Archive for the ‘Creative Reflections’ Category

Happy New Year!

New Year 2012Hi Aspiring & Published Authors!

It is with great pleasure that I am writing to wish you a very happy New Year!

I hope that you have enjoyed an excellent mid-winter break and are looking forward to all that 2012 has to bring.

At this time of year, we all have a wonderful opportunity to make a fresh start and renew our commitment to our most important priorities.

It is a time when we can draw a line and leave behind all of the baggage that no longer serves us.

Free from all that weighs us down, we can then set our intentions for positive outcomes in all the areas of life that mean the most to us.

We’ll be sharing some inspiration and practical tips over the coming weeks for how to make 2012 your most creatively productive and rewarding year ever as you establish yourself as an author.

For now, I just want to send you an abundance of good wishes as we begin what I am sure will be an awesome year for us all.

Enjoy your 2012 writer’s journey!

Juliasig300dpi

PS Our next interview for IACCW members is on Conscious Listening for Authors with sound expert Julian Treasure. Read more here http://www.iaccw.com/5/member-events

Writer’s Journey Winter Solstice Quick Tip

Intuition_sunrise_sky_croppedHi Aspiring & Published Authors!

In the northern hemisphere, in a few days time, one of the oldest winter celebrations in the world will occur – the Winter Solstice.

The 22nd December is the shortest day of the year and marks the turn of the season when the daylight hours gradually begin to lengthen once more.

For traditional people who live in close contact with nature and the seasons, the ‘return’ of the sun is immensely significant. No wonder it has been celebrated for millennia by lighting candles, present giving, camp fires and storytelling!

As writers we can draw on many facets of the natural inspiration that is available to us at the Winter Solstice.

On this occasion, I invite you to bring your awareness to the meeting point between darkness and light which can be seen symbolically as the unconscious and the conscious mind.

The Winter Solstice is a time when the veil between the worlds becomes transparent for those with eyes to see what lies beyond the everyday reality we usually take for granted. Immense treasures lie within these realms.

So my recommendation for you is to schedule some time on the 22nd December for inward focus and reflection on your deepest sense of purpose as a writer and your highest conscious and creative priorities.

Write your realisations down in your journal and remember to celebrate your journey so far, even if you haven’t yet arrived at the destination of your dreams.

Just as the sun always ‘returns’ to bring forth life from the earth, your own creative process will continue to unfold, nourished by your conscious attention at this reflective time of year.

Enjoy the journey!

Juliasig300dpi

PS Our next interview for IACCW members is on Conscious Listening for Authors with sound expert Julian Treasure. Read more here http://www.iaccw.com/5/member-events

The Power of Connection: Make or Break for Conscious & Creative Writers

Paper Chain SkyI recently returned from the Hay House “I Can Do It!” weekend where a host of successful authors presented their latest offerings to an enthusiastic crowd.

Seekers of all ages, backgrounds and a number of different countries gathered to hear the latest discoveries in spirituality, science, and self-help.

Each speaker shared their expertise and experience using their own language, evidence and stories.

Essentially, however, they were all delivering the same core message …

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How a Holiday Mindset Helps You Write

Smiling_Sand_Face_croppedHere in the UK we have a public holiday today. It is the last of the summer bank holidays before autumn begins, and with the sun shining, many of us will be enjoying some time outside.

Before the regular holiday season draws to a close, it is well worth paying attention to carrying forwards the benefits of a holiday mindset to apply to your writing and to your everyday life.

Pause for a moment to reflect on how you think and feel when you are in holiday mode and write your results down in your journal.

Relaxed, open, spacious, spontaneous and free are all possible descriptions of a holiday mindset. What else describes your experience?

Celebrate

Holidays also encourage us to take the opportunity to celebrate and enjoy spending time with family and friends or recharging with some time to ourselves – or both at different times.

All of these qualities are deeply supportive of the creative writing process which flows more fluently when you are relaxed, open, spacious, spontaneous and free.

Your experience of the writing journey is also greatly enhanced when you take the time to celebrate along the way.

There are obvious moments to celebrate such as finishing your first draft, being signed up by a publisher, reading a positive review of your book or reaching a specific number of books sold.

Yet celebrating when you cross smaller thresholds is just as important.

Gathering your ideas for a new project into one place and getting yourself organised or finishing a chapter of your book are stages of completion that are well worth acknowledging.

Celebrations don’t always have to be major excursions. They may simply be taking an extra hour for yourself at the end of the day or treating yourself to a new pen.

How do you make this a reality in your everyday life once the holidays are over?

Be clear about the components of your own holiday mindset and schedule time in your diary now to make way for honouring whatever you need to retain these positive qualities.

And wherever you are on your writing journey right now, pause to celebrate how far you’ve come. I invite you to share what your holiday mindset includes, how you are choosing to take this forwards and what you are celebrating at this time by posting your comments below.

As always, enjoy the journey!

sig

PS All of the class audios, Workbook and all materials from the IACCW Summer School are now available for you to benefit from working through this Conscious Writing Program in your own time.

Read more here: http://www.iaccw.com/70/summer-school-2011

Here are a few comments from participants: “An amazing experience!”; “a truly inspiring workshop”; “I now have the confidence I need”; “really opened my heart and mind with inspiration”; “I simply loved everything about it! A most brilliant summer session!”

Surrender to the Creative Muse

Top view of a young man resting on grass at a lawnLike many people at this time of year, I am just recovering from a bout of flu. Being ill is happily a rare occurrence for me so I had forgotten that flu has different phases. Just when you think you’re feeling better, you slide back down the ladder to feeling wiped out again!

All you can do is let go and surrender to what ‘is’.

The ‘one step forwards two steps back’ scenario combined with conscious surrender echoes something else you may recognize – the creative writing process.

Our muse does not (usually) respond to willful demands to appear and pour forth her magic through us onto the page. She cannot be forced to show her face and become our trusted creative partner.

Instead she requires an open-hearted invitation to inspire us to capture the faint sparks of potential that become the flames of our deepest writing.

She thrives on clarity of intention combined with the creative surrender that comes from trusting that greater forces are at work.

She shows up most when we learn to allow as well as to plan … and when we consciously live the full creative cycle over and over until it feels as natural as breathing.

How do we begin the process of creative surrender?

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Writer’s Journey Tip: How to Discover Your Sources of Inspiration

lightbulb_headIt is a core principle of the Writer’s Journey to nurture your creative spirit on an on-going basis. Yet if it’s been a while since you gave your inspiration a boost how, and where, do you start? Here’s a possible way forwards for you.

Walking in nature can be deeply inspiring and is a good place to start. You may well find that ideas and creative thoughts come to you along the way. So take a notebook and a pen and when you feel the flickers of inspiration stirring, find a place to sit down for a while to write.

Invite the fires of inspiration to burn brightly within you and brainstorm ideas of other possible situations or activities that could offer you the opportunity to access your feelings of inspiration.

Don’t think too hard about it. Just write as many ideas down as you can – or draw quick images – and aim to capture as muc h as possible. Keep your pen moving on the page as a way of overriding the censorship of the inner critic who may show up and try to steal the show!

Your ideas could include different settings when you are outside in nature such as by the sea, walking along cliff tops or in a forest, as well as different times of the day such as watching a beautiful sunset.
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Ignite Your Creative Fire with Music and Dance

larmartreeWhen was the last time you immersed yourself fully in music and dance?

Your sense of self dissolves as you become one with music and movement. Energy flows for you to express yourself freely, time is of no significance and your experience is effortless and engaging.

What has this to do with writing you may well ask?

The parallels of being in the zone, including all the benefits of that experience, are clear. Yet there is more to it than that.

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