• Bio
  • Contact
  • Events and Resources
  • My Writing

Jessica Jonas

Jessica Jonas

Monthly Archives: March 2011

Quarterly Report

30 Wednesday Mar 2011

Posted by jessicamjonas in Goals, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

goals, progress, quarterly review, writing

All right.  So I know the blog has technically been up since October of last year, but this January is the more fair mark of when I got started with this whole ‘develop a web presence for yourself’ thing. I’ve been trying to take my writing life more seriously this year, so I think it’s a good idea to make myself more accountable. We’re at the 25% mark in the year, and I hear businesses like to do things in quarters, so let’s give that a shot here, shall we?

Credit: http://www.toothpastefordinner.com

Okay, for serious this time.

What I’ve Done So Far:

Blogging has gone spectacularly well, I think. I’m posting regularly, sometimes even more frequently than the once a week I planned in January. I’m updating several areas of my site–my What I’m Reading page has seen a few updates, and I even posted a mini-essay to my Stories & Things cache. Making the leap to post blogs to Facebook gave me a wild jump in traffic for a little bit, and then it fell off again. I’m reading other blogs here and there to learn about what it is that’s working there to keep people’s attention. Maybe there are elements that translate to other kinds of writing, as well.

Speaking of, writing ‘serious’ things (read, creative work that I intend to send out for publication) is a mixed bag. In January I was high on resolution-fuel, pumping out words every day like a machine. Toward the end of the month, though, I realized I was starting to get lost in the novel, and not in the good way. I had so many gaps between scenes that I was losing the thread of what I was trying to do in the story, and felt like I was just meandering. It stood at about 15,000 words then, and hasn’t grown since.

I did write the Story in a Day, but didn’t revise it, and a few pieces for my Experimental Forms class, as well as the aforementioned mini-essay, so I’m turning out some product here. I’m also keeping lists of potential article ideas to submit, and I’d estimate I sent out around 10 pitches and manuscripts this last quarter. Low as that is, it’s a step up from what it’s been in the past, so I’m smiling, albeit with slightly gritted teeth.

Where Do I Need to Improve?

The perfectionist side of me wants to say “across the board.” I’m nowhere near the ideal of getting published regularly, earning enough to make a noticeable contribution to my budget (or, um, anything), and living that daydream writer’s life. Trying to make that happen in one swoop, however, is utterly unrealistic and a bit stupid.

I want to be more intentional about my writing. I feel like I’m heading there with some of the things I’ve done so far this year, but other times even successes have felt like happy accidents. I want to be more deliberate about growing in this area, so I propose that in the next quarter of the year, I try to meet the following goals:

1. Submit 10 queries or mss/week, total: 120 pieces. This is really scary, because as you can see I normally take something like three or four months to steel myself to send out that much. I have a good list to start me off, though, and if I want to make this happen, I need to get serious. Just try for 3 months to keep that level going, and see what happens.

2. Write and revise 4 new pieces. My problem is that I like starting things, but my enthusiasm dims toward the middle, and really fizzles out when it comes to reworking a first draft into a polished product. I need to force myself to finish what I start, and take the time and effort to make it something I’d (gasp) let someone else read.

And I’m going to end the list there for now. Both of those goals are ambitious enough to keep my attention for a while, so let’s get on top of those and see what happens from now til June. Business meeting adjourned, and back to writing!

Nick and Sheila Pye

23 Wednesday Mar 2011

Posted by jessicamjonas in Art, Breaking Boundaries

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

art, contemporary photography, inspiration, nick and sheila pye, photography

So last Friday I was sitting at the front desk in the law firm, answering phones and forwarding calls and signing for deliveries of Cobb salads for attorneys in depositions. I had the empty, vaguely itchy mental feeling that often means I need to read something, so I slid the wheely chair over to where the Washington Post was, did my best to remove the Style section as quietly as possible, and went to read the article on the back so I wouldn’t make noise by crinkling pages (my boss’s office is not far from the front, and her assistant is barely forty feet away from me, and Assistant and Boss are likethis). And there was an image from a photography exhibit at the Curator’s Office, and I had this sudden, overwhelming, ravenous craving for art.

