Haole Girl
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Sat Jul-25-09 04:38 PM
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| Please be gentle, since it is my first post in the Writing Group |
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"Summertime"
The stress slowly eases out of my body my mind wanders back and forth between past summers and now
It's so odd, isn't it, how easily bored we are as children and how we long for empty days as an adult?
Maybe not empty but less hectic with time to sit on a porch or to be fearless because the only worry was to be home before dark
Old bones prevent me from being as reckless as I'd like and sometimes I think it is nature's way of preserving longevity
So when we feel our days are short, and it becomes difficult to remember sitting on the front porch asking our friends, "What do you want to do?" with wet swimsuits drying in the sun
we aren't too tempted to try and do everything else we always wanted to.
***
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sandnsea
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Sat Jul-25-09 05:37 PM
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Haole Girl
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Sat Jul-25-09 05:59 PM
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Tangerine LaBamba
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Sat Jul-25-09 07:50 PM
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and it's not a poem.
It's an outline.
Maybe someday you'll write it out in fuller flesh and tell the story that's hidden inside all those lovely words.
I'd like to read it if and when you ever do.....................
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Haole Girl
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Sat Jul-25-09 08:09 PM
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I was always accused of "not elaborating" in school.
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Tangerine LaBamba
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Sat Jul-25-09 08:11 PM
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| 5. I had to learn, in law school, |
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how to sketch out every step in what went into building a case, or deciding one. It was hard - as you know - because simply stating conclusions is so easy.
But it was great training for my life later as a novelist and essayist. Now, it's just second nature.
Practice, practice, practice. Too many words is no sin, because the unnecessary ones can be erased.............................
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DavidDvorkin
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Sun Jul-26-09 05:14 PM
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We have to be, because writers tend to be such misfits in the outside world.
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Tangerine LaBamba
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Sun Jul-26-09 08:55 PM
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some of us have lived quite nicely in the traditional world, even enjoying ourselves.
That myth of the tortured misfit is just that. Writers are just people. We're no different than any other folks.
And if you think writers are "... a friendly gang ...", write and publish a best-seller, and then see what happens with your fellow writers.
As an old-timer said to me when my first book went big, "You do understand that it's not just that I need to succeed in order to feel good. I also need for you to fail."
We're still good friends, me and Harry.............................
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DavidDvorkin
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Mon Jul-27-09 08:54 AM
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| 8. Sure, I live in the traditional world, too |
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But I, and most of the other writers I know, are fairly introverted, introspective, and not socially comfortable or adept.
I have to say, too, that my fellow writers have been supportive of my career, and I have been of theirs.
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Tangerine LaBamba
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Mon Jul-27-09 04:39 PM
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| 9. Your publication party will show you |
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a whole new world, and you'll get a kick out of it.
Your publicist will invite a whole bunch of well-known writers, just to jazz up the scene and to make the papers - the NY papers, mostly - and you'll encounter a world of networks and friendships and lots of socializing, which sounds incompatible to writing, but after a long stretch spent working alone, the company is vital. And writers are great storytellers, not to mention that the professional competition makes for some wonderful creative tension.
My writer pals have been grand to me every step of the way, and, if not for the friendship of just two writers, I'd never be in this game.
One other thing you'll discover - if my experience holds true: the bigger and better they are, the nicer they are. Success and brilliance are a delicious combination, and you'll meet some terrific people, who will also be glad to welcome a new member into their midst. Doesn't dull the competition thing, but the people who greeted me when I broke into the business were generous and warm, and it seems to be a tradition that's passed down. I meet new writers at these parties, and it's always nice to watch as the group grows by one.................................
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DavidDvorkin
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Mon Jul-27-09 05:33 PM
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| 10. I've been in the business since the mid-70s, so I've met quite a few |
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big names over the years. Some of the big ones were nice, some were jerks. I assume they were jerks when they were small, and getting bigger didn't improve them.
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Tangerine LaBamba
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Mon Jul-27-09 05:39 PM
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| 11. Ah, you're an old pro - |
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I've only been writing since 1998, so you've got 'way more experience than I have.
Silly for me to try to give you pointers. What a screw-up! Ah, well, the best of intentions, and all that.
I just wish you the best of everything with your novel...................
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DavidDvorkin
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Mon Jul-27-09 06:16 PM
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kimmerspixelated
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Thu Sep-10-09 05:20 PM
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| 13. One great place to receive feedback |
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in a gentle and supportive way is The Next Big Writer. You might give them a try.
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Haole Girl
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Thu Sep-24-09 09:59 AM
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| 14. Thank you for the suggestion. nt |
jotsy
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Tue Jan-12-10 02:45 AM
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| 15. Ah, the sweet air of innocence in the breeze of reminiscence. |
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Nicely done, IMO. You call well to younger years and all those long hazy days of summer. All the time we had to frolic that got condensed to a twelfth of itself once we're deemed grown.
I'm fond of describing something I think akin to this phenomenon a different way.
We spend the first five years of our lives trying to get out of taking our nap, about a decade where we don't care one way or the other and the rest of our lives trying to get back to where we can take one!
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Occulus
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Wed Feb-17-10 02:23 AM
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I like lines 27-30 (I count blank lines as lines; don't know if that's a convention or not).
"to remember sitting on the front porch asking our friends, "What do you want to do?" with wet swimsuits drying in the sun"
That was my summer, many many times over when I was a kid.
Thanks for the memory.
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Haole Girl
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Sat Feb-20-10 09:13 PM
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