Friday, April 24, 2009

Writing to Heal


Writing as catharsis -- as well as to uncover one's innate joyful Self -- is nothing new. John Lee and I talked about this extensively in Writing from the Body. Getting to the "grammar of the gut" and saying what needs to be said isn't as easy as it sounds, so we served up our favorite insights, experiences, and writing exercises for healing the fear-stricken Inner Writer and silencing the Inner Critic.

What is new (to me) is the healing phenomenon called expressive writing, now backed up by real live research. It's the result of some smarties with a lot of chutzpah sticking their scientific necks out. While others peer into microscopes hoping to discover the final cure, these folks care enough about those in treatment Right Now to study how writing about your life can positively affect a cancer patient's outlook and boost the healing process.

The patients themselves -- jotting poetry and memoir in their journals through chemo-sickness and fistfuls of hair -- make these ballsy scientists look feeble. I don't know what it is that makes you pick up a pen and paper, or type or text about the crappiness that is cancer treatment, but these people do it. They gather up the precious energy they have, and they do it. I admire them.
As a book editor, I've heard enough whining about how hard it is to write (pause to lay hand upon brow) to last my lifetime, however long or short it may be. And I can tell you: Writing is a lot about showing up when you don't feel like it.

So to you who are feeling like hell and writing about the dark places and the light places, I bow deeply. To you who keep showing up in your communities, who just get out there damnit and walk around and pet dogs and speak to children, I bow. Because by showing yourselves to us in sickness as in health, you teach us. We learn what it is to be human, to be in need, to be brave enough to live as you are -- in all seasons.

Somewhere right now there are men and women sitting in a writing circle for cancer patients. One of their members is reading a poem as the others listen intently, nodding their heads. Living in a body that seems hell-bent on erasing itself, where do you find the energy and willingness to write, much less to share those writings?

Now we know that writing heals. Even those of us who demand proof now concede that writing "from the body" brings us into communication with every part of ourselves. We touch levels of pain-fear-confusion-shadow that lead us, counterintuitively, into the unbearably light and simple true nature of ourselves.

So thank you, scientists for proving that writing heals. Thank you, patients willing to reveal your most personal writings for the sake of others who may later suffer as you've suffered. Just knowing you're out there, just knowing how tough you have to be to get so soft and vulnerable in the midst of cancer's craziness, gives me more than hope. It gives me courage.


Ceci Miller is founder and president of CeciBooks.com, an editorial and publishing consultancy that empowers authors to write, publish, and market irresistible books that uplift and inspire. A long-ago graduate of the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop, Ceci has written, co-authored, and edited books with bestselling authors and experts since 1988. See book credits.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Does Your Book Have That ZING?




People are always asking me what makes a paper sandwich deliciously original. If you're going to self-publish, in particular (I prefer "indie publish") you've gotta pack ZING into every layer of your book. Cuz it don't mean a thing if it ain't got that.

If your book is now in the hands of a major publisher, well, yikes. Pray hard. The New Yorker expressed the current publisher attitude toward authors extremely succinctly in a cartoon that ran last December (the winter of our discontent?) Actually this attitude first emerged sometime in the mid 90s, but it's only now that it's getting decent airplay. The cartoon would be a lot funnier if I hadn't seen the scenario it describes befall numerous worthy books in the last ten or so years. Egad, and alas. It's what made me, an author published more than once by kind editors at once-decent-but-now-usurious publishing houses, turn away in disgust. It also inspired me to become an uncompromising champion of indie publishers.

But I had a point, and it has to do with Quality and Honor as practiced by the best of writers.

First, you've gotta love what you’re saying. This may seem obvious, but you'd be surprised how many people set out to write a book merely because they think it'll sell. This is a terrible reason to write anything. Don't do it.

Second, honor the people who said it first. Then offer the reader a message they haven’t seen before -- or at least one they haven’t seen recently.

Yes We Love It, but No, It’s Not New!
Every book is not Homer’s Odyssey. We can all be grateful for that, given our shrinking free time. But however humble the work may be, it pays to acknowledge the sources that nudged forth your own genius. Writing about bagels? Remember to mention the authors of Bagels of the Cretaceous and The Bittersweet Bagel Diaries. However, as my friend Amanda Lorenzo Famous Author says, it’s all a matter of proportion.

Of course, feel free not to credit helpful but brief-ish pamphlets such as Test Your Child’s Bagel Quotient, unless you quote it in full in your own brief-ish pamphlet!

Acknowledge the Source!
All authors I’ve read have in some way enlarged my wealth of knowledge; however, listing each deserving one would make one’s bibliography as thick as a deep-dish lasagna. And it’s honor we’re talking about here, not weight. Somewhere among your textual musings, there should be evidence that you, as author, are aware that others have trod parts of this path before you. Your mention may be a still, small voice at the end of your Introduction, or a hyperbolic passage acknowledging your debt to the author of Whither Goes My Bagel?
Whether it’s a teeny, tiny tenderness or a big bold bang, thanking our predecessors and literary influences reminds us, at the very least, that we are not alone.

Ceci Miller is founder and president of CeciBooks.com, an editorial and publishing consultancy that empowers authors to write, publish, and market irresistible books that uplift and inspire. A long-ago graduate of the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop, Ceci has written, co-authored, and edited books with bestselling authors and experts since 1988. See book credits.