Showing posts with label conversations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conversations. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 18, 2013


Sunday was my first full day off and it was a great day. It started off on Saturday night with too much wine and snacks with the growing group of women I’ve been hanging out with. We took over a section of the dining room and got loud and deep. These women are so accomplished—Fulbright Fellows, and professors, artists who have shown in galleries in New York and Paris, published authors. Our conversations have been getting better and better and have covered everything from art to sex to feminist theory to politics to evolution and everything in between. Since I got here I’ve been connecting more with the visual artists rather than the writers. I think simply because there are more of them. Since my wife is also a visual artist it’s been wonderful learning their language and discovering the similarities we share in our work. I’m taking notes and can’t wait to share the things I’ve learned. I think my wife, and anyone pursing any form of visual art, should totally consider a residency. You’ll get work done, but the people you’ll meet and the things you’ll learn will propel you in all the right directions. Community at its finest and most concentrated form.

On Sunday I took a two-hour walk with my friends, Anne and Esmerelda. The night before twelve inches of snow fell and the landscape was pristine and untouched, gorgeous. We walked an old railroad track road that followed the river and the view was amazing. The black bottom of the river against the bright white snow, giant yellow icicles forming off the sides of stone cliffs. We made our way to two small waterfalls, watering holes really, and sat for a bit taking in the scenery. It made me want to return in the summer time when the temperatures can get into the 90s.


There were more student slides that night and once more the diversity of the artists here and the work they are doing blew me away. I had my first real conversation with a novelist, a man working on his MFA in Washington, DC. I wanted to know about his process, which was quite involved, and he shared it openly. He had practical advice for a slow writer like me and was so encouraging and thoughtful. We really connected and I hugged him after our talk, after we commiserated about the long and arduous form of the novel and drank whiskey. Support at its finest and most concentrated form.

The last several days have flown by. At meals the women check in, “how are you feeling about your work today?” “Have you been productive today?” For me, there have been highs and lows, but overall I’m happy with what I’ve accomplished so far. I probably won’t finish revising the whole chapter like I wanted to, but when I get home I know I will be motivated to finish it.  More than anything I know I am at least headed in the right direction and will continue moving forward.

Last night I read and it was fabulous! Most of the readers were women from our group and it was awe inspiring to hear their poetry and prose, their distinct voices, all strong, all so talented. I read the opening of Cleofas’s chapter. Her revision is the work I’ve been doing here. I got wonderful feedback after my reading. Many in the crowd had previously asked about my work so knew what my project was about. An artist friend said to me, “You write like a painter.” How amazing is that? Another, whom I had complained to about my slow pace, said, “Please take your time with these stories. You’re doing just fine.” Sigh. Still today people are thanking me for my reading. It was a great night.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Entrance to the Maverick Writing Studios and new snow.

I’ve been fighting a damn cold since, if you can believe it, the day I left San Francisco.  Its timing was impeccable.  I managed to stave it off with homeopathic syrup and tea infused with garlic, lemon, and ginger, but it’s trying hard to take me under.  I slammed Tylenol PM last night and woke up just in time for lunch today at noon.  I considered my studio afterwards, but decided to head back to bed with a dose of DayQuil and The Best American Short Stories 2013.  I slept all day.

Last night there was a reading at the Red Mill.  Poets, creative nonfiction, and fiction writers who have been here for two weeks read from their work and it was fantastic.  So talented, their work so brave.  There were poems about love and post-partum depression, prose about a mother’s suicide, a lesbian murder mystery, and an ode to VSC.   A few readers thanked the crowd for helping them finish something they hadn’t been able to back home.  I am still contemplating if I will read next week.  Of course, I hear my own advice to our students, “Read!  It’s muscle memory.  Practice!”  I will keep you posted.  

The common area at Kowalsky House.  My painter friend, Esmerelda, and a night cap.

I sat with a wonderful group of women last night at dinner.  My original group from the airport has grown to include another poet and sculptor, one from North Carolina, the other from Pennsylvania.   Have I mentioned the food here is delicious?  I’ve already had to change my eating habits from the first few days because I was definitely coming back home with an extra ten pounds.  The fresh baked bread and hunks of cheese get me every time.  Last night they served a seafood stew with mussels, shrimp, and calamari over rice (my wife would have loved it!), made even better when the new sculptor busted out a bottle of red wine and shared it with the table.  We spoke of home ownership and the trauma of selling and buying, Dutch tulips, homeopathic remedies, Brenda Hillman and Bob Hass, and of course, always, our families and creative work. 

Everyone here has left something behind.  Jobs, school, husbands, wives, pets, children.   Many are current MFA students or recent MFA graduates.  Many are university teachers still grading papers before being able to fully commit to their Vermont experience.  The artists with families really inspire me.  They talk about balancing their artistic lives with their parental duties, about their children and spouses encouraging them to pursue their dreams, about how doing so actually makes them better parents.  I think of my friend Sara and all the other artists with children, young and old, and have so much respect for their dedication.  Couldn’t it all just slip away in the bustle of other commitments? 

Not really. 

These artists are 100% dedicated to their work and it is a magical thing to be in conversation with them, to discuss their artistic goals, to share mine, to believe that I belong here among them.  Here is another gift of being at a residency.  To understand the kind of commitment we all have to our art and the professional level to which it is (or will be) achieved blows me away.  It is this community building I imagine the people who create and support these types of environments want to encourage.  It lifts us up, makes us believe it is all possible, demands that we keep going.  



The Mason House Library


The Mason House Library where the writer's craft talk will be held on Friday.