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Join an internationally bestselling children's book author and her down-home husband and their dogs as they try to live a happy, better life by being happier, better people . You can use those skills in writing and vice versa. But we’re not perfect, just like our podcast. We’re cool with that.

Dogs Are Smarter Than People: Writing Life, Marriage and Motivation Carrie Jones and Shaun Farrar

    • Kunst

Join an internationally bestselling children's book author and her down-home husband and their dogs as they try to live a happy, better life by being happier, better people . You can use those skills in writing and vice versa. But we’re not perfect, just like our podcast. We’re cool with that.

    Just an Hour a Day Makes You More Bad Ass

    Just an Hour a Day Makes You More Bad Ass

    There are a lot of people who advocate spending just an hour a day doing something to become awesome. That hour a day is often learning. You study up about what you want to do, you self learn, you teach yourself to be better by learning all about the thing you're into.



    So, if you're into writing, you read books about writing and actual books. You study the craft.



    So, if you're into knitting, you study knitting. Entrepeneurship? Same thing, but first you probably have to learn how to spell it. My bad there.



    There's a cool graph here that talks about how if you read a certain number of books, how you compare to other American adults. It's also a bit depressing because it basically says most Americans read two books a year.





    Hallel K has a post on Medium about how you can use the 1-hour rule to catapult yourself into the 1% and I think that's a great post, but it's a little hyperbolizing. We like hyperbole though, right? It makes things easy.



    Hallel uses a quote by Earl Nightingale.



    “One hour per day of study in your chosen field is all it takes. One hour per day of study will put you at the top of your field within three years. Within five years you’ll be a national authority. In seven years, you can be one of the best people in the world at what you do — Earl Nightingale”



    This might make you think, "Yes! Right. So true. Epiphany moment."



    Or it might make you think, "Who the hell is Earl Nightingale?"



    Well, he has a Wikipedia page? But basically he was a motivational speaker and a radio show host that died in 1989. He wrote Strangest Secret. And to him it's all about risk taking and he also said that the problem with people's lives and lack of success isn't cowardice, but conformity.









    According to his definition, a success is when you go after a goal and achieve it. Deliberately. And only 1 out of 20 do that, he said.



    The key, he said, is creating, not conforming, deliberate creation. Goals, he said, bring you places. A ship, he says, that has a crew and captain has a destination and it gets out of the harbor and ends up to its destination. But a ship without a destination? Without a captain and crew? If you just turn on the boat's engines, it might not even make it out of the harbor.



    Deliberate learning. Goals. Focus. That's what matters, he says. Reading, learning? Those are important aspects. Maybe you won't get in the top 1% of whatever you're going toward, but you will get smarter, closer, and have deliberate action.



    DOG TIP FOR LIFE






    Pogie claims to be in the top 1% of Begging. She's an International subject expert in Food begging. Study in the morning and at night. This, however, is a photo of her apprentice, Mr. Murphy.



    COOL EXERCISE



    This is from MasterClass and it's all about goals.



    "Create Realistic Goals



    "If your goals are unrealistic, they’ll be unachievable and overwhelming. Don’t let your passion for finishing your novel cause you to push yourself too hard and set goals that simply aren’t possible. For example, it might not be reasonable to set a goal that you will write your novel in one month. Neither should you set a word-count goal to write 10,000 words a day—especially if you also have a full-time job. Setting reasonable goals in the first place will make it much easier for you down the road.



    "Consider setting writing goals that you can accomplish step-by-step, one day at a time. The best thing you can do is create daily habits that will help you reach your goals—rather than burn yourself out early with ambitious expectations for yourself. Here are some goals that many writers will set for themselves:




    Write 1,500 words every day



    Write for three hours every day at a scheduled time



    Finish one chapter each week



    Practice morning journaling"




    PLACE TO SUBMIT



    River Styx Castro Prize 2025 (Deadline September 30)




    The Castro Prize, named for our founding editor, Michael Castro, is a new prize awarded a

    • 17 Min.
    Fighting, Commerce, and Ten-Cent Beer: Welcome to America and How to Frame Stories

    Fighting, Commerce, and Ten-Cent Beer: Welcome to America and How to Frame Stories

    On last week’s podcast and the one a few before that, and in a post, Shaun and I talked a bit about plot structures and narrative structures and how here in the U.S. we think of these usually (not always!) as pretty linear, and pretty much in a three-act framework (think beginning, middle, end) with rising stakes and drama as you go along.



    This is not the only way to write.



