The Hot Topic - Creativity - Page 10

Part of: The Hot Topic

I take some amount of pride in my ability to tell a tale. I have a small amount of gift in which to take something mundane and ordinary and turn it into a grand tale of action and humor. Though, I must admit, I have struggled in transforming an oral story into the written page. The gesture of the hand, the intonation of the voice is difficult to transform into words on the page.

I must confess, I had all but given up on ever writing something worth the time of a bored gnat. The ideas were all there, but the stamina to put them down and -by gawd- edit them, never seemed to happen.

Then there was blog. My wife and I did a ten-month stint in Strasbourg, France this past year. This was at the height of the blog craze. Politicians were set spinning by bloggers worldwide. I decided to journal the experience of my time abroad through blog. At first it was diary, then I began inviting friends and family to read and see just what I was up to. In time, the newness of my days wore thin. No longer was the daily trip to the boulangerie for a baguette of any interest to anyone but the breadmaker.

The blog then became a place to tell stories, review movies, and discuss the book I had just read. Unknowingly, I had become a writer. Do I have dreams of becoming the next Hemmingway, Faulkner or Steinbeck? Do I dare to believe that my little place in the blogosphere will somehow become the mecca for all great artists? No I do not dare.

Yet, in writing, I share a little piece of myself. I become a member of a community. And in the end, that is all I need.


From: Eric Berlin

To: The Hot Topic Team

Re: Creativity

Looks like I'm riding in on the Hot Topic caboose once again. Great topic!

Drawing back to the good Sir Fleming's definition of creativity, I'd actually broaden it out substantially. It always pains me to hear people say, "I'm not a creative person." To me, that's the same thing as I'm saying, "I'm not a passionate person – there's nothing in the world I care about." Sure, writing and painting and acting is "creative," but I think any act of creating is creative.

Forming new ideas about the world, coming up with an inventive solution to a problem, figuring out the right words to form so that your date, instead of throwing Chablis in your face, laughs ever so slyly and runs her well-maintained Lee press-ons through her hair. You know; you get the picture.

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Article Author: Aaron Fleming

Aaron Fleming is a waster and an idler - prone to pomposity - forever enchanted by the filmic, the sonic, words and the aesthetic - given to the most ludicrous appraisal of Culture's finest icons and compositions. He resides in London.

Visit Aaron Fleming's author pageAaron Fleming's Blog

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Article comments

  • 1 - Alisha Karabinus

    Nov 17, 2005 at 6:04 pm

    All these boys, boys, boys... is this male bonding or a discussion? :)

    Two things: I loved S. King's On Writing more than probably anything else he's done it years... it was GREAT.

    And second... I too am a victim of having a hard time composing anywhere but at the computer, at my computer, where things are comfy and nice. I thought that was maybe unique to me. I feel a little better now.

  • 2 - Eric Berlin

    Nov 17, 2005 at 6:32 pm

    I really like and admire your take on the writing process, and your attitude, Bennett. That's exactly how and me and everyone else improves. Writing begets better writing, writers write, and all that.

    The really superfly nifty thing about the Internet, and Blogcritics in particular, is that it doesn't feel like work to write. It feels like fun; it feels like rapping with your old pals. I think that's when you really get better and really start to excel at something -- when you passionately bash away at a task over and over and over not because you have to (though that's the case with the wriitng bug at times) but because it's just far too fun to stop. How could you not stop? I'd say if asked -- it's too fun. Like a good addiction or something.

    Alisha -- I think this column is a combo of male bonding and pontificating about cultural and mythical topics of the day. It came as a result of many e-mail back-and-forths and Mr. Smyth, I believe, wisely decided that everyone on the planet had better take a look at the genius that's ever unfurling.

  • 3 - Bennett

    Nov 17, 2005 at 6:59 pm

    Thanks Eric, likewise re your revelations. Man what a read this thing became! I'm gonna digest for a while, and then return with some comments on you guy'z take on it. Fun to drop into your heads for a bit, every one of ye.

  • 4 - Elsa

    Nov 17, 2005 at 7:11 pm

    Alisha has a point.

  • 5 - Aaron, Duke De Mondo

    Nov 17, 2005 at 7:30 pm

    Aaron, tremendous job of bringin all this mania to light. Like Bennett, i'm gonna go off an sleep an awake with a head filled wi comments for the flingin.

