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Archive for the ‘Writing Process’ Category

Our journey of writing “Nexus” began during a seminar led by Richard G. Green. We didn’t know it then but Richard would become our writing mentor.

Photo of Richard Green

The seminar was about Native story-telling but you anyone was welcome to attend, Native and non-Native. During the seminar, Richard talked about the importance of finding your voice and how writing can be therapeutic. All interesting stuff but what really got us was when he described the eccentric fixtures of a writer’s mind.

While at a bus stop, most people are too busy with their own concerns. But not the writer who is busy checking everyone waiting at the bus-stop. She would create a whole story about each person from just watching them. Amazing Richard was completely describing us our innate curiosity for people and the world.

Most writers are in denial of the fact that they are writers. So, during the break, 6′2″ Richard stood over 5′2″ Deborah and firmly asked: “Are you a writer?”

She hesitantly answered “yes” not knowing what she was getting into. We felt an excitement from admitting that we’re writers. It’s amazing how much energy we put into not admitting something to yourself and when you do then you feel a release.

We had bought Richard’s book on writing, The Writing Experience, an Iroquois guide to written storytelling and used it as our guide to the fascinating world of story-telling………And that’s how our journey began as writers and it led to “Nexus.”

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What inspires an individual’s creativity in writing and other arts? The answer to this question would vary with each individual as perception shapes what is defined as “inspirational.” Though certain sources of inspiration have a common thread, since they are rooted in our shared human experiences. Life gives us everyday opportunities to experience inspiration , though we need our senses open to receive it.

One of the best sources of inspiration can be found in nature, which can inspire us to great poetic heights as evident in To Autumn by John Keats. Beauty of nature creates an aesthetic feeling that is uplifting and enlivens the senses. My writing partner, Deborah Morrison, wrote a beautiful passage “Beauty of Nature” in our book Nexus: A Neo Novel, which depicts the ecstatic experience of Logan Andrews as he is inspired by the beauty that surrounds him on a hilltop.

I find that stepping into natural landscapes changes my perception, since the contours and lines are rounded and less defined there. In cityscapes, everything is harsh and sharply defined and our sensibilities need to step away from the starkness of the city to be reinvigourated. We can compare the sharp boxed buildings found in many cities to the softness of trees found in nature.

This is why I make time to commune with nature and attune to her rhythms. In Southern Ontario, I also enjoy the seasons change. Deborah’s Sacred Circle is one of my favourite poems on the sense of wonder around seasonal changes. Copies of her first poetry book, Mystical Poetry, are now a rare item. In fact, a few weeks ago a used copy sold for around $200 on Amazon Canada. So someone out there is truly inspired by her poems.

The beauty of nature is inspiring at many levels and as artists we struggle to capture our experience of it. How to describe the intricacies of a snowflake? Or the migration of birds, butterflies, whales and other animals? Or the sunset on a beach? Sometimes we find the words or the image to commit to canvas. At other times the inspiration is there, yet we struggle to communicate the essence of our experience. The pristine experience is rarefied through our artistic endeavours.

We welcome you to share on what you find inspiring about nature. Or your own experiences of nature expressed in your own words or art.

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“Nexus” is now being offered with “The Secret” at a special price on Amazon.ca when both books are puchased together. Click on the icon below to visit the link.

Buy Nexus with The Secret by Rhonda Byrne today!

Nexus The Secret

Total List Price: CDN$ 46.41
Buy Together Today: CDN$ 30.98

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To know yourself is the most important aspect of spiritual life.
While no book can reveal this fully, since knowing yourself is a personal journey for each individual. Yet the journey of each person in NEXUS touches the mind and especially the heart. Words are powerful as they can reveal, heal, illuminate and move the spirit. They can act on our mind as a balm.

Ever since I can remember, this quasi-magical quality of language, where the words act upon our psyche to create new insights and meaning, has always fascinated me. The richness of symbolic meaning is given life by our imagination and consciousness.

