When did I Start Writing?

At a certain point in my life I came to the conclusion that I wanted to be a writer. I find  it hard to remember how or when exactly I got to that point. Probably, a turning point happened when I was about 25 years old and I wrote a short-story that was selected as a finalist for an anthology book. By then I had decided that being a ballet dancer wasn’t for me after all. At 17 I had dropped out of my dance uni degree and moved to advertisement and marketing. At 25 I had been working at a large multinational corporation that was draining my blood.

One day I was driving alone to work, from the car radio I heard a voice saying:

“Writing is your major gift”. I’m aware the phrase is a bit strange but I cannot change the voice from beyond just to fit the English grammar, so I will leave it as is, the closest translation.

That moment I made a decision (based on a voice I imagined because I was delirious of boredom, most probably, but who cares, right?). I had been trying to write more and more and I realised I had to find a way to have a good quality of life to have energy left for writing. If you check the post “why Australia?” you will see how that brought me to Sydney’s beautiful shores.

Although, the decision was made when I was an adult, the more I search for when I started actually writing, the further back I go.

My best friend pointed out to me that none of her childhood friends wrote a story about the time they caught the maid making out with the security guard. I was telling my friend how terrified I was of this maid because she found my story and was very upset at me. Lost in my anguish cause by the upset maid I didn’t realise that most kids don’t write about stuff like I did all the time.

When I first learnt what poetry was, I also sold some poetry to my grandfather which I never delivered because I was then as I am now: hopeless at poetry. I did try though, ended up writing a few lines without an end. I ate my payment in candy and that was that.

I remember the look in the face of my fourth grade teacher when instead of delivering a writing assignment with one page, as I was supposed to do, I delivered twelve pages. Just because I couldn’t cut the story short, stop it in the middle, I had to take the character walking all the way from school to work… Poor teacher, she was a mean one but I’m not sure she deserved that punishment.

A few years later my beautifully-bummed high-school teacher published a book with short-stories, I had a story there. (Beautifully-bummed because as a Brazilian teenager, like all other Brazilian teenagers, I was obsessed with the roundness of people’s behinds around me and such youngish teacher had very nice buttocks that would shake firmly when he wrote on the blackboard.) [Two more notes: I’m still obsessed with round buttocks and at the time it was an actual back board, where you make all that effort to write with chalk.]

While I was on my dancing career path I only thought I would write a book when I retired, I wasn’t really thinking, probably from lack of food, the brain didn’t work very well. I’m grateful to say that I added things up before starving to death and changed my mind. This is my reasoning:

I am not flexible enough to be a prima ballerina + I live in a third world country quite worried about food and health, not art + I can never eat + I am always fat = bad idea.

Once I stopped dancing professionally — I still dance for pleasure — I started writing more, I’ve always had ideas, many, many ideas for being so, even if I had to give up writing about the maid’s kisses.

Quando Comecei a Escrever?

Em certo ponto da minha vida concluí que eu queria ser uma escritora. Acho difícil me recordar exatamente como ou quando cheguei à essa conclusão. Provavelmente um dos momentos decisivos aconteceu quando tinha uns 25 anos de idade e escrevi um conto para os Anjos de Prata, um concurso do Escritor Mário Prata, onde me coloquei em quarto lugar e participei do livro lançado com os melhores do concurso. Àquela altura eu já tinha decidido que ser uma bailarina clássica não era para mim, aos 17 anos eu tinha deixado minha faculdade de dança e mudado para um curso de publicidade e marketing. Aos 25 eu vinha trabalhando em uma grande multinacional que estava drenando minha energia.

Um dia, eu estava dirigindo sozinha para o trabalho, e ouvi a voz do Fernando Morais me dizendo pelo rádio: “escrever é o seu dom maior”. Uma frase um pouco estranha, eu sei, mas não dá para mudar uma voz do além só para fazer o fraseado mais elegante.

Eu costumava ouvir o Fernando Morais falar no rádio então foi a voz dele que imaginei falando comigo, e foi essa frágil loucura que usei para tomar uma decisão. Eu vinha tentando escrever mais e mais e me dei conta que eu tinha que descobrir um jeito de ter uma boa qualidade de vida, para ter energia sobrando para escrever. Se você olhar o texto chamado “Austrália Porque?” vai ver o que me trouxe para a linda cidade Sydney.

Embora a decisão tenha sido feita quando já era adulta, quando mais procuro o momento que comecei a escrever, mais distante no passado eu vou.

Minha melhor amiga me disse que não é todo mundo que escreve histórias de como eles presenciaram a empregada beijando o segurança. Eu estava contando para minha amiga o quanto fiquei com medo da funcionária doméstica porque ela achou minha história e ficou muito brava comigo. Perdida em minha angústia infantil eu nem parei para perceber o quando é incomum, uma criança pequena, escrever sobre sua vida o tempo todo como eu fazia.

