Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Intro to Write With RCS

 Write With RCS: An introduction to a writing niche 


             Here are some little essays on writing. There are a couple of more in the works and ideas for couple of more in mind That seems enough to begin this little niche blog dealing with writing.

             Over the years I have had several blogs, but nearly all of them have had a mix of many topics. I have seen and believed that the better blogs nearly always have a discrete topic or niche. So, now I intend to try and have such a blog.

 
            My present suggestion to bloggers, including myself, is to sort and present your writings into clearly defined areas. My first efforts to that end will be this blog on writing. "Writing" may not be enough of a clearly defined area. So, it seems I have a great deal of room for improvement.
 
            This blog will deal with the practice of writing. It may become a "how to" start writing and keep writing and include suggestions for getting "unstuck." It may include a suggestion or two for completing a useful draft. I will probably post of seeing our writing as a process of self-development and growth. The posts here will be about bettering our writing.
 
            It is beginning to sound like a "how to blog." Maybe I should call this blog, Hints For Bettering Our Writing. I say 'our' and mean 'our.' So I will appreciate your comments, suggestions, corrections, and hints for better writing because I need them. There is a "comment" window below where you can write to us. Your commenting can be anonymous, but it is better if you can identify yourself. Of course you an identify yourself with a pen name if you wish. 

            To start a valuable piece of writing, consider making a problem interesting and follow by offering a useful solution.
 
 
                                                                                                            Richard C. Sheehan     



In a Writing Group

 Are you serious about having a group?

                Tell me about it. I am interested; I may even be able to offer some help, or to try to do so. And remember, you do not have to have one. Many successful writers have never had the experience of a group. Most have received some feedback and many have benefited from that feedback.

The following few paragraphs may help you in your efforts to recruit group members and even help to keep a a group to keep going:

                Talk feedback. An important, and appreciated, function of your group can be providing feedback to one another. There are effective ways of doing so. I will try to touch on a couple of those ways here.

                Other purposes for your group can include: inspiring you to write, improving the effectiveness of your words, and help you to feel satisfaction in your development. On this blog are an increasing number of posts calculated to improve your chances of pleasing a reader. These posts can help you to continue writing well with or without a group. You are welcome to explore them all.

Back to group feedback:

                Selections of members' writing may be read in group, yours too. This can be an important step toward providing useful feedback to a writer. Useful feedback begins with careful reading of her work. Often the entire group will participate in providing feedback on a given selection. I like to hear the selection read aloud to the whole group a couple of times. Group members will volunteer their comments and all are encouraged to do so. Group members will often quickly learn to make their feedback more honest and more helpful with little need for encouragement. Still, it is OK to encourage them.

                Writers may find that more reading may move them to better writing. 
A writer will appreciate a careful reading of her work. Should the writer be male he is likely to appreciate a careful reading of his work.

Reading:

              As a reader don't be nervous in telling how a given selection affected you. Your job can be well done just by honestly saying something about what happened to you as you read her selection. With this you will be making a great beginning and also doing that which will continue to be helpful over time.

                Some preparation may be called for. At times a piece may be read to you a couple of times in group. At other times you may take a written copy home to read carefully more than once. Everyone ought to be prepared to give feedback. Everyone will begin to learn a bit about providing feedback useful to the writer. The practice of honesty is a good practice to follow. Honesty can be kind and even loving as well as cutting and brutal. When you are not sure what kind of honesty is best at the time, it is usually best to choose kind and considerate.  

                Your good reading habits may get even better as you read the works of your fellow writers. You may come to pay better attention to your own feelings during your reading and even remember their occasion. Better reading often results in improved writing.

More about feedback:

                Upon hearing or reading a writers work, be ready to tell her how her words led you to react or feel. Tell her what happened to you as you read her words. You can also tell her what you understood or failed to understand from her writing. If the piece bored you, tell her so. Be honest. If you had a cold and had not slept well before your reading, let her know that it may have affected your reaction to her work.

                Do your best to complete your assigned reading. You may even suggest that it might be best for you to complete a reading during group time or to listen to a reading during group time. It's your group too. It is still unfair not to read. It is best to aim to read near your best. Read the work a second time and note the difference. Be a good reader to help others to write better and to give yourself a chance to write better. Be a better than average reader even when it feels somewhat burdensome to do so. You can tell the writer that it was burdensome. You can also tell him what you thought he was getting at and what seemed to be his main points. Your honesty can be very helpful.

