Mar 09

A hyphen can make a huge difference in a word and give it a new semantic and the reader a new insight.

I’ve been rather taken recently by Lee Carroll’s book, The End Times, where writes about “voiding karma”. The simple message is one that is well known. When you follow your life’s path, then you move on and upwards gracefully and easily. We all though are brilliant at self sabotage.

The simple addition of a hyphen and a letter makes it easy to understand the flip side.

If you a-void karma, then you get stuck in a loop and the same lesson comes around to hit you again and again. Perhaps it manifests as the same type of partner or the same dead end job. Once it’s recognised – or better expressed as re-cognised, as you have been there be-fore – you can move on and embrace the next challenge and new learnings.

So armed with this gem, you have the whole lexicon and richness of the English language to play with. The potential for enlightenment is immense.

Now I run workshops on creative writing where I teach authors how to tap into inspiration. Imagine my surprise when the addition of this simple hyphen led to a huge insight.

The etymology of in-spiration decomposes into the word into “in” and exposes the Latin root of “spirare” which means “to breathe”.

Check out the etymology here

inspiration_etymology_cropped

Now I was aware we speak on the out breath. Could it be that ideas, and divine guidance, come to us on the in breath?

Some experimentation with my own meditation, then with individual clients and latterly in group classes seemed to confirm this was true. I used a modified Taoist Drop meditation I learned from the Barefoot Doctor and amazing results ensued.

I was on a roll. This insight then morphed and expanded into inner-sight. My intuition told me that this was all really inner-tuition. Where would all this linguistic in-vention lead? There you go again with the breathing!

I have always thought it amazing what people like Leonardo achieved in a single life time. He was a polymath – an artist, sculptor and inventor. Not only did he think up the helicoptor but he had the pre-science to add the parachute too in case it failed. Now some Kryon channellings imply that our in-carnations do not necessarily follow chrono-logically. Perhaps this re-naissance man reborn in the past from a future life or another planet?

Yes, just re-read the above para-graph again. The semantic layering is deep, wide and so much fun.

So it tran-spires that the English language has become entrenched in concantenation. I suppose this occurs in all languages, naturally, from years of usage and abusage.

Then a horrible thought occurred to me. If language slides into the modern day parlance of mobile phone text-speak then the origins become lost forever – hardly LOL 4 U & I.

I was in-spired to craft some verse in order to re-verse this trend.

The addition of a hypen

A gift of inner-sight

We are what we speak

Inner-tuitive light

Expand The Word

Banish concantenation

Add a simple dash

For joyous e-lucidation

So a call to all

Authors, poets and scribes

Add verve and dashes to your work

Keep true meanings alive

Now such lyrical musings take your mind down new paths and it occurred to me while penning this that this thought piece would not be complete if it didn’t include re-search on the word hyphen itself.

Imagine my surprise when I found this online …

hyphen

c.1620, from L.L. hyphen, from Gk. hyphen “mark joining two syllables or words,” probably indicating how they were to be sung, “together, in one”

So it appears that first there was The Word. Then we combined them and then we sang and re-played them back to the Heavens. What an Ode to Joy.


P.S. If you think are A-voiding Karma, you may like to do the exercise and visualisation in this blog on How To Void Karma

Tagged with:
Mar 01
The causes and cures

There are generally three levels of block encountered by writers and other creatives.

All are relatively easily curable – permanently.

The first type of block you may encounter is where your creative juices temporarily dry up.

It can happen on one of your book writing sessions or when you just have to get that sales proposal out or that blog written.

You can sometimes just run out of ideas. Your Creative Muse has left you.

Don’t fret, it happens to all writers.

Just take a break, make a cup of tea or ideally go for a walk. Don’t think about what you are writing, just pay attention to where your consciousness lies. Is it in the front of your head? If so move it back to the centre – to your third eye. Remember to use your dream-time too.

The second type of block is when life just gets in the way.