The exhibit was the latest from Nick & Sheila Pye, a husband-and-wife team, newly divorced, who I had never heard of ever before I read the article on the back of the Style section. The article said their work drew from their relationship, but felt universal, that it had dark, Gothic themes but at the same time kept a quality of playfulness and experimentation, that elements of myth and religion and death and love were constant visitors in their photographs, but not heavy-handed. These are all things that match up beautifully with what I like in my reading material and would love to have said about my writing one day, but at that moment the reviewer could have been blathering about whatever she liked and it would hardly matter. This photo was breaking my heart every moment I looked at it, and I couldn’t stop looking. The image was of a dark-haired woman, drifting on tiptoe in from a calm gray sea and a peachy sky. Her hands were by her sides, arms flexed back just a little, like wings. One foot had rope looped around it, leashing her by the ankle to the  waist of a blond man, sprawled asleep or unconscious on the sand. The woman’s toes were just grazing the foam of the last wavelets before she would reach the beach. She wasn’t looking at the man. She looked out at me, and I couldn’t read her expression but I knew I had to see her, bigger and clearer and closer, and I needed it badly.

Like a myth, or an old fairy tale -- entrancing and frightening all at once

I went on Saturday. Andrew, fortunately, was able to come along, too. The whole set-up of the exhibition–newly divorced couple, still so committed to their art if not each other that they still made beauty together–felt like something I wanted to see with my someone, or else not at all, and the craving was so bad I didn’t know what would happen if I didn’t get some art in me. We got there, and realized the Curator’s Office is not a cute name for a gallery. The exhibit was in the curator’s office. We had to buzz her to have her let us up. Two of the photos hung over her desk, and she typed away on her computer while I moved from photo to photo, walking up so close my nose almost touched, or standing as far back as I could in the little room, and hugging my shoulders to keep from flying apart.

There was one other, besides the Aphrodite one of her coming in on the waves, that I loved. She was wearing a red dress, climbing a ladder that stopped in midair, her back turned to me. There was water again, and the black branches of trees just beginning to bud. And it’s so obvious that I would love the picture of this unknown woman climbing her ladder into whatever new nothing it means, here and now when I am working so hard and waiting for careers and proposals and publication and all these wonderful life things to happen. But I kept thinking about what she would do when she reached the top of that ladder, which was made of such old, creaky-looking wood, twisting in the wind. I wanted to know whether she would back out, or back down the ladder, or flail her arms and grab for the twigs nearby to steady herself, and then I remembered how much she had loved her photographer, and how much they both still loved this art to keep even that great pain from stopping them from joining together to make this. She was going to jump when she reached the top of the ladder, put one foot on either stem and push off and jump into that gray water, and the lens of the camera would rush forward to see if she was all right, and her head would surface a moment later, water streaming down her face, and she would look over and see that yes, the camera had caught her, just as she knew it would. And she would be laughing.

We spent an hour there, all in all, for six photos. I couldn’t stop looking. We took turns pointing out things we thought were beautiful, or sitting for ten or fifteen minutes at a time studying one in silence. I can’t tell you too much about what made them so amazing. I know very little about art, less about photography and the many things artists can do to make an actual image surreal, or make the quality of it more like a painting. I haven’t learned the language to explain what it is about light and color and expression that moves me, the way I could point out the beauties of a beloved author’s writing style. I do know I felt full by the time we left, so giddy I was almost skipping past the jazz bars and kebab places in downtown D.C.

I’m learning to trust these cravings, when they come. I had cravings to scribble, before I ever took a writing class, and filled pages of my diary wondering why I felt so antsy all of a sudden without a pencil in my hand. Maybe I need this kind of food, too, the freedom to sit still and look, as hard as I can, as images that show me what I would like to be able to do one day, even if I don’t plan on using a camera.

The exhibit’s still open for almost a month. If you’re anywhere near the D.C. area, please go. Please look. And tell me what you see.