                You can often help a fellow writer by telling him, or her, when and at what point, in your reading you felt perplexed, annoyed, or disappointed, enlightened, pleased and satisfied. Say what made you laugh or smile. Say when you got it and felt pleased. Say when the work felt rewarding.

                You now know some of the responsibility of a reader at feedback time.

                At that same time the writer's job is to hear the feedback, to be quiet and listen. Then to consider how to use the information to help her, or him, to write to better effect or to continue to practice his or her wonderful ability.

                Much of your ability to write well may develop with practice and experience at some distance from both class and group. Still classes have helped many, and group is helping may more, to develop their talent and ability.

                Thank you for reading.

                Keep writing.




                                                                                                 rcs

              

Writing: Rambling Glimpses of My Development

Words to the Readers of Writing With RCS 


                    We are learning to write well. Writing well is a bit different for each of use. For most of us, writing well includes being understood. I have come to believe that writing is an ongoing developmental process. In that process we often develop as much as our writing does. That development includes growth, maturation, cooking, transformation and like that. It seems to let more meaning and understanding into our lives. All this occurs whether we are aware of it or not. Sooner or later we usually do become aware that the process changes us. That awareness gives us a chance to co-opperate with it.
          

"Too soon old, too late smart"

                    I forget who told me that he heard an older immigrant say them. It seems to have caused them both an introspective thought or two. Looking back, I see that I was long mostly unconscious that my writing was developing me perhaps even more than I was developing it. It's a wonderous world, we can, and do improve without being aware of the sources of our growth or its source. I do now see that I was learning and coming to new understandings of my world and of myself. It is a pleasing discovery.

                    I also discovered that I very often know what I was talking about until I completed writing about it. I hesitate to add that, in an important sense, I have never come to completely come to completely know the nature of  "it."

                    So, in a sense, I have never completed writing anything. Now when I write, I know that I am clarifying my present understanding in a way I hope I can help another to understand. I have more to learn, more to put together. As I practice writing the process of  my development is enhanced.

Five Little Steps. Wait for them.......

                    I have just been looking at some notes of mine and see a little list of  five steps. I have found it useful as a way to see where I am in the process of writing a piece. I tells me about my progress. It has been a help and a comfort, but it has not provided me with details of how to write.

Memories:

                    A lot of memories and thoughts are coming to mind just now, doings and happenings related to writing. A good happening to one wishing to write of writing. I am remembering that I read a lot and still read. I believe that doing so helps me to write. I did not analyze the way a work was written. I just enjoyed the content and tried to understand it.  Sometimes I just read as fast as I could so that I could "getto the good parts." 

                    I discovered "vocabulary." I enjoyed my growing vocabulary. It helped me to think better and it helped me, I thought, to better explain my understandings to others. I began to think with my wonderful vocabulary. I believed that, with it, I could make myself understood, not only to myself, but also to others.

                    I began to use my wonderful vocabulary on my on my friends and my family and to as many more as I could with my writing. I soon found that a few who found my vocabulary gratifying, but they were very few! Many, I discovered, did not know what in the world I was talking about. I was not very aware that meanings could be expressed in a variety of ways, some more appropriate to the moment than were others.

                    About this time I became a young traveler and writer of letters.I wrote mostly to my mother and my sister and used some of my wonderful vocabulary. They wrote back telling me that they loved my writing and my letters and that they laughed and laughed. I was pleased that they enjoyed my humor, but I thought that they were missing some of my descriptions of scenes I had enjoyed. Had my descriptions been boring. No, I had used my wonderful vocabulary to paint realistic pictures and to include the mood which they had evoked.

                    As I remember, I was told that the joy of these ladies of my family included rolling on the floor holding their sides from so much laughter. Their laughter, they explained, came from the nature of my very poor spelling, and from their efforts to pronounce my written version of the English language. 

                    I knew my spelling was not wonderful in any positive sense. There were reasons for the poor quality which did not include sloth,, much sloth. I had learned to read with no conscious knowledge of paragraphs, sentences, words or letters. No alphabet for me. I was read to at an early age and had opportunity to look at that which was being read, sometimes being indicated by a moving finger. Slowly I came to recognize words and their meaning and to gain some concept of sentences. I was even slower to recognize individual letters and their significance.
So I was recognizing meaning in writing before I understand the nature of individual words or letters. I did come to see that certain groupings had certain meanings and even certain ways to be said. I was nearly an adult before I recognized that letters in words had much to do with the way they were pronounced. To this day it is difficult for me to attend to letters and their ordering in words. 

