*Magnify*
    May     ►
SMTWTFS
   
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
Archive RSS
SPONSORED LINKS
Printed from https://p15.writing.com/main/books/item_id/1808259-Starting-to-Write/sort_by/entry_order DESC, entry_creation_time DESC/page/8
Rated: 18+ · Book · Personal · #1808259
"I could eat alphabet soup and crap better lyrics then that." - Johny Mercer.
From June 2016 entries are entered into "The Bard's Hall Contest"   by StephBee - House Targaryen

From May 2017 entries are entered into "Invalid Item"   by A Guest Visitor /right}
From June 2017 entries are entered into "Invalid Item"   by A Guest Visitor

From June 2016 entries are entered into "Blogging Circle of Friends "   by Lyn's a sly fox



** Images For Use By Upgraded+ Only **

I'm a writer, who doesn't write.
An artist, who doesn't paint.
I'm a blogger, who doesn't blog.
I'm a dreamer. And all I do is dream
.


I was born a donkey, but lived as a man. My parents sent me out from the paddock so that I could learn the secrets of corned bread. Seeing for myself the world of men made me curious because that was my weakness. Always my weakness. My hind-legs were strong and so began my masquerade. I became a man and walked the world of men.

I tasted many delights, and many disasters. But soon I found that I needed a thing called money. To continue my quest I would need to work. A courier seemed the most obvious thing. Although, was I not a man now and not a pack-mule? No. No couriers work for me. I chose a trade and worked in a factory.

I had not forgotten my quest for the secret of corned bread. Every night, while printing the newspaper on the night shift, I would see the grand old culinary designs in the food and drink section. There was so much more to food then corned bread.

Continue My Memoir of Magic and Dreams

This is my blog documenting my experiences on http://www.writing.com. In it, I will include my reviews of others works, links to offsite writings, and importantly, I think, moan and complain constantly about the machinations of this beautiful, sexy, inspiring and fearsome beast of a writing community.

I didn't do anything about my desire to write for over 20 years and I have a lot of catching up to do. I'm a little worried that I've left it all too late and I won't have enough time to become a good writer.

I'm always up for joining in on blogging groups and challenges, so if you have one - let me know here.

Previous ... 4 5 6 7 -8- 9 10 11 12 13 ... Next
June 8, 2012 at 1:08pm
June 8, 2012 at 1:08pm
#754395
Entered this months Short Shots contest with a poem. Had Peter Gabriel's absolutely mind blowing New Blood playing in the background. That album could well be the album of my life, right up there with Nick Cave and the Bad Seed's I Let Love In or Tea Party's Edges of Twilight.

 Invalid Item 
This item number is not valid.
#1872515 by Not Available.


And really, all of this just to put off writing the next part of Ethan Drane.

June 5, 2012 at 4:45am
June 5, 2012 at 4:45am
#754168
Wrote a paragraph today of my Ethan Drane story. Last night, I also added to the mindmap I made for the story in the simple minds app. I mainly focused on the elements I want to add in to convert the straight western into a western steam punk story. Funny how these things work out as I'm using a little world I created from my session with the book "You Can Write Science-Fiction Stories" (Yes, the writing book aimed at children that I am slowly going through with my kids aged 3, 6 and 7!) as the backdrop to Ethan Drane's new world.

And so, tomorrow's aim is to write another paragraph.
June 4, 2012 at 10:44pm
June 4, 2012 at 10:44pm
#754154
 Invalid Item 
This item number is not valid.
#1871776 by Not Available.


I've posted my entry in my own contest as a forum instead of a static item to see how it fares. I have also plugged it at the review request.

The idea is to get a discussion amongst readers about the story. I've put a 300Gp reward for reviews as I do also want reviews.

I'll be keeping track of how it fares in this format and report back to you.
June 3, 2012 at 9:08pm
June 3, 2012 at 9:08pm
#754083
Success!
"Invalid Item

Made a new item out of one of my starting to write blog entries.

I'm considering the merits of creating each new item as a forum. That way I can provide "foot. Notes" like authors notes, open it up for discussion etc.
Especially if a piece was popular or controversial, it might gather some discusserers. Which would be the difference between a discussion and a review.