Waving in the Dark

16 Wednesday Mar 2011

Posted by jessicamjonas in Writing

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

paranoia, steps back, the void, writing life

The discouraging part of trying to kick off a writing…presence…is the feeling of being to small to be noticed. It took me several years to identify as a writer without cringing as I said the ‘W’ word. Writers are the successful people who know how to look appropriately thoughtful in black-and-white pictures, or at least they’re the people who write every day without falling in and out of good habits like I do. I’ve finally got myself in a place where I’ll admit that I can wear Old Navy sweaters and write little bits on lunch break and the Metro and in evenings that I am not too exhausted (read: one evening every two or three weeks), and it still counts.

There’s a new cringe word now, though. I’m allowed to daydream about what it would be like to be an official, full-time writer, in the same way that I can daydream about how it would have been to be a professional ballet dancer, provided I had better turnout, extension and metatarsal arches, and lost 15 pounds or so. What I can’t quite bring myself to claim is an idea that such a life (the writing one, not the dancing one) is maybe something I could try to put together for myself in real life. I can’t quite bring myself to say the word “career.”

The thing is, if we’re being completely honest, my chances of being the kind of writer who makes a steady, comfortable income doing nothing but writing are comparable to my chances of going into dance full-time, even after a vigorous stretches-and-strengthening routine and a diet. There are so many of us out there, and not enough people buying books and magazines to support us all, or even half of us, or even one in ten. But we want to be those chosen few who can do it, the Margaret Atwoods and Neil Gaimans and Junot Diazes (although even Junot Diaz is listed teaching at a college and editing a magazine as well as winning all manner of prizes for his books, so there’s a thought), and everyone is slamming away at the same goal.

So what happens for me is I end up reading WAY too much in whatever is going on in my life right in that moment. If it’s a good week, that’s not too bad, cause if I write a story in a day, or send out a bunch of things, or my stats say a bunch of people read my blog today, then I’m all like, “YEAH! I’m the best. I’m going to win at all of this!” And I immediately rewrite all my goals to see what I could get done if I kept succeeding at that rate. And that’s where the mistake comes in, because if the next week is a slow blog week, or I’m too exhausted to write, or a rejection letter comes in, I’m all like, “Everyone got together and decided I am worthless at writing, and now they will shun me forever until it gets through my thick skull that I should never type another word ever ever again.”

And that’s where having other people to talk to helps a bit. I had the following exchange with the boyfriend last night:

Me: “No one read my blog today! They read the Midnight Snack story, and decided no one should ever read anything I write ever again.”
Boyfriend: “I don’t think they thought that.”
Me: “Then explain why everyone stopped reading immediately after I posted it.”
Boyfriend: “I think if you write another post, people will read it.”
Me (narrowing eyes): “Why? Are you going to tell all your friends to read it? Am I going to get a bunch of pity views?”
Boyfriend: “No, I think if you write another post, people will want to read it.”

All right, boy. It’s on. I have a new writing project in mind to work on today, and I’m not going to tell what it is right now because it’s in the earliest of stages and I make no promises, but I am working. And there is a new post today, so even if all it does is give me a tiny kick in the pants to do something worthy of having a writer-ish blog, that’s something, too.

Mudhouse Sabbath

11 Friday Mar 2011

Posted by jessicamjonas in Books, God

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

books, christianity, god, judaism, lauren winner, memoir, mudhouse sabbath, religion, what I'm reading

I mentioned earlier that for a while I worked at a church at a job that sucked. What’s good is that, in addition to the awesome job at the literary journal, I also found myself working an equally awesome job at a church. I’m a youth director rather than a secretary this go-around, which is a much better fit – playing games and leading discussions with 6th to 12th graders is a lot more fun than folding bulletins. Also, the pastors at the new church are supportive and encouraging. One of them gave me Mudhouse Sabbath by Lauren Winner as a Christmas gift. It took me a few months to get around to it (I’ve always got a back-log on the ‘to read’ list), but I am fully in it now, and what a book it is.

