Writing Is My Drink
Williams’s prompt “Where is home?”
    7. One of the images around the word “writer” that I held in
    my coming-of-age years was of someone who could live and
    work in total isolation and who did not need the reassurance
    of others to keep writing. Because I knew that I knew that I
    could never live up that image, I believed I couldn’t ever be-
    come a writer. (I also thought I had to be male to be a “real”
    writer.)
    a) Think about what preconceptions and images the word
    “writer” conjures up for you. What were the images you
    held of “a writer” in your childhood? Are any of those im-
    ages limiting you still? Write for ten minutes on this topic.
    8. Write for ten minutes about where you grew up. If you grew
    up in more than one place, as I did, write about each of those
    places for ten minutes apiece.
    9. Answer this question for each of the places you grew up: How
    did that place contribute to your sense of yourself as a cre-
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    T h e o P a u l i n e N e s t o r
    ative person? Was your creativity encouraged and stimulated
    there, or were you shamed for your creative impulses? Or was
    it some combination of encouragement and shame?
    10. Write about a place that you love for ten minutes. Go for the
    detail. What about that place inspires you?
    11. Write about a place that you loved when you were a kid.
    12. Make a list of times when you’ve been part of a group or a
    team. Pick a time when you had a transformative experience
    with a group and write about that for ten minutes.
    13. Make a list of times you felt isolated and another list of times you felt part of a community. Pick a time from each list and
    write about them together.
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    6
    ginger Harper Died for
    My sins
    You see, in my view a writer is a writer not because she writes well and easily, because she has amazing talent, because everything she
    does is golden. In my view a writer is a writer because even when
    there is no hope, even when nothing you do shows any sign of
    promise, you keep writing anyway.
    —Junot Díaz
    A month before the seminar with Terry, my grandma JoJo
    died of a stroke. She was found in her drafting room taking
    a nap, the magazine beside her open to an article on Islam.
    Fresh dirt clung to her gardening shoes outside the kitchen
    door—further evidence that she’d spent the last day of her
    eighty-six years wel . I felt the loss of her acutely, though, for
    she was someone who’d understood my lifelong yearning for a
    big life of authentic expression; in fact, she’d insisted upon it.
    JoJo showed me that an artist is a person who makes art and
    a writer a person who writes and that your love of doing the
    work exists separately from whatever value anyone else might
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    place on the work. Now that I had decided to final y use my
    sabbatical to pursue my dream and for MFA programs, I would
    need to remember this lesson.
    Growing up, I’d counted on JoJo to show up for me in all
    the ways that my mother couldn’t—not because my mom didn’t
    want to but because her love for a married man and her drinking
    drew her away from the present moment, the place where chil-
    dren dwel . When I looked into my mother’s beautiful blue eyes,
    I saw a vacancy, a desire for something that was far away. My
    mother was also distracted by running her business, which was
    both a necessity and a passion, which pointed to one of the ways
    that my mother and I essential y differ, although it would take
    me decades to see and understand this as simply a difference.
    While I see the world in stories and feelings, my mother sees the
    world in numbers. When my mom and I talk, she wants to know
    my numbers: the day’s temperature, my mortgage interest rate,
    the reading on my car’s odometer, my weight.
    JoJo, on the other

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