                    The idea is that I came to reading with little understanding of letters, words, or their "sounding out." I thank the developers of  "spell check." My knowledge of reading contributed less than usual to my ability to spell. I neglected letters. I was not conscious of being bothered by this until I began to receive bad marks on spelling tests in the 3rd grade. Than I thought I was born a bad speller and might benefit from writing the same word over and over again.

                    The fact that there was not yet a kindergarten in the public school system, that I never entered first grade, and that I entered 2nd grade twice, and entered 3rd grade with never having completed second grade very likely contributed to my condition.

Beginning to write:

                    Forward to my days of writing. As I struggled with my spelling and wonderful vocabulary, became willing to make my writing more accessible to readers. I did not truly realize that my writing, and even a bit of my speech, had become what might be called academic and literary. What I did was to invent am imaginary brother whom I loved and respected, but who did to enjoy or even appreciate my vocabulary, and perhaps my sometime large jumps in logic. This invented person with whom I very much want to share the thoughts and meanings of my writings. I had much to share with him, much of which it was not easy for me to express.

                    I decided to use language which I was more sure that we held in common. And, also to try to write so as t be more careful to fill in all the gaps or neglected steps in my logic. (I wish I had a doctor who had the same idea.) I had much to learn, but it was an improvement in my writing. However, half a centaury later, I am still slowly learning to express a fuller meaning of that which I want to say in a language that would be clear to a reader, and to me too. I am still finding that my writing, my writing practice is helping me to have the meaning I want to express more clearly in my mind.

Internet readers:

                    The internet is a problem for me because I have been unable to get to know my readers. It has been impossible for me to imagine them accurately. Still imagining helps a bit. Feedback helps. Years ago, when I had many more readers world wide. Most of them were from the US, followed by Europe. I began to receive many comments from Eastern Europe and began to get a better concept of to whom I was writing and the nature of their interests. That knowledge and feedback helped me to write better. Then I traveled for a time and finally decided to move from the US to Colombia and from my lack of publishing I lost a great many followers. I began to get a few returning and a few new followers, and along came "Covid 19" and I lost more readers. Also it now seems that a smaller percentage of those using the www know the advantages of blogsites and I do not appreciate the present value of visuals, the I do us a number videos. So now I am down to the number of viewers I had in the 1970s and have practically no commenters so practically no feedback.

                Feedback from many blog type webesites is  a two way deal or more.

Back to the notes I was looking at:

                The list had been a sort of aid to where I was in the process in a given piece of writing. The process is divided into five parts. You may find it useful as some others have.
Here are these five steps:
1. Start writing and keep writing(its OK to stop to eat, sleep, and cogitate). Having the idea in the back of one's mind of completing the piece at hand may be helpful. 
2. Experience disorientation and chaos, and keep writing. Here too it may be useful to have near consciousness the orientation and order may return.
3. Begin to detect to detect a growing center of gravity, the development of a central theme. Continue to continue to develop and express that central theme as you continue to write.
4. Mop up. Make sure that you have written you you thought you wrote. 
5. Edit for publishing.

                    You may very well see other steps to include. I find that I may do two rewrites with rests in between, followed by another clean up.

                    Writing is an ongoing practice. Continued practice with these steps in mind has improved the writing process of others. They also can help one to be alert to where they are and what they are doing in the process of their writing. 

                    Early on the second step seem to come to me most naturally. I often pass through it quickly these days, but it still recurs and is help in sorting through what's on your mind. I think about and develop my writing as I write. I find that it is a learning process for me.

                    We writers have a ''hard row to hoe." That is to say writing is seldom easy. We not only feel compelled to think about meaning and understanding, but also topic, theme, outline, paragraph, spelling, readers, etc, etc.

                    I have learned, am learning, and I am grateful. I hope to share more with you. Looking over that which I have written here, I do not see it as complete. 
I see it as probably enough for now. The center of gravity may be weak. With another look it may seem half cooked. Right now I can see it as a fair beginning. I expect to continue the practice of writing and to keep plenty of meaning in my life. I may also experience an ongoing gratitude for my spell check app.

