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Monday, December 12, 2011

Why WRITING IN THE CROSSHAIRS?

Why the title

WRITING IN THE CROSSHAIRS?

All writers I believe write in the crosshairs.

If you have beta readers and have submitted to agents/editors, you know the feeling of being in the crosshairs of their evaluations.

Ouch. But no pain, no gain.

But I am thinking of the imagry of the hunter.

He fixes his aim at his target, looking through his scope.

The image is hardly crisp at the beginning. He must adjust the lens to achieve crisp clarity and the best chance of hitting his target.

Writers are like that hunter.

At first the image of our tale is blurry. We tighten the focus with revealing dialogue, vibrant characters, engaging crises, and creative descriptions. Pacing and plot tighten the image even more. Sometimes we get it with dead-on clarity. Most times we don't.

No one but Shakespeare is perfect. If you don't believe me, ask Harold Bloom or any university English professor.

It is a tricky endeavor writing in the crosshairs.

How do we focus quicksilver humans into concrete mental images?

Take flames. They look like objects but are really processes.

Humans are like that as well. No human actually is complete. He or she is in the process of becoming.

But becoming what? We answer that question with our choices.

But there is more to my title than that.

We all write the movie of our lives in the crosshairs.

That endeavor is more tricky. We don't get the luxury of time to reflect, muse, or ponder at leisure. Life is a harsh mistress.

As we struggle, she flashes us that "beauty-queen" smile : all sharp teeth and no heart. And in her games of chance, the House ultimately wins.

Like Indiana Jones we must make it up as we go along.

We plan and prepare. Life gleefully throws her monkey wrench into our preparations. We must write our lives in the crosshairs of illness, accidents, dysfunctional humans, and our own inner demons.

We are all in Life's crosshairs, and none of us know when she will pull the trigger. We just know that she will.

This is what my blog is all about :

how to maintain a measure of grace and peace in the crosshairs of Life. I haven't figured it out yet. Let me know what helps with you.

I am currently listening to "Mourning Tree" by Leaves' End.

The romance of my haunted, undead Texas Ranger, Samuel McCord, and his immortal love, Meilori Shinseen, has echoes to it of the tragic love of Arwen and Aragorn.

Here is a music video I think you may like :

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6 comments:

  1. We all know what it feels like to write in the cross hairs. It is such a challenging profession we have chosen.

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  2. Funnily enough, I've often wondered why your blog is called, Writing In The Crosshairs. Now I know. Interesting post.

    'No human actually is complete. He or she is in the process of becoming.' I love that analogy!

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  3. Ciara :
    Your book trailer is creative and engaging. Well done. Thanks for following! Getting our writing in focus is quite a challenge, isn't it?

    Wendy :
    Heraclitus was right in saying that, like flames, we humans are a process not a finished product.
    It occurred to me that my friends might wonder at my title. I thought long about what I would call it when I first started. Thanks for being my friend, Roland

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  4. I can't imagine your blog being called anything else now Roland :-)

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  5. Hi Roland .. interesting that you took your time pondering on your blog name .. so many of us rush in! Then find that fools fear to tread ..

    I did the same - and cancelled that one .. and it wasn't me anyway ..

    I'm glad I've chosen mine - but yours is so appropriate and I can see that now. I am impressed with Mark Twain's travels in Europe - via his book "A Tramp Abroad" .. interesting thought ..

    Have a good Christmas and New Year .. and a most successful 2012 .. cheers Hilary

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  6. Thanks for dropping in Christmas Eve, Hillary :

    I, too, very much like Twain's A TRAMP ABROAD. Wouldn't it have great to have him as a traveling companion?

    Merry, Merry Christmas! Roland

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