sitting on shrimp

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Sitting on Shrimp

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Everybody is a writer.

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Page 1: Sitting on Shrimp

Sitting

on

Shrimp

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@Mamacita [email protected]

Scheiss Weekly: http://janegoodwin.net

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That was, of course, a literary reference.

You recognized it as such because you have cultivated your cultural

literacy. Writers must cultivate a bumper

crop of cultural literacy, and apply it accordingly.

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It’s all about making connections. The more you already know, the more you continually learn.

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Your audience is your context. Be sure your readers understand

where you’re coming from. And vice versa.

State your genre. Write about what you know, or

imagine.

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Be sure you are addressing the right audience.

Context. It all boils down to context.

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Sitting on Shrimp

Until we put ourselves OUT THERE, there will be

no results.

As writers, we are our own bait, and our readers

come when they see us waiting for them.

We know they’re there when we feel them bite,

and most of the time, it feels so good.

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When I hear pompous people talk

about the purity of the English

language, I have to stifle a smirk.

American English isn’t pure; it’s a

veritable stewpot of thises and thats.

It’s a multicolored patchwork crazy

quilt of words, phrases, clauses, and

expressions most of which were

stolen from other languages.

American English is a lot like

American people in that way.

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American English is not pure at all. It’s a fabulous blend of every language on the planet. It’s colorful and majestic and unique. American English rolls with the tides and changes with the seasons. It’s a patchwork quilt. James D. Nicoll put it this way: The problem with

defending the purity of the English language is that English is about as pure as a cribhouse whore.

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James D. Nicoll owned a popular SF/game store in Canada. When his quotation “caught on,” he had this to say:

If I had only known that was going to be my fifteen minutes of fame, I'd have run that sucker through a spell checker and taken more care while

writing the surrounding material.

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Stealing a lot of words from other languages has its

advantages.

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We have all THEIR words to use, too!

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The more words you know, the better you can communicate with

others.

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Keep books in your bathroom. Learn a new word with each twosie.

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Writers need schema. Lots and lots of schema.

The Most Dangerous Game, by Richard Connell.

Unless you’ve read it, you won’t get it.

Schema. Writers need schema. SCHEMA.

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You have a story to tell that nobody else in the universe knows.

Don’t die with your story untold.

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Tell your story as YOU see it.

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Laura Ingalls Wilder

didn’t start writing

her “Little House”

books until she was

in her sixties.

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Grammar and spelling are

important!

Don’t allow your message to

the world to be lost because

your mechanics aren’t good!

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Their There

They’re

NOT THE SAME.

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To Too Two

NOT THE SAME

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A single simple punctuation mark can change your message

completely.

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I bet you thought you knew all the punctuation marks.

This one means “because.” Raise your hand if you knew that.

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I’m angry with Bob he drank the last Diet Coke.

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This is an exclamation comma. Just because you’re excited, or

shouting, doesn’t mean your sentence is finished. Necessarily.

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You told your mother what I said

about her and now her feelings

are hurt.

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This is a question comma.

Sometimes we pause and ask a question in the middle of a statement.

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Are you insane and now we have yet another bill to pay each

month.

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Editors use the pilcrow, or paragraph break, all the time.

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SNARK This is the snark mark – not to be confused with the Dark Mark. It is also called the percontation mark, or irony mark. It indicates that one needs to read between the lines.

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Lewis Carroll’s fiction is full of snark.

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This is a hedera. The hedera, like the pilcrow, indicates a

paragraph break.

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Pronouns need antecedents. Be sure yours match.

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Count your change.

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Egg’s That’s a lot of eggs.

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Your mind will expand. Your worlds will collide. Your connections will astound you. The more you write, the more you discover about yourself and everything else.

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Every part of your life is a story. Tell us.

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Don’t let anyone tell you that it can’t be done. It can, and you can do it.

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Why do writers write?

Because it isn’t there.

--- Thomas Berger

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She had been forced into prudence in her youth; she learned romance as she grew older – the natural sequence of an

unnatural beginning. -- Jane Austen

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Don’t limit your writing to things you think other people might approve of.

