Word by Word

Practical insights for writers from Jessica P Morrell

What’s Next?

Written By: Jessica Morrell - Jan• 04•13

©Jessica Page Morrell

      Sometimes you just have to trust the thing you claim to trust – and for me that is the shaping spirit of creativity. ~ Jeanette Winterson

     In long-ago times, as seems fitting, March was the beginning of the year and interestingly marked the resumption of war. In about 700 BC January and February were added to the calendar by a Roman king. January is named after the god Janus and he is the god of gates and doorways, openings and closings. Janus has two faces, back to back, which allow him to look both backward into the old year and forward into the new one at the same time. He is the spirit of the opening. Native Americans called January the wolf moon, the Anglo-Saxons called it Wolf-monath because wolves came into the villages in winter in search of food. Wolves howled loudest and searched furthest in January. With wolves about they hunkered down, kept the livestock close.

For me January will always mean the special beauty of snow and white and winter stars spangling the blackest sky. My child’s heart travels back again and again to those memories this time of year. Lacy, frost-etched windows and whisper quiet mornings. I remember most the deep silence, when every morning was a surprise: how much snow had fallen in the night? How cold was the morning? The blanketed world was far from colorless and rich in contrasts: the deep white  lit w ith flashes of cardinal red and black as birds flitted in the aftermath of storms , the bare-branched trees, and the winter silvery hue. And the smell of snow—part metal, part magic arriving on the wind. Icicles tapering, gleaming, more silver; beautiful and somehow cruel . Sleds, ice skates and toboggans.

There was something endless about the snow in my childhood. It was epic. Arctic. It was a hushed, buried world.

By January there were wind-swept drifts piled shoulder high and the snow kept coming, sparkling like diamonds under the streetlights. And, of course, mighty storms barged through, with drunken, wild winds and heaping drifts, burying landscapes. You knew that in the woods bears were hibernating and that knowledge felt as if you were in on the most primal and fabulous secret.

Ice was always underfoot no matter how hard you scraped with a shovel, and the cold wouldn’t lift. Snow prints crisscrossed the yard, the surface like lost maze walkers. Summer a far-off, distant land.

January required layers, endurance, and good humor. We were fueled with hot chocolate, oatmeal, soup, and casseroles.  The world within buildings was absurdly different from what lie outdoors.  Because of the cold we couldn’t tromp lost in our imaginings along a river or creek, because we’d get frostbite. And did.  When skating or sledding you were forced indoors at intervals because you couldn’t feel your fingers and toes. Really cold feet make it hard to stay balanced.

The cold like a force, our breath sharp in our throat and clouding high into the air.

Far from childhood, the Pacific Northwest’s climate is relatively mild. The wet–not constant with climate change–encourages books and blankets, maybe a puzzle, a pot of soup to assemble and nurture. Inward habits and pastimes. But still  the habits of winter.

Even we’ve recently unwrapped a calendar or planner or app, this month is designated for deliberate slowness. Almost everything we care deeply about, we accomplish with some nimbus of slowness and deliberateness, whether it is crafting a poem, tending a garden, or baking a pie. “The greatest assassin of life is haste,” said the poet Theodore Roethke. And yet so many of us feel rushed, overwhelmed, and time pressed.

For writers perhaps there is a lesson to be learned from a true January and a true winter. When the world is cloaked in mystery and time unspools in many hours of darkness, allow the quiet to sink in. Look inward as the season demands. And when the time is right, start anew, but with quiet and unhurriedness. As the stark midwinter dawns, you might want to begin the day with candlelight, silence, and solitude and end the day by tidying up, clearing away to face the next dawn with a clean desk, an empty sink, and fresh steadfastness.

When you’re rested from the din and rituals and richness of the holidays, the shock of another year gathering before you, then gently, gently start pushing toward what’s next. A book idea or editing your NaNoWriMo project, finishing a short story collection, or polishing and submitting essays or poems. Maybe you need to read more or submit more or create a blog. Let it come to you like a midnight snowfall; the kind that hushes everything.