Forums and static items are both items - i wonder if there are any places around the site the pieces wouldn't show. Like in certain advertising boxes and similar items spots. Are the similar items boxes based on type or the keyword category selected?
June 3, 2012 at 1:55am
June 3, 2012 at 1:55am
#754035
Finally managed to get started again on my Ethan Drane story last night. Only managed a paragraph before I realised it was very, very effing late and I better get to bed or I would be one grumpy daddy/husband the next day.

Anyway, here it is, another paragraph.

Morning steam fogged out of Karnak’s mouth as his lips curled into a sneer. Drane snapped as Karnak snorted. Whatever witty, educated reprise that the schoolmaster had intended as a parry in a battle of wits was silenced by the cowpoke’s blunt fist. Karnak’s head snapped back as Drane snaked his other hand out of the reins and sent it crashing into the schoolmaster’s side.
“Teach you,” Drane snarled. “Teach you.”
Really, Drane would have ended it there. The schoolmaster, the namby-pamby shit heel, had mouthed off at Drane and then laughed at him. Drane had hit him. Twice. Drane would have looked down at the schoolmaster on the ground, dismissing him. He would have taken his horse by it’s reins and tugged it back towards the store; taken off his work gloves this time, even with the bitter cold, and tied a convincing knot and kept that damn horse at the rail. Then, he would have walked back onto the veranda, his boots tapping on the wood floor like door knocks, and opened the flimsy door and walked inside to buy a warm coffee and a news sheet and demonstrate his surly nature to the old storekeeper inside. Drane would have done all that. But the schoolmaster hit him back. He hit him back hard.


Technically, there is no reason for it to be taking me so long to write this story at this stage. I know exactly what happens in this part of the story. They fight and Karnak is killed. It's not the actual writing that gives me grief, it's the discipline to get started. Hence all the crap I write and post about Writing Procrastination and Writing Anxiety (and not Writers Block, as I've never let myself get far enough into any story to suffer from that!)

Just discovered this amazing gal, Camille O'Sullivan. She's amazing.

[Embed For Use By Upgraded+]
June 1, 2012 at 1:21am
June 1, 2012 at 1:21am
#753861
Looks like I won Author of the Month for May, 2012, thanks to the Angel Army.

When I get home, I even get a cool Thundersbeard plaque to display. Shit, maybe I should start entering my own competitions!

As I said to my buddy Wyrm , for someone who cant seem to get their writing shit together, I must be doing something right...Haha.
May 31, 2012 at 5:22am
May 31, 2012 at 5:22am
#753799
Yup. That's it. Me and the boys are playing with string.
May 28, 2012 at 1:28am
May 28, 2012 at 1:28am
#753639
Haven't reviewed for a while, but really I haven't met any of the goals I set myself this month. I guess I'll take any thing I can get, that says "success".

 Success!
Invalid Review

 Success!
Review of "Untitled Zombie Short: (Part 1)"

 Success!
Review of "The Blood of The Spirits Fiction"
May 27, 2012 at 2:30am
May 27, 2012 at 2:30am
#753578
Played Dungeons and Dragons Racing today. Drew up a board game and positioned monsters around the track. We had to race around the dungeon fighting monsters. If you lost, you had to choose a new character and start from go again. Maxie won. The final monster was a three headed dragon that had 3 attacks/defences. Maxie took it out with a 20 on his attack. He was playing Old Ben Kenobi. Previously Jet almost won with Chewbacca, but the 3 headed dragon killed him. Even Kylie played. She kept knocking me out and making me miss a turn by landing on my square and beating me in a battle of the d20's.

Now, we're back to playing Dungeons and Dragons. I've marked out x's on the squares which are special encouners. Roll a d4. 1. is you get a magic spell to add d4 to your attack or defence later on in battle. 2. Is treasure. 3. is fight a monster, if you win you get that piece on the board as well. 4. is xtra piece of your choice.

We've paused to watch the Smurfs cartoons, but currently I only have 4 pieces left and Ash and Jet have 7 each. Maxie has 3.
May 25, 2012 at 9:10pm
May 25, 2012 at 9:10pm
#753516
May 20, 2012 at 3:39am
May 20, 2012 at 3:39am
#753166
Didn't write any prose but I did watch Romero's Land of the Dead AND write an article on naming characters for the Dragon Scroll newsletter for the Coffee Shop of the Fantasy Society or whatever they are called.