    I am very much a product of the U.S. culture. And I’m going to talk a tiny bit in the next couple weeks about different forms/shapes of storytelling, but again . . . I am a student of this culture’s structures. I am not an expert at other structures. I adore them though. I’m going to be providing links.



    And hopefully by quickly talking about some of them, you might go off and explore and adore, too. Maybe even get an epiphany for your own story?







    So, another kind of storytelling is Middle Eastern and it's  Frame Story in our language.



    And it's so cool. Basically, as the Novelsmithy explains "many types of stories, characters, and symbols are woven together into a larger tale.



    "One Thousand And One Nights is the most famous example of this. In this story, Shahrazad tells story after story to the Sultan in order to keep him from killing her. Her stories include a variety of complex narratives, different characters, conflicts, genres, and morals. There are even frame stories within the larger frame story!



    "Characteristics of Middle Eastern Storytelling:




    Outer 'frame story' tying multiple stories together



    Multiple characters and narratives



    Variety of genres, fantasy, and high action."




    It's very influenced by The Qur’an.



    Gulf News writes,



    "One of the most revered traditions of oral storytelling is the hakawati. As intricate and complex as a weaving pattern, this motif-rich narrative style darts in and out of stories, offering unending drama where the storyteller begins one tale, deftly leaves it mid-way to pick up another and then has a third story emerging from a subplot of the first and so on. All this is done using the tools of allegory, folklore, satire, music and a visual spectacle of grand sweeping gestures and facial expressions to finally create an enthralling experience for his listeners."



    There's a great piece about frame stories here.



    DOG TIP FOR LIFE









    Pogie's like "hey dude, I live my style and life in the frame story style of way. It always comes back to me. I'll always be doing something. I'll see a cat and I'll change my storyline." And that keeps happening. It's all about multiple stories in a brain.







    WRITING EXERCISE



    Do the Forrest Gump. Find a setting like a park bench and tell the stories that make a life. OR at least outline it.







    PLACE TO SUBMIT



    Voyage simply aims to publish good work and provide a space for new and established voices. To get an idea of what we publish, please read our archives. General submissions are open year-round with no fee to submit.



    We only accept submissions via our online submission managing system, Submittable. We DO NOT accept submissions via email. Submissions sent via email will be automatically discarded without a response. We accept simultaneous submissions, but please withdraw your work via Submittable if it is accepted elsewhere.



    Though we consider reprints, please be advised that Voyage doesn't offer payment for work that has been published before. If you are submitting a piece that has been published, please notify us in your submission. 



    Voyage pays $200 per accepted, previously unpublished piece of short prose.



    Fiction: We are looking for short stories that surprise, inspire, entertain, or enlighten.



    Creative Nonfiction: We’re on the hunt for personal essays and other creative nonfiction that specifically relates to the teen experience. Submit your creative nonfiction via our submission manager here.  



    Manuscript Preparation: Please make s

    • 20 Min.
    Pot Plants Invade Wisconsin and Alternate That Plot Structure

    Pot Plants Invade Wisconsin and Alternate That Plot Structure

    Last week, maybe a week ago, maybe 82 years ago, who knows, we talked about alternative plot structures.



    Much of American film and novels is built on what's considered to be the classic three-act structure, which basically goes beginning-middle-end, and there's this rising line of the plot.





    It ends up looking like a bit of a triangle.



    As readers, we can sort of anticipate and feel that structure happening. In a rom-com, we almost always know how far into the book or movie it will be when the couple breaks up and then someone has to chase down a car or airplane or something so they can get back together. There's a lovely familiarity in that, but us writers don't always want a lovely familiarity with beats in all the prescribed places and a structure that looks like a triangle.



    In an earlier podcast, Shaun, was asking me about the different structures and plots. And this is a pretty big question that people write entire books about, but I'm going to start here.



    First, a structure is sort of the diagram of rising and falling and action that links all of the plot points together



    The plot is something that connects the moments of the novel in a way that gives a novel its meaning. .



    Janet Burroway defines plot as a “series of events deliberately arranged so as to reveal their dramatic, thematic, and emotional significance …. Plot’s concern is ‘what, how, and why,’ with scenes ordered to highlight cause-and-effect.”



    Plot, according to Ingrid Sundberg, is about patterns, rhythm, and energy. It’s about the movement and feeling your particular arrangement creates. The triangle (often called the Aristotelian story shape) is a visual metaphor for the escalating energy that is meant to come as a result of a classic design arrangement.”



    This podcast, we're talking about all the different types of plots. Next time? We'll go all structure on you.



