Kristine Holmgren - Your Favorite Minnesota Writer
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Move before you write.

11/14/2009

1 Comment

 

Fat girls get published and die. 

Picture


One morning, much like this one, you awaken and find yourself twice the size you once were.

And now you a fat woman.  Lord, have mercy. 

You have no one to blame but yourself for the altercation of your physique.   All along  the journey you had opportunities to stop the madness. 

A friend invited you to join his walking club.  Your neighbor asked you to play tennis; your daughter wanted to you take up golf. 

And of course, there was that older man you met at the Unitarian church. The one with the toilet-seat hair cut who kept inviting you to the Tapestry Club for something called "contra dancing."

You turned them down.  Every one of them.  You told them you needed to sacrifice for your art.  And so month after month, instead of swinging kettle bells, you swing a fountain pen.  Instead of sit ups and crunches,  you sit in front of your computer and crunch adjectives into the Great American Novel.

There's a price to pay for this literary obsession.  Once upon a time you had a face and body that inspired a man to build a wilderness outhouse  in your honor. 

Now you resemble one.

To make matters worse, you feel as fat as you are.  Your back hurts.  Your shoulders ache.  Your legs fail after brief stroll to the top of the stairs.

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And you remember what your old writing sage Judy Delton once told you - writing is not an aerobic activity.

Judy, of course, was morbidly obese.

You know the truth.  Fat girls might get published, but they won't live long enough to spend the royalties.  Judy's contract with Dell Publishers for the Pee Wee Scout  series made her a millionaire and, as I write this, continues to support her children and grandchildren. 

But Judy is dead; too early, from obesity. You won't see her on the beaches of Curacao this winter.

The lesson?  A writer has to hike the path to fame.  A writer needs to move.

Each day, before you sit to write, exercise.

Take the dog around the block.  Jump in the car and head to the Y for a few laps.

Put on the motown and boogie.

Not all of us age as did Steinbeck.  Most of us grow into a version of Orson Wells.

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Sure, Virginia Woolf was a compulsive, prolific author who wrote herself into near starvation.  But you're no Virginia Woolf. Raised on fortified bread, beef and dairy, if you were to throw yourself into the River Ouse, bereft of all hope,  you wouldn't need stones in your pockets to pull you into the mud. .

So, get out of your seat, put on your twenty-year-old Nikes and get moving.  You know what I'm talking about; the ones with the grass stain from when you raked the leaves two years ago, before you began the third revision of chapter ten.

The muse will not be annoyed - in fact, the muse will follow.

My experience is this - the muse only comes to writers who are depressed, lonely, drunk or physically fit. 

Last time I checked, it's  too early in the day for gin.


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    Writing about writing.


    Writing full time allows me to think about the process as well as the product. 

    The essays on this blog are related to the work, creativity and rewards of writing as a career and calling. 

    Enjoy!


     

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    Kristine Holmgren
    "CHANGEMAKER"

    Minnesota Women's Press names Holmgren  "CHANGEMAKER - 2009" for her work with the Dead Feminist Society of Minnesota. 

    Click the image below to read more about this honor. 

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    Archives

    April 2010
    December 2009
    November 2009

    Categories

    All
    Acceptance
    Acting
    Advent
    Amnesia
    Angry Children
    Battered Women
    Blizzard
    Bore
    Boredom
    Christmas
    Commitment
    Craft
    Creative
    Determination
    Dirty Clothes
    Discipline
    Drunks
    Dying
    Emotions
    Exercise
    Fame
    Fashionista
    Filth
    Frenzied Approach
    Generousity
    Gloria Vanderbilt
    God Girls
    Group
    Hungry Men
    Innocense
    Inspiration
    Keyboard
    Loneliness
    Lonely
    Lost Childhood
    Loveless
    Lucille Ball
    Margaret Mead
    Martinis
    Muse
    Mystery
    Needs
    Neighbors
    Obesity
    Orson Wells
    Paper Daddy
    Paul Gruchow
    Perseverence
    Pink Room
    Planning
    Playwriting
    Poor
    Powerlessness
    Praise
    Purpose
    Rejection
    Resilience
    Shirley Temple
    Shoveling
    Snarly
    Snow Fall.
    Soul. Spirit. Ethic Of Outreach
    Special Nature
    Spring
    Stage Writing
    Steinbeck
    Submission
    Suffering
    Summer
    Support
    Tap Dancing
    Theatre
    Vietnam
    Virginia Wolff
    Whining
    Winter
    Work
    Writing
    Writing Every Day
    Young Girl

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