Writing Down The Bones: Freeing The Writer Within

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Authors: Natalie Goldberg

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Writing Down

the Bones

Expanded edition with a preface

and interview with the author

N
ATALIE
G
OLDBERG

S
HAMBHALA

Boston & London

2010

Shambhala Publications, Inc.

Horticultural Hall

300 Massachusetts Avenue

Boston, Massachusetts 02115

www.shambhala.com

© 1986, 2005 by Natalie Goldberg

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

The Credits section constitutes a continuation of the copyright page.

The Library of Congress catalogues the trade paperback edition of this book as follows:

Goldberg, Natalie.

Writing down the bones.

1. Authorship. I. Title.

PN145.C64 1986 808’.02 86-11840

eISBN 978-0-8348-2113-2

ISBN 978-0-87773-375-1

ISBN 978-1-57062-258-8

ISBN 978-1-59030-316-0

ISBN 978-1-59030-261-3

ISBN 978-1-59030-794-6

 

 

For all my students past, present, and future

May we all meet in heaven café writing for eternity
.

CONTENTS

 

Preface

 

Introduction

Beginner’s Mind, Pen and Paper

First Thoughts

Writing as a Practice

Composting

Artistic Stability

A List of Topics for Writing Practice

Fighting Tofu

Trouble with the Editor

Elkton, Minnesota: Whatever’s in Front of You

Tap the Water Table

We Are Not the Poem

Man Eats Car

Writing Is Not a McDonald’s Hamburger

Obsessions

Original Detail

The Power of Detail

Baking a Cake

Living Twice

Writers Have Good Figures

Listening

Don’t Marry the Fly

Don’t Use Writing to Get Love

What Are Your Deep Dreams?

Syntax

Nervously Sipping Wine

Don’t Tell, but Show

Be Specific

Big Concentration

The Ordinary and Extraordinary

Talk Is the Exercise Ground

Writing Is a Communal Act

One Plus One Equals a Mercedes-Benz

Be an Animal

Make Statements and Answer Questions

The Action of a Sentence

Writing in Restaurants

The Writing Studio

A Big Topic: Eroticism

A Tourist in Your Own Town

Write Anyplace

Go Further

Engendering Compassion

Doubt Is Torture

A Little Sweet

A New Moment

Why Do I Write?

Every Monday

More About Mondays

Spontaneous Writing Booths

A Sensation of Space

A Large Field to Wander In

The Goody Two-Shoes Nature

No Hindrances

A Meal You Love

Use Loneliness

Blue Lipstick and a Cigarette Hanging Out Your Mouth

Going Home

A Story Circle

Writing Marathons

Claim Your Writing

Trust Yourself

The Samurai

Rereading and Rewriting

I Don’t Want to Die

Epilogue

Afterword: An Interview with the Author

Notes

Books and Audio by Natalie Goldberg

Credits

PREFACE

 

A
YEAR AGO
on a December night in Santa Fe, New Mexico, I attended the birthday party of a young filmmaker I had known only briefly. For about half an hour I stood near the buffet table in conversation with a man in his early thirties, who I had just met. He was obviously a serious poet;
I told him I was once a poet, too, before I’d written my first book. We bantered back and forth. I was enjoying myself immensely.

Suddenly, with a quizzical look on his face, he asked, “So, anyway, what have you written?”

“Well, several books,” I said, “but the one I’m most known for is called
Writing Down the Bones
.”

“You’re kidding!” His eyes bugged out. “I thought you were dead.”

Without blinking an eye, I responded, “No, not yet. Still trucking along, still putting pen to paper.”

We both laughed.

He didn’t need to say any more. I understood: he’d read me in high school. All books read then must be by deceased men—or women. No author studied in a secondary school institution could possibly be alive.

Writing Down the Bones
came out in 1986. I have often told audiences that if it had been published in the fifties it would have flopped. But instead it met this country exactly where it was—great hordes of Americans had a need to express themselves. Writing is egalitarian; it cuts across geographic, class, gender, and racial lines. I received fan letters from vice presidents of insurance agencies in Florida; factory workers in Nebraska; quarry workers in Missouri; prisoners in Texas; lawyers, doctors, gay rights activists, housewives, librarians, teachers, priests, politicians. A whole revolution in writing began soon after it came out. Separate writing sections in bookstores sprang up. One student said to me, “I get it! Writing is the new religion.”