This is why I have been fascinated by mystical and spiritual language because realities outside ordinary experience are made real by rich symbols. Writing became an extension of this fascination with creative possibilities contained in language.

Deborah and I wrote NEXUS to offer readers a unique journey from surface pain and sorrow to the realization of a deeper peace that is within us – at the core of our being. Journey to this innermost part is “connecting to the Nexus within” and our novel explores this search.

The search for peace is not something new. Ancient civilizations have quested for the answer to self-knowledge contained in an essential question: “Who am I?”

This self-inquiry yields our infinitude as we move past labels of name, nationality, race, gender and religion. At the surface level are these labels deep within is peace.

Our mind is full of worry but when we can objectify our thoughts, we realize that our true nature is outside the thoughts as an ever-present spiritual reality. That realization is the essence of peace. Surface thoughts and emotions pass away like shadows cast by moving clouds, yet at our centre we can find stillness, silence and peace.

The outside is like the rim of a wheel always spinning but the central hub is steady and peaceful.

Wheel

In NEXUS, we experientially explore many insights into spiritual life in the narrative. The journey of personal transformation needs to communicate to the heart. So it can’t be a theory of living but a unique experience of personal transformation from the struggles of people in the novel.

Each person needs to reconnect to their inner centre of peace, their Nexus within, in order to find the source of compassion, peace and strength. Of course, the centre is always there except it can be covered by hurt and pain of experiences.

In some cases, the affliction can be deeply buried like a wound. So it requires conscious awareness before release is possible. After the heart is unburdened from laden emotions, then the truth of who you really are can be known.

Peace is not something we have to find, since it is always within us. Rather we need to uncover it. Our surface condition has an apparent reality, yet true transformation comes from within – at the core of our being.

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Nexus is derived from Latin nectere, which means “to bind.” First of its three possible definitions will be explored in this article. Definition 1: Nexus as a means of connection, link or a tie.

A connected relationship involves a union between two or more people. We are familiar with many bonds between two individuals, which starts with our first experience of attachment, our mother, who can often be our nurturer, caregiver and protector. This bond is significant for Logan Andrews, the protagonist of our story, since his mother raised him as a single parent during his adolescence. A child often can feel the strongest bond with his or her mother, since she gave birth and raised the child in her womb. Even after birth, a child will often turn to the mother for sustenance.

The bond with the father develops next, since the child and the father are separate entities. They develop a concrete relationship after birth. Many of the same qualities can be present in father-child relationship as with mother-child, except fathers have often been distant due to traditional roles. As with any relationship, complex issues can surface and the relationship between Logan and his father is built upon regret and missed opportunities. The bond isn’t severed because the hope however remote of reconnecting is there until physical death, yet it has lost its closeness a long time ago. Will the closeness ever be established between Logan and his father before he dies?

Next we move into the level of relationship that love songs, “chick flicks” and Harlequin books depend upon: The coupled relationship. But what does it mean to be in love? Is it a feeling that we desire, or is it truly an attempt to transcend our narrow self through union with another? Some people can also be hurt by fully giving their heart to another. With the resulting hurt and pain, they can in severe cases decide to close down to life.

With Logan he experienced a deep ecstatic love with Sarah McMaster. A love that would fit the definitions of soul-mates, united in mind, body and spirit. Yet Logan loses her and this becomes his painful tragedy from which he seeks escape through suicide. Still a part of him yearns to live and to love. Nexus becomes a psycho-spiritual struggle based on this inner conflict. So far we have looked at relationships between two individuals and the bond between them. Of course, relationships can also extend outward to include a group of people as part of a circle.

Besides Logan and Sarah, Nexus also has an interesting mix of other personalities. One of the most endearing characters is Muriel, a loving widow whose faith gives her certainty that she will reunite with her husband after this life. Yet, she also wants to be part of a community before she dies. As you read our novel, you will know if she fulfills her wish.