                    Thanks for reading. Come back anytime; the sooner the better.




                                                                                                rcs

Writing Makes Us Writers

                             When you want to be a writer, write. Start writing and keep writing. Your writing makes you a writer. When our object is to write we don't have to be perfect, but it is good to be good.

                        So, write something. Consider taking ten minutes to write a paragraph. Write something about what you would like to write about.

                        I used to use a timer when I wrote and found it helpful in several ways. For example, I found myself stopping to make corrections or to rewrite so often that I lost my line of thought and wasted time. So, I set my timer to ring in five minutes and did not stop for anything until I heard that ring. Then, if I felt like it I made corrections or changes. I also found that it helped to have the nature of a pararagraph somewhere near the conscious level of my mind. Neither of these doings is completely necessary. Certain doings are more important as you begin to write. Having a table and chair handy may prove helful. Pencil and paper and your glasses at hand may be a good idea. Maybe a computer with a speech to print app at hand and warmed up could make your writing flow more easily.

                    For this writing do not stop to make corrections or to edit. Just keep writing. Do not go back to read or anything. Just write. This practice can help you to accomplish writing.

                        When we are note-taking or writing a first draft it is often best not to take time for editing, improving word choice, or executing excelent  punctuation. You may write more efficiently when you complete such acts in your final draft or your penultimate one. It's OK to change your mind, but often best to express that which is on your mind at first. Which is often a more efficient way of writing. Later you can look over your writing and get a better idean of wht you were trying to get at. Seems that I have writen elsewhere recently that that we grow and develp as we write.

                        Well, did you write for five or ten minutes, relax for a while and then read what you have written. If so you can make additions and corrections as you like. Congratulations. Relax for a minute or five. You have written. You are a writer.

                        Now reread what you have written. Don't throw it away yet. You may get a surprisingly use idea from it which you can use right now or later.

                        If  you still feel like writing, do it. You can make your corrections and additions. Maybe you made a wrong meaning in a wrong word. You can double check the meanings of the words you are not completely sure of. This could be a good learning experience for you and good the the meaning and clearity of your paragraph. It could even help your reader to get that which you want her to understand or feel.

                        One changes as one writes. One's writing changes as one changes. We grow and develop as we write and our writing grows and and develops as we do so. 

                        Your most embarrasing paragraph or sentence can contain a gem or seed from great writing. Where you see the possibility for that gem or seed make a stab at bringing it out, clearifying it, or even making it shine and grow.

                    I am so old now that I am losing skill faster than I am learning. Even so, I am remember ing some past experience. After three or so of the writings were were just talkng about and if you have saved that which you have written, you'll have a pile of rubble. When you look over that rubble try not to over look seeds and gems. You are nearly sure to find words, phrases, and a sentence or two which seem important.

                    Use some careful thought and editorial discrimination to see what your words, pharses, and sentences add up to. Decide how much you believe them. Arrange them somehow so that the make sense. write some new and connecting parts if you wish.

                        We could call this your first real draft. We could also say that you have begun your career as a practiced writer. Congratulations!

                        When you feel like writing more you may find that when you keep alert to finding an "an emergent center of gravity" as you write, you may find one.

                        That emergent center may help you to more clearly see what you are writing about. Clarifying what you are writing about is often a big help. I am remembering now that at this point I sometimes found that which I thouht ought to be the beginning of a paper ought to end it and what I thought ought to end it was better as a beginning.

You can find the following as aids to finding and clearifying that center of gravity:

~ As you write you may honestly come to say, "Ah, now I see what I have been getting at." Pay attention.

~ Finish what you are writing about. Put it aside for a time. See useful implications as you look it over again.

~ See that your good idea is crap. Then see tat part of it is les crappy. Sort out the good parts from the bad. You don'thave to throw anything away. You may come to see that some of it is better than your favorite idea.

~ Your first writing may be good scaffolding fir your next writing.

~ You can find a powerful spark in a tiny digression of yours. You may keep the same elements of your work, but change the whole orientation for the better. 

~ See your work improve as you improve. See yourself improve as your work improves. 

~ As you progress in a piece of writing, be alert to an emerging focus or theme. Its OK to let your focus ortheme improve.

~ If notheing emerges in a piece you are writing, sum up thar which you have written, then sumit up again.

