Creativity

What keeps you inspired in uncertain times?

What keeps you inspired in uncertain times?

Sometimes, when the world seems like too much, I pull a heavy, fuzzy blanket over myself and disappear into a novel. This month, as the world spins, and wobbles, I’ve been reading The Paris Network--our creative community’s book of the month. I invite you to pick up this story (or another great book) and see what happens when you forget your surroundings, your time for a minute…

Suddenly you’re in France, World War II, the occupation. You pop into a bookshop. The owner writes “poetry prescriptions” to keep the townsfolk strong, runs a resistance book club with banned books. Poetry falls from the sky in airdrops. And it’s all based on true events: the banned books, the resistance publishers, the literature and poetry woven into the novel, like “Liberté” by Paul Eluard.

Under the story, there’s a truth that will, no doubt, resonate with you:

Sometimes, literature (or art) is more important than food.

Reconnect to your body--and your creativity.

Reconnect to your body--and your creativity.

When is the last time you stopped to think about your body?
As a writer, a creative…a human.

At our Vagabond Voices Creative Community, our inspiration revolves around creative seasons. And…there’s a ‘season’ that is just about the body—remembering you have one and reconnecting to it.

So, whether the season is one where it feels like winter is melting all around you, or summer is going to sleep--whatever side of the globe you’re on, join me today for a celebration of your body. It’s healing, it’s good for your creativity (and good for your writing).

This year, as we enter the creative season of ‘the body’ I’ve got a blog post for you with ideas for tapping into your body for healing and creativity.

And I’ll have a few words of wisdom from a fantastic book I finally finished reading: The Body Keeps the Score: Mind, brain, and body in the transformation of trauma. by Bessel Van Der Kolk.

How is a book on healing trauma relevant to our writing and creativity?

Here is what I know:

So many of our artforms, our modes of creative expression actually help us heal.

They are a part of what helps us survive as individuals and cultures.
Even when the unthinkable happens. Or when it’s all around us.
They make us strong. They make us whole.
They bring us together--and they are our human tradition.

Celebrate these with me--whether you’ve experienced trauma or not.
Help keep these creative acts alive and share them with others.

For all of us.

Here are a few ways…

When there are no words: peace, creativity + doodle prompts.

When there are no words: peace, creativity + doodle prompts.

Have you been sleepless lately?
Me too.
There was a night last week when I woke up at 3 AM, and could not accept—anything.

It’s the kind of thing that will leave you asking the ceiling overhead, the rafters, the roof creaking in the wind, the sky:

Is it worth being angry at the world?
Does it help anything?
Does it put bread on the table?
Stop madmen in their tracks?

So many questions and one thing I know for sure:
This is what the first creative step looks like sometimes…

How you can stay creative even with commitments: A writer profile with Ellen Bratsche

How you can stay creative even with commitments:  A writer profile with Ellen Bratsche

“What keeps you writing?” is a series of interviews where I ask writers from our Vagabond community what keeps you writing and creating. Even when, well, life unfolds all around you.

This week, I’m very excited to share a bit of wisdom from a writer and illustrator, Ellen Bratsche. Ellen has celebrated a major creative victory this year--the birth of her daughter! I’m amazed by the way she keeps creating with a newborn (sometimes literally) in her arms. I also really enjoy having Ellen in our creative community because she always reminds me that it is possible to tell a story with pictures, doodles and illustrations...or that when the words won’t come, you can start with a drawing first.


You can find Ellen’s illustrated flash fiction, Birds of the Water at the Vagabond Voices publication on Medium. And you should definitely check out her beautiful children’s book, Das kleine Buch der wilden Tiere which allows children to flip the pages and create fantastic animals using Ellen’s illustrations. Well you kind of have to see it for yourself…

Let’s hear from Ellen about how she keeps writing and stays creative. And no, it’s not by waking up at 5AM to write in the dark...quite the contrary…

Vagabond English: Book Club Picks for Spring and Summer 2021

Vagabond English: Book Club Picks for Spring and Summer 2021

What can be better than diving into a book--holding an adventure of the written word in your hand?