• Keep in mind that the person to write for is yourself. Tell the story that you most desperately want to read. ~Susan Isaacs

Write about what you

know. Write about

things you’ve

experienced, and

remember that we

experience things in

our heads, too.

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Pace yourself. You don’t have to finish the whole thing in one sitting.

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Learn lots of cool words.

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And at last you'll know with surpassing certainty that only one thing is more frightening than speaking your truth. And

that is not speaking. - Audre Lorde

Speak.

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These are my children. Tell us about yours.

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Parents love to write about their children, and, as Art Linkletter used

to say, “Kids say the darndest things!”

This is one reason why Mommy and Daddy bloggers are so widespread

and popular.

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We write to taste life twice, in the moment and in retrospection. Anais Nin

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Knowing the rules of grammar will help you develop STYLE.

Rules can be taught and learned.

Style is up to you, the writer, but if you know the rules, your style

will be all the better for it.

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Do you know what the most commonly used opening sentence

is?

It’s common. Don’t use it. It’s already been used.

Here it is:

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If the word you want is “condemn,” be sure to spell it right.

Use “condom” only when you mean to.

Or for safety’s sake. Actually, “condemn” is a very

interesting word, too, if you know its point of origin.

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Interjections. Use sparingly, dammit. Hmm…damn…condemn…Nah.

Inconceivable.

P.S. Profanity and obscenity are NOT the

same thing.

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Pronouns can be confusing when used in compounds. Just remember this:

The pronoun that is correct alone, is still correct when used with another word.

I like pizza. Bill and I like pizza.

There was enough pizza for me. There was enough pizza for Bill and me.

The rule doesn’t change just because Bill was

mooching my pizza.

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“Just between you and me” Is always correct.

It is NEVER

“Just between you and I.”

Never. Ever. Carved in stone.

It’s a prepositional phrase. They use objective forms.

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Those who say it can't be done are usually interrupted by others doing it.

James A. Baldwin

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Don’t be scared. You can do it.

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You don’t want to be this guy: "Lincoln was a tall man, much in the way that Andre the Giant was also tall, and

with the same sideways heart and thick bones that made Andre the Giant look so much like a giant, and made Lincoln look like a guy who shouldn't have been photographed wearing that tall hat which made him look even taller, kinda like a chef only the wrong color, which for the times of his life, were taller even than if he lived today, in which case the hat wouldn't be a problem because it wouldn't exist, and some think and I might agree that he grew that beard because a little girl told him to because the more of that face that was covered up, the better, and you know it's bad if a little kid can't stand it, and we all know which one was took out by a southerner with three names, just like the guy who blew Teddy Kennedy's brain to pieces in the middle of the parade, and which one was killed by a crazy actor leaping from the stage onto the balcony to climax the scene with something not exactly in the script but which would read DEATH all in red caps if it was, and Andre the Giant has a small and dainty wife which must have made their personal lifes interesting to say the least, and Lincoln's wife was a spendthrift nutter, but at least Andrew the Giant got to drop dead naturally instead of be took out by ham actors with guns or book salesmen, but the Morphine Syndrome which made them both so tall and thickboned also caused their death before their old age began, and pretty much ended both the Civil War and any chance of a Princess Bride sequel."

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…or this guy…. • "After watching the movie sos I could really get it, and reading the book, although

in all sincerness it was the Classic Junior Comic of my youth, which I cherish, not the novelle since I haven't got all day to bake a cake with you, (sorry, my parental rights come before a book because being a good example is more important than being seen reading or watching a non-barney substance for my own benefit or pleasure or a good grade) I have concluded that being a comic and thereofe much shorter than a book with hard covers still gives no rights for leaving out important people who have a part in the story, such as the girl with short hair who could shoot, and Moochie. I find follity logic in this paper version because it left out so much that was in the movie! I think in my opinion since the question begged me that the tree house was the best part of the story, and I would love to have one, for I would make my bed in the tower and paint the walls green but have real plumbing with shower and high speed internet in it. I find the book version lacking for it left out the treehouse and the girl and that Tarzan game they played by the waterfalls. Also, many of the words were long and hard to understand, since I was ever in a hurry that week and coulndt' stop to use the dictionary all the time like usual when I read the paper, for example, or the instructions on the back of No-Bake Cheesecake by Jello. I also wondered things like where the hell are all the pirates? To answer the question in only a few words I would have to say, the movie was better because it had them riding ostriches and rolling logs down a hill to crush people, where in the book there was nothing cool like that."

