
I finished up my first ever creative writing course, and got my final grade report. Honours. Cool.
This is the first Saturday in the last eight weeks that I haven’t been editing, re-reading, re-hashing a new five page scene for submission to my instructor for feedback. Once I hit “send” I could then get on with my weekend. Before picking things up on Monday, reviewing a classmate’s piece for workshopping and reading assignments due on Tuesday. Seven scenes written about my life for critical commentary. Rather exhausting, and harrowing going back to some not wonderful moments in my life. It seemed the deeper and sadder I got, the better my writing. At least that’s how it appeared to me with the feedback! So it’s a bit liberating not to have that pressure today.
On the other hand, wow, did I ever have a blast. I was engaged in a creative way. I was learning about what constitutes a great scene, I was told I was good with sensory detail, that my writing is crisp and easy flowing. I also received some wonderful constructive criticism. And a feeling that if I ever wanted to publish, there is a market for it.
I’ve got a thirst for good, great writing. Not just from some of my classmates (I was blown away)… but also from the reading assignments. We’d read an excerpt “The Bird Tribunal” by Agnes Ravatn a few weeks ago. Not a memoir but written in the first person, and we were all captivated. A Scandinavian novel, with great description of nature and an overarching mood of foreboding. When I woke up at a stupid early time this morning (6 AM on a Saturday for no good reason)… I found it as an ebook at the library, and finished it in one setting.
This course has changed the way I read. I don’t want to be a reading snob, but I have a more critical eye. I appreciate things that are done well, and lose patience for long meandering descriptions and plot lines. I may have more “DNF”s in my Goodreads selections going forward.
I think I will continue writing my scenes, just not at that crazy speed. Writing requires a lot of commitment with little reward. Perhaps the reward is just finding the creative side of myself again.
One of the pieces we read was written by an author who published her first book at 65! So there is hope.
What a wonderful exercise you did, taking that class. I am glad you’re going to continue with it.
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(Continue with writing I mean, not the class)
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Read your blog post about Cody and he was so sweetly described. And how awesome about your writing class, it sounds really interesting! I hope you keep writing. The reward is also reading yourself back 2 months later and thinking to yourself: huh! I wrote that? To me at least, that’s such a cool feeling.
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How wonderful to finished with honors! All that hard work and effort paid off and more, you have all the tools at your disposal for all your future writing.
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Congrats on completing the class. It sounds like a challenging but enriching experience. I’ve learned a lot whenever I’ve taken a writing class. I hope you get to sleep in next Saturday.
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Congrats on finishing – and with honors! What a great accomplishment. This might be the push I need to finally research some writing classes I can take. MAYBE. I am also very lazy so maybe not, haha.
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What a great experience, and I can imagine you read differently now.
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This sound like a very interesting yet challenging course. But I love how enthusiastic you talk about it. It must be a wonderful feeling creating something, getting better and finding confidence. Cheers to you.
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