Quando eu aprendi o que era poesia eu vendi uma para o meu avô. O coitado nunca recebeu a poesia comprada, porque como poeta eu sou uma excelente novelista. Eu bem que tentei, escrevi algumas linhas sem final. Comi o meu pagamento em balas e foi isso.

Me lembro da cara da minha professora de português da quarta série quando entreguei a ela uma redação de doze páginas ao invés de uma. Eu não poderia parar a história no meio, certo? É claro que a personagem tinha que andar o caminho todo de casa até a escola.  Pobre professora ela era bem chata mas não acho que merecia tamanha punição.

Alguns anos depois meu professor mais lindamente bundado do colegial publicou um livro de contos, e um deles era meu. (Lindamente bundado porque como boa adolescente brasileira eu era obcecada com a beleza das redondezas posteriores ao meu redor, e esse professorzinho novinho tinha um par de redondezas muito belas que chacoalhavam firmemente quando ele escrevia no quadro-negro.) [Dois outros comentários: Eu ainda sou obcecada por belas bundas e naquela época era mesmo um quadro-negro, daqueles que dá um trabalho danado de escrever com giz.]

Enquanto eu ainda progredia na minha carreira de bailarina eu pensava em escrever um livro quando me aposentasse. Acho que não pensava muito claramente, devia ser por falta de alimento. Sou bastante grata de poder dizer que eu calculei as coisas melhor antes de morrer de fome e mudei de idéia. Esse foi meu raciocínio:

Eu não tenho muita flexibilidade muscular para ser uma prima bailarina + eu moro num país de terceiro mundo que se preocupa muito mais com comida e saúde do que com arte + eu nunca posso comer o que quero + eu sempre acho que estou gorda = péssima idéia.

Quando parei de dançar profissionalmente — ainda danço por prazer — comecei a escrever mais, sempre tive milhares de idéias para escrever mesmo tendo que desistir de escrever sobre os beijos da moça que trabalhava lá em casa.

A Narrativa Positiva

Para descobrir porque escrever é tão importante quanto respirar para mim, eu comecei a olhar para as coisas que gosto de fazer.

Adoro narrativas, contos, personagens. Em livros ou filmes, procuro personagens bem construídos, histórias que eu possa seguir com profundidade de personalidades e longos enredos. Amo ler, e ver séries de TV e filmes, amo conversar com amigos e seguir suas vidas e meus assuntos preferidos são relacionamentos e discutir as minúcias de como o mundo funciona.

Seguindo essa lógica, descobri que escrevo para fazer parte da construção da aventura das pessoas, para influenciar, mesmo que um pouquinho, suas escolhas e destinos.

Um calor me invade quando ouço alguém rindo de algo que escrevi, or quando eles me dizem que foram influenciados pelas minhas palavras de algum jeito. Eu escrevo para criar uma influência positiva e aceito que, às vezes, minha escrita pode ser vista através de um prisma negativo.

Eu sei, por experiência, que mudar os caminhos das nossas vidas é difícil e espero que compartilhando minhas histórias eu possa ajudar a criar coragem nos meus leitores para mudar, quando necessário, e sempre progredir em suas vidas.

I fail on a daily basis to watch the news

I received this message last night from my friend:

“I know you aren’t much into politics, just so you know, Australia’s got a new Prime Minister.”

Not much into politics is a major understatement. I can say I am alienated in an intellectual way. I don’t watch, or read, or listen to the news if I can avoid it. In general, my news are a couple of years old, when the major events appear in published books.

I felt very grateful to have friends that alert me when something major is happening so I can reconnect with reality.

To maintain my stream of interesting issues to talk about, I connect with story tellers, with things like Ted talks, podcasts, audio books, going to events and lectures and even watching high quality drama (no reality tv permitted in any way).

I simply cannot stand the journalistic style of writing, I cannot find the energy or the will to read or view the news. Maybe it comes from the trauma of having lived in a third world country where the news are a string of atrocities or injustices, I’m not sure.

But today I made an exception to see what was going on in my country. I went to ABCs news podcasts and clicked on all the ones from today and yesterday about the change of the Prime Minister. It was hilarious because there are all these interviews from yesterday and they talk to many people who categorically affirmed “they are all rumours, there is no truth in any of that, we will be in power at least for another year” and about six hours later the exact opposite happened.

Watching the news knowing what comes next might be fun.

The Structure

How I structure my ideas is firstly by keeping notes in any way on my reach to put down ideas. In paper, on the phone, in voice notes and written bits and pieces. Early morning, middle of the night, and during the day.

Then I expand these notes to include the details that kept coming to me with or without my authorisation. The filling of these ideas assault me in dreams, in the shower, when I go to the toiled during my working day. But they come more when I am walking.

Next I start writing what needs to be put down, the parts that if I don’t make real will keep annoying me incessantly, these are the texts that won’t go away, that will fill my thoughts and ideas until they are resting in a physical form.

