Read Writing Is My Drink Online
Authors: Theo Pauline Nestor
Tags: #General, #Reference, #Writing Skills, #Personal & Practical Guides, #Self-Help
After work, I’d walk our dog along the red dirt roads that tra-
versedthe terrain of black volcanic rubble and silvery blue sage
across the street from our house. Beyond the lava and the sage,
stacks of the white and red rock formed the very surreal Snow
Canyon. Walking through this landscape, I’d feel my dream of
becoming a writer resurfacing, a force gathering critical mass. I
still had this idea that one day I would do something I thought
of as my “real writing,” although the hubris of this aspiration
also embarrassed me because I had no proof that I could write
and no idea what form this “real writing” would take. Haiku?
Fiction? All I knew was that I wasn’t doing it.
On the few occasions I did try to write, I wrote short sto-
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ries that inevitably ground to a halt after five pages or so. Some
segue or momentum of plot usual y tripped me up. After that,
I’d squeak out a sentence or two but my heart wasn’t in it, and
so I’d give up. I had a few notebooks full of false starts. The busy school years blurred past in a rush of students’ questions, papers, and class prep, but during the long, hot summers off work
the feeling of falling behind would start up again. The years were
going by, I told myself: Ticktock, as if writing had a closing bio-
logical window.
A woman in the HR department at the college told me about
an annual summer writers’ retreat in the mountains above Cedar
City, and I decided to go. Up a twisty road of pines and red rock,
an old lodge held a number of classes all about the craft of writ-
ing, real y nutsy and boltsy how-to classes. One class I took that
week, taught by the poet Ken Brewer, changed everything for
me as a writer.
Ken was a sweet bear of man who was a product of the very
best parts of the seventies—the groovy aspects that supported
equality, vegetable gardens, and self-expression. As he segued
into our writing assignment, Ken talked about how he always
had trouble sticking to external forms. He gave the example of
learning to waltz, which he’d found very difficult to learn. He
could dance free form to rock and rol , he told us, because then
he didn’t have to stick to someone else’s pattern of how his body
should be moving. As I nodded yes, yes, yes, he parlayed this
analogy into talking about how he’d final y discovered a form
that was perfectly suited to his content. He told us that this form he called “the triptych” had helped him to find as a writer.
Ken taught us that the triptych’s structure, a form borrowed
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from visual art, grows out of theme instead of story. Instead of
beginning with a story you want to tel , you start with an idea or
a feeling, he explained as he led us in a writing exercise that re-
quired us to isolate a concept, feeling, idea, or theme we wanted
to write about.
Everything he was saying about the triptych made sense to
me. I felt this tremendous sense of relief and joy, as if I’d been
traveling for years in a country where no one spoke my language,
and I’d final y met someone who understood me perfectly. As
I worked on the theme-identifying exercise, it occurred to me
that often my need to write sprung from the desire to express
an idea or a feeling rather than the need to tell a specific story. I quickly identified that I wanted to write about a long-standing
sense of separation I felt and my craving to heal that sense of
separation. Ken urged us to pick a single word and I chose this
word: “detachment.”
As instructed by Ken, I wrote the word “detachment” in the
center of a page. Then, following his direction that we come
up with three events or moments that matched this feeling or
theme, I named in separate bubbles two scenes from my child-
hood, and the final scene was the day I moved away from home
at seventeen. Ken explained that these three scenes would be-
come the triptych’s three panels, and when hung together they
would tell a story larger than the sum of its panels. Magic, Ken
called it.
Ken urged us to write those three scenes right then and
there. And so we did. We sat there in silence in this cavernous
lodge at four thousand feet with the smell of pine in the room,
writing. I wrote one scene and then another and then another.
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As I wrote, I fell into the story in a way I never had before, be-
cause I trusted Ken and I trusted this form. In this perfect storm
of trust and pine and high elevation, I moved into the belief that
the story I was writing
would
come together and that, gulp, I would finish it.
At the end of the day, I drove down that twisty mountain
road back to my house in the red desert and fired up my laptop.
I typed up what I’d written in class. A single golden thread of the theme of detachment wove its way through the three scenes—
just as Ken had said it would—magical y holding the scenes to-
gether, but just barely. It was the barely that thrilled me.
Barely
was exactly what I was trying to say; maybe
barely
was what I’d been wanting to say for a while. Maybe I’d been waiting to find
the right form. Maybe we’re all waiting for the right form.
In part, the triptych worked for me because it lent a struc-
ture that was a natural extension of what I felt compelled to say.
I’d been yearning to express how seemingly disparate moments
in my life were united by a theme and a feeling—for a way of
showing
how those moments were united instead of just simply saying that they were. The magic of the triptych sprung from the
empty spaces between the scenes, negative spaces that seemed
to whisper their own quiet message.
It was a small accomplishment, but it’s often our small ac-
complishments that give us the confidence to keep going—to do
more, to write more, to explore further. Final y I’d completed a
personal narrative, the writing I dared to call my own, to call—
even though I felt foolish to do so—my “real” writing.
