Like my poet friend Ruth Foley and her poet friend Molly Fisk, I choose a word for the year. I used to do it according to
academic year, but then at the start of the 2013-14 school year, I just
continued with my 2012-13 word until last week, and so I’m switching now to a
word for the 2104 calendar year.
I tend to go with a word that will, at various times
depending on what's happening with my writing life, alternately inspire,
motivate, remind, encourage, gently scold, and otherwise work its magic on me.
Sometimes I also have an accompanying mini-mantra, though not every year. Usually,
they work together.
When my word was YES, the mantra was "I have everything I need." I wanted to say yes to every
option, opportunity, resource available; and, I needed to remember that even without
extra funds, the ability to travel, or connections, everything I needed to
write was within my reach.
Another year, the word was Choose, and the mantra "You
Can't Do Everything". Another time, the word was Decide, the mantra, "So
What?" Here, "decide" wasn't about choosing between things, but
deciding on something and then going ahead with it; and if it didn't work, so what?
My just-expired word was Hope. When I first chose the word,
I worried it might feel too mealy-mouthed, a bit too soft and vague for me, as
if I was abdicating my own agency in the process of writing, submitting,
publishing.
I was about to embark seriously on several new areas
of my writing life, and needed something to quell the nerves and doubts banging around in
my brain. I also needed to remind myself that just because I hadn't done these things
before, and even though there were chances things might not work out, it was
essential not only to work hard, learn, try, and persevere, it was also okay (and maybe even necessary) to hope.
As it turned out, many of the new ventures worked out quite
well in the form of finding new teaching opportunities, getting more work
published, developing a coaching/editing client base. Some haven't yet—finding
a publishing home for the memoir manuscript is among the three goals I have
been diligently chasing but which are still "in the works".
I have hope, still.
And now I have a new word for 2014, and a mini-mantra too. While I won't say what they are, I can vouch for the power of having
them. Though there's no chance I'll forget them, I do write them in various places
and tuck those notes where I'll come into contact with them at random times
throughout the year. Reinforcement helps.
There are days when I think having such a word/mantra is a bit too touchy-feely, or that my word is silly or I'm silly
for investing a word with any power. Then again, isn't that what we writers
do, every day: believe in the power of words, the power of a single good word?
So here goes. Some days, stumbling across or remembering my
word/mantra is like remembering that $20
bill tucked in the bottom of my glove compartment just when I need gas and
left the credit cards at home. Or finding, on a day when more than one
rejection arrives, that Reese's Peanut Butter Cup from the Halloween stash still hidden in my desk drawer.
5 comments:
This is my third year of choosing a word -- I find it empowering and helpful. Belief. Abundance and now, Simplicity.
In late December The Writer magazine had a photo on Facebook of 2014 written in a notebook. The question was asked, "What will your word be for 2014?" Right then it came to me: my word will be 2014! (with the exclamation mark).
Chocolate is a great word. In 2012 my word was "vibrant." I've never picked a phrase before but if I did, I'd steal my yoga buddies phrase that she says at the end of every class...I'm the Point the Universe is Trying to Make.
Have a great year.
My word this year (first time I'm doing this!) is resilience.
My two words for the past few years - especially in connection with my writing - are patience and determination. If I say them enough, maybe I'll develop some!
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