Window Writer

10 May 2010

Golden Muse




Golden Muse Statue Prague  “Thalia”
“Inspiration does exist, but it must find you working”  Pablo Picasso










Waiting For My Muse

My journey as a writer I have often struggled in  “waiting for my muse” and looking at a blank page.  Once I started feeding my muse by activating my senses, awareness and surrounding my self with good books, my muse became my new honored friend and my most valuable writing tool.  I have realized that muses bestow their favors on those who make them welcome. 

Stacks of newspapers lined the shelves’ outside store fronts of this small tucked away Prague neighborhood set in a dozen-old square blocks of dusty  fin de siècle apartment buildings .  The letters in the headlines were all strung together making words that my mind could not find meaning for.  One newspaper stood out as it was a burnt golden rod in color, reminded me of when I was a child and the evening newspaper would come in a golden brownish-orange.

I made my way through the streets of Old Town Prague and my search for English words continued.  I purchased a guidebook with much anticipation to read more on the history of Prague.  After four hours of walking the intriguing maze of cobblestones lanes, we reached home.  I fell into an exhausted slumber position and pulled out my Petite Guide Of Prague, and to my disappointment, it was in French.  Needless to say, my search for English words today was unsuccessful.

To satisfy my craving for English commentary, I opened my writing file and there before me laid a few newspaper clippings that I had saved – some I am wondering why they even made it into this particular folder at all.  What laid on top of the clippings was an article about the nutritional benefits of bananas.  This slightly yellow newspaper print was dated seven years ago.  

I not only keep blank books but I accumulate masses of clipped paged articles - folders bulging with clippings in all sizes, shapes, colors, and  subjects – a spectrum of chaos one might surmise. 

The banana article surged my memory and I reflected back on my “muse” workshop a few years ago.  Our final project was to find an article that we had kept and write a fictional narrative letting the subject of the news article be our muse..  I was overwhelmed when I opened my folders but this particular article on bananas pulled at me and my muse began working zealously.

I created “Grace” a fictional character.  I blended some of my personal world into the story and found it extremely empowering and engaging to write from this perspective and initiated by this type of musing.

O Muses, O high genius, aid me now!
O memory that engraved the things I saw,
Here shall your worth be manifest to all!
(Anthony Esolen translation, 2002)

The Banana


Grace
 

I am considered a slight woman of middle age who is at the cross roads in my life.  I have made great strides to surrender and stretch myself to a deeper sense of consciousness.. I was soaking up every bit of awareness I could, like a flower in rain. 

I was departing from my home state of Maryland and traveling to a country that was slightly smaller in size but populated with 8.4 million people.  I was curiously fascinated about Rwanda’s population of 898 people per sq mile in comparison to the US’s density of 84 per sq mile.  Here I was, traveling to this breathtaking country. I could not image a more beautiful place than the rolling hills of Rwanda, where the red earth flows through Rwanda as a vein.  The narrow red dirt paths appear like hundreds of veins against the green vegetation. The soil reacts in great movement to the rains and at times causes great turbulence. 

I fully understood that to experience the beautiful colors of Rwanda – one had to identify with the spirit of the country and its people.  I came in preparation.

I rode silently in the passenger van; I was staring out the smudged window focusing on the Rwandans who were walking along side the road.  It turned out to be a perfect day – the sun was poetically charging the sky as the van navigated its way on the undeveloped dirt roads - the roads were deeply rutted from the seasonal rains.

The roadside has its own distinct way of life in Rwanda – the roadside travelers carry loads of fruit, jerry cans, wood and rice sacks on their heads; they remain forward focused – their steps are taken at a slow methodical pace.  Small children carry infants on their backs or tie them securely to their petite hips.  There is no evidence of haste, frustration, or unrest – there is just this silent mystic movement.

My concentration lost its sense of the present; I drifted back to the morning’s World Nutritional Conference – where the point of reference was the Number 4 ranked food crop of the world – The Banana.  The Banana is rated as the number one fruit in America where an average of 26 pounds of bananas are consumed per person per year – Rwanda consumes 550 pounds per person per year.   Clearly the statistics showed the banana being among the healthiest of fruits.  The studies were all conclusive – there were significant health benefits from bananas for anemia, blood pressure, brainpower, constipation, depression and PMS.  I was especially interested in the conversation I overheard from two medical doctors.  They were contemplating about a tribal healing practice where rubbing the inside of the banana skin on a mosquito bite reduces swelling and irritation. 

The van slowed and I quickly changed my focus.  We stopped in front of the guest house - the day was cloudless, a perfect afternoon.

The bougainvillea blooms were still dripping from the tropical downpour earlier in the day.  I made my way to the rocked terrace joining my host and my friend Gahiji (his Rwandan name meaning hunter and seeker).  The house girl offered me a glass of Cuvee Millee Collins wine – known as the best banana wine in the country.  I closed my eyes and lifted my chin and savored the taste – the wine was quite fine – a sherry-like flavor.  Gahiji, my Rwandan interpreter, was taking pleasure in his tall mug of Rwanda’s brewed banana beer called Urgwagwa.