I also played Lego Zombie Wars with the boys. We all played ourselves in a zombie world with motorbikes. The boys job was to protect Daddy from the zombies while he fixed cars, gathered supplies, and rescued people. I even drew some quick cartoons of the action. Fun times.
May 15, 2012 at 9:24pm
May 15, 2012 at 9:24pm
#752937
 Invalid Item 
This item number is not valid.
#1867748 by Not Available.


Them's Fighting Words!

The FUN action-writing picture prompt contest!

EVERY DAY IS FIGHT NIGHT! (sic)


"The art of crafting action scenes is critical to competence in writing fiction because the action scene is one in which the mechanics of movement must be described believably and with precision." - David Alexander.

HOW IT WORKS
Every day I will post 2 images.
Every day you will write the battle, argument or other conflict arising.
Word limit is 300 - 2000 words.
An Every Day begins at Midnight WDC Time.

THE PRIZE MONEY
First Prize: 500 GP Second: 250GP Third: 100GP
Yes, the prizes are low. But until donations come rolling in, it's about the fight not the prize money baby!

1 weeks worth of picture prompts will be stored on the challenge page. After that they will be archived on their own page with a list of winners.

Without further ado:


In the red corner....
** Images For Use By Upgraded+ Only **

Vs

In the blue corner....
** Images For Use By Upgraded+ Only **

Ready? Fight!

May 13, 2012 at 9:24pm
May 13, 2012 at 9:24pm
#752810
Had a great heytell conversation with Wyrm this morning about the fantasy trilogy he is penning. He's even newer to writing then I am, but he's younger with a young mans drive and tenacity.

The conversation was great for me too. Not only was I getting him on track with his plotting, and prodding his strategists brain with my inventive one, but thoughts about his story motivated me towards my own. If only I hadn't have been on my way to work! I'll have to try and get ahold of him after work, and see if he can't motivate me some more.
May 12, 2012 at 9:32am
May 12, 2012 at 9:32am
#752745
One Minute Overview

"So you've got the foundations right, but what else must you aim for as a writer? This chapter takes you through several important strands involved in the art of writing. These aren't the only components - they are a further selection of building blocks, intended to give you a firm platform for the future. You'll have writing suggestions for most sections, so keep your notepaper handy - it helps if you work through any questions as you go. Some of them are ways into writing, following on points mentioned in Chapter 1; others are explanations of ingredients common to effective literature, which editors and readers will expect to see. Writing is an art form where you need to be fully engaged as a human being. Observing, using your senses, and being willing to stand in another's shoes are essential traits which you should develop early on if you want to write well and communicate."

Exercise 1
Select an author you admire. What is a typical subject choice for them. What kinds of words do they use - complete or simple? Are their texts rich in imagery? Emotionally engaged, or detached? Are they pushing home a message?
Write down the hallmarks of this person's style: what makes it a work by X instead of Y. Now try your hand at one of their favorite subjects, using the types of words and sentences they might choose.
May 9, 2012 at 2:42am
May 9, 2012 at 2:42am
#752562

Lots more in the article, link below, but here are the 10 tips to end writers procrastination. I'm putting this here for my edification as much as yours :)


http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/science-and-sensibility/201006/ten-top-tips-...



If you put off writing as long as you can, and you want to turn over a new leaf and start scribing scripts, here are 10 quick tips:

1. Look for your procrastination trigger. A complex form of writing procrastination can have different combinations of triggers including inertia, a natural tendency to avoid something you see as unpleasant, performance anxieties, self-doubts, intolerance for uncertainty, perfectionism, and not wanting to do something that may be arduous, unpleasant, or lengthy. As you examine your writing procrastination motivation, cope by pushing yourself to write.

2. Adopt a reasonable perspective. If you expect that writing should come easily, but written words don't come so easily, what supports your belief that "writing should come easy for you?" Whenever you find a contradiction between fantasy and reality, prefer reality.