And like midnight snow, trust it will nudge your interest. Perhaps it’s a new project or rethinking a discarded one. Perhaps you’ll imagine a character who you’ll bring into your heart.

Trust that your what’s next is waiting. Trust that creativity happens in the quiet.

Imagine the possibility of silence.

But since it is January, a looking back and forward time, also push yourself toward untouched emotional territory in your writing. Let yourself really feel when you’re writing. We all have emotions deep made over the years. And we all need to call on them to make the writing authentic. Write with recognition and memory and trust. Experiment.

Write in a notebook instead of your laptop. Write in bed, fresh from your dreams. Write as if you’re embodying your characters bone upon bone, with the gnawing grief or spite or rage or whatever emotion that needs to be channeled. Write from the body so your characters can be felt and known.

Find the intersections of theme and desire; push into the stream of a story.

If you neglected writing over the holidays–and who can blame you–invite your writing back like an old friend. It’s time to find inspiration using untried methods, to rejuvenate what has been set aside and invite in originality. And carve out time for nothingness. If possible let a fire roar, and simply sit and gaze into it and allow heat and time wash over you. Allow yourself to feel fragile or tender or soft. And then start writing.

It’s also the perfect month to try out and change your daily routine, to create new writerly rituals. You might want to think back to all the risks you’ve taken and how they turned out. What small changes can lead to big results? Should you vow to finish each project before starting a new one? Should you enter competitions? Dust off an old manuscript and determine if it’s worth reviving?

January is also a good month to dial down your time on social media sites. You don’t need to be so connected all the time. It will all be there in February–now that’s a month for bringing into being.

And yes, it’s a good time to make fresh resolutions, acknowledge intentions– but they need to be linked to your values.

What do you want to give the world and how will your writing accomplish this?

The rest of the year can be spent worrying about your kids, health concerns, distant wars, and hometown troubles.  This is the month for finding your original fire.

I wish you hushed and happy New Year.
No portion of this column may be reprinted without permission.

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

10 Comments

  1. Jessica, this should be required reading for every writer at the start of every New Year. You’ve inspired memories, and reasons to love January all over again. 🙂

    • jessicap says:

      Well aren’t you kind?
      Sometimes I think that resolutions and hup, hup, willpower only approaches just don’t work.
      This is supposed to be the quiet time of year. I love to live with the real sense of the seasons and I suspect you do too.
      Jessica

  2. Thanks for the inspiring article, Jessica. Happy New Year!

    • jessicap says:

      And thanks for being a reader.
      Your writing inspires me too. I love the way you imagine the future. Well, maybe not all the outcomes, but how your world feels so potent.
      Best, Jessica

  3. Shari Green says:

    Lovely and inspirational! Thank you so much.

  4. Jessica
    I’ve been wrestling with the slippery ice and low light of winter the past few weeks.

    I lost my older sister April 23rd, when she took a dramatic step and jumped 123 feet from the apex of the Ross Island Bridge. I know it was a well planned, conscious choice on her part, but the weight of her a absence showed up at my door for the holidays.

    Your eloquence and imagery this quiet morning took me through a shadowed inner door that opened to a landscape of beauty and sacred space. As a visual artist, it is a place that fuels my spirit.
    I cannot thank you enough.
    Mary

    • jessicap says:

      Oh Mary,
      I’m so sorry to hear this. What a heartbreak.
      I’m not surprised the weight of her absence shadowed your holidays.
      I find poetry, music, writing, art help so much with grief, don’t you?
      All my best,
      Jessica

  5. Jessica,

    I hadn’t read your column in WW newsletter before and am very glad I did. It all rang true to me; your writing is imbued with great spirit. I also know the adoration of snow. Thanks for insights shared with us-I will keep working.

    • jessicap says:

      Appreciate you reading it Cynthia. I’m going to post some more columns here. However, I’m also collecting a bunch for an ebook.

Leave a Reply to jessicap Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.