Showing posts with label waiting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label waiting. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2025

Each day is like opening a book

Each day is like opening a book

and finding another poem

waiting for you


sunlight or clouds on the page

shadows or raindrops

the sound of the wind


the silence of snow falling

of clouds passing by

each morning a different poem


lighthearted or sad

a moody melody

a gleeful reprise


the moment you open your eyes

you can hear

the song of a new day


words filling your ears

sounds you never heard before

syllables that roll off your tongue


letters spilling onto the page

one after the other

a stream in flood


pulling you into the day

filling your lungs with air

with life, with gratitude


for whatever appears 

on the page

beneath your pen 

Thursday, January 02, 2025

Unmoored

It's the beginning of the year

and I feel unmoored, unsure 

what direction to swim in.

Do you feel unmoored, too?

Here we are waiting for the wind 

to offer us a clue, treading water,

floating in place, befuddled by the way

uncertainty replaces certainty.

At the moment it's impossible 

to choose which way to go.

All paths have been erased,

all destinations hidden,

so how can we find the route 

we're meant to follow?

How long can we keep treading 

water before sinking to the bottom?

What is keeping us afloat?

Maybe it's all just a matter of allowing 

ourselves a chance to rest, 

to step out of the water,

to regain our strength. 

Maybe this is how to let the well fill up again?

Listen, it's the beginning of the year, 

and there's hope that a path will appear 

tomorrow or maybe the next day, 

and that we'll know what we didn't know 

a moment ago: the path we're meant to follow,

the way we're meant to go.

Sunday, October 17, 2021

Time and Patience

Writing takes time 

and patience. You wait 

for words, hoping they'll come 

from wherever they come and 

fill the page with whatever 

is hidden in your heart.


Some days they find their way 

to the page; some days the page 

remains blank. You can't know 

ahead of time what you'll find or 

what might appear.


Some days it's like playing 

hide-and-seek: I see you. 

No you don't. Catch me if you can! 

And what you wish you'd written 

remains just beyond your reach, 

still wordless, waiting for another time 

to reveal itself to you.


And so you keep writing, waiting,

hoping whatever is hidden in

your heart will fill the page 

with words.



Sunday, August 15, 2021

Summer doldrums

sitting here

wondering what

to write

waiting for a breeze

carrying words

to my pen

staring at the blank

page the way

sailors must have

stared at the blank

unmoving sea

waiting for wind

to fill their ship's sails

waiting, waiting...


Sunday, July 18, 2021

What Happens When You Mix Ink and Paper

It’s the kind of morning when I don’t think I have anything to write. 

I don’t feel any need to say anything new. 


I feel empty, in fact. 


Yet here I am sitting at my desk waiting and wondering what I might find on the page today.


It’s just ink and paper, yet there is a kind of magic that happens when you mix the two together. 


You can’t predict what might happen. 


The moment the nib of your pen touches the page—whoosh!—something percolates inside your brain, and your curiosity is aroused, and you wonder what will emerge from the other side of your consciousness. 


So you write to find out.


Maybe it’s a memory that you pull from a far-away time in your life. 


Maybe it’s a dream that haunts you after opening your eyes. 


Maybe it’s just the sight of sunlight falling through the window as you get out of bed. 


Maybe it’s nothing more than the sound of your breath or the sound of your pen scratching the surface of the page. 


Or maybe it’s just the feel of your chest rising and falling and the pulse of your heart beneath that reminds you of the waves of the sea and how you’re part of a universe extending beyond where you can see.

And so your pen takes you to places you might have missed if you hadn’t decided to sit down to write. 


That’s the thing about writing. 


It’s a mystery tour of the inner workings of your mind and heart. 


You never know where you’re going until you get there.


Sunday, June 16, 2019

Savor the silence

Take a moment to breathe.
Just wait before touching
your pen to the page

and let the blankness
of the empty journal
wash over you

like the waves of the sea,
like the silence of an empty house,
like the pause between breaths.

Just listen for a moment to
how the white page, not yet
filled with words,

sounds like walking through
falling snow, and not a single
footprint marks a path

and the possibilities
of where you might go
are endless.

Take a moment to breathe,
to savor the silence of
the empty page.

Just wait before touching
your pen to the page,
and then begin...

Sunday, October 14, 2018

Long Haul Revisions


Sometimes I think revising one’s work is all about letting go.

Like when you fly a kite and the wind pulls the string out of your hand and you have to let go (or get burned by the string) and you watch the kite flying off on its own?

That’s a little bit what revising feels like at the moment.

I’m feeling helpless to guide the characters. They're on their own now, like the kite, free-floating, each character guided by his or her own inner compass, not mine.

But I’m also feeling, after just a half-dozen revisions, that I’m a much more intent observer, trying to take everything in and get it on paper. 

It’s as if I’ve become a recorder of events as they unfold, a conduit, so to speak, for a story that’s happening inside my head as it spins itself out into the world line by line.

If I’m patient and willing to wait quietly—like a fisherman waiting for a fish to bite—I will eventually feel the tug on the hook and know that it won’t be long before I’ll learn something more about the story and the characters in it.

At the moment I’m printing out the latest batch of revisions for a manuscript that I started back in January.

I’m forging forward using one of my writing teacher’s methods of revising, which means that I’ll need to revise these pages in front of me at least 30 more times (thanks, Norma!) before I consider the manuscript finished (or decide if I need to revise for another 30 drafts).

Well, okay, thirty drafts may seem like a stretch--and sixty drafts, well, that's a bit mind-boggling at the moment--but if that’s what it takes, then I’m willing to aim for a high number of revisions, even though it’s daunting to think of revising the same pages that many times.

