ProBlogger: 10 Steps to Writing Mindfully for Your Blog |
10 Steps to Writing Mindfully for Your Blog Posted: 07 Nov 2011 06:02 AM PST This guest post is by Sean Madden of Mindful Living Guide. These past few months—in my summer and early autumn creative writing classes—I've not focused so much on the mindfulness aspect of my teachings. Perhaps this had to do with the energetic pace of summer, which only recently faded here in the South East of England. Just last week autumn seemed finally to arrive and with it the cozy, heartwarming smells of wood and coal smoke rising from the chimneys of local cottages. The end of our unseasonably warm Indian summer ushered in that back-to-school feeling of my childhood days growing up on the South Shore of Massachusetts. And so it was just last week that I made explicit the intended theme of the six-week course which got underway in mid-September. That theme's perhaps best conveyed by the course title, Write Your Way into Autumn. I had everyone spend about ten minutes in class writing a list of autumnal-inspired words, phrases and snippets of language. We then read aloud the words we each gathered. This brief exercise promoted a feeling of turning within, of slowing down, of simply witnessing the world around and within us. And this brought that sense of presence, that magical spark, back into our shared time together. This week, in both my Monday evening and Wednesday morning classes, we read from Deng Ming-Dao's Everyday Tao, specifically the "Source" and "Return" entries of this book, which is chockablock with wisdom. Here's how Deng (last name) closes the former entry:
To help my writing students better understand what Deng means by source, we then read the "Return" entry which closes thus:
I then asked my students to write for ten to fifteen minutes on the following question: "What is our essence, our original nature, our innocent self?" As with last week's autumnal word hoard, this brought mindfulness back to center stage, and, again, the results were magical. Here's what one of my students, writer-animator Carl Sullivan, said about yesterday's class: “The last session for me had the most depth. To breathe into the now and find a moment of stillness before the pen starts moving gives you a chance to bypass the person who wants to be a writer, and to just write. Much as when I draw—I really don’t have an idea of what's going to appear. To approach writing from a no-mind 'now' point lets the words be as free as a doodle. To doodle words in playful creativity with just a gentle expectancy, no pressure, just wondering what's going to be revealed is as fun and free as drawing.” What else is there to say, really? Well, here's what Carl wrote in response to the aforementioned question about our essence, our original nature, our innocent self, this final piece marking the end of our six weeks together: inner smile purity 10 Steps writing mindfully for your blog
As a Creative Writing & Mindful Living Guide, Sean M. Madden offers Writing, Literature & Mindful Living courses and workshops in the UK, and one-to-one guidance & mentoring worldwide. Sean invites readers to follow him on Twitter @SeanMMadden. Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger |
You are subscribed to email updates from ProBlogger Blog Tips To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
0 comments:
Post a Comment