Writing Vision: Words Can Make Your Visions Come to Life

Vision

About two years ago, I had a literary vision. Maybe you could call it a sort of ‘language arts dream’. This summer, that vision became real.

Way back in 2009, I attended the Nature Consortium’s fabulously unique Arts in Nature Festival at Camp Long in West Seattle, and I noticed there were no words there. That is, there was no literary component to the incredible array of arts included in the two-day event held among the trees and cabins of Seattle’s only campground. That’s when my vision began to take shape.

I wanted to bring words to the woods in the form of literary readings and writing workshops. I wanted people of all ages to share their work. I also imagined an interactive sculpture where people would write their favorite words or wishes on a piece of cloth and tie it to a tree branch—an idea inspired by the ‘clootie’ wells one might come across when traveling in Ireland or Scotland. I wanted people to experience poetry and other carefully selected words in an environment that was open and playful, not exclusive or pretentious.

To make this happen, I needed to put my vision into words that would inspire others to help. So I began writing grant applications, and approached Nature Consortium with my vision. After a number of attempts and much careful writing and editing, I secured funds from the Elizabeth George Foundation, which greatly helped support my writing efforts.

At Words in the Woods, as the literary event at the festival came to be called, local writers Esther Altshul Helfgott, Ann Batchelor Hursey, Jennifer D. Munro, Julie Lange Groth, Sarah DeWeerdt, Sarah Steinke and Arlene Naganawa read their stunning work. There were also riveting, beautiful words read by local Pathfinder K-8 teachers and poets Kelly Riggle-Hower and Ami Pendley. People were inspired to see young readers—including some of my students from the Family Learning Program, a community, home school organization— sharing their work under the tall trees too.

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The poetry collage and haiku workshops yielded wonderful poems, and the ‘clootie’ sculpture was inundated with messages and words that were both inspiring and humorous.

Like me, the clients who hire The Writers K have visions that need words. This past year I’ve worked closely with a client who will soon self-publish a small book written for salespeople to improve their sales. We’ve been working together for nearly a year organizing, writing and editing his book. Recently he showed me the finished cover design, and it struck me how much it resembled the vision he first presented to me, and how the many hours of working with words had finally made his vision come true.

Words, first spoken, plant a seed. Written down, words have the power to crystallize our visions and to nail down the important aspects of our biggest dreams. Written words create a place where other people can see what we see and become part of our vision.

I’m grateful for the success of Words in the Woods. Through The Writers K, I’m also honored to be able to use my writing skills to help make the visions of others become a reality.

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Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit!

I say it.  Do you?

For years now, I don’t know how many—though it must be within the last twenty-four because that is as long as I’ve known my friend, Susan, who taught me to say it—I’ve said, Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit aloud on the first day of each month. This ensures good luck for the rest of the month.

Technically, Rabbit (times three) should be the very first words from your mouth on the morning of, say, February 1st, before you’ve asked your husband to please, in the name of everything that is good, turn off the radio alarm, before you scritch your daughter’s back through her jammies and say, Time to wake up, little one, and before you promise the black and white cat that he shall be fed soon.

This tradition or superstition, which I thought Susan made up out of thin air and taught to me and our mutual friend, Laura, has actually been around since 1909, if you can believe Wikipedia’s take on Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit. Apparently, the phrase can be shortened—if you’re lazy or maybe in a hurry—to simply, Rabbits! or White Rabbits!

Of course, who can remember what day it is, let alone whether it’s the first day of the month, when you’ve just peeled your eyelids open and it’s still dark because it is, say, only February 1st, usually one of the darkest and wettest first days of the month each year. And so Susan graciously slackened the rules and allows Laura and me to say, Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit at any point in the day that we happen to remember it is the first day of the month, or, even more loosely, whenever we happen to feel the need for a little good luck.

Honestly, I don’t know if this word, repeated three times at the beginning of each month, has ever brought me luck. I do know that twelve times a year I can bet money that I will receive an email or phone call or a shout across the table from my long-time sister-friends, Laura and Susan, whose friendship, as mentioned above, can’t be calculated in years. I know that these words bring us together, the way prayers do, or the way a mission statement can clarify and pinpoint ideals in a diverse group of people.

I work with words everyday either on a freelance writing project (or two), or on my poetry manuscript (or two), or as I prepare for and discuss words for the classes I teach. It can be overwhelming, and yet, on the first day of each month I say Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit and I’m reminded of the power and poetry of the right words at the right time.

Freelance and Free Verse: A Happy Couple

As a professional freelance writer, I find myself immersed in words on a daily basis; whether I’m intently focused on a current project, or drafting up an alluring email to a prospective client, each word makes a difference. Words, chosen well, can make a potential snore-fest into web content that keeps one’s eyes on the screen, hungry to find out more. This challenge is what I love and—yes, I’ll admit it—sometimes hate about the freelance writing life. But when our clients feel we’ve delivered five-star content, the kind of personal stories or clear technical description that they couldn’t generate for themselves, well, it makes the struggle worth the effort.

Sometimes when the grind of business writing drains the gusto out of me, I turn to my first love: poetry—particularly free verse poetry (though I love tussling through a pantoum or sestina every now and then!). Like writing a client’s bio, or making mundane background information more interesting, writing free verse poems requires just the right words, the right rhythm and sentiment. Okay, perhaps it’s not as dire to make a grant application read like a piece by William Blake, but it must have resonance with the grant review board!

Unlike freelance writing for clients, free verse poetry accesses a different part of my brain where troves of untapped thoughts, ideas and feelings hang out. Sorting through the smorgasbord becomes my biggest task. At first I welcome this opportunity but, like freelance writing, the struggle waxes and wanes in intensity. I’ll admit to having days when I feel like gnawing my own limbs might be a better option than sitting at the screen trying to find the right way to describe my daughter’s hair (Stringy? Fluffy? Golden? Like the color of a sand flea? Errrrrgh!)

The funny thing is, I don’t regret in any way my devotion to writing—in any form. I’ve had the honor of having my work published in a number of literary journals over the years, and my chapbook Urban Animal Expeditions (Dancing Girl Press) was just released this September. My life as a poet has unfolded wonderful experiences for me. Earlier this year, I was invited to read at Oyez Roslyn!, a unique reading series in Roslyn, Washington, that blends local writers and historians with out-of-town writers. Writing and studying poetry have also given me opportunities to spread my knowledge through teaching young people in the Seattle Public Schools and in homeschool environments. I believe these affirmations, like the testimonials that happy clients share with The Writers K, will keep me freelancin’ and free versin’ for all my days to come.