But here’s one of the surprises that I've learned over the past half-dozen revisions of this particular manuscript.

Revising over and over again is liberating!

The manuscript is still malleable, still a work-in-progress. It can change and grow.

And thinking about revisions in this way—revisions over the long haul—has taken a lot of the pressure off the process.

Instead of trying to shoo the manuscript out the door like a reluctant calf or puppy, I can take my time. I can give myself permission to look at each character with care. I can listen more closely to each character’s voice. I can better understand their struggles.

Until recently I hadn’t realized the manuscripts that I was shooing out the door earlier in my career were too young, too immature, for the world, unable to stand on their own.

In my head they were finished, but on paper they weren’t done and not quite ready to share with readers.

Long haul revisions may seem like a slow process, but, really, it’s just a process of taking the time it takes to get acquainted with my characters and to learn about them on a deeper level, to understand what’s going on beneath the surface of their lives.

This kind of long haul revising is also a process of waiting for characters to talk, to divulge their stories, to share their secrets, so the story itself expands and deepens in ways that I could never have envisioned if I’d stopped revising in an earlier draft.

Truths and lies slip out of their mouths, or they act in ways that I might never have expected. 

And these unexpected moments of discovery take the story on a path that I could never have predicted. They invest the story with life so the story becomes a living, breathing thing, no longer lifeless words on a page but a record of lives in the process of living, searching for answers, exploring the world, and finding… well, each character finds something different, unique to him or her.

Anyway, I’m enjoying the process of long haul revisions (even on days when I have no idea what will happen next or where the story might be going).

I hope you are finding ways to enjoy revising your work, too!




Sunday, September 16, 2018

Sitting and Waiting


Are you willing to sit and wait for a while?

Are you prepared to sit and wait for more than a few hours a day, more than a few days a week, more than a few weeks a month, more than a few months a year?

Are you capable of sitting and waiting for more than a year?

If you’re not willing to sit and wait for your characters to reveal themselves to you—however long it might take—then how can you expect to write about their world?

One of my teachers told me long ago that she rarely wrote fewer than thirty drafts of a novel or short story. Thirty drafts! 

Sometimes that's just how long it takes.

So, when you finish one draft, or two, or even three, perhaps you’re only starting the process, and there’s more sitting and waiting ahead.

Writing requires patience. Not just the patience to sit and wait for words to come, but the patience to wait until a character is forthcoming and willing to open himself or herself up to you.

Your characters need to trust you, and they can sense your impatience, your doubts, your discomfort sitting and waiting. They can sense when you are afraid of their story, fearful of the truths that may emerge from their lives, reluctant to face the events they want to share with you, unwilling—or unable—to confront the challenges in their day-to-day existence.

If they sense the slightest hint of fear, uncertainty, or doubt, they will remain silent.

They may show you the surface of their lives, but they will withhold the deeper issues, hide the fissures that cause them pain, and conceal the cracks that reveal their need for love and acceptance.

If you can sit and wait, though, they may grant you a gift.

They may tell you who they truly are and how they live their lives and what they want and what they fear and what they’re willing to do for love.

They may give you the gift of a story.

Sometimes writing isn’t just about getting words on paper.

It’s about trusting and doubting, and about being afraid and being able to love, and about hoping and believing in a story that you can't yet see and in characters who you can't yet hear.

It’s about sitting.

And waiting.






Sunday, August 20, 2017

Some Mornings

Some mornings
I sit at my desk
the way a man
might sit on the shore
and gaze out at
the water of a lake
or the sea watching
the patterns of light
and clouds shifting
on the surface.

Some mornings
I sit at my desk
and gaze at the
empty page as if
it’s the still surface
of a pond, unruffled
by the wind, undisturbed
by the fish swimming
below, a mirror reflecting
the sky above without
giving a hint at the mystery
that is hidden below.

Some mornings
I sit at my desk
and wait for words
to appear, for the slightest
hint of movement,
for a sign of life,
and I listen to my
breath and close
my eyes and wait.

Some mornings
I sit at my desk
and nothing appears
and I hear only
the drone of the fan
spinning on the ceiling
and the sound of
my breath when I inhale
or the sound of someone
else in the house putting
a teapot on the stove
to boil.

Some mornings
I sit at my desk
and watch the surface
of the page ripple
with life, words swimming
across the paper tugging
at the lines I dropped
in the water, filling
nets, the page awash
with words, overflowing
with words, words spilling
over the edge of one page
and falling onto another.

Some mornings
I sit at my desk
full of faith
that words will
come and I will
be able to catch
them with my pen.

Some mornings
I sit at my desk
not knowing if anything
will appear, filled
with doubt and anxiety
that I’ll starve,
that I’ll hear nothing
but silence the rest
of my life, that I’ll
drown not in words
but in the pages
of an empty journal.

Some mornings
I sit at my desk
and wonder
at the miracle of
creation—of love
and life, and words
and stories,
of ink and charcoal
and wood pulp
and forests and
rivers and seas,
of clouds and sky
and wind and rain,
of how the miracle
of each breath
is filled
with poetry.

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Sunday, May 14, 2017

Waiting

It’s painful to sit
and wait for nothing
to happen

just sitting and holding
a pen and looking
at a blank page

listening to your breath
flow in and out—
sigh
and feeling your
heartbeat

aware of each blink
of an eyelid,
each second that passes
without a word
to break the silence.

It’s painful to sit
and wait for nothing
to happen.

When will you realize
that whatever happens
is invisible, hidden
from sight,

and that words
will rise to the surface
whether you’re asleep
or awake, waiting or not?

Look -- all the time
you thought you were
staring at a blank page, 
and now? 

How do you
explain the words
that appeared beneath
your pen when you
weren’t looking?

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