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sticker courtesy of Pomelo Books |
Over at
Sharing Our Notebooks, Amy LV is collecting summer notebook and journal ideas for writers of all ages. I contributed this little snip from my current notebook and can't wait to see all the cool suggestions she's collecting. I always look forward to summer break and having more time to spend with my notebook, and now I'll have lots of new adventures to take it on.
Try This! Doodle Your Listening
Heidi Mordhorst
I debated for a long time about how many notebooks to keep:
one for school, one for poetry, one for my calendar/agenda, one for
everyday household business, one for—yep, that was too many notebooks to
juggle.
In the end, I do keep a separate binder for my teacher stuff, but for
all other purposes I have Just One Notebook. I use it for intentional
sitting-down-to-write, but it’s also the one that I take to writing conferences,
to services at my congregation, to a political meeting, to a wellness workshop.
The pages below are from a workshop called “Redefining Health,” and they
definitely do not capture the organized thread of the presentation!
Instead you see my doodled, fonted, decorated, designed version of
it. I have recorded certain turns of phrase, questions for
myself, pairings of words, tangents, direct quotes, and there are lots of possibilities
for mining poems from the graphic details.
I’m calling this thing you might also like to try “DOODLE YOUR
LISTENING.” Carry your notebook anywhere you’ll be sitting and listening--in
the car with the radio on, in church, at a meeting, at the pool where people
don’t know you’re listening! Design and decorate your notes to see what
happens!
Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) had it right:
“A commonplace book is what a
provident poet cannot subsist without, for this proverbial reason, that ‘great
wits have short memories:' and whereas, on the other hand, poets, being liars
by profession, ought to have good memories; to reconcile these, a book of this
sort, is in the nature of a supplemental memory, or a record of what occurs
remarkable in every day’s reading or conversation. There you enter not only
your own original thoughts, (which, a hundred to one, are few and
insignificant) but such of other men as you think fit to make your own, by
entering them there.”
—from “A Letter of Advice to a Young Poet”
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Matt Forrest Esenwine continues his Big Year of Breakout by hosting Poetry Friday today at Radio, Rhythm and Rhyme. Go congratulate him on his first book contract!