In Nexus, we wanted to show through the journey of each character the importance of empathy, which is aroused through intimately understanding another person. Each of us has experienced moments of joy, sadness, despair and even loneliness. These experiences of highs and lows give us the capacity to relate to and know the contents of another person’s heart in all its myriad emotions.

Our empathy creates the connection between us and another person and this is precisely the nexus, the connection that the book presents as having the potential to reconnect us in our relationships.

Our connection isn’t just at a human level, we can feel the same empathy for animals and all life around us. I would even say that we have an intimate relationship with Mother Earth, though living in cities that connection is not always apparent. Yet our sustenance and survival as a species comes from Gaia just as a child’s comes from his or her mother.

Logan poignantly experiences the pain of a dying fish, expressing the idea that all life is interconnected at a spiritual level. No pain or suffering is isolated, so long as compassion enters the heart. So the circle of empathy can extend outward from that between two people, to an intimate group that attempts to form a community, and ultimately to the connection between all life. In the process, of each unique relationship our heart also grows in its capacity to love and to be present with others in our shared journey through life and possibly even after. The book also hints at the dimension of our connection beyond this life. Moments of being present, especially at the end of a person’s life journey are important and we also experience them in Nexus.

The nexus found in relationships becomes a major motif throughout our novel as we explore the connection between each character and those around them, in the process highlighting compassion and heart-centered living. Through this connection, the holistic vision of the self can be realized instead of a divided self.

Awareness of Nexus is not easy and both Sarah and Logan undergo challenges. When you read Nexus, you will learn about each character’s unique journey and discover if they can overcome their challenges.

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Evolution of human history has focused outwardly, since satisfaction of physiological needs had been paramount. We have with technology and science learned how to control many aspects of the outer world, though a clear gap exists between, developed and underdeveloped. What remains as part of human transformation no matter where you live is the inner journey. This is precisely what Nexus is all about.

It is a movement from the outer shell of mental agitation to a quiet place of peace within. It is this place that great spiritual leaders, both ancient and modern, accessed for both inspiration and personal transformation.

We wanted to share with readers a way to create personal transformation & empowerment in our life through the journey of each person in the book. The transformation for each person is different involving meditation exercises, yoga, psychological understanding, spiritual insights and vivid experiences.

Nexus presents a holistic vision and an organic process of transformation derived from psychological, spiritual and social development of each individual in the story. It shows that through our access to the source of human creativity, we can regain lost hope due to pain, sorrow, loneliness, depression and despair. Nexus offers solutions to existing problems, since our greatest circle of influence is our own transformation first and foremost. Before we can make social changes, we need to look within ourselves and find the source of inspiration and guidance. Through the connection to the source, the Nexus we can empower ourselves and others.

Through Nexus you can learn:

  1. To enhance quality of our lives from the personal journey of each person in the story
  2. About transformation and personal development as each person in the novel connects to their Nexus
  3. About relationship and spiritual insights, which are important to people as shown by the popularity of shows like Oprah or Dr. Phil
  4. The importance of the inner journey in personal growth
  5. A holistic vision where we can be united through our empathy with one another

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The book launch for “Nexus” at Chapters Meadowlands on Sunday November 5 was successful thanks to people who attended. We are thankful to everyone who bought copies of “Nexus.” Of course, we couldn’t do it without Chapters – Ancaster for providing the space and equipment, our publisher, Michael B. Davie, for being a delightful host, and Ian Thomas for sharing his wit and insights with us.

When we first walked into the Chapters bookstore, we noticed the Holiday Season decorations were already up. In fact, the displays came up right after Halloween, since retailers count on doing brisk business at this time.

Wide Shot with Authors

Copies of “Nexus” were prominently displayed on our table, which allowed us to personally sign copies of our book during breaks along with lively conversation with people over cookies and coffee.