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Writing about comparisons is often useful, though. Well, usually.

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Do not be surprised when those who ignore the rules of grammar also ignore the law. After all, the

law is just so much grammar. ~Robert Brault

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“20 items or less,” indeed.

• “Less” is used when the items cannot be easily counted. If the items can be easily counted, the proper word is “fewer.”

• Sally ate less at breakfast than at lunch.

• Sally ate fewer meals with her new diet.

• Please alert your local WalMart, as their sign really annoys people who know how to use the English language. Then again, it also shows the local population who can read & count and who can’t – a little IQ test, if you will.

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Use “I” if the pronoun is the subject, or if it follows a linking verb. When in doubt, use the pronoun alone. The rule doesn’t change

just because you might be dealing with a compound.

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The most essential gift for

a good writer is a built-in,

shock-proof shit detector. ---Ernest Hemingway

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Things you write can come back to haunt you.

Think before you post.

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If you’re going to worry, worry about the right things.

Change the wrong things.

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Some critics will write “Maya Angelou is a natural

writer” - which is right after being a natural heart surgeon. -- Maya Angelou

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There is no greater agony than bearing

an untold story inside you.

~ Maya Angelou

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Yes. Yes, we can.

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Marie Antoinette never said “Let them eat cake.” She was misquoted. Be careful with your citations; you

don’t want to be misquoted, either. Of course, there’s no sense losing your head over it.

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Be sure your graphics match your message.

The wrong graphic might invalidate your argument.

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Duckface was stupid

at the turn of the 20th

century, too.

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Write about your pleasures.

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Write about your job.

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Write about other people’s children.

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Write about funny signs you see in your area.

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Write about funny things. Write about sad things. Write about

things that have happened to you, or to someone you know.

Write about deadly serious things. Write about things so

other people will know what to do in similar circumstances.

Tell us. Tell.

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The beautiful part of writing

is that

you don’t have to get it right

the first time,

unlike, say,

a brain surgeon.

~Robert Cormier

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The power of the harasser, the abuser, the rapist depends above all on the silence of women.—Ursula LeGuin

Speak out. Act. Write it up.

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Be the brave one, not the needy one. Write your own story.

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Choose your words wisely.

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Let the secret of your success be YOU.

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Authors who never give you

something to disagree with

never give you anything to

think about.

-- Michael LaRocca

Don’t be afraid to make a reader angry.

You’re doing him a favor if you do. Never fear

controversy. Embrace it. It makes us think.

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Be careful what you write down. Be sure you really want to write it. You are carving in stone. Is this how you want people to perceive you?

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All creative people are a little crazy. Nurture it. It’s what

makes us unique. It’s also what gives us blog fodder.

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TELL US ABOUT IT.

Do you do ordinary things in an unusual way?

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. . . and write about both.

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Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body.

~Joseph Addison

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Readers will always be better writers.

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What immeasurable wonders are experienced and understood by a

reader that a non-reader can’t even imagine, for if he could

imagine it, he’d be a reader, too.

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Reading enhances the soul, the mind, the

body, the emotions. . . .

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Nonreaders have only one world in which to dwell; readers live in

the universe - not just ours, but all of them. And, living there, they have much to say to each other

which a nonreader can’t begin to comprehend.

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Readers appreciate the world more

because they have seen what it is, what it has been, and what it

could be.

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Readers have more words

and more experiences to connect to the

world.

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Readers understand the world

more clearly.

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A bird doesn't sing because it has an answer, it sings because it has a song.

