“To be with the one I love and to think of something else: this is how I have my best ideas, how I best invent what is necessary to my work. Likewise for the text: it produces, in me, the best pleasure if it manages to make itself heard indirectly…”
This is Barthes’ observation in The Pleasure of the Text.
Why would it be the case, writer, that our best ideas come indirectly? What power lay hidden beneath our floorboards, in the back of the cupboard, waiting for us to grope and grasp at another object altogether so that we may say with surprise, ‘Look what I found’?
You always make me wonder. Thank you
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My pleasure. Thanks for reading.
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Individual Valuations mysterious questions depending on the locality.
Here, then, a mysterious one dives in and stays until you find something, but it’s worth it to stay(°J°)))
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It is like x-ray vision. It’s a superpower, some weird kind of clarity.
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What if we want to take it out, from the realm of the mystical/magical, and examine it in cold light? Would it disappear?
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I would say quite possibly. It might be a hyper state of chemical stimulation. 😀
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I connected with this post quite strongly; some of my best ideas came from the sideways places. Try to think and you’ll lose it, but stop thinking and the idea unfolds itself.
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Yes, that’s it exactly. I wish I understood it better but if I approach it head on there’s nothing there.
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I think the whole point is not to understand and to let things -or your writing- talk on their/its own. It’s more a form of listening, as opposed to asking.
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Ideas come from thin air. Trying to chase them is always a mistake.
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I can’t help but chase them Colin. 🙂
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Dreams are so much better…
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When a sudden prompt to write about something nudges me, It’s those hidden little sparks thar are the most refreshing to work with. It is always a surprise to me to find out what I have to say. Your words are very inspiring, and your artwork is amazing!
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Yes! Sometimes it is a pleasant surprise. Thank you for reading and thinking with me.
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♥️
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🦋
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It like looking into the mind. Search at cupboard for misplaced things that turn into amazing stories. Have a great day writing ✍️
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There is certain something magical in all of this. When I get stuck (as I have been lately), I go back to Elizabeth Gilbert’s book on writing, Big Magic. It reminds me to keep at it–the stories appear and connect is to something much bigger.
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Do you go to something unrelated to writing and find writing there? Look for a tissue and find a poem, for example.
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Beethoven symphonies–loud. Watching clouds. Hiking by the river or a mountain trail. Good latte in a coffee shop. Playing the violin. I think key for me is going to some other part of the brain for a while.
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Yes. Thank you for writing Vicki.
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