3. Prepare to think independently. If you make your global self-worth depend on others' judgments of your writing, you may delay until you believe you have a guarantee for success. To counter this form of procrastination thinking, shift gears. Think about what you want to accomplish. This can take your focus off possible rejection fears. Then, ask yourself how you can express your ideas through writing to further your positive goals that involve writing? By focusing on what you are doing rather than on how others may or may not think, you will likely create a better product.

4. Map your cognitive-emotive-behavioral writing procrastination process. Tune into what you tell yourself about the writing assignment. How do you feel? How do your emotions affect what you do? What do you do to avoid the writing task? Use this information to start a cycle of positive change. For example, can you identify and punch holes in your writing procrastination thinking? What first step can you take to move from thinking about writing to the process?

5. Decide when to start, and commit to that time. You won't get far unless you start. That's obvious. State the "obvious" to yourself and this can help put the matter into perspective. Before that, commit five-minutes to create a plan: What you do first, second, third, and so forth. Include a schedule where you carve out time for each phase of your self-management writing plan. By pushing yourself to start on time, you may avoid the last minute rush and stresses that typically come at the end of a procrastination cycle.

6. To boost your motivation, set up a reward and penalty system. Identify what you like to do that is pleasurable but not time-consuming, such as reading your favorite news column. (1) After every hour of work (or other suitable time), take five to ten minutes for a planned enjoyable activity. Then get back to the writing activity until you finish. By having many small, meaningful, rewards, you play into your own human nature. People typically go for smaller quicker rewards in preference to the bigger reward that is often far in the future. Follow this path and you can get both. (2) Use penalties for procrastinating. For example, deprive yourself of something pleasurable, such as reading your favorite news column. As a support option for your reward system, write out a contract that included both rewards and penalties, Sign it. Perhaps have someone you know counter-sign as an added incentive to start and finish. This reward system yields a triple reward: A. You have short-term rewards at each phase of the writing process; B. You avoid a penalty by writing, and that is rewarding; C. You finish with less strain and more of a gain and that is rewarding.

7. Expect inertia and prepare to meet that challenge. If you experience inertia, refuse to collapse. If you con yourself into thinking you "can't" break through inertia, could you break through inertia one time for $1 million dollars? Would the feeling of resistance prove too much? If you can break through inertia under these circumstances, then why not apply the same energy to gain ground in both starting and finishing your writing task?

8. Distinguish between "can't" start and "won't" start thinking. Can't implies that an action is outside of your capability. Is it really true that you can't start? Can you start but won't because you perceive and believe the writing project is difficult, uncertain, time-consuming, unpleasant, or other? Won't thinking is a reason for optimism because this thinking is changeable.

9. Plan for re-writes. Completing formal writing tasks typically involves developing ideas, paring them down, and repeating this "draft" process until the work is in good shape. Through revisions you gain control over the shape of the content and of your written expression.

10. Rather than view yourself as stuck in a writing procrastination rut, focus on the free-will component of writing. William James, the founder of American psychology, once wrote less than he wanted and lamented this situation. Following reading the work of the 19th century French Philosopher, Charles Renouvier, James had an epiphany. Renouvier described free-will, or the power to choose one path when you might have chosen another. James thought he could choose a different way, did so, and got much more self-directed written word done.
May 7, 2012 at 11:45pm
May 7, 2012 at 11:45pm
#752504
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJkwbq8Nsw8

{embed:YOUTUBEURL} 1

[Embed For Use By Upgraded+]
May 7, 2012 at 11:27pm
May 7, 2012 at 11:27pm
#752501
My books and short stories for this month of May.



The Watering Place of Good Peace by Geoffrey Jenkins. Randomly picked this up out of bookcase. Incredibly tense and captivating first chapter. It's an adventure story about sharks, and in particular one man who survived a shark attack 10 years earlier (losing both his legs) and is out for an excruciating revenge.
On the Edge, an anthology edited by some guy called Barry.
Reading my way through Ambrose Beirce's short story collection on shortstories.com
A selection of Zane Grey western novels for research.
May 6, 2012 at 8:53pm
May 6, 2012 at 8:53pm
#752412
My personal goal for the weekend just passed was to get cracking on either my Ethan Drane western short or my installment of the No Rest horror novella. I did not achieve this. What I did achieve was this: burning off; completed the.nArrative drive exercise in starting to write; completed. An exercise in "you can write science fiction"; built an action figure fortress for jet; made 3 craft books complete with glue binding and proper book spine; filled out 5 forms for the missus; played wii with tiger and instigated an "I love you" day where everyone had to say "I love you" before someone's name. Little 3 yr old Maxie took to it with gusto. I wont be surprised if he's still doing it when I get home from work today.

