Summer time: time enough to fold cup after cup of blackberries into muffin dough, pancake batter, home made pie shells.
Time enough, once the rest of the household snores, for a mother with insomnia to grab and eat raw by the chilled handful the remainder of the crop…
And time enough, mercifully, to slip into Perhaps, Maybe, play with Liz Brennan.
Three stars (on longing and flowering plums):
Micro Reading and Text of Poem: Maybe, when peering into the depths of my own shadow, every beginning...
Atlantis (on fathers and daughters):
Micro-reading
Text of Poem: Perhaps the female body, at point of conception...
Liz is currently looking for others to collaborate with her... Perhaps once you start, maybe you'll find it hard to stop...
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Friday, July 13, 2012
Announcing Website Launch, Upcoming Classes and Blogging Book Project
This winter I spent a good deal of time working behind the scenes on preparing a new website, the latest in a series of steps along the way to developing my life as a professional writer. With my youngest child finally in school, I spent this last year devoting time to editing, interviewing, cross-posting and promoting the work of other writers, all valuable and worthy work I intend to continue. But with our family at a financial cross-roads, perched on the cusp of choosing one city to live in so we can potentially forgo the two city insanity, it is time for me to fund that writing life.
Additionally, I began to feel Feral Mom, Feral Writer’s
usual focus (on the changes of heart and hearth as I write and raise children)
became diluted with posting announcements for classes and forthcoming published
writing. So I’m attempting to allow Feral Mom her due and let my other site be
the new hub for published work, classes I’ll be teaching, and a new blog I’ll
be starting in August about the transformative blogging book I am in the
process of writing for women bloggers.
Teaching a subject, of course, always pushes one to grow; teaching
Transformative Blogging continues to be rich. In the networking world, I’ve come
across the work of writer and blogger Nick Thacker (thanks to research expert and blogger Marlene Samuels). I bought Thacker's book and am working
my way through it (actually answering his questions, putting in the footwork to look
around the net), as he provides very tangible ways for understanding the
business side of blogging (something I am definitely not savvy about) as well
as how to grow one’s roots and connect to others. Here’s a link to his blog:
Nick Thacker and a link to his book on Amazon ($4.99 on Kindle, and you'll see I wrote him a review) Building a Blog for Readers: 101 Questions to Ask Before you Launch your Blogging Empire.
While Thacker and I share some similarities in terms of questions and the inventory approach to the blogging process, I find the worksheets I'm using and developing for women cover what I'd loosely define as emotional and spiritual aspects of the blogging process. But I wanted to spend the next year inviting women bloggers to work with me so that what I offer extends past my own potentially myopic view of what we face as women bloggers. I invite you to come along with me--I will be blogging at my new site (www.taniapryputniewicz.com) and offering sample worksheets to subscribers starting in August.
I’m so grateful to be a writer, today, now, given the many
ways we have of connecting (as a writing mother, I’m thrilled we have the venue
of online teaching). I get so much pleasure out of coming up with on-line classes,
and then having the chance to work with my students. You know the saying, that the map is not the terrain--I start with the course map, and we veer where we need to go given who arrives to take the class. I’m excited about the
scope of the International poetry workshop, as well as the new class for
couples recovering from parenting (class structure will include the usual
sharing of poems in progress, but the secret assignment: writing a poem we won’t
share, to be mailed to the better half by Valentine’s Day).
Over at Mother Writer Mentor, here’s the forthcoming class
list:
Around The World in 30 Days:
Transformative Blogging for Writing Mothers: November 1-November 30th 2012
Send Me a Letter: Love Poetry for Couples Recovering from Parenting: Jan 8th to February 1, 2013
Excavating and Writing the Poetry of Motherhood: April 1-April 26th 2013
Excavating and Writing the Poetry of Fatherhood: May 6-May 31st 2013
For a blog post about the support I’ve received from other
women writers and a link to an interview with writer Julianna Baggot: Mother Writer Mentor Blog post by T
Look forward to our writing lives crossing. As always, we are ever on the lookout for guest posts written by writing mothers about any aspect of that dual role.
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
The Three Percent Girl: The Chrysalis and the Coffin
artwork by Jaime Zollars |
I do wonder what happens next. I do wonder why I’m at this
juncture. Except it must be exactly where I need to be to grow, even if
arriving at first flight involves the red rain Woodman refers to in the quote
above. You can focus on the rain, or you can focus on the view from above, the
wet, so newly unfurled wings.
But more likely, I need to position myself in the middle,
neither observing the wings from an aerial perspective nor observing the
fallout, but resting calmly, blindly, in the long black root of the thorax,
where I do nothing but sense where wings begin and the rush of air on the
downbeat and the up.
I see women’s fragility everywhere I go. In the locker room
at the gym, a beautiful graying blonde in her sixties shyly tells me she loves
my green dress, the thin black sandals I’m wearing. She used to wear sandals,
she says. “But I can’t wear them, now,” she confides… “you know, varicose
veins…” I watch her from the mirror where I’m Nefertiti-ing my eyes so I exist
a little more, eye-liner for the self-esteem, her pale blue eyes darting away
from mine. On my way out I touch her
shoulder, say to her, “You enjoy those strong legs of yours.” She laughs, and I
hope she thinks about all the places they’ve carried her.
A female poet friend of mine, in response to my confusion, suggests burying something or a version of someone (metaphorically,
of course) in response, to plant something new, to start over in order to
restore trust. Her words drive me down to my writing cabin, where I stand in
front of a piece of artwork my brother gave me three years ago by Jaime Zollars.
It used to hang in my bedroom, until a friend said to me, “I
would never hang that image where I sleep.” I suppose for its graphic
underworld content, how it might invite one’s dreamer to soak in the image,
lead one into strange forests. But I am in a strange forest, and I find the
image comforting.
This time, I don’t fear some force swallowing the girl child
from beneath, but marvel instead how the umbilical root cord releases her out
of the blood coffin to the sky, ever a flower, primally, eternally in bloom,
meeting a mirror image of herself on the earth’s surface.
There’s little left to do for now. Wait it out. Observe the
heart mending. No seeing yet where the path leads from here. I can walk it
alone but I would rather not. But is that either/or opposition accurate
anymore, or useful? Time to grow up, again. Differentiate, but not fear it
means the end, signals instead a beginning.
Which, in the course of a healthy marriage, I imagine you
do—differentiate, take stock, take responsibility for power you may have
relinquished, revisit the ground rules--over and over again. When you are both willing
to grow.
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Beautiful Unity and A Fine Disinterest: Micro Readings with Liz Brennan
Here are the latest two collaborations posted on Perhaps, Maybe, composed with Liz Brennan (one on roses and motherhood, and one on the reverse kaleidoscope of aging--the spiral back to birth). We meet, we drink tea, we step out on the back deck in the perfect light of late summer dusk and record. The challenge: to get through both verses before the roar of random motorcycle or pickup truck surging up the hill.
1)
Beautiful Unity: Perhaps just after the rose is cut and set into a crystal vase it brings summer into any room…
Text of Poem and Micro Reading
2) A Fine Disinterest: Perhaps as we age, we cultivate a fine disinterest in the attraction of objects until they no longer catch at us like brambles… Text of poem ,
Micro-Reading
Thank you Liz for the invitation to play.