    Here’s a list of different possibilities when it comes to plot:



    • Mini-plot



    • Daisy chain plot,



    • Cautionary tale plot



    • Ensemble plot



    • Along for the ride plot



    • Symbolic juxtaposition plot



    • Repeated event plot



    • Repeated action plot



    Explanations of the Possibilities



    Mini Plot – This is the emotional plot. It’s minimalistic. It might even seem like it does not have a plot, but it does. It’s just that the cause-and-effect is about emotional evolution and growth.



    Example: Tender Mercies



    Daisy Chain Plot - We have no main protagonist, so we have no main goal. A bunch of characters and situations are here and they are linked via cause-and-effect like a physical object.



    Examples: Thirteen Reasons Why (has a protagonist, but it kind of works). Lethal Passage.



    Cautionary Tale Plot - Hero? There is no hero! Comfort? There is no comfort! Our main character sucks. And instead the reader is the protagonist.



    Examples: Jumped by Rita Williams-Garcia. Inexcusable by Chris Lynch.



    Ensemble Plot - According to Berg, this happens when you have protagonists grouped in the same place and it is “characterized by the interaction of several voices, consciousnesses, or world views, none of which unifies or is superior to the others.”



    Example: Give a Boy a Gun.



    Along For The Ride Plot - Ah. Where is our protagonist doing proactive things? Not here. Here we have the secondary character pushing the action and the protagonist is there, zooming along with them. The protagonist has an emotional change anyways, but they aren’t Captain Proactive going after their goals.



    Example: Looking for Alaska – John Green



    Symbolic Juxtaposition Plot - Why yes, it’s the anti-plot, which some people treat like the anti-christ. This book is an existentialist's dream. It’s not about the emotion. It’s about having an epiphany, an intellectual epiphany. The plot is about ideas and themes and symbols and that connects everything and gives it meaning. The cause and effect? It’s re

    • 24 Min.
    No cow cuddles, no brain worms: Do you want to be happy?

    No cow cuddles, no brain worms: Do you want to be happy?

    Do you want to be happy?



    It’s a question philosopher Sebastian Purcell asks his students every year.



    Do you want to be happy?



    For Purcell being happy has a lot in common with living a good life,




    “The Stoic answer to this question, that the good life consists in flourishing (eudaimonia), has seen a resurgent interest that is indicative of a cultural shift. Interestingly, it looks to be taking the place left open by the retreat of religious belief,” he writes.




    And stoicism? It’s a way to look at life and how the world connects, how they work. It’s physical, Purcell says, and metaphysical.





    Most people think of me as a pretty happy person, and I possibly am. To be fair, before I started to feel a bit overwhelmed by my life, I’d always thought positively about things, expected good outcomes.



    When I lived in another town and would drive from place to place for my job as a reporter or to pick up my daughter, Em, from school, I’d hear from people later.



    “You just drive around smiling. What are you even thinking about?”



    I couldn’t ever tell them. They’d scoff. I’d laugh. I’m pretty sure one city councilor called me a weirdo about it. I know a baseball coach did. It didn’t matter. I was who I was.



    When Em was little, she and I would talk about her worries, I’d run through logically how outcomes were probably not what she’d expect. I do that with Xane, our other kiddo, too.



    “If you fail a test, will you end up in jail? Will anyone die?” I’d ask.



    Em would roll her eyes at me and say things like, “You’re being ridiculous,  Mommy.”



    I’d bounce back with and say brilliantly, “You don’t have to expect the worst case scenarios all the time because a bad grade is not a worst case scenario.”



    “I’m just being realistic,” she’d say.



    “No. You’re being pessimistic,” I’d tell her, “because you aren’t going to fail anyway.”



    The truth is that though I’ve told both of them these things and even though I motor through my day staying pretty chill and positive, often I would flop in bed at night and stare at the darkness for an hour, a weird shiver of anxiety creeping through me—anxiety stemming from things that I couldn’t quite place.



    That doesn’t sound all that happy to me, but the truth was that even as I smiled in my car all by myself, even as I sold positive outcomes to my kids, I didn’t know how to even define happiness. I don’t think I’d ever really tried.



    And I’m trying now.







    Harvard professor, Arthur Brooks, says that “happiness equals enjoyment plus satisfaction plus meaning.”



    Brooks tells his students to think of happiness as “a portfolio with four big categories of investments.”



    He says, “We need all of them so our happiness can grow in a balanced way. The first investment is faith or life philosophy, it's how you make sense of the world.”



    Family and relationships that will most likely stay with you throughout your life though you don’t choose them is the second category.



    The third is the relationships we choose. What he calls our “most intimate relationships.”