What can take the place of traveling as you turn the pages?

Whether you visit incredible new places, walking strange streets, feeling the dust of the traveler on your shoes.

Or you find yourself returning home--in one way or another.

Or even find yourself traveling within…


What is more beautiful than the exciting and surprising stack of new books waiting for you?

Only one thing I can think of tops the delicious flavor of solitary hours spent in words...and worlds:

Knowing that people who understand you--and your book--are reading alongside you.

Write about Your Life: Resilience and writing that connects.

If there has ever been a time to write about our lives, maybe it’s today.

What curious peaks and crests we find ourselves sailing. Questions. Decisions. Restarts.

And if this is a time of turbulence, it is also one of creativity.

I’ve been through times in my life that left me searching and forced to recreate life from scratch in the past. During those times, I found myself in writing. I didn’t have a plan. I wasn’t trying to add on some new self-care regimen.

I just had to write. I literally felt my body drawn back to the pen and paper. Maybe it was just the thing I did to keep from being lost at sea during times of personal crisis.

But now? There has never been a more important time to write.

These days, it sometimes feels like we are all sharing a ride on these rough seas.

We are reinventing, recreating: You and I, the person sitting near you on the bus. The neighbor you cross paths with once in a while...

And like so many aspects of writing, maybe we begin because it helps us find meaning. Or because it lays something to rest. Or because it allows something to be reborn.

But then, on occasion, that writing that started as a furtive scribble in a journal somewhere turns into art:

Reading for Resilience: Why Good Books Get Us Through...

Reading for Resilience: Why Good Books Get Us Through...

It’s funny, the things I know for certain? They never cease to surprise me anyway. Like reading novels and discussing them with people you trust...and who inspire you.

Earlier this week, I showed up to our writing chats, curled in layers of wool against the cold and armed with tea. It was like a small break from, well, everything else.

We met to talk about Mr. Pip. A beautiful book set during the civil war on Bouganville off the coast of Papua New Guinea. A book that sweeps you up with beauty and resilience in the face of catastrophe.

And that got us all talking about the way stories get us through.

In Mr. Pip, one of the main (and mysterious!) characters, Mr. Watts, reads Dicken’s Great Expectations to the school children as all the teachers have left the island. Ultimately, he draws the entire village into the story, to create something new a new tale that deviates perhaps from Great Expectations...possibly from the whole and exact truth of his own life.

“Do we forgive Mr. Pip for not being entirely honest?” I wanted to know in our book chats?

Do we forgive the author for telling us the story that we need to hear? For handing down the story that makes us strong rather than ‘just the facts?’

Our first Writing Anthology is in Print! + Creative Pursuits, Community and Resilience

Our first Writing Anthology is in Print! + Creative Pursuits, Community and Resilience

Here I sit, leafing through our (first!!) Anthology--the physical manifestation of our creative endeavors this year. A tiny, brave book that is made of inspiration, hopes, and dreams (that often seemed unrealistic), community…

This light and hopeful collection is, as its title implies, just the Tip of the Iceberg. The tiny part of all our conversations, connections, scribbling, and doodling that poked its head above the surface.

Maybe if there’s one thing I have to say to you as we wipe the slate clean and face the blank page of January 2021 it’s this:

Keep dreaming up your creative projects—even when you don’t know where you’ll find the time.

And do you know what amazes me? I’m (still) dreaming. And so are so many of you.

We have creative projects in mind. New books to write, new doodling or journaling habits to begin...or rekindle…

Writers, keep the words flowing with blackout and collage poems...

Writers, keep the words flowing with blackout and collage poems...

If you want to really write and feel good about your creative process—rather than find yourself staring at a blank screen, I’ve got two pieces of advice for you:

  1. Read (good, quality writing preferably in books and that YOU like).

  2. Engage in creative reading exercises to keep you unstuck and keep your words flowing (like blackout poetry, collage poetry and ‘found’ poems).

Why use experimental techniques like blackout and collage?

On the most basic level, blackout poetry and collage turn your reading into writing.

It’s a chance to let your subconscious mind wander and travel, play with associations. This is great for your writing in any of your languages.