Proposal for introducing your work to be revised – from a groundwork of your relationship to it. What is most interesting to you about it? What’s active in the text? Where does it meet you today, especially if it was written a while ago. How do you perceive its energetic signature, or its presence, that is, what is it like to be in its presence as you imagine its eventual reception?
Distance and bridges: we talked about feeling at a remove from the writing you want to revise. The trepidation of going back into something. Knowing something is missing or needs restructuring, caution at going back in to unbalance or destabilize. How much will have to go? How interested in it is the you of today?
Revision as a process of building a bridge back to a written work.
At what point does a revision process need generative openness? At what point do you constrain, steer, decide?
Tools, structural overlays that help organize material.
New forms of influence: research, reading, that can be let into the old draft. What will the new equilibrium be? What changes and to what degree as you allow new season of interests to intersect with existing material?
Possibility of reworking something not from the standpoint of revision, but of shifting to a new form, i.e. a performance text that wants to become something that is read on the page.
Revision stages, the exuberant in-breath of generating, the focused finishing like an out-breath, death of a process. We talked about care, caretaking. What kind of care does the thing need at this point in the process?
How to read the existing material before launching in. Reading for delight vs reading with corrective mindset. Grounding yourself in what is there. Scary too to ground in what is.
We talked about listening to a draft. Learning how to listen instead of coming up with counter-arguments. If I really listen, I might find that there are attachments I need to let go of.
The possibility of company in a process. Formalized, as editor, outside, eye, interlocutor, or adjacent, a community, some solidarity. Usefulness of saying to someone else, I’m going to do this. Group as a place to set an intention.
Prioritizing being with the work. Letting it be just as nourishing as anything else that could be prioritized.