    “The fourth is meaningful work,” he says.  "That doesn't mean work that pays a fortune or features a fancy title. Rather, it's work that allows you to earn your success and serve others.”



    A HAPPINESS PORTFOLIO



    Those four categories aren’t solo acts. They work together and they all have to be there, he believes and that means? Well, it means that we don’t get to be in charge of our happiness all the time. Sometimes horrible things happen. Circumstances exist. And heredity is a factor, too.



    I think I’m pretty lucky because despite all the choices she made and things she went through, my mom was a pretty happy human. And my biological father was always happy too. That accounts, Brooks believes, for about 50 % of my happiness.



    I once asked Shaun, “Babe, would you call your pare

    • 24 Min.
    Celestial Bodies, Sexy Knees and Story Structure via Robert McKee

    Celestial Bodies, Sexy Knees and Story Structure via Robert McKee

    You can learn a lot about culture by how it looks at what makes a good story and a good story structure.



    In Western culture right now, we tend to think of stories as three acts (a beginning, middle, and end with the bulk being in the middle), and with a protagonist or hero or main character (whatever you want to call it) who drives the story forward.



    So, it's sometimes good to remember that there are other ways of making story and other cultures where the bulk might not be in the middle or the main character might not be so proactive. Story reflects who we are as a people.



    Nobody keys into this as much as Robert McKee, who is quite the guru of screenwriting and story.



    There are three of his maxims, explained by No Film School that really show that.



    Those are:



    "Your protagonist needs to be the one who makes the decision that brings about the climactic action.



    "Is your protagonist driving the story forward? Are their actions and choices putting the story into focus and kicking it into gear? Make sure they are active, and not just along for the ride. Give them something to do. 



    "Desire in your character is key.



    "What does your character want? We talk about goals on here a lot. They need to have a goal, but also the reasoning behind it. That's where desires come in. I want to solve the case to make the city safer. I want to bring all my friends back from Thanos' snap. Give them something tangible and obvious.



    "Character payoffs should always be emotional unless you have a special reason.



    "Think about not only what happens inside your story but how these moments affect people internally. Does someone let a character down, or crush their heart with a rejection? Is there a way to hook that into the goal and show how things evolve within them? What do these emotional hurdles do to them or cause them to do? Let emotion guide the way."



    For literature in our time, right now, and our culture, those are three big keys to making stories that will be purchased and will resonate with readers.



    How does that reflect with our life though, right?



    DOG TIP FOR LIFE






    You've got to make things happen. Be the hero of your own story and make your people have emotional rewards when they give you what you want.



    COOL WRITING EXERCISE



    This is from Robert McKee and his book, Story:




    "Lean back and ask, 'What would it be like to live my character’s life hour by hour, day by day?' In vivid detail sketch how your characters shop, make love, pray — scenes that may or may not find their way into your story, but draw you into your imagined world until it feels like déjà vu.



    "While memory gives us whole chunks of life, imagination takes fragments, slivers of dream, and chips of experience that seem unrelated, then seeks their hidden connections and merges them into a whole. Having found these links and envisioned the scenes, write them down. A working imagination is research."




    PLACE TO SUBMIT



    The Bath Novel Award 2024  £5,000 international writing prize









    SHOUT OUT!



    The music we’ve clipped and shortened in this podcast is awesome and is made available through the Creative Commons License. 



    Here’s a link to that and the artist’s website. Who is this artist and what is this song?  It’s “Summer Spliff” by Broke For Free.



    WE HAVE EXTRA CONTENT ALL ABOUT LIVING HAPPY OVER HERE! It's pretty awesome.



    We have a podcast, LOVING THE STRANGE, which we stream biweekly live on Carrie’s Facebook and Twitter and YouTube on Fridays. Her Facebook and Twitter handles are all carriejonesbooks or carriejonesbook. But she also has extra cool content focused on writing tips here.



    Carrie is reading one of her raw poems every once in awhile on CARRIE DOES POEMS. And there you go! Whew! That's a lot!







    Subscribe







    LINKS TO LEARN MORE:

    • 23 Min.
    Strangeness free for all

    Strangeness free for all

    It ended up being a bit of a free-for-all as we talked about the strange things people do sometimes.






    SHOUT OUT TO STUBHY!



    The snippet of our intro and outro music is only a snippet of this guy’s awesome talent. Many thanks to Kaustubh Pandav. You can check out a bit of his work at the links below.



    www.luckyboysconfusion.Net or www.Facebook.com/mrmsandtheinfusions 



    Thanks for hanging out with us! And remember, don’t be afraid to let your strange out.

    • 55 Min.

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