I slumped my body comfortably in the faded wicker lounge chair.  I noticed the red clay colored hut across the road.  The walls were covered in bright shades of bougainvillea and there were rows of corn and the daisy-like pyrethrums hanging from the banana leaf roof.  The hut was marked with a sprig of flowers tied to a bamboo pole – a sign that a batch of banana beer was fermenting inside.  At this time of day, the family was probably cooking a single pot of banana and beans, in questionable water, on an open flame inside the house: only a minimal amount of smoke is vented through an inverted cone at the top of the hut.  The heat keeps the family warm but it has caused terrible respiratory problem for their elderly grandmother.

I looked over at Gahiji and he was quietly enjoying his brewed banana beer.  Earlier in the week, during my visit to the Kayonza village, a group of villagers, mostly women with babies tied to their backs, gathered and worked together peeling hundreds of bananas.  After peeling, they cover the bananas with grass and banana leaves.  Holding their colorful skirts knee high; three women set out to smash the life out of the bananas – they work feverishly for thirty minutes until it was liquefied – they added a little sorghum to help the fermenting process.  The villagers then gathered the banana peels (rich in potassium and calcium) and spread them over the fields as fertilizer. Gahiji boasted to the visiting on lookers about the process being a mere eight days from picking to drinking.

Before I made her way back to the guest house I stopped to visit with the young boys along the roadside.  They were selling Banana Juice, banana soda, banana jelly and loaves of banana bread.  Several banana leaf bundles that housed the fresh eggs were scattered on the ground.  After a challenging exchange of conversation, I proceeded to the guesthouse through a thick forest of banana trees; I came upon a group of women who were trying to escape the blistering sun and were sitting in the shade under the narrow overhang of their thatched roof.  I stood there for a few minutes observing them making baskets from natural banana leaves.  One by one, they stopped and extended their small weathered hands in greeting.  As I stepped away, I paused, and glanced skyward with a grateful smile.


Back at the guest house the host poured me another glass of Cuvee Millees Collins wine.  Dinner was served shortly thereafter with local dishes of lamb chops – fried bananas – central Africa lake fish cooked in butter and a side-dish of matoke, bland mashed plantains (plantains being a close relative of the banana).  A meal without matoke is considered not a meal at all.

The conversation at dinner became very engaged.  The core of the discussion was focused on agricultural farming of the banana. Rwanda is a land blessed with rich volcanic soil and bears two million tons of bananas a year. 

With my quiet, but powerful voice, I empowered to speak and expressed my concern for the future of this significant fruit.  The banana being seedless and a mature cousin of the wild herb – is genetically vulnerable.  My main concern was about the widespread banana disease of leaf fungus.  Everyone agreed that the bananas are an essential resource in Rwanda and a mainstay in the every day lives of its people. 

A knock at the back entryway interrupted the discussion – the young housemother announced that Isa Mugabe was calling.  There he stood with 60 pounds of bananas on his head – he spoke eagerly in Kinyarwanda - teasing me - telling me that his head was his third arm and is the best way to carry heavy loads.  I responded to his challenge and reached for the branch of bananas; with Isa’s help, I balanced them on my head.  Isa’s strong, deep, dark eyes and his signature smile acknowledged my playful efforts.

It was the last day in Rwanda and I tried consciously not to paint in any clouds of regret in this day.  Rather I concentrated and focused on the immediate chore of packing and than leaving.  I decided to immerse myself in each moment, to both stretch out the day and to see what final inner dialogue this place had to offer.  I packed my treasures of banana baskets, banana leaf cards, handcrafted banana figurines and the carefully wrapped two bottles of Cuvee Millee Collins wine.  The conference material was attentively tucked into my briefcase – I was anxious to share my new information.

Without incident I made it through the long security line.  Once seated on the plane I closed her eyes, my heart was full, memories were fresh in my mind as I drifted off to sleep. Sooner than expected I was awakened from a deeper sleep, a flight attendant gently tapped me on the shoulder to prepare me for landing.  I was finally home, back to my family, back to my country. 

I cleared customs in record time.  I walked down the l-shaped corridor, grouped with my new friends, colleagues and my enriched memories.  The storybook travel girl in me wondered if life could get any better – then it did – there in front of me was my husband and family. 

Weeks later the embers of my trip had not yet gone out.  The stories were still sharply etched in my mind – stories I would never forget.

Before my journey to Rwanda I was unripe and difficult to peel – a green banana.  Now, with new ripeness in my life, the flavors are sweet instead of tart; I feel softer and more supple.

06 May 2010

Architecture



är'kĭ-tĕk'chər

As I sit here in Prague, by my new writing window, I am profoundly inspired by the architecture of this beautiful ….14th century old city.  The skyline is absolutely magnificent. Prague has literally been a textbook of architectural styles throughout the centuries. 

So today the muse that has inspired my writing is “architecture”  a Latin word dating back to the 16th century ….meaning ”the complex and carefully designed structure of something - a particular idea or project.”

Much of my professional career was working with Architects, where I witnessed the evolution of many beautifully designed buildings and the process of how their creative minds approached their work.