I went on to write more triptychs. Okay, the truth is I be-
came hooked on triptychs. Some twenty years later, I’m still
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teaching my memoir-writing students the triptych form, and
the form continues to thrill me with its ability to tell a new type of story. Like me, many of my students feel the triptychs are the
first pieces they’ve written that felt complete.
The inspiration to finish that first triptych in that Utah
lodge was more than arriving upon the perfect form; the other
piece of magic I got from that workshop up that twisted road
of pines was the understanding that my life was worth observ-
ing, worth the ink and the paper, worth examination and time,
and was, in essence, of literary value. Even though the word
“memoir” wasn’t used that day, the examples Ken gave were
autobiographical. As a poet, he was adept at transforming his
ordinary experiences into a literary form, and so for him it
was natural to use his own experiences in the triptych as wel .
When I’d written fiction in college, I not only tried to press
my square-peg stories into a Hemingway-shaped story form, I
often tried to obscure their autobiographical roots, assuming
that my life was not the sort of life that could yield up litera-
ture. I’d never fought a bull or stepped foot in Manhattan or
fly-fished or fought in a war.
One of the essential characteristics of a writer is the willing-
ness and ability to see the stories in our lives and to believe that our observations, thoughts, and obsessions are worth following
to the page. If you’re accustomed to discounting your thoughts,
this process of valuing your own experience isn’t going to hap-
pen overnight. It will be a process, a long retraining in which we
move from negating to valuing. It has been for me.
I see this process at work each year when a new group of
students arrives in my classroom. Often, at the beginning of
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the year, at least some of them are struggling to believe that
their subject matter has value. At the start of fall quarter last
year, a student shyly told me that she felt self-conscious that
her topic was not important enough or maybe somehow self-
indulgent.
“What is it, the topic?” I asked in a whisper, anticipating
something like the joy of teacup collecting.
“Deciding whether to have kids or not,” she said weakly.
“You’re not sure if the decision to bring life into the world is
big enough?”
She nodded.
I urged her, maybe even begged her, to write on that topic.
“Begged” sounds extreme, but I am rabid about this issue, be-
cause I can very easily remember that time when I didn’t think
my own life-and-death topics were worthy, even when I could
read another writer’s five-page account of playing Frisbee and
think it was funny and fantastic, when it never would have oc-
curred to me to question the value of his topic.
Consider that you are developing bit by bit the habit of believ-
ing that your own thoughts are worth exploring. You are cultivat-
ing the faith that these thoughts will yield up something, even if
you don’t know what yet. You’re trusting that there will be some-
thing of value in there. Even if you feel sil y, like you’re wasting time on those thoughts now, someday you won’t feel sil y. That
day will come after you’ve followed the trail of your observations
and watched them become something and after you’ve worked
on that something until it becomes golden: a poem that captures
the moment, maybe even a painting that matches a feeling or an
essay that gives voice to a story only you can tel .
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Try This
1. Make a list of all the jobs you’ve ever had.
2. Pick as many of these jobs as you like and for each one list
“the emotional requisites” of the job, the emotional task or
tasks that the job required you to accomplish. For example,
teaching requires exposure and therefore vulnerability, even
though vulnerability is never listed on any job description for
teacher, instructor, or professor.
3. Pick one of these jobs and at least one emotional requisite for that job. Set the timer for ten minutes and write about that job
and what it required of you. Did you resist the requirement at
first? What did that look like? How did you grow and improve?
4. Write on this question: What did you learn in that job emo-
tional y that could help you as a writer?
5. If you want, continue with this pattern, writing about each of
the jobs on your list.
6. Write about a job for which the emotional requisite was over-
whelming to you. Perhaps, you left the job or stayed but remained
miserable because of the burden of the emotional requisite.
7. Write about a time when you took a big risk—such as moving
to a new place—so that you could follow a dream.
8. Write for ten minutes on this question: When have you “put
down the cards” and started following your own script in-
stead of someone else’s.
9. Now consider this: As a writer what would it look like for you
to “put down the cards”?
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10. Get a small notebook that you keep in your purse or back
pocket. Start taking notes on your thoughts and observations.
Challenge yourself to take at least one note every day.
11. Go to WritingIsMyDrink.com and read examples of triptychs.
12. Create a triptych of your own, following these instructions or making your own way there.
• Brainstorm a list of ideas/feelings/concepts that you
might write on. A partial list of the topics my students
have used includes: redemption, loss, grief, love, lust,
hope, faith, envy, jealousy, rejection, land, birth, dating.
But go for it and generate a list of your own.
• Pick a topic from the list. When choosing, I advise you
to go where the heat is, to one of these topics that ex-
hilarates you or even scares you. Personal writing is best
when the stakes are high for the writer.
• Follow the clustering technique outlined in the last chap-
ter, brainstorming as much as you can on your topic.
• Write three “panels,” ensuring that each panel is some-
how tied to the chosen theme. The panels don’t have to
be the same length.
• Try different orders for the panels before settling on a