Writing Prompt #25

If any of the writing prompt images inspire you to create something, I’d love if you’d share the link (if you posted it to your own blog/site).  I like the idea of creating a community, inspiring each other, and being creative.  What do you think?  Should we make the images more of a weekly exercise?  Let me know your thoughts.

This one is in keeping with my inspiration for the rewrite…

Writing Prompt #25

Lovers Meet on the Castle Stairs

 

Happy Writing!

Writing Prompt #24

Two days ago I thought I would move on to another project, then I created my Writing Rules.  Four of them specifically relate to the fact that I need to finish what I started, the rewrite of my first script, Fate(s).  So I’m setting a goal, to finish the rewrite in a month, and in order to find the pleasure and love of writing this particular screenplay, I need to find some new inspiration.  Thank you, Pinterest!

MedievalGirlAtWindow

Happy Writing!

Writing Prompt #23

I’m temporarily abandoning the rewrite and moving forward on another screenplay.  In an effort to get in the right frame of mind for this piece, I need a little inspiration – my touchstone (by DeviantArtist milyKnight) for Projection.

Knight-Espionage101

Happy Writing!

A Little Introspection

RedRose&BookI’ve been watching The Mortified Sessions, now streaming on Netflix.  If you are unfamiliar with the premise, it’s a “reality” type show that looks into the pasts of mostly famous people to see how their childhood affected who they became.  I like the idea of digging through your past and discovering if who we are is who we always wanted to be.  I’ve been telling stories for as long as I can remember, but I never considered myself a writer, that came years later.  So after watching a few episodes of Mortified, I decided to dig into my writing past and see who I was and share a little.

First off, my teen years were clearly more angst filled than I remember, according to the writings I found.  I was depressed and love sick, often.  Which I find strange, because I don’t remember it like that.  In high school my parents divorced, which referring to as “messy” is a gross understatement, and I lost the friendship of my best friend because she chose a boy over our friendship, so I suppose I had a few reasons to be melancholy.  One year in high school, we had to keep a journal, the only time I was ever vigilant (until now), and there are a lot of ramblings about love and darkness.  I’ve had a good laugh.

Here are a few snippets –

Blackness surrounds
Fear sets in
Eyes deceive
but in darkness all other senses must take over.
Paranoia strikes, you try to look,
minute sounds quicken your heartbeat
The black seems never ending, there seem to be creatures lurking in the darkness
of my mind or are they?
Where is the light?  Will it ever arrive?
You’re frightened.  Voices invade.  You tremble in terror, a ghostly chill runs through your spine.
Images of death cross you mind,
in a split second your forehead is wet,
you try to rub off the moisture in a flicker of panic,
feeling it smear down your face, it becomes sticky.
“Light!”, you scream, “Where is the light?”
Obsessed with finding your way out,
you reach your hands in front of you.
You feel a strange warmth against your palm,
a sensation of a soulless corpse.
Squinting, you see the outline of a girl, leaning forward,
you see the reflection of your forgotten self.
Finally, something clicks, as if you know where to go.
You get up, turn a corner, and see a dim light.
“Run! Must reach the light!” You think aloud.

So there’s some angst, here’s a little love sick –

I look out my window on a particular rainy night,
and you seem to be on my mind.
I wonder where you are, who you’re with, and wish you were with me.
I don’t know if you remember me, but I remember you.
That night I first saw you is like a fixed impression in my mind.
I remember every detail about you from that first night…
your hair, your eyes, your smile, and movement.
That memory plays in mind like a broken record…
repeating itself over and over, reminding me of you.

I was introduced to Dracula by Bram Stoker, and that new interest permeated a lot of my writing.  These are three separate entries.GaryOldmasAsDracula

It is a damp and dreary night.
Not another living soul in sight.
I turn to look in fright.
I feel his hunger, ready to bite.