I consider myself an “architect” in my own space of writing… in designing the structures of my stories. 

Writers, like Architects, plan, design and review the construction of their story projects.  They create their story structure and use this creative process of organizing materials and components with consideration to mass, space, form, volume, and texture to achieve all layers of their construction – what is functional, practical and artistic.  Stories rely on carefully designed structures to help them function.

As a story architect, I think about the structure early and often.. As soon as I get my idea, I start by considering the best way to tell the story.. there are lots of choices in structure and no right or wrong in your design.  I believe the right structure depends on you and the story.
 
I often consider several alternatives and try different structural approaches.. There are so many structural approaches (to name a few) …Narrative Structure – Inverted Pyramid – Martini Glass – Conflict/Resolution – Circular Story.
 
As a writing Architect, my efforts are to understand the elements and patterns that determine the makeup of a story and how these elements are arranged and designed in actual narratives, fictional and nonfictional. 

Avant-garde / Carrier



Dancing House  Built during 1992-96 by Frank Gehry and Vladimir Mulunic, the Dancing Building is a piece of controversial Prague architecture, the delightful design of the building, nicknamed “Fred & Ginger” for the way the building mimics the forms of a dancing couple.  One would consider this an avant-garde movement….
 

Writing Architect - Bonnie J. Rough

When Modern Architecture was first practiced, it was an avant-garde movement and it gave rise to many new lines of thought and design.  Bonnie’s new book may be considered and avant-garde movement – “pushing of the boundaries” of what is expected of a memoir structure.

Recently I met Bonnie Rough, who has just published her first book – a memoir.

  

For me, memoirs can be complex and creatively challenging.. a powerful writing structure – it is the unique unfolding of a person’s life.  When I read a memoir, I want to walk in their shoes and feel the pulse of the story…

While there are enormous variations in designing the structure of memoirs, I believe you will enjoy Bonnie’s structural design in her book Carrier - she goes beyond craft and turns inward towards the heart of the matter.. 

In Kara Garbe’s blogspot (www.karagarbe.blogspot.com), she reviews Bonnie J. Rough’s new memoir Carrier …“She doesn’t completely follow the “rules” of memoir in her book, Rough’s book is pushing the boundaries of memoir, and I’ll be curious to see what other people think about it.  

I personally loved Rough’s Memoir – a beautiful piece of architecture. 

Colors Across The Page



Spilling Colors Across the Page

As the color orange was splashed across the Centrum today I realized the power of color, the profound effect it has on how we feel and the emotional association we tend to have to particular colors.

I love the color black. Which is really the absence of all color.  But for many of us it is our “color” of choice.  It is a color that speaks “notice me but do not intrude” and discreetly lends to a sense of mystery.   Black is also referred to as “Saturday’s color”.

The Dutch’s use of “orange” for Queen’s Day significantly created a celebratory mood and atmosphere for their holiday.  Orange is a social color that expresses energy, and today, it was a pulsating splash to landscape…

I try to be mindful as I walk through food and flea markets and flower gardens.  I am always searching for color descriptions that occupy my mind and surge my imagination. I spend time reflecting on the past, thinking of colors and shades that not only produce emotions, but bring back clear memories..

I attempt to use color in my writings to create the scene and mood.  I believe color adds life to a story: variety, depth and texture.  I enjoy providing a vivid visual journey – painting brilliant hued words across the page, deepening the reading experience. I am often skeptical of overdoing and sometimes struggle to remember that a passing hint of color is sometimes enough to stir the senses and imagination.

…It’s all about laying your palette on the page, and coloring your writings! 

May’s Color is Orange

Oranje



Color Oranje


Before the umbrellas took presence in the skies there was this bright vibrant orange landscape that was forbidding gloominess to appear.   On this last day of April, the morning skies were darkened with a solid layer of cumulous grey clouds and there was a fragrant smell of rain in the air... The warm moisture and low pressure heightened my sensitivity to smell… the tree-lined canals were fragrant with spring blossoms.

Today the Dutch celebrated Koninginnedag ("Queen's Day"), most widely celebrated holiday in the Netherlands.

Festivities spread like a wave through the city. Dam Square became a fair ground. We browsed the kennels’ flea markets and listened to live bands play outside bars. The barges were jam-packed with celebrators fully clad in orange. Music blasted from huge sound systems and a solid pack of beer-drinking merry-makers were the spectators on the bridges.

The city transformed itself into one vast orange sea of people: Fashioned in orange caps, hats, feather boas, jackets, clogs, socks and face paint. Orange balloons floated in the air and tied around the lantern-style street lamps. Orange-themed window provided creative play for their displays. Pastries smothered in orange cream icing were begging to be eaten.

The color orange has royal roots in the Netherlands dating back to Willem van Oranje, today it symbolizes a broader pride in the country and in being Dutch.

Umbrellas were folded away, the sun warmed up the festivities and the orange took on a golden hue through out the Centrum… Night fell upon the city, the techno music grew louder, dancing continued in the streets and there was a glow of the “safety orange” in movement.

Long lives the Queen!