Our reading for “Nexus” was from 12:00 to 1:00 PM before the book launch of “Bequest” by Ian Thomas, which is a unique murder mystery where the main character, Professor George Moss, has a special psychic gift inherited from his predecessors.

Ian Thomas, besides his wit, is a celebrated Canadian singer and songwriter of hits like “Painted Ladies,” “Liars,” “Pilot” and “Hold on.” He has successfully taken his song-writing abilities to writing with his first novel. His book is also published by Manor House, which brings us to our publisher, Michael B. Davie, who was the MC for the event. He read many off-beat and hilarious poems from “Poetry for the Insane.”

Michael B. Davie with Authors of NexusArvind Singh, Michael B. Davie & Deborah Morrison with their book “Nexus”

Michael had previously published Deborah’s book of poetry, “Mystical Poetry.” Since Debby has a good experience with her first book, we felt comfortable to ask him to publish “Nexus.”

We were ready to start reading but our microphone was only a hand-held one without a stand. But like a unexpected twist in a plot, we needed to adapt quickly. So we became pros with using our hands, except at times two hands were just not enough. So, Debby and I became each other’s third and even fourth hand during our reading.

Reading with Microphone

Michael welcomed everyone and introduced Debby before she began her first reading. She gave an introduction to “Nexus” and then began her First Selection, which highlighted the struggle of Logan Andrews climb to the top of a hill. During a short break, we had engaged discussion with people about our novel and our journey as writers. We also sold more copies of “Nexus.”

Bob Lumbers, a tall man with a heart of gold, agreed to be our official photographer. So most photos from our launch are taken by him. Here is a photo that I took of Bob with Deborah:

Bob & Deborah

The Second Reading by Debby drew attention of even many otherwise engaged shoppers because it resonated with current social changes. My passages were shorter than those selected by Deborah. They included the following selections:

Logan’s Vision in a Dream

Sarah Closes the Door on Logan

Compassion for a Dying Fish

Petals Floating

I concluded the Book Launch for “Nexus” and soon we had Ian Thomas join us with insights into “Bequest.” We were glad to have Ian with us, especially since we wanted to find out more about him, his book and his experience as a writer.

“Bequest” reads like a murder mystery and a novel that highlights corporate greed along with the strange gift of sight handed down generations. It keeps your interest with a level of suspense that makes you turn the next page. Apart from the suspense, the many lovable characters along with wisdom expressed in poignant phrases are the greatest strength of “Bequest.” Here is our photo with Ian:

Deborah, Ian & Arvind

We had a lot of fun at our Book Launch, thanks to Ian, Michael and everyone who attended our event. Our weekend will be busy with two book launches. One is in Burlington’s Indigo Bookstore on Saturday. Then on Sunday a book launch in Toronto at Chapters – Festival Hall near the MuchMusic building.

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In literature as in life, heroic qualities are found not in a perfect human being, rather they can lie hidden in a person who on the surface does not exhibit obvious heroic qualities. The anti-hero is a troubled individual who can be filled with fears expressed in frailties and anxieties, unlike a traditional hero who stands resolute with clear conviction, idealism or courage. In this way, an anti-hero is more true to life than an exalted hero. A hero emerges through the conquest of fears, no matter what the outcome. We often confuse public success with being a hero when in fact the heroic act started with overcoming personal fears.

We may dream of emulating heroic virtues in our lives, yet most of us can more readily relate to the anti-hero figure, since s/he is a figure not on a pedestal but walks among us. Yet the anti-hero can turn out to be a hero through death and resurrection of the self.

Logan Andrews, the anti-hero of Nexus, is conflicted after the loss of important relationships in his life. He is an awkward, alienated, passive and in some ways pitiful character, whose journey shows the conflict between self-destruction and a disordered attempt to reclaim life.

His journey can end in one of two ways: either in death or in final resurrection. His journey through many initiations makes him a hero because he struggles within himself. In this way, he evolves into a pathetic hero, not a hero in the traditional sense but a hero fit for a postmodern understanding.

