On writing (& social media)
June 26, 2008
When I read this, I also include social media (eg. blogging / photo sharing / social networking).
Commentators like Clay Shirky and Charles Leadbeater tend to be a bit snobbish when it comes to acknowledging the inherent human need to be heard, to share, to tell our stories.
Lawrence Sanger told me he was worried about non-experts getting together to construct their own knowledge. But he would say that.
I say - do it! Experts be damned. Speak your truth, and find others that share it.
[[ Just be careful about checking the facts that really matter. Which is not what we are talking about here anyway. The subjective realm is far vaster than many wish to acknowledge.]]
Writing is egalitarian; it cuts across geographic, class, gender, and racial lines… vice presidents of insurance agencies…factory workers…lawyers, doctors, gay rights activists, housewives, librarians, teachers, priests, politicians…
We all have a dream of telling our stories – of realising what we think, feel and see before we die. Writing is a path to meet ourselves and become intimate.”
Natalie Goldberg in Writing Down the Bones
New dates for Fresh Writing (plus spring tips)
March 28, 2008
Spring has come and it’s time for even fresher writing!
Here are the dates for the next series of our Fresh Writing Classes at The Werks.
Tuesdays 10.30 - 12.30
1 April
CANCELLED DUE TO NEAR DEATH EXPERIENCE
22 April
6 May
20 May
Put them in your diaries now if you have a positive intention to come and learn / create / express / play.
More information about the classes here.
To celebrate the fresh new season - three top tips for improving your writing & blogging… and expanding your mind…
1. Watch your verbs
Verbs are (remember!?) “doing words”. They are the action of your sentences. If you want your writing to jump from the page, give it legs. Think about your verbs. Use new ones. Take risks, combine them in new ways with your nouns (”naming words”). Experiment. Wake people up. Surprise them.
Here is a list to play with, inspired by Spring…
Sow
Melt
Hatch
Thaw
Grow
Radiate
Tweet
Explode
Shoot
Create
Use them in unlikely ways and surprise yourself. Thaw those frozen fingers. Explode onto the page. Or just tweet a little.
2. Stay alert with new ideas
The wonders of modern tech. Register a Google Alert for a key word expression that relates to your work / passion / writing / life. One of mine is “authentic blogging”. I get sent blog posts from all around the world that use these two key words together. I am forever finding relevant, inspiring new material to write/blog about.
Give it a try. Register here and follow the prompts.
It’s easier than you think.
3. You Think, I Think, We Think (Better) Together
Last thing is… you just gotta watch this clip… if you are remotely interested in creativity and innovation. Yum.
http://authenticblogging.com/2008/03/26/you-think-i-think-we-think-better-together/
Better still, buy the book. “We Think” by Charles Leadbetter.
Reap what you sow.
Hope to see you some Tuesday.
Libby
PS - Happy to come into organisations and do affordable bespoke sessions.
Please forward to anyone interested, with many thanks
More posts on writing to help get your words flowing…
You Think, I Think, We Think (Better) Together
March 26, 2008
Been reading reviews about Charles Leadbetter’s book We Think all over the place. Got to get my hands on a copy sooon (come on Rosie, hand it over).
If anyone is trying to get their heads around Web 2.0, social media, new paradigm thinking and all that claptrap - get a look at this. Lovely simple animation. I’m going to use it at the beginning of all my courses. Free event coming up soon to give people a taste of it all. Watch this space.
Guardian review here (including Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations by Clay Shirky) which also looks reeal good.
Shame The Big Issue review isn’t available online. A different and very valid take on things.
No wonder most journalist’s I meet are annoyed with blogging and What’s Going On with we-think.
No wonder I am compelled to work in and support this space.
So glad Rosie Sherry is in it with me (thanks for the video).
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qiP79vYsfbo&hl=en]
Feedback from Fresh Writing classes
February 14, 2008
Thanks again to folk from our Fresh Writing classes for bloggers and non-bloggers alike. But watch out, we might have you all blogging soon. In the meantime, it’s an honour to be helping you get your words and ideas flowing. Really impressed with what you are all coming up with and the impact this is having in your lives.
Games, exercises, tips to make writing easier and more fun, strategic thinking on audience and the writers/bloggers life. Even nice biscuits and a game you’ll all love called Two Bob (or a Pebble) Up Your ‘Ort Sport. (No photos taken fortunately… you had to be there).
More about the writing classes here…
“Fun, interesting and worthwhile - personally and professionally. I’m glad I took time out of a lousy schedule to do this class. Now I can rite reel good.”
“It’s been easier to write. I’m jotting down ideas again and having more of them. It’s the creative convalescence, soon I’ll be back at full strength.”
“Did first workshop on the Tuesday. Signed up as a co-worker at The Werks to give me a place to go write. Wrote a 10 minute play that Thursday & Friday & submitted it to a competition on the Monday. First thing I’ld written in years. All good.”
“I’ve been flying since the first session. A real release.”
Flexible, affordable, easy transport, what’s stopping you? We all need to express ourselves better in life… and be seen and heard.
Register on Upcoming and see who else is watching/coming, get in touch with Libby if you want to know anything, or just turn up on the day.
Look forward to sharing the magic of your words with you. The techniques we use are so immediate and such fun that you will surprise even yourself with what you are capable of, and how this can translate into your daily life and work expression.
No need to be afraid. Everyone is equal in these sessions and you do not have to read what you have written unless you want to. The inner critic or ferocious editor (find out more in the e-book here) takes a break during most sessions, infact, it is only welcome when being constructive. If none of this makes sense or you are in any doubt, call for a gentle chat with me. It is a very natural thing to have some fear about writing. It is wonderful to overcome it.
