Discussed: Who’s the reader? Who’s the imagined audience? The work is addressed to… Deadlines as a kind of audience. Receiving hands of submissions panel as a kind of audiences. [I related that I had done the “who’s in the room” exercise and had come up blank on this question, so I drew a little icon of a veiled child, the beloved mystery girl to whom my book is addressed, is to be gifted to]. Who do I need to ask to be in my audience? Who do I need there to challenge me?
“Milestone” as a different way to mark time from “deadline” – what are the milestones in a process and how do you recognize them? Understanding revision from this one-to-the-next perspective, instead of only in relation to an end point. Stone – something material, something real. Measuring pressure from the outside (social or internalized) vs measuring a sense of distance spanned, milestone reached. Milestones offer a different framework than draft. A milestone might be, gathering material in order to ask someone to read it. That’s an example of a milestone in the process – in your lived time of writing vs. in the writing’s time from seed to completion.
A wall of its own, I wrote, and drew a box around it.
Another boxed word: momentum. Another: getting rid of the clutter. Take the time you need to get rid of the clutter [of everything outside the writing].
Decompression rituals. What can I do before I write so my body knows that’s what’s going to happen?
Looking at old writing, in early and later drafts. Going back to the first draft with question: what was I negating as I was going through the revision process? (Misdirections of trying to make something better.)
What did I devalue of my instinct? What delicate things got plowed out of the way by other forms of necessity (i.e. solving for plot). How to restore lost things.
How to look at the draft from non-dominant layers. The analogy of recording a song. What are this chapter’s drum tracks, what’s the bass doing, the vocals, the fx or atmospherics, etc. Considering the balance of the different tracks in the scene. (analogy: images, events, rhythm or tempo, etc.). A vertical, soil-layers analysis. Working from different places in that vertical span.