I was on British soil. Gray is British, of course, and I think something of that place must have slipped into the texture of his music.

These worlds and memories live inside the texture of songs. i know you have your own worlds and songs, textures to call your own.

I suppose this is one of the reasons I write. I'm trying to weave textures into words so I can share them with you, and also so I can wrap myself up in them again in a new way. This is probably why I'm drawn to meditative and lyric forms of writing, which leads me to write essays in which, as I say, "nothing happens." I love story and narrative, but I'm always running after the texture of things, trying to translate an experience into something you can experience along with me.

** ** **

About Everyday Essays: At least a few times a week I jot down notes about something -- usually a small moment, detail, or thought -- that I want to write about. Most of those ideas stay frozen as notes and never bloom into essays. Everyday Essays is my new writing practice to allow some of those notes to move beyond infancy. I've decided to share some of them with you here, even if they're still half-naked or half-baked. The word "essay" (as is almost always noted when the form is discussed) comes from the French verb essayer, which means to try. The essay is a reckoning, a rambling, an exploration, an attempt. Think of these Everyday Essays as freewriting exercises, rough drafts, or the jumbled, interconnected contents of my mind, which may or may not take root and grow into longer (deeper) essays.

Wednesday
Aug292012

Loquacious: "Rubble" by Annie Penfield

Loquacious:  full of excessive talk : wordy (www.m-w.com)

Loquacious is a "wordy" series that revels in language.

In this essay, written after Hurricane Irene devastated portions of Vermont in 2010, writer Annie Penfield meditates on the word, the idea, and the reality of "rubble." I love Annie's writing because she uses language to pull readers into her world inside and out. When I read her work, I feel like I'm seeing the world through her eyes and riding (slipping, sliding, swirling) around in her thoughts. She combines her depth of spirit and introspection with a deep connection to the land, moving seamlessly from the internal to the external and back again, until there is no distance between the two. She is one of my closest friends from grad school, and I recently had the joy of spending time with her (and recent Loquacious contributor Laurie Easter) in a St. Benedictine monastery. There was plenty of laughter, great conversation, and, of course, some reading and writing. There also may have been lemon wedges, a small container of salt, and an unspecified amount of tequila. I hope you enjoy this essay as much as we enjoyed that tequila I do.

Rubble

By Annie Penfield

Rubble: sounds like bubble but also a rhyme with trouble. It means wreckage and fragments of a broken building. There is no hint of creation from rubble; hope can perhaps be derived from the sound of the word―rubble that bounces on the tongue upbeat like a child sounding b-b-b pushing a small matchbox car along a small dirt road through debris, through a village that has sprung from imagination.

The flood scrambled Vermont valley towns: claiming houses and herds, bridges and roads. The roads are all different after the flood. The river ate them. What is left is narrow and bumpy and crumbled at the edges. Now we have a single lane and a stoplight when before we were accustomed to just soaring down the hill.

With the stoplight, we must wend one at a time through the blind curves. Debris and uprooted culverts line the roads now stripped of pavement. What had churned alive in roiling waters now sits abandoned along the single-lane road.

I am waiting for the light―the one that tells me to go. Move. Move through the sorrow. I thought I was sad for the flood damage but I think I am sad about the unlived life. About possibilities I see for myself that seem scattered along a roadside, potential not yet pursued.

I saw the river course and claim a new path, then return to its banks. Like I see a dream but let it slip under everyday routine. My passion for other possibilities slips into the darkness of deep waters, like the coffins pulled from the graveyard, drawn in by the currents of the Irene-fueled river that ripped on land and houses and livestock. The landscape is different now. That graveyard is empty. I sit at a light and wait for change.

Along the road, long grasses flattened, an imprint of the flood. The water leapt its banks, flowing wild like fantasies across fields, and spreading like a prayer over open lands. Turning a corner, the river threw up its rocks and sticks. Piles of asphalt but not salvaged for the road. New fill will arrive to make the roads fresh and easy, but now I travel the rough, crude and functional.

The caskets traveled the undertow. They found traction to move and to be cast about. Twenty bodies have been found down stream and the struggle to reassemble them and the re-internment begins. To sit and wait for change, to watch the rivers run, to ignore the possibilities, will I dull to my current life, like that graveyard that has lost its souls.
 
I no longer believe in salvage. I want to lay a new path in the rubble and stumble my way into a future less certain. I let the waters rest within the familiar banks.

I am sitting at the light, waiting for change. Waiting to be released down the single road of rubble that follows the curves in the river.