Logan’s primary journey is to lose himself and the self-protection he has built up around him to guard against possible hurt and pain. Of course, such walls also disconnect him from life and human connections. So a transformation is needed at the level of conscious awareness, if he is to succeed in reconnecting and breaking the walls around his heart.

Even as a anti-hero, Logan commits some heroic acts. The most important being to trust his intuition and begin his journey to a spiritual retreat. There he meets his ex, Sarah McMaster, and old passions are ignited with potential to destroy or to fulfil the destiny of the two soul mates.

Subconscious forces are at play and conscious intentions cannot control energies unleashed, whether of sexual attraction or vengeful anger. Conscious intentions are not running events at the retreat, subconscious motivations have great powers.

The teachers offer guidance, yet they can only show the way. Each character makes their own journey. The greatest challenge for Logan is the struggle between his higher and lower consciousness. If he fails, he gives himself to the dark forces within himself and if he succeeds he experiences a glorious life free of doubts, anxieties and fears through a transcendent experience of a connection to all life.

He needs to find out what’s ticking inside him. If he can do so then he erases his fears and anxieties and in the process he can reclaim his life. Otherwise, he loses the gamble and is conquered by lower forces. Then he will go down the path of self-destruction.

He needs to know his centre, otherwise he will be torn apart in his psyche. Nirvana is a psychological state untouched by desire, fear or compulsion. So as one dies to the old states of mind, a new consciousness can emerge. If Logan succeeds then he transforms in his life from an anti-hero to a hero. Even if he fails, he still becomes a hero through his struggle with life no matter what the outcome.

Logan is a hero, since he took the journey and went through difficult initiations. Life can have many struggles, great or small, yet as anti-heros in our own lives, we cannot give up. We have to go through our own initiations and develop courage and confidence to live our lives with peace, love and centeredness.

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What would be an appropriate definition of writer’s block? Well, most of us have experienced it at one time or another. While in this context it is associated with the act of writing, I think anyone who works in a creative field can experience a block in their performance whether it be artists, musicians, actors or even public speakers.

An analysis of this block outside and within writing reveals that it has to do with feeling uninspired i.e. losing creative energy.

We feel that we’ve lost our creativity or inspiration. Of course, this is only a temporary condition like stage fright. Once you regain composure, you realize this also will pass.

So how do you overcome writer’s block. These strategies may also prove useful to people in other fields.

Strategies for Overcoming Writer’s Block:

  • Take a break, go for a walk, breathe deeply, relax, meditate or any other activity that you enjoy
  • Do something different that will give you new experience and help you regain your creative understanding through a new perspective
  • Leave the writing for couple of days
  • Continue to write whatever comes to mind, you can always revise your ideas later

Interesting “writer’s” block features prominently in a in a few of the following movies:

SecretWindow (based on a novel by Stephen King) stars Johnny Depp as Mort Rainey, a successful writer who deals with his writer’s block by isolating himself at a lakeside cabin. I won’t spoil the movie for anyone who hasn’t seen it but I certainly hope none of us deals with our writer’s block the way Mort does by the end of the movie.

Johnny Depp in Secret Window
Johnny Depp as Mort Rainey

In 8 1/2, a 1963 film directed by Federico Fellini, we have Guido Anselmi suffering from 8 1/2director’s block. He loses interest in his movie due to marriage problems.

The film is available in the Criterion Collection of costly but fine films. So even directors suffer from this condition. :)

 

 

Shakespeare in Love (1998) features young William Shakespeare played by JosephShakespeare Fiennes, who suffers from, yes you guessed it…playwriter’s block.

Of course, the movie is a dramatization, we don’t know if the real Wil suffered from it. It’s a movie with an intelligent plot, which is rare to find in the romantic comedy genre.