So you set out with the best of intentions and perhaps things get hectic at work or a problem comes up in your family life or in a relationship. The upshot is that all thoughts of writing go out of the window.

This happens too and, again, don’t fret but do at least two things:

Firstly, think about what learnings you can get from the situation – can you use it as source material perhaps?

Secondly, try to at least keep up a daily writing exercise, like Julia Cameron’s ‘morning pages’ so you keep flexing your writing muscles.

If this doesn’t work and you really do hit a permanent block, again, don’t worry. See it as an opportunity to break an old, unwanted pattern that almost certainly affects others areas in your life.

Sometimes it’s possible to come to a complete grinding halt. You lose faith in what you are doing and why you are doing it. Perhaps the fun has gone from it. Ask yourself if you are running any negative emotions such as: Fear, Anger, Sadness, Hurt or Guilt.
Myebook - Wordlube - writer's block removal in 5 days -</p> <p> click here to open my ebook

The third type of block is more drastic.

Old gestalts are brought to the fore. The toys are thrown out of the door and the baby goes out with the bath water. You don’t want to ‘play’ anymore.

You are coming to the point where you really want things to change but perhaps don’t know how.

To help with all types of blocks, I’ve just written and published a free ebook on the subject with interactive exercises and visualisations. You can find it on the amazing new Myebook web site.

It’s called Wordlube – the writer’s unblocker – and it’s designed to be used it liberally to free up your mental cogs & get them whirring again …


Tom Evans, aka the Bookwright, deals with blocks of all kinds and how you can tap into your creative muse in his Unleash the Book Inside workshop. This workshop is also available online for Home Study any where in the world – details here

Tagged with:
Feb 06

micMost my friends here at FuelMyBlog know me for my blog on psychology and inspiration.  My close family and friends know that I actually have three blogs: one on teaching and another I call my online diary.  But only a handful of people so far know that I actually record a podcast from my garage every weekend.  Damien Riley PhotoI started it November 1st, 2008 and now, 15 episodes later, I’ve decided it’s a keeper.  Learning the process of publishing a podcast was complicated.  Therefore, I thought it would benefit the community here if I shared the key stuff I learned.  You might want to start a podcast.  Anyone can start one but not just anyone can become established at it.  I am still working at that goal after 15 episodes.  Anyway, without any further delay, here’s the general stuff I’ve learned. To start a podcast, you need:

  1. A blog that produces a feed.  You can use your established blog you have now and simply make a category devoted to podcasts if you like.  You can also create an all new blog.  To avoid any confusion, that’s what I did.  For example, the feed for your Wordpress blog would then be: url/feed/ and if you dedicate a category to it: url/category/feed
  2. A quality microphone and digital recording capability.  I use a multi-track program on my laptop and a Shure SM-57 microphone.  I have an area of my garage dedicated to recording episodes each week.  The multi-track allows me to have an intro song and a music fade at the end.  You can hear it here.
  3. A webhost that can handle multiple large files.  My podcasts are 7-10 minutes each and around 8-15MB apiece.  This will start to fill the “basic” plans out there up after a few months.  To podcast, you will probably have to opt to pay for more space.  Another way to keep the riff raff out right? LOL.  I still don’t know if that defines me.
  4. Great, inspired ideas to talk about.  Like Jeff Goldblum said in Jurassic Park: “Just because you can doesn’t mean you should.”  I am really energetic about my niche.  If you have something you are passionate about and want to share, then go for it.  If not, this isn’t for you.  It’s far too much work and research to maintain if you don’t love the topic.
  5. Submit to iTunes.  This is a somewhat complicated process but it really does work once all is said and done.

I look forward to recording my podcast every week.  It’s become a welcome friend.  My hope is that my words from the “high desert trails of Victorville, California” will bounce through the internet and affect someone in a positive way.  If that sounds interesting to you, you may be a potential podcaster yourself.

I hope this post has given you a little peek into what starting a podcast is like.  If you have any questions or comments, please leave a comment.

Tagged with:
preload preload preload