** ** **


Annie Penfield lets her words ― and her children and horses ― run away with her.  She lives in Vermont with her husband, three children, two dogs, five horses, and one little donkey named Dazzle. She owns Strafford Saddlery and has her MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She is working on a memoir about her time on an Australian sheep station. Recently, her essay "The Half-Life" won the 8th Annual Fourth Genre Steinberg Essay Prize. It will be published in the February 2013 issue of Fourth Genre.

Wednesday
Aug222012

Upcoming Writing Courses, Double Alchemy (and possible last call)

This class is amazing, and you are an amazing person and gifted teacher. ~ Ell C., Alchemy participant

Registration is now open for both Alchemy online writing courses. This will be the second time I've run Alchemy Inspiration: Start Writing and the fifth (fifth!) time around for Alchemy: The Art & Craft of Writing.

I want to let you know: This may be the final time I offer either one as an online course.

I love these courses and believe that they are truly useful in helping people find the sweet spot between writing technique and inspiration. But I feel my energy shifting toward some new projects for next year, and I can't promise that the Alchemy classes will be around again in their current form. This isn't a scare-tactic to get you to register, but rather full disclosure so you know that I might not run them again.

Details about both courses, including a special Double Alchemy discount are below.

Alchemy Inspiration: Start Writing runs September 1-30. This is a 4-week course designed to get you writing -- now! It's perfect for writers (or wish-to-be writers) who haven't written before, or haven't written in a while. In addition to a month filled with inspiration, writing prompts, tips and lessons, and other goodies like videos, guests, and a private online community, you'll also get an ebook of the content to keep. There is no formal feedback in this course because it's all about starting and gaining momentum. (But if you really want some personalized feedback, you can add a mini-mentoring session with me for a reduced rate.) I'm available to all participants during the course to answer questions, provide encouragement, and suggest additional resources. The course, community, and ebook are just $89. Get the full details and registration info.

Thank you for hosting this safe place to come, learn, share, be inspired and not be afraid. Thank you for offering Alchemy and Alchemy Daily. I continue learning ways to weave my words together and hope someday to have a tangible tale upon which to look back. Your teachings here have offered me more eggs to add to my creativity nest. I am excited for what is yet to come. ~ Kristina Wood, Alchemy participant

Alchemy: The Art & Craft of Writing is a 6-week course, and the next session runs October 15 - November 23. (It wraps up right around U.S. Thanksgiving, so you can be done just in time for the holiday madness goodness.) This course is perfect for writers in the intermediate to intensive stages of their writing life, and for newer writers who have taken Alchemy Inspiration. (Note: You do not have to take Alchemy Inspiration in order to take this course. But if you'd like to take both courses, there's a Double Alchemy discount.) Each week of this course is packed with core and bonus lessons, audio and video extras, a featured guest (with the likes of Brené Brown and Marianne Elliott), nuggets of encouragement, invitations to inspiration, and oodles of writing exercises to use as practice. There's a private online community where you can share your writing and support your fellow Alchemists. You'll also get an ebook of the lessons to keep. Plus, each participant has the option to receive personal feedback on a short piece of writing. This course is the full pot of gold, to use the Alchemy imagery. I created it to share everything I've learned from years of writing and years of grad school. The course, community, feedback, and ebook are $169. Get the full details and register.

Double Alchemy Discount

Double Alchemy! What does it mean? It's like two pots of gold at the end of the "double rainbow!"

What if you're ready to go all-out and register for both courses? Can you get a discount? Yes, you can!

Here's the deal: Some of the content in Alchemy Inspiration is also included in Alchemy: The Art & Craft of Writing. How much? No more than 40%. This means that at least 60% of the content in the longer course will be brand spankin' new to you if you take both courses. This includes additional topics, new lessons, new writing prompts, different guests, and much more. So... if you'd like to register for both courses, you can save a whopping 40% off of Alchemy: The Art & Craft of Writing. This brings the price down from $169 to $101. 

So how much for both courses?

Alchemy Inspiration: Start Writing -- $89
+

Alchemy: The Art & Craft of Writing -- $169  $101

=

DOUBLE ALCHEMY -- $258  $190

(You save $68. Or think of it this way: It's like getting Alchemy Inspiration for just $21.)

Register for both Alchemy courses here.

I am still amazed at the sheer amount of amazing (and totally usable/practical/universal) content you provided in Alchemy: The Art & Craft of Writing. It was so full of goodness. I'm not sure I conveyed how satisfying it was to take part and access your brain for those weeks of writing. ~Meredith Winn, featured Alchemy guest and participant

If you have any questions about either course, please ask. I'd love to see you in one (or both) of these sessions, especially since this may be the last time I offer them.