~ Push yourself a bit to keep getting some center of gravity or summing-up to occur. 

~ Work gradually toward moderation from extreme positions. If you feel you must be immoderate in a given case, make sure that you are being extremely honest and realistic.

~ Its fair and good to explain your position and its source.

~ Keep writing.


                    It is possible to learn a lot by helpimg others to develop their craft. That could be done in a writing group or you may do it by your suggestions or examples in the "comments" section below. Share an experience, information, or understanding. Pass it on here. You can even ask a question. You can help me by proof reading this piece and making sugestions or correcting my spelling. This is  a way to be a published writer!

                    Thank you for reading and thank you for writing.



                                                                                                rcs



Writing As a Developmental Process


                      Consider the your writing as a developmental process which grows and develops you.

                        Your writing could suddenly get better, or even great, but neither is a good bet. However, when you keep writing and pay some attention to the quality of that writing, you will begin to note changes occurring, some for the better.  You can congratulate yourself, consider the nature of the changes for the better, and aim to accentuate the positive.

                        You can be relaxed enough. You can be abundantly relaxed. If you are not procrastinating, you may be relaxing just enough. If you are writing, you may be doing relaxed writing. There is no law against being a kicked back writer. Relaxed writing can be very good writing.

                        Writing can be very much a natural process. Your writing doesn't just grow by itself, it also changes you, mostly for the better. As you practice your writing, as you write, you come to think differently, behave differently, and to see happenings differently. To ripen and mature your writing, you can cultivate it. Cultivating is less like high culture and more like caring for one's garden. Relaxed persistence and attention does the trick.

                         Do avoid wasting time. You can sketch in a draft roughly; you can move fast when doing so feels okay. Let your commitment and investment be light. Doing so does take some commitment. It can pay to spend enough time and effort to make this draft a kind of complete version of what you want to express. It could turn out to be a mess, but it is your mess and you could find some good stuff in it. Don't threw it away yet.

                        Treat your words as though they are able to grow. Let them grow, allow them the energy they need. Send energy through your words. Relaxed is good, but you want to do. Give your words life energy to continue. You are cooking. You may already know that with attention you come to see growth  and development.

                        If you come to see your words come into a small pile and interact, you may be mad. Most probably you are not. It is likely that you are becoming conscious of the process of writing. Attend, and you may see those words separate and form new little piles according to some energizing pattern. The small piles consolidate and shake down into their best organization. They move together together again into a big pile and work until a different pattern emerges. This may repeat 4 or 5 times until you are satisfied or until it feels right.

                        Your writing has undergone changes; so have you. Some of those changes will will help some of your future writing to be better then ever!

                        Onward. Let the new idea or perception finally take shape. Let go of the old perception and let your writing grow. Some of your writing will seem bad this month and this year; accept that and see also that much of your writing shows improvement. As you grow, it grows; and as it grows, so do you.

                        Start writing and keep writing through great disorientation and chaos and on to an organizing center of gravity; and then go on to wrapping up and editing. Remember to complete a paragraph or more before considering the rewriting of anything. Take time to reread your writing when you are rested, calm, and relaxed. You will find stinking poop. You will also find some writing of which you can be proud. Pay attention to it. For my part, I then try ro destroy the stinking part before anyone else can see it.

                        You have begun that which may become an ongoing process of learning, cooking, an maturing, one draft at a time. 

                        Thanks for reading. 

 

 

                                                        RCS

                

                        

 


Practice

 

Writing: a way to better writing is practice

 A way to practice is to start writing and to keep writing.

     

                For now try this: Write without stopping to worry, correct, or edit. Write for more than five minutes without stopping. You will write some phrases you will really love. You will find it hard to throw them away.

                Be ready to to throw them away because  they probably won't fit the writing you end up with. If you don't come up with a whole new focus or angle, you will probably come up with a whole new subject.

                Before you do throw away what have written do this: Read it and pick out your best three or four best sentences. Then reread them. As you do so consider improvements you might make in them. Rewrite them and save them for a while.

                Oh no! Did you already throw them away!




                                                                                                Richard Sheehan






 

Writing, Growing, Oganizing

Writing With RCS: Don't let a wag dog your tale. Some of your best writing may go a bit like the example below:

                You start writing about a dog you had. Then you are writing about sadness. Then you are writing about personalities of dogs. You keep writing. You find that you are writing about the effects of the past. Then you write a poem about names. You are thinking. You are cooking.  Then you write an autobiographical self-analysis. Then you write a story about your family. You are bringing out different aspects of your material. You are preparing for some very good writing. Hang onto this work for awhile.
                