 

Throw Mama from the Train is a black comedy that features Billy Crystal as Larry Throw Mama from the TrainDonner, a struggling writer who teaches creative writing course at a community college.

He blames his ex-wife, Margaret, for stealing his idea for a book. Her book becomes a great success and Larry’s anger keeps him stuck in writer’s block.

 

 

 

Despite its low sales, I liked Wonder Boys when I watched it a few years after its release Wonder Boysin 2000. Michael Douglas stars as Grady Tripp, a very likeable Professor, whose third wife has left him and he is unable to repeat the success of his first novel.

The more he tries to finish, the less happy he is with the ending. His novel runs into several thousand pages and it’s still not finished.

In his case, the writer’s block stems from wanting to find a satisfactory elusive ending.

 

Well, now you know from the few movies cited that your writer’s block is something that even Hollywood finds interesting. So just relax and know your creativity will return at the right time. Until then, make writer’s block your friend. It’s asking you to take a well deserved break from your writing. Good friends always let you know when you’re working too hard. That’s why your friend, let’s call him WB for short, asks you to chill, relax and have fun.

Why struggle with a friend who only wants to help you?

 

 

 

 

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In The 6 Stages of Writing, I had clarified the components of the Writing Process, and a follow up post discussed these stages as interrelated not separate stages. The first stage of the writing process begins with pre-writing. So this will be the first of a series of posts, which will look at each stage in greater depth. For a definition of each stage you can read my previous posts on this topic.

Pre-writing involves a number of strategies aimed at exploring your topic. Debbie and I found the use of an outline to be most useful. So we will begin first look at this strategy.

OUTLINE: Debby devised the outline based on our discussions. We had an overall theme in it of the importance of compassion. Then we developed a chapter-by-chapter structure based on certain topics we wanted to discuss. Originally our material was intended as a self-growth manual with insights and reflections. Over time, we realized that a narrative style would work better with our ideas and it would prove more interesting for us and readers, since it would involve a journey with each character. Outline can be complex or basic, depending on you and your writing. Here is the structure of our outline:

Main statement of our book: Follow the soul not the ego.

Chapter 1: Opening of novel with dramatic start and introduction to main character and his conflict

Chapter 2: Listening to Higher Guidance

Chapter 3: Introduction to retreat setting and characters there. Talk on trusting your intuition.

Chapter 4: Importance of inner peace

Chapter 5: Importance of motivation

Chapter 6: Compassion demonstrated by the main character

Chapter 7: Call to remove ego’s fear and hurt

Chapter 8: Ego versus soul

Chapter 9: Importance of discovering your Life Purpose and importance of Non-violence

Chapter 10: Fight with lower self or ego

Chapter 11: Violence versus Courage

Chapter 12: Conclusion

This was not our first outline because our story idea had changed from a contemplative book about ideas to a narrative story where readers could experientially understand our insights according to their understanding.

BRAINSTORMING: Basically this is coming up with a lot of ideas quickly without concern about filtering those ideas. These words or thoughts can be the raw material that will develop into a more structured outline. An example of brainstorming:

Brainstorming on Compassion

You can also connect different ideas together with brainstorming like “compassion” and words associated with it can relate them to “connection” and words relating to it. This is called clustering and it is another useful strategy for the pre-writing stage.

CLUSTER:

Clustering allows you to uncover relationships between ideas. It’s like a web of ideas on paper. Here is an example of a cluster.

Cluster

5 W’S & H: These questions allow you expand on your topic or to clarify your ideas.

5 W’s are:

  1. Who?
  2. What?
  3. When?
  4. Where?
  5. Why?

Lone H:

  1. How?

These questions allow you to quickly develop your topic. Journalists often use these questions to scope out a story, you can use them to better understand your topic.

Pre-writing is a fun stage where your creativity can generate ideas. It’s a stage where your writing project is developing and you are giving your ideas a structure. So use the most appropriate strategy for your pre-writing development of your ideas.

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