I grew up with two religions myself. My father’s not an Orthodox Jew by any stretch of the imagination, and I don’t know much beyond the skeleton of Judaism, but I grew up fasting on Yom Kippur, dipping parsley in salt water at Passover Seders and lighting candles at least four or so of the eight nights of Hanukkah (my dance and my sister’s gymnastics inevitably ate up some of those evenings). My family’s way of resolving Judaism and Christianity is to concentrate on what the faiths share, which is wonderful because it leads to a lot of openness and tolerance when it’s done right, as I believe it is in my parents’ house.

Winner takes a different approach by focusing on the differences between the faiths, specifically the differences in rites and practices such as prayer, food, weddings, and the Sabbath. What is so wonderful is that while I would have expected a focus on differences to lead to judging, Winner clearly has tremendous respect and warmth toward both sides. She grew up in a mix household, too, practicing Reform Judaism for the most part and gleaning a bit of Baptist belief from her mom’s side. In Girl Meets God, which I have not read yet, ever-stronger spiritual yearnings led her first to devout Orthodox Judaism, and then to equally devout Christianity (Anglican, I believe? I had to read up on the Internet to check it out, since she doesn’t mention a denomination in Mudhouse). Leaving Judaism for her meant leaving all the practices she was accustomed to, from keeping kosher to the way she grieved or prayed. Some transitions were easier than others (being allowed to eat shellfish is apparently one of the big perks of converting), but she found herself missing the rhythm of her Jewish life, the way even the annoying rules she had to follow kept her feeling connected to God.

Mudhouse Sabbath looks at eleven aspects of life from both the Jewish and Christian perspective, explaining what rituals each religion brings to the table, what they mean to her, and how she’s adapted or created her own practices so she can keep the attentiveness to faith that she loved in Judaism, rewritten into a Christian context. The writing is engaging and approachable, with an easy openness and honesty that makes me wish I could run into this girl on the street and be friends with her. I like the way she takes it as a matter of course that spirituality is an everyday part of life. Even though I work at a church, I don’t always pray every day or make such an attentive practice of “being religious” during the week. This book makes me want to bring more of that into my life, because the way she tells it makes it seem like such a rewarding way to be present in the days between Sunday and Sunday.

Two Jobs and a Midnight Snack

08 Tuesday Mar 2011

Posted by jessicamjonas in Growing Up, Stories, Writing

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

abandoning perfectionism, criticism, essay, memoir, short stories, work

Last May, I was working at a church, and it was awful. The pastor was a perfectionist, slow to praise and quick to point out anything I did wrong. The last straw came when he told me that he’d decided I had five typos left, and then I’d be out of a job. I hadn’t thought I was making that many mistakes, and I knew I was putting effort into my work. I also was involved in other projects, like helping overhaul the website, that were acknowledged minimally, if at all. So I quit.

About a week later, I was chatting to my MFA program director, who’s also the co-founder and editor of a literary magazine, and when she heard I needed work, she offered me a job on the spot. It’s a fantastic job. I’ve learned how to use two new computer programs since I’ve been here (not to mention a new operating system), and gotten markedly better than I used to be at two more. My bosses now are all about exploration and playfulness, and much less about mechanical perfection. I design posters, for example, for guest poets and speakers, for example, and once or twice it’s happened that a typo went to print and it hasn’t been a big deal (I keep wanting to clarify – I really don’t mess up that often, and I catch more errors than I make, but sometimes ‘night’ gets changed to ‘evening’ at the last second and I forget to switch ‘a’ to ‘an’). If I was thoughtless or careless about what I was doing, that would be another story, but in this job the bigger picture of what I’m doing matters more than any little bumps.

I’m still working on making a similar shift in my writing life. I’m still too quick to scold myself for not being as good or fast or prolific as I want to be, and need a hugely significant achievement (see Exhibit A) to happen in order to feel proud of what I’m doing. So I’m trying to quit, or rather I’m trying to be that kind of supportive presence for myself. I’ve got a new essay up in Stories & Things, a little piece I’ve been meaning to write for a while now, but hadn’t, perhaps because I thought it was too light to really matter. Now it’s written, and it made me happy to write it, and I hope someone may read it and like it too, but what’s best is that it is there now when it wasn’t before.