                 Reread it. You are likely to find both useful material and useful inspiration in the words, sentences, or  a paragraph you have written.

                I remember an English teacher of mine , an ex-bosun's mate of the U.S Navy.  The dog example above reminds me of his frustration with me. "Damn it, Richard," he once said, "Try this: write "I like dogs because they have four legs, wag their tails, and bark." Then write a paragraph each, about what you like about  legs, tails, and barks  Finish it with "That's what I like about dogs." Hand it in and forget about it."

                He may have been trying to tell me something about simple organization and completing  assignments. By having a bit of your previous writing in mind you could have material well worth organizing and "handing in."

                Keep Writing. It doesn't all have to start the same..... or end that way.

                
                                              
                                                                                                         by Richard





 

Stuck

Write With RCS: Writers get stuck. Writers get unstuck.


If you have writers block right now try:

~ taking some time to consider what is going on with you. 
 
~ just resting a bit.
 
~ completing some business.   
 
~ thinking about the meaning of the words you are about to write.
Doing one or more of the following has helped a writer to move forward:
 
~ Look for  contrasting or conflicting elements in what you have written or are about to write. You can inter act with those elements when you find them. Just finding an example of one such element and naming it can help.
 
~ Try just babbling on in your writing. You may find yourself not being so nice or less agreeable than usual. You might even begin talking back to yourself. Try not to shut yourself down too fast. Don't stop yet. Let each voice make it's point.
 
~ When you get frustrated let their be movement. Again, let each and every voice have its say before you shut it down. No one is looking. Some writing may occur.
 
~ Try more meaning before words. Develop the meaning of the words you are using. Clarify those meanings. Fit word to meaning.
~ Keep writing. Keep writing even if you only write why your writing doesn't make sense. Keep writing for 10 or 20 minutes. Then try to get yourself to step back and look at what you have written with some perspective. You may discover that you have written verbless phrases or that nothing you write asserts anything. A few verbs and and a couple of assertions may improve your writing.
 
~ Sit back. Look at your writing and try to s what it adds up to. Going back and forth between immersing yourself in your writing and then sitting back to gain perspective - is writing. 
 
~ At times it is good to let yourself be a bit extreme, to be emotional. Let impulse have its day. Sometimes it seems that one has a cycle to go through before you get down to better writing. Such a time may well be the time to take to extremes for a while. Take it to the limit one more time. Latter you can be the ruthless editor with a sharp knife.
            
 Bye for now.
            Keep writing.

 Writers get stuck

Writers get unstuck


If you have writers block right now try:

~ taking some time to consider what is going on with you. 

~ just resting a bit.

~ completing some business.   

~ thinking about the meaning of the words you are about to write.

Doing one or more of the following has helped a writer to move forward:

~ Look for  contrasting or conflicting elements in what you have written or are about to write. You can inter act with those elements when you find them. Just finding an example of one such element and naming it can help.

~ Try just babbling on in your writing. You may find yourself not being so nice or less agreeable than usual. You might even begin talking back to yourself. Try not to shut yourself down too fast. Don't stop yet. Let each voice make it's point.

~ When you get frustrated let their be movement. Again, let each and every voice have its say before you shut it down. No one is looking. Some writing may occur.

~ Try more meaning before words. Develop the meaning of the words you are using. Clarify those meanings. Fit word to meaning.

~ Keep writing. Keep writing even if you only write why your writing doesn't make sense. Keep writing for 10 or 20 minutes. Then try to get yourself to step back and look at what you have written with some perspective. You may discover that you have written verbless phrases or that nothing you write asserts anything. A few verbs and and a couple of assertions may improve your writing.

~ Sit back. Look at your writing and try to s what it adds up to. Going back and forth between immersing yourself in your writing and then sitting back to gain perspective - is writing. 

~ At times it is good to let yourself be a bit extreme, to be emotional. Let impulse have its day. Sometimes it seems that one has a cycle to go through before you get down to better writing. Such a time may well be the time to take to extremes for a while. Take it to the limit one more time. Latter you can be the ruthless editor with a sharp knife.

            Keep writing.

            Bye for now.


                                                RCS