Still fighting the good fight, as someone said. I thought at this point that I'd be in two writing groups but one of them has entirely failed to materialize. I think that was to be expected because the other person involved has actually got a lot on his plate: he's highly productive in print, on stage, and on radio, so... why would he condescend to small potatoes like me? Very well.
The other group, despite itself, is causing some substantial material to come into being. We've been having difficulty getting together as a group, people turning up and dropping out from week to week (personally, I think weekly would be too often to meet, except people aren't meeting every week so it works out), and I think we lost a writer, but the rest of us are actually writing. One is focusing on her travel stories, another is generating really excellent poetry--and I'm not usually a fan of poetry--and I even have a short story about ready to be sent out.
That sounds anemic in my ears: everyone else is throwing out their work with wanton abandon, submitting weekly, several times weekly, and I'm orchestrating this tremendous effort to refine one short story before submission. Fear of success, or just laziness?
But I'm still writing plenty. I started a blog (which I won't advertise here) in which I have committed to writing one short story every day. I've pretty much plumbed the dregs of my notebooks and hacked out every half-baked idea I've ever had, and now I force myself to come up with one new, original story every single day (except weekends, which usually go to family concerns). I'm very happy with a lot of the material that's come of this, and I really feel like this is a useful practice and I'm actually growing from it, just as anyone else would develop a frame of musculature from regular visits to the gym.
I have the short story blog, I write daily in a blog dedicated to stationery and pen pals, and I write twice daily in a blog where I complain about traffic incidents, complete with photos. That's just a vent for my spleen, but it is still a writing exercise. So the quantity is certainly there, and the quality is improving, but what needs to happen next is that I start turning these freeform exercises into actual manuscripts that I formally submit to publishers.
I also need to research the legality of online publishing as it pertains to print publishing--many places will not accept a manuscript if it appeared online first, like, say, a blog, considering that the first publication--so if anyone happening to read this knows anything about that, please point me to some useful links, thanks.


