Subject: Hi Friend, The Power of Vulnerability in Your Writing (Part 2)

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The Power of Vulnerability in Your Writing (Part 2)

August 7, 2015

Hi Friend, 

In this newsletter:
  • Personal Note from Beth
  • The Power of Vulnerability in Your Writing, Part 2 (article)
  • Plan Your Novel *free* mini-course available now

Personal Note from Beth

I love to travel. My recent trip to New York City for the Romance Writers of America national and annual conference was a much needed refresher. I love getting away from my daily life and seeing a whole new place and realizing that people are people wherever you go.

The bustle of Times Square, the artists singing and dancing in the subway, the fruit vendors in Upper West Side, the hawks nesting in Central Park, the taxi cab drivers driving so aggressively you think you might get run over by them.

And through it all the humidity. I thought I would hate the humidity. I live in Oakland. Normally we have pretty low humidity even though the bay and the ocean are only 5 and 22 miles away respectively. 

But in NYC, I loved the humidity when the day was 70+ and 80+ degrees. A gentle sweat lodge or sauna (those I do not like), a gentle sweaty cleansing, daily, as I made my way through the city.

I mostly spent time at or near the conference hotel at Times Square, but also ventured to other areas. What I loved and was awed by were the skyscrapers and old buildings. I loved the mix of buildings, just like I loved the mix of people.

I've been to London, Paris, Amsterdam, and Brussels, but new York, oh New York, has a bustle and vibrancy all its own that I fell in love with. I will be back.


On to our article on the power of vulnerability in your writing, part 2. (You can find part 1 here.)


The Restart Button: The Power of Vulnerability in Your Writing (Part 2)


Last week I shared how I want to create a safe space so I can feel my emotions and then put them into my fiction. I use certain grounding tools to help me do that: list of 10 Things and a 20-minute free write before I work on my current work-in-progress. And weekly (and sometimes more often) capoeira class.

This week I want to share another tool I use to handle overwhelm that sometimes arises when we're tapped deeply into our emotions. For many sensitive types, we experience a flood of emotions that are hard to decipher. I feel them as a flood, a mishmash of feelings I cannot parse apart. I'm left with an overall experience of Feeling. Like a wave tumbling me, I don't know which end is up.

I'm also a child of this Internet age, coming of age just as the first visual browsers were arriving. One thing we did when computers stalled is we unplugged them and plugged them back in. We restarted the machine and often that fixed things.

In life, we can't get a complete do over each time, but we can emotionally hit the restart button.

What this looks like for me is different depending on the situation, but for my fiction it means allowing myself to come to the beginning.

Instead of thinking that I should be at a certain place in the project, and pressuring myself about that, I allow myself the grace of hitting the internal restart button.

I want to come to the page with a fresh, open attitude, a sort of beginner's mind. 

To do that, I need to wipe the slate clean inside and give myself the freedom to begin again, without "shoulds" or past regrets.

What this means to my sensitive heart is that I allow myself room to feel without judgment and sit in that beginner space where it's all okay.

How can you hit the restart button so that you can come to your work with fresh eyes and an open heart?

This article is part two in a three-part series, so that I can share with you my journey, tools, strategies, and habits I'm using and the results of my actions and my learnings on the power of connecting to your heart and putting that into your fiction.

As always, I'm happy to hear from you.

Best,
Beth





Plan You Novel *free* mini-course Available Now

Yay! I'm excited to announce that our taster course is available now!

Please join us for this free mini-course and get working on your novel now!

Sign up here: http://bit.ly/miniPYN

I look forward to having you in the course.

This mini-course is designed to give people a useful peek of how we roll at Barany School of Fiction -- our teaching and coaching approach and content -- and introduce them to the live October class on the same topic. 

This mini-course is a condensed version of the whole course, "30-Day Writing Challenge to Plan Your Novel" that is now a homestudy course, and once (or twice) a year as a live course.

So, if you need a jumpstart on starting your novel or you've been wanting to start, or you're just curious and want a refresher, then join us in the Plan Your Novel mini-course.
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Have a Happy and Creative Week!

And thanks for playing!

All our best,
Beth & Ezra

beth@bethbarany.com

PS. If you found this newsletter useful, please forward it to your friends, writing buddies, and people who you know want to write a novel, but gosh darn it, haven't, yet.


ABOUT US
Beth and Ezra Barany are award-winning, best-selling novelists, and teachers who have worked with over 100 authors to help them get their books written and published.

♥ Happily married for over 15 years, we’re passionate about writing, storytelling, and guiding authors to achieve their dreams.

♥ We offer coaching, change work sessions, book marketing coaching (Beth) and cover design (Ezra), for novelists. More at bethbarany.com. 

♥ To explore how Beth can support you, schedule a 1-hour complimentary Discovery Call here: http://bit.ly/AppmtWithBeth.


ABOUT BETH BARANY

An award-winning novelist, certified creativity coach and Master NLP Practitioner, Beth runs Writer's Fun Zone, a blog for and by writers, and her recently launched school for novelists, the Barany School of Fiction.

Beth writes YA fantasy and magical contemporary romance. She also writes how-to books and courses for novelists, including her home study coaching guide, The Writer's Adventure Guide: 12 Stages to Writing Your Book, a Hero's Journey adaption with you the author as the hero in your own adventure of writing your book.

In her downtime, Beth takes walks, paints, watches movies with Ezra, travels, and has coffee with friends and family. And plays with her two cats, gardens, and does capoeira. And sleeps. She loves sleep.


Photo Credit: by c. 2014 Vivienne McMaster

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