Reading & Writing a Life

Carla Pineda's blog


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Stringing Beads

“I learned that you should feel when writing, not like Lord Byron on a mountain top, but like a child stringing beads in kindergarten – happy, absorbed and quietly putting one bead after another.”  

Brenda Ueland

Stringing beads like a child in kindergarten.  Oh that I could write with that kind of attentive fascination, stinging one word at a time along the thread that ebbs and flows forming a line of words, a flexible flow, fringe thoughts stirring up and feeding my imagination.  Words that delight, that give the mind images to play with.

I always think of the quote that I read somewhere – “don’t tell me, show me”.

This is a child stringing beads is it not?

This bead, a red one perhaps, goes here, then two purple ones, or maybe a green one.  There may be yet just as likely, not be, a pattern, at least not a too definitive one at this point.  And it may change.  It will change.

This is the “just write” stage of the journey.  “Just string the beads.”

Rearrange them later, tomorrow, or next week. Let the pattern settle where the writer’s eye can focus and then…add, subtract, rearrange and see where the beads, the words land.  You will know when they have found their home.

#journaling #writing #readingandwritingalife

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Image by Sigmund on Unsplash


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“More linen than metal”

“Parts of me are more linen than metal—why can’t I let my writing feel more wrinkled, more frayed?”

Emily Stoddard

What parts of me are more linen than metal?   

Where am I wrinkled?

Some of my earliest writing memories stem from seeing my grandmother,  Minnie write.  There were the elusive journals from the days of my father’s growing up stacked on her closet shelf . They were detailed, full sketches of situations, settings, full of opinions, strong, and sometimes “in your face” brutal.  Her handwriting, letter perfect cursive, written with blue fountain pen ink, embedded the manila fibered paper she wrote on.  There were no wrinkles in her letters, no wavy lines, even on unlined paper.  

As I remember reading line after line of those journals and their rigid straight lines, their tense verbiage…even now, writing this my breath freezes in my chest.  I sense a hardness, metal like as Emily would say.  

And,  then there were her typewriter writings and her quest to be published.  She would send entries off to Reader’s Digest and other places.  They were typed on onion skin paper always with a carbon copy for her files.  Again, rigid, tight, and controlled.

My mother was an English teacher and a good one!  My memories of her impact on my love of reading and writing is deep.  It did make her sigh in exasperation when I would write school term papers the weekend or the night before they were due and write my outline last. 

My words wander all over the page, wander as my thoughts do, from this image to another one.  They are not linear, not lined across a blank page in sequential order the way I remember their writing and writing processes to be.

I bought a new linen dress earlier in the year. It is sleeveless, loose fitting, a raspberry color and fits like my oversized nightgown, my kind of dress.  I washed it to get the fold lines from shipping out of it.  I put it on straight from the dryer.  No, I did not iron it.  Over the day it took on the wrinkled lines of my lap, of the car’s seatbelt, of chair back railings.  Wrinkles telling the story of my day, illuminated in my dress.  

Perhaps those wrinkles are like memory markers.  Memory is never “metal like”.  It is often wavy, maybe distorted, frayed around the edges.  When I write I write out of the wrinkles, from the frayed edges of yesterday, last year, a decade ago.  I recall snippets, pieces of stories and forget another part.  They come together in patchwork like fashion….

I want this wrinkled, frayed look on the page.  I like when my words form wrinkles and frayed edges.   I want my words to reflect my wrinkled, frayed days, days that are always unfolding wrinkled.

This is a bit challenging as I work to get past these strong, early, formational writing memories.  I’m glad for those memories, for their modeling of writing (and reading), and glad that I can write myself onto the page the way that I do it.


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A Book Review:

Book Review: Whispers from the Valley of the Yak: A Memoir of Coming Full Circle by Jacquelyn Lenox Tuxill…

What a beautiful read! Jacquelyn weaves together her family story through China, where she was born to American parents who were missionaries, and their life in America. A return trip to China as an adult with her elder parents sets her on a journey to uncover answers to questions about family and love and a troubled childhood. About 25 years after this trip she and her adult children return to China and retrace her parent’s journey. This brings a peace and closure for her.

I love the way she wove the family timeline of 3 generations into a beautiful and living tapestry of story and meaning, questions and resolutions. Family narrative is always alive, always changing and revealing. This memoir captures her family’s life and energy on each page. It’s a book I could read again.