Living a writerly life

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One of the things I appreciate about the March Slice of Life Challenge is that it really forces me to live a more writerly life. That is, it makes me pay attention and look out for possible writing topics all the time. What is happening? What am I thinking about? What have I seen? What have I heard? But once the challenge ends, I often find myself tuning out and living on autopilot, especially when I skip a week…or weeks. Of course, this leads to more skipping of weeks.

Well, last week was one of those weeks. Tuesday arrived and I just couldn’t muster any enthusiasm for writing. There was nothing to write about. (You and I know that’s not true, but it’s how I felt.) I told myself that I would absolutely not skip writing a Slice of Life next time. But did I open up my eyes, my ears, my heart as writer? No, no I did not.

However, I did stumble across an old book I used as a mentor text for notebooks–Syllabus by Lynda Barry. It’s an art professor’s collection of notes, drawings, and syllabi that she kept by hand. One of the pages that caught my eye was the Daily Diary. I haven’t kept a diary since I was in middle school and I’m not a real journaler, but this format seems very doable. You create a frame that has a space for the following: a list of about 7 things you did, a list of about 7 things you saw, something you heard someone say, and a drawing of something you saw. You spend just five minutes completing it.

“Your daily diary will teach you to to hear, see, and remember the world all around you.” I’m going to try it and I’ll let you know how it goes. Anyone else want to do it with me?

19 responses to “Living a writerly life”

  1. arjeha Avatar

    I like that idea of a daily diary. It makes you focus on yourself and what is going on around you. There is so much we miss, at least I know that I do, because we are not tuned into the present.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. vivian chen Avatar

      We can be accountability partners! Try it out and we can check back in. =)

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      1. arjeha Avatar

        I just might give it a try. Will keep you posted.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. wordancerblog Avatar

    Definitely going out and finding this book! It’s write up my alley (pun intended)!

    Thank you Vivian!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. vivian chen Avatar

      Haha! Let me know what you think.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. wordancerblog Avatar

    I ordered all three of her books. They arrive on Wednesday! Can’t wait! Thank you!

    Liked by 1 person

  4. jaclynfre Avatar

    As I struggle with a sense of being overwhelmed and doubting myself as a writer, this post was grounding. My challenge is that so much is happening all at once, it’s difficult to process all of the tennis balls with one racket. I appreciate the invitation to sort and select. Thank you!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. vivian chen Avatar

      I like that it’s a 5 minute process to reflect and jot. Any more than that and I don’t think I’d even try. #truth

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  5. beckymusician Avatar

    I like that idea! I also have trouble getting motivated to when it’s not Tuesday.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. mbhmaine Avatar

    Isn’t it amazing how you can write for 31 days in a row and then suddenly there’s nothing to write about!?! lol I can totally relate! Even though I write daily for myself, I’ve rarely managed to cobble together a post/slice since March. The guidelines you noted seem like something I can add in to my own writing practice. Thanks so much for sharing them.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Denise Krebs Avatar
    Denise Krebs

    Vivian, yes, please. I want to do it with you. I can relate to that not finding things to write about during the year. March is easy, as you say because we allow ourselves to live a writerly life. I love the idea of 7 things we did, saw, something someone said, and a picture. We can glean lots of things to write about from that rich resource. Thanks for the encouragement.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. vivian chen Avatar

      Let’s go! I tried it yesterday and it’s already got me thinking of some possible writing topics.

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  8. Juliette Awua-Kyerematen Avatar
    Juliette Awua-Kyerematen

    Thank you Vivian for sharing this amazing book. The daily activity is also special too, one I’ll try using.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. vivian chen Avatar

      Look forward to hearing how it goes!

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  9. Trish Avatar
    Trish

    I am excited! I just found this book at my library and put it on hold! I will give it a try. Pushing myself to write every day has been a struggle for me lately. The soup in my head won’t stop swirling to allow for something substantial to emerge. Thanks for this.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. vivian chen Avatar

      One day at a time!

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  10. Elisabeth Ellington Avatar

    I love this book! (And her other books about art, writing, creativity.) And I’ve done the Daily Diary for periods of time by myself and with students–thanks for the reminder of this very doable prompt (even if I do struggle to get it done in the time limit). I know what you mean about the struggle to write weekly. I am determined not to skip a Tuesday because I know that one skipped Tuesday will turn into a year of skipped Tuesdays…. but I honestly do a lot better with a daily writing challenge than with a weekly writing challenge.

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  11. Living a writerly life part 2 – Learn With Vivian Avatar

    […] week I wrote about daily diary idea I learned from Lynda Barry’s book Syllabus. Well, here’s how it went…I got […]

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  12. franmcveigh Avatar

    Great reminder, Vivian. A daily diary after the holidays . . . but wait, I do a 30 day writing challenge in January. I think my writerly habit will be kick started for 2025 at least!

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