Dark dreams haunt my mind.
My heartbeat quickens as well as my breathing.
Drops of sweat bead my forehead.
I turn in horror, but cannot see
the thing that haunts nearly every dream.

Hot breath on my neck
in a trance of passion
A sharp pain
I fall to my knees
I look on in wonder…

Then I found some story ideas that are just too funny and almost embarrassing to repeat.  When I look back on those writings, besides laughing, it does stir my memory.  I was reintroduced to my love of books during this time, because when you’re forced to read in school sometimes the love of reading falls to the wayside.  I was introduced to romantic fiction by my mother and fantasy by some of my teachers.  Those interests melded together, marinated for more years than I’d like to admit, and became the seeds to the writer I have become.

It was a fun exercise, and a good excuse to dig into the past.  Sometimes a little introspection is good as a reminder of who we are and why.

Wishing you all a productive week!

The Jane Austen Syndrome

JASilhouetteI was recently introduced to virtual strangers as a “great admirer” of Jane Austen, as if that were almost an excuse, an apology, or a warning…I’m not sure which.  I do not deny my Jane Austen obsession.  I am joined by legions of (mostly) women who refer to themselves as Janeites and celebrate the author and her work in any way they can.  Why?  You might ask.  There are several reasons; likeable characters, restrained romantic encounters, great dialogue, lush landscapes, great houses, etc. but this is not to be some treatise on the literary constructs, but a few of the reasons why a girl from Sin City found refuge in a faraway land set hundreds of years ago, that started a chain of events that I will refer to as the Jane Austen Syndrome.

First off, when I was 19* I visited England for the first time.  That was it for me.  I was home.  And I’ve been trying to get back there ever since, having achieved success only once more (so far).  I always felt a little out of place in my hometown, and finding this sense of “home” was intriguing and compelling.  So, upon my return home I started to devour all things English.  It was later that year when Sense & Sensibility was released.  (*Oh gracious, don’t do the math.)  My literary education had never included Jane Austen.  This was my first introduction, and the first domino.

Sense & Sensibility, where to start.  I have a much younger sister, and for many years I had to maintain a certain Eleanor appearance in regards to keeping emotions in check.  So that rang true for me personally.  The men were dashing and handsome, but there was more to it than that.  The lifestyle, the manners, the propriety, the rules…all of this was fairly new to me and I loved it all.

FirthasDarcyFrom there I discovered the BBC version of Pride & Prejudice with Colin Firth (whom I still love to this day) and Jennifer Ehle, which is the basis for all boy meets girl romantic comedies.  It was official.  I now understood.  I was a Janeite.  At this point I started to watch any version of any Jane Austen film made to date, but had yet to pick up a novel.  Once that happened, it was just another stepping stone in my love affair with England.  It is on this topic I could write a treatise.

I discovered that through certain films, I was introduced to time periods that affected not only me but my writing greatly.  Which, hopefully, you’ll see when my screenplays come to the big screen.  *Fingers crossed.  I dream(ed) of the Mr. Darcy and the gentlemanly ways of a time gone by.  Today you’re lucky if a man will hold the door for you (this is a generalization, albeit a fairly accurate generalization.  Sorry guys, but you should know that you will win more favor with a few kind acts, and that most women would love to be treated like a lady.  And let me add a side note, women should act like they deserve to be treated as ladies, this is the Janeite in me.).  There were manners and standards.  And this is a side effect of “the syndrome”.  Once immersed in a world we’d prefer still existed in some regard, most things pale in comparison.  It was this introduction that has led to my Anglophile status – why I swoon at an English accent, love high tea, developed a passion for history, have dressed in Victorian garb on more than one occasion, will watch any English period piece, have a fondness for the Queen, want to join the Society of Creative Anachronism, and desire to settle in an adorable manor in the English countryside…Jane, what have you done to me?!

EnglishManorNow I shall go immerse myself in some history in my own script, so I suppose a “Thank you, Jane” is in order as well.  🙂

Have a great week everyone!