-- Maya Angelou

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You have a song, too. Sing.

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Who among us does NOT work for the circus? Really? Liar.

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I think that in order to write really well and convincingly, one must be somewhat poisoned

by emotion. --Edna Ferber

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Remove those 'I want you to like me' stickers from your

forehead and, instead, place them where they truly will do

the most good -- on your mirror!

~ Susan Jeffers

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Possessives: If the word does not end

in “s,” add ‘s. If the word already ends

in “s,” add an apostrophe after it.

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Excellent writing can be found in unexpected places.

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Inexcusable mistakes can be found in unexpected places, too.

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People want to know why I do this, why I write such gross stuff. I like to tell them I have the

heart of a small boy... and I keep it in a jar on my desk. -- Stephen King

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Put your ear down close to your soul and listen hard. --Anne Sexton

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It makes little difference how

many university degrees or

courses a person may own.

If he cannot use words to

move an idea from one point

to another, his education is

incomplete.

--- Norman Cousins

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The gentleman below (with my daughters) is Barrett Hansen, but you probably know him better by another name. Because of him, hundreds of writers have found success. There are all

kinds of writers, and to encourage them is a noble, if occasionally “demented,” profession.

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Laugh. Cry. Sing. Dance. Love. Hate. And tell the world about it all.

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If your dog LOOSES its collar,

it will probably LOSE it.

You don’t loose your keys. You lose your keys.

This little spelling glitch makes you look like a

tool. Just to let you know.

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Never put an “s” at the end of “anyway.”

Never spell it “neway.” Never. Never. Never.

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If the sign says “No checks excepted,” they have to take your

check.

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The rewrite is often far superior to the original.

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Cell phone: OK

ANYWHERE ELSE: Verboten

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You don’t dot your i’s with little hearts any more. (I hope.) Don’t use cutesy code when you write; it’s hard to take an adult seriously if she is still writing

as a pre-teen would write.

(OMG, the old broad’s not serious, LOL!)

She’s serious.

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In math, two negatives equal a positive. The same is true in English grammar. “I don’t want nothing” actually means “I do want something.”

“I don’t hardly see your point” actually means “I see your point, plain as day.”

Use one negative at a time or you’ll find yourself saying the opposite of what you meant to say.

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Our worst experiences can be our best experiences. When we’ve

been through hell, writing about it can help others avoid it.

Tempered steel and vulcanized rubber are tough – strong, and

capable of withstanding tremendous pressure. They get that way by going through fire.

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Apollo and the Muses

In ancient times, women were in charge of all things artistic and creative. Without women, we would have no “music,”

“museums,” or “amusements.” Or any more men.

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P.S. Now you know where a really cool band got its name: from

creative women.

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We are a species that needs and wants to understand who we are. Sheep lice do not seem to share this longing, which is one reason

why they write so little. --Anne Lamott

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Writing is only boring to the people who are, themselves, boring.

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It's tougher than Himalayan yak jerky in January. But, as any creative person will tell you, there are days

when there's absolutely nothing sweeter than creating something

from nothing. -- Richard Krzemien

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The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference

between lightning and a lightning bug. -- Mark Twain

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I saved this one for last. It’s an interrobang.

The interrobang is the punctuational equivalent of awesome, glorious, holy

cow, fantastic, and WTFOMG.

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One more time: Let’s groove on the weirdo punctuation marks!

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Writing is not a genteel profession. It's

quite nasty and tough and kind of dirty.

-- Rosemary Mahoney

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There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and open a

vein. --- Red Smith

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Write about your life. Tell us how it was. And is.

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So, you don’t think you can write? I beg to differ.

I’ve seen pigs fly before.

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When we were children, we used to think

that when we were grown-up we would

no longer be vulnerable. But to grow up

is to accept vulnerability.... To be alive is

to be vulnerable. -- Madeline L’Engle

Write on.

An Interlude, by William Sergeant Kendall, 1907

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P.S.

Beware of advice

-- even this.

~Carl Sandburg