“But why,” people asked me, “does everybody want to write?”

I don’t think everyone wants to create the great American novel, but we all have a dream of telling our stories—of realizing what we think, feel, and see before we die. Writing is a path to meet ourselves and become intimate. Think about it: Ants don’t do it. Trees don’t. Not even thoroughbred horses, mountain elk, house cats, grass, or rocks do it. Writing is a uniquely human activity. It might even be built into our DNA. It should be put forward in the Declaration of Independence, along with the other inalienable rights: “Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness—and writing.”

And it’s inexpensive. All you need is pen, paper (of course, computer, if you are so inclined), and the human mind. What crannies of untouched perception can you explore? What autumn was it that the moon entered your life? When was it that you picked blueberries at their quintessential moment? How long did you wait for your first true bike? Who are your angels? What are you thinking of? Not thinking of? What are you looking at? Not looking at? Writing can give you confidence, can train you to wake up.

Writing Down the Bones
is backed by a two-thousand-year-old practice of studying the mind. It is not solely Natalie’s creative idea. I wanted to root this work, give it a solid foundation. At the time I wrote it, I had already studied meditation for ten years, six in close practice with a Japanese Zen master. Where do thoughts come from? Memories, ideas, even the word
the
? Meditation and writing practice are coincident. The more we understand the human mind, our basic writing tool, the better, more secure we can be in our writing.

When this book came out, people called me a genius. I smiled, but I knew I wasn’t a genius. Maybe the only genius moment was having Zen inform the writing. I had a sincere and earnest desire to figure out this writing life. I very badly wanted to do it and I didn’t know how, and I hadn’t learned how in all my public school education. By college, I think I gave up. But I had a yearning for it way deep underneath, a desire I didn’t even know I had. I was in love with reading and literature. There were stories only I knew about my family, about my first kiss, last haircut, the smell of sage on a mesa and my kinship with the flat plains of Nebraska. I had to get slow and dumb (not take anything for granted) and watch and see how everything connects, how you contact your thoughts and lay them down on paper.

I wish now that I had another chance to write that school composition, “What I Did Last Summer.” When I wrote it in fifth grade, I was scared and just recorded: “It was interesting. It was nice. My summer was fun.” I snuck through with a B grade. But I still wondered, How do you really do that? Now it is obvious. You tell the truth and you depict it in detail: My mother dyed her hair red and polished her toenails silver. I was mad for Parcheesi and running in the sprinkler, catching beetles in a mason jar and feeding them grass. My father sat at the kitchen table a lot staring straight ahead, never talking, a Budweiser in his hand.

What an opportunity to recount the crush I had on a blond boy down the block, the news of racial injustice I saw on TV and how I felt confused and hurt by it, how I feared my sister was prettier than me, how I made coleslaw with my grandma. But I didn’t know how to narrate all these things.

In this book, I instruct all of us how—the old students, and the young.

It is my sincere wish that this book be taught in all public and private schools, that students learn how to do writing practice, that they come to know themselves, feel joy in expression, trust what they think. Once you connect with your mind, you are who you are and you’re free.

A long time ago I read Jack Kerouac’s essentials for prose. Four of them, in particular, have provided me with heart for the path:

 

Accept loss forever

Be submissive to everything, open, listening

No fear or shame in the dignity of your experience, language, and knowledge

Be in love with your life

Believe me, you, too, can find your place inside the huge terrain of writing. No one is so odd as to be left out.

Now, please, go. Write your asses off.

—D
ECEMBER 2004

Introduction

 

I
WAS A
G
OODY
T
WO-
S
HOES
all through school. I wanted my teachers to like me. I learned commas, colons, semicolons. I wrote compositions with clear sentences that were dull and boring. Nowhere was there an original thought or genuine feeling. I was eager to give the teachers what I thought they wanted.

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