Electric Writing Days, or, How I Almost Missed the Train

04 Friday Mar 2011

Posted by jessicamjonas in Writing

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

epic bosshood, inspiration, making time to write, short stories, steps forward, totally boss, when the writing's going well, word count, writing, writing life

Much of the time, writing comes for me in fits and starts. I spend a lot of time treating myself like an old car, thumping myself around, muttering “come onnn,” and making vague promises and threats. Once in a long, long while, though, something magical clicks into place, and I get to spend a little while being the kind of synapse-firing, electric writer that I want to be. Yesterday was one of those days.

I wrote a story in a day, people. I wrote an entire story, beginning to middle to end, in a day. It came in at 3,174 words. Most days, I’m pleased if I hit 500 words, thrilled if I get past 800. During NaNoWriMo, my go-to insane writer’s challenge, reaching 2000 makes me feel like an overachiever, since you only need to write 1,667 to stay on track (I know. “Only.”). This is half again over the kind of overreaching goal I set for myself once a year. Forgive me for bragging, but I am feeling pretty boss right now.

And it was easy! For one glorious day, every time I sat down and opened the laptop, the next sentence came forth smoothly, and the next, and I already knew which scene needed to come after that. I nearly missed my stop on the Metro because I was so engrossed in what I was doing. It’s a good thing I happened to look up to think of the right word and saw “Metro Center” on the board, or chances are I would have been halfway to Vienna by the time I realized I’d been riding too long. It’s a good thing my stop on the way home is the end of the line, too, because it happened again. I only noticed I was there when I realized I was the only person sitting in my car of the train. All in all, between Metro rides, my lunch break, and two power sessions back home, the actual, physical writing of the story took about three and a half hours.

This is not, of course, the same as saying that the story took three and a half hours to write. I’ve been mulling over the world of the story for weeks now, ever since my professor mentioned there’s this crazy experimental poet who wants to use DNA strands as a medium for writing poetry and I thought, how cool would it be if human DNA did have poetry encoded into it? What would that mean for science, and literature, and religion? Who would read it? What would happen if someone didn’t have it? I took a couple stops and starts because there were so many different ways to go with it and I couldn’t figure out whose story I wanted to tell. So two days ago I got frustrated and spent my lunch hour putting together my notes of how this world worked, and who my characters were, and what they wanted and why. I don’t usually take that kind of prep time before writing, and I’m still not sure if I’ll make a regular practice of it, just because one of the things I’m learning is how different stories can be from each other. Practices that feed one story can suck the life out of another, but for this story, at least, making an outline worked in spades.

Next week is revising time, so chances are I’ll be grumbling again, but for now I’m still on the high. These are the moments to hold onto all the other times when nothing is working, and I hope next time I find myself in that place I’ll have the presence of mind to reread this and remember the rush.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 355 other subscribers

The Latest

  • Prices to Pay
  • Why You Should Do NaNoWriMo This Year
  • Back in the US!
  • Hiatus
  • The Briefest of Check-Ins and Some Words About a Bride

Journal History

  • February 2015
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • January 2014
  • August 2013
  • July 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • August 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • May 2011
  • April 2011
  • March 2011
  • February 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010

Recurring Thoughts

abandoning perfectionism annoying art Banned Books Week birthday blogging book design books canary review class criticism D.C. elephants engagement epic bosshood essay fiction flash fiction flash friday goals grad school Hunger Games inspiration italo calvino jose saramago judaism lauren winner literature love magazine writing making time to write memoir mfa mudhouse sabbath nanowrimo niche markets nobel prize novel obama oddities oedipus paul guest pie poetry politics progress publishing quarterly review reading religion reports resolutions short stories sometimes goals are hard steps back steps forward submissions substance tanya egan gibson the apartment The Book the elephant's journey top-shelf totally boss wedding what I'm reading when the writing's going well when the writing isn't happening word count work working my butt off writer's block writing writing life YA

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Jessica Jonas
    • Join 85 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Jessica Jonas
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...