    Regarding the fact that these males are all of the masculine variety, i understand and indeed agree, but this came about on account of an email group of a buncha fellas yackin to one another, as Eric pointed out. Sir Fleming, for one, has been vocal about the need for some feminine perspective on these things. and i agree with him, i might add. but it all stems from the email group thing, theere's only as many folks as you see listed up above, barring a couple highly valued folks who are missing, presumed knackered. the group wasn't set up for this purpose, this grew out of it, when the Topics took a turn for the Hot and Sir Smyth made his glorious suggestion. but i understand, yes.

  • 6 - LegendaryMonkey

    Nov 17, 2005 at 7:35 pm

    Elsa -- perhaps we haven't any points and THAT is the point!

    Oh well, it's a good read anyway.

  • 7 - Mat Brewster

    Nov 17, 2005 at 9:19 pm

    Berlin you ride the caboose of these things only because you can't turn your shite in on time! But fantastic job pulling all our thought together and conclusion.

    I'm all about the ladies. Man, I've been inviting the ladies to join us for scores and scores, but every time one comes along they take one look at this motley crue and flee like the dickens.

    So shower up boys, and bring on the ladies.

  • 8 - DJRadiohead

    Nov 17, 2005 at 9:48 pm

    A very quick two cents...
    I plan to read this wonderment directly but first must take the wife to whom I am married to go see HP4 at midnight tonight. ROCK!!

    Alisha/LM (Her Royal Primateness)... that's why there are comments: for you to come straighten us silly boys out.

    Sir Fleming & Co., I will have more on this directly.

  • 9 - Eric Berlin

    Nov 17, 2005 at 10:04 pm

    Berlin B busy, Brewster!!!

  • 10 - vikk

    Nov 18, 2005 at 12:29 am

    Nice broad spectrum of opinion and process, gentlemen. Blogcritics is a terrific venue and hospitable to a varied group where each one enters the room with their own covered dish offering and sits down at the table to share. There's something for readers, conversationalists, debaters, and pontificators.

    As for writing, well, I write to make sense of what I think and feel, and I write to share what I've discovered and/or learned. It seems to be a natural outgrowth of so many years of reading.

  • 11 - Mat Brewster

    Nov 18, 2005 at 5:53 am

    Berlin better get his biddy butt in gear, or Brewster will bop his bouncy balls to Bermuda!

  • 12 - Bennett

    Nov 18, 2005 at 8:02 am

    Thanks for that Vikk! We are curious as to why other folks write. What is the driving force behind it all?

    Cheers!

  • 13 - Greg Smyth

    Nov 18, 2005 at 3:04 pm

    Finally got round to reading the whole thing, guys. Really enjoyed reading your opinions on the whole topic but DJR's hit me especially - looks like you're taking a new step forward into the unknown, my friend.

    Also, Duke with the whole shrivelling up of the urge to write thing you hit the nail on the proverbial.

  • 14 - DJRadiohead

    Nov 18, 2005 at 5:22 pm

    I finally finished reading everyone's contribution. I have a new appreciation for how interesting some of you fuckers are.

    Greg, thanks. I am feeling more energized than I have in quite some time. It's a good feeling.

    Mat brought up something I hadn't considered... I spend as much of my disposable income as possible on media of some sort. I am mostly a music junkie but I have been known to watch a movie or crack a book every once in awhile. I guess that figures in to my own desire to create (bringing it all back to the opening monologue of Episode 6 of my podcast... see above).

    And Duke... good news... you aren't bald at age 90 although the fringe ain't what it used to be.

  • 15 - Greg Smyth

    Nov 20, 2005 at 4:35 pm

    One thing I neglected to mention in the main post is just how much I detest these people who churn out ridiculous amounts of "How To Write A Novel" type guide books without having any recognisable talent/authority on whhich to hang their advice.

    Obviously, people like Stephen King are worth listening to because, regardless of what you think of his writing on a personal level, there's no denying that the guy has been doing it long enough and made enough money from it to know what he's talking about.

    All too often I get the feeling that a lot of people see the "How To Write" book as a valid alternative option to make money, rather than practicing what they preach. You wouldn't buy a "How To Write A Movie" book written by me, now would you. No, you'd go and buy Syd Field because, regardless of how despicably hack-like his ideas are, he's a screenwriting guru.

    People should, if they really want to be writers, get down to the business of writing and be done with the hideous meta-career that every spineless no-hoper has constructed to cushion themselves from failure.

    Like I said: if you want to be a writer, write.

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