Bestest - Libby
More posts on writing to help get your words flowing…
Fresh Writing Classes in Brighton
January 8, 2008
For Beginners & Professionals
Express * Create * Connect * Learn * Grow * Play
A chance to let your words rip and flow. Fun, fresh activities will make these classes one of the highlights of your week.Perfect for anyone who uses the written word to communicate, eg. social enterprise folk, creatives, geeks, government folk, artists, writers, journalists, communications professionals, business people, activists, eco-warriors, peaceniks, bloggers. Come one and all!
“Fun, interesting and worthwhile - personally and professionally. I’m glad I took time out of a lousy schedule to do this class. Now I can rite reel good.”
“It’s been easier to write. I’m jotting down ideas again and having more of them. It’s the creative convalescence, soon I’ll be back at full strength.”
Find out what else regular participants are saying about them here…
Great writing exercises and games that build confidence, dissolve writers block and get your fingers flying across the page or keyboard.
* Connect with your real voice
* Enjoy expressing yourself again (or for the first time?)
* Give the ferocious editor (or “inner critic”) a holiday and let your words flow freely
* Learn how to write effectively for different audiences, and even for yourself
* Write authentically and learn to connect, be heard and seen by others for who you are
* Stand out from the crowd and compete in the “Attention Economy” of the new world order
* Enjoy writing like a person, not a corporate-speak, “we’re not listening anymore” brochure.
* Get help editing and planning your writing projects
* Join our fab new online space and share youre words, projects, ideas - get extra resources (all students eligible to join).
Your teacher Libby Davy from Authentic Blogging has a background in creative and professional writing, editing, education and strategic communications.
Venue:
The Werks
45 Church Road
Hove
BN3 2BE
www.werkshop.org.uk
Bike, bus or drive if you must. Parking is only a quid for two hours
When?
10.30 - 12.30
1 July
15 July
Put them in your diaries now if you have a positive intention to come and learn / create / express / play.
£13 per session (on the day) or £20 for last two.
Still offering first class free to permanent desk spacers at The Werks and friends of students.
Leave a comment if you would like to know what we will be going in Autumn or to make suggestions…
Please help this grow by spreading the word to those that might be interested.
Contact Libby Davy on 07968 687 107 or libby@nodestone.com
Some folk already starting to book in and watch what’s happening at Upcoming: http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/402221/
About Libby
Hello there. I have a degree in communications and have taught writing, editing, publishing and strategy at a university and community level. I am a published and awarded short-story writer (very low-key to be honest) and have had work broadcast on national radio. For many years I have been studying education and involved in a range of education projects, in addition to my own teaching practice. Completed part one of an innovative new Masters programme in Person-Centred Education at Sussex University, and may even return one day.
For many years, I consulted in strategic communications and marketing, and business coaching - with an increasing emphasis on ethical, sustainable / environmental and social enterprise.
In essence, I am a fun, friendly, Australian mother with a passion for creative expression, business, education and human potential - including yours!
http://nodestone.com/2008/05/29/fresh-writing-each-fortnight/
http://nodestone.com/2008/03/28/new-dates-for-fresh-writing-plus-spring-tips/
Editing the self
November 19, 2007
Just out of interest.. I added the bunny ears around “thought leader” in between sending the last post out as an email to some current students, and putting it up publically.
Why do that? Why tell you I did it?
I was editing myself. I was thinking carefully about how I wanted to communicate. I was listening to myself. I was learning, as I am right now in this moment, very very deeply.
In the first version I was uncomfortable with calling myself a thought leader due to the perhaps pompous nature of appointing yourself as that, yet is has some meaning. But I knew I was in a more closed conversation with people that had intimate, direct experience of any credentials I might have in that way.
I was uncomfortable with the use of it for two reasons. One - it makes me sound like a tosser to include myself in that category. Two - in context, it was ironic due to the inherent hierarchy implied. My authentic self sees everyone as potentially thought leaders, and that’s a part of the potential blogging offers. That’s the deepest part of the conceptual space we are developing here. Lead your own thinking. Listen to yourself first.
In the second version - I used the bunny ears for “thought leader” to suggest the questionable use of the expression, as if I was quoting some else in using it. Which I was. Earlier I spent some time (on an off day when I should be in bed recovering from a cold) looking at some of the world’s top, self appointed “thought leaders” who might want me to join them at the top.
I guess I’m not quite ready to go there. I think the view and sense of interconnection is better from the earth, not up on the mountain looking down. I hate heirarchies.
There. Lesson to self finished. If anyone else gets anything from it, that’s a total bonus.
Free E-Book on the Essence of Authentic Blogging
October 13, 2007
Here’s a living document I prepared for our first three groups of budding bloggers. I feel a collaborative book coming on.
Not sure I see myself in the same light as the company I am keeping in this collection, but some wonderful people to be gaining inspiration from all the same. David Bohm, Carl Rogers, Carl Jung, Natalie Goldberg, Julia Cameron, The Cluetrain folk, Scoble, Meerman Scott (in some order of importance).
We see this as essential reading for anyone on a quest for personal and professional growth through blogging, but it is a very first draft. Stay tuned for more…
Have a read and let me know which quotes resonate most for you…
FREE E-BOOK on the Essence of Authentic Blogging
More posts on writing to help get your words flowing…
Age no barrier to blogging
September 26, 2007
A quick note about this very special lady (95 years old and going strong) and the grandson that empowered her. What a team! We would love to see older people blogging, capturing and sharing their wisdom for the ages, for the world, combating isolation, making new connections, feeling valued.
The same things apply at any age don’t they?



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