Following I have to organise where it all goes and write the other bits, the ones I had only the sketches for before.

Depending on the project it doesn’t have a pre-created structure. The book I have written in Portuguese, Simplesmente Gerva, has been created in a series of emails between my co-author and myself, and we never knew what the other was going to write.

I am now writing the continuation of this book and, although I am writing on my own, I am being faithful to the proposal. I don’t know much of what is going to happen to the character, I sit down to write and let him take me wherever he wants.

Sometimes a whole idea is born from one thought, one example is the one I mentioned in another post: what would a writer do if they didn’t have the means to write and which situation would that be.

To surmise, I impose no rules to myself. Whatever works, works.

The Technique

I write using the many parts of myself. I write using both my home language, Portuguese, and my adopted language, the one of my fantasies and dreams, English. One day I may write in French, who knows. I write using the young me that lives inside and the older one. The wise and the silly. I write using my South American style, some fantastic reality, chopping off sentences (see the one just before) while writing really long paragraphs in other times.

I write with my own sense of fun, my original abilities and I have upgraded my technique with a Masters degree in Arts – Creative Writing from UTS. I am far from a literary writer, (as far as I can, actually), I aim to write in a straightforward way in plain English (or plain Portuguese, from Brazil). This was not without challenges during my studies, it was difficult to separate what was valid feedback on my style and what was my own Brazilian flavour, or what was because of the simplicity in the style. I guess I am still searching for this distinction.

I write following mostly the inspiration and the voice I found when I was seventeen, but try to give it a bit more style and maturity. I keep honing the knowledge, keep reading, listening and viewing anything that will enrich and feed my writing.

What do you Write?

Whenever I tell someone that writing is my passion they come up with the difficult question ‘what do you write?’.

‘I write letters in a blank page’ doesn’t really explain, does it?

What I do is creative writing, short stories, blogs or novels. No poetry, no journalistic pieces. I write fiction and non-fiction, although my non-fiction reads like fiction. I love writing with humour but I also get into deep depressing stories and tales, at times.

My main subjects are day-to-day adventures and relationships. I like romance.

I would probably say that there is an element of sensuality in my writing. I am an kinaesthetic person and movement of bodies attract me even in bi-dimensional black and white letters.

I write anything that inspires me.

The Tools

At the moment, I have 3 loves-of-my-life (how do you pluralise such a word?):

1) my computer — where all my ideas are stored. A present from my parents, the best ever. My lovely MacBook Air, that is the size and lightness of an ipad, with a phenomenal, smooth keypad, from a company that is aligned to my own values: creativity, design, beauty, sensuality (yes, the mac has a sensual design) and agility. I can carry it everywhere and write anywhere, and it has another love-of-my-life in it: the software for writing…

2) my scrivener — the discovery that changed my writing life. It made it very easy to keep all my ideas organised. It is also perfect for compiling projects. When creating a book you can keep the ideas for the chapters organised and then go into each part and just fill it with the actual writing. Next you are able to move the parts around, keep notes, research items, etc. Finally it exports to many formats including most, if not all, e-book publishing formats. Love, love, love it!

3) my nespresso — the food, albeit a drink, for my thoughts. With which I create magical Moccas with melted chocolate that energise my ideas. Another gift from my parents and my sister.

The WordPress in my Mind

I write because I do it anyway, even without pen and paper, or without a computer. In my head I write all the time, for everything that happens around me I create an entry in my imaginary post. I even speak as I write sometimes and the thing that would give me the biggest grief would be to be made to stop writing.

I have created stories about what would happen to me if I was made to stop writing or if I didn’t have the means to do it. In which situation would you not have access to writing? And then, what would you do?

I would go insane because when I need writing something, it enters a loop in my head and I repeat the tale over and over in my head — the dialogues or the paragraphs — until I can sit down and ‘download’ them.

If I had no access to a computer, or to pen and paper, I would have to remember everything my experiences are creating I guess my memory would expand and so would my despair.

The Positive Narrative

Searching for the reasons why I feel my writing is as essential as breathing for me, I looked at what I like in life.

I have a passion for narratives, tales, characters. In books and films, give me stories I can follow, give me well constructed characters. Give me profundity of personality and longer accounts. I love reading and watching TV series and movies; I love talking to my friends and following their lives and my favourite subjects are relationships and discussing the intricacies of how the world works.

Following that logic, I have discovered that I write to be part of the construction of people’s narratives, to influence (even if it happens to be in a small way) their choices and fate.

A fuzziness invades me every time I hear someone laughing at something I wrote, or when they say that something I created influenced their lives in a good way. I write to promote positive change and accept that sometimes it can be seen in a negative light.

I know, from experience, that changing the path of our lives is very difficult and I wish to share my stories to help creating courage in my readers to change when necessary and always move forward in their own lives.