Did you achieve your personal goals (writing) this weekend?

This week my personal goal (writing) is to enter Heart & Soul into my download trial of Scrivener. Hopefully, this will motivate he completion of its novelisation.
May 5, 2012 at 7:22pm
May 5, 2012 at 7:22pm
#752346
** Images For Use By Upgraded+ Only **

Craft day with the kids! Bugging the missus because she thought she'd spend the day giving me jobs to do. Lucky for me, it's craft day!

About to fire up the glue gun and make some new craft books. Tigerbelle tells me she was the only kid in her class who didn't burn herself with the school's glue gun. Reminds me of Bart Simpson burning himself on the stove and saying "Hot!" then putting his hand back on the burner, repeatedly. Sounds like a valuable lesson but probably not one in the school's syllabus. Burning little kids with glue guns? Hmmm. Method teaching?

Anyway, time to let Tigerbelle show me her stuff with a gun! P-yow!
May 5, 2012 at 7:40am
May 5, 2012 at 7:40am
#752310
I am five years old. I am into Star Wars figures and Match Box Cars. Tantrums and getting my own way. For the most part, I don't wear shoes. We live in the country, in Outback W.A, but I am fascinated by the city that my mother comes from. Melbourne. It's on the other side of Australia. I know that I will live there some day. My tracksuit always has to match, top to bottom. I get quite upset if it doesn't. I get upset quite a bit. The other day, I wrote "fuk" on the cover of my brother's Invaders comic book. He knew it was me, because out of all the kids there I was the dumbest, he said. I know I am the smartest. I know that one day I will sit by the throne of God, Jesus on one side and me on the other. I think Darth Vader is my father too.

Nine years old. I live in the country. I live in the country on the other side of Australia now. Regional Victoria. I don’t like this town as much as my old one. I have lots of cousins here though. That is why we moved here. My teacher always tells me off for slouching in my seat. She tells me off for everything. We don’t get along very well. I’m confused because I thought that teachers had to like the kids they taught? My Mum just laughs when I tell her this. I also get in trouble a lot for drawing in the columns of my exercise books. I’m into Transformers toys and GI Joe action figures and M.A.S.K. My brother often gets angry with me because I won’t give him my pocket money to help him buy comic books. We get our pocket money from our Dad, who we ran away from in the middle of the night, but he found us. I use my pocket money to buy toys, why would I buy comic books when I can read his? I saw my first real life naked woman the other night. I didn’t mean to. But I did.

Seventeen years old. I'm into smoking cigarettes, drinking southern comfort straight, smoking marajuana, taking acid, having sex with my girlfriend, cutting school and reading comic books. I like grunge music and I have a fringe that reaches past my chin. I have the longest fringe amongst all my long fringe friends. I've been kicked out of home, I live in a townhouse in a retirement village with 2 guys from Melbourne who moved here to escape the big city guns-and-drugs scene. My friends come around, not to see me, but to use my housemates giant bong. I write and draw my own comic books now, as well as reading other peoples. I plan on moving to the city when my girlfriend finishes school and becoming a comic book publisher by night and a printer by day. I do not live with my head up my arse. That is for mid-thirties bald guys who sit at the kitchen table completing exercises from writing books about their youth.

244 Entries · *Magnify*
Page of 13 · 20 per page   < >
Previous ... 4 5 6 7 -8- 9 10 11 12 13 ... Next

© Copyright 2018 Thundersbeard 30DBC JULY HOST (UN: thundersbeard at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
Thundersbeard 30DBC JULY HOST has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.

Printed from https://p15.writing.com/main/books/item_id/1808259-Starting-to-Write/sort_by/entry_order DESC, entry_creation_time DESC/page/8