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5/ Emotional Work

Twitter fatigue, emotional inspiration, and the intricacies of vocal expression.

David Gane
David Gane
3 min read

Hello friends,

Another week without an essay from me. It's the end of summer and the beginning of fall, and my schedule is out of whack, and sacrifices have to be made.

I am back teaching, which has required acclimating students to my online way of doing things the past few weeks. As well, my wife and I made a day-long trip to the cabin yesterday to close it up for the season. And somewhere in there, I'm trying to fit the time to finish up the next book...

To be honest, I had drafted essays for these past two weeks but knew they weren't quite ready to hit publish, so I held back. At some point, I hope to write about that decision.

Until then, I hope you are all well and enjoy this emotionally charged newsletter.

Twitter fatigue

Many of my friends from the #writingcommunity are taking breaks from Twitter. Yet, there is an expectation for us to build a strong social media presence as a part of our writer's platform that connects us to our audience.

It's not healthy, though, especially over the past year. Although I quit Facebook years ago, I only scaled back Twitter at the end of last year. This process included staying off it more, deleted my history to the past month with TweetDelete, and cutting back who I follow to only a few hundred.

A useful guide for me was Cal Newports' book Digital Minimalism and here is an interesting psychoanalytic read on why we are still on social media.

More AI and Robots

While I am fascinated with GPT 3, I am also terrified. The better they get at writing, the closer I am to being out a job.

To further my fear, The Guardian had a robot write an article for them, but Austin Kleon had a good take on it after noticing a note at the bottom.

Another defence to the robot uprising is that good writing still requires emotional labour.

Emotional Inspiration

I enjoyed this article from Mary H.K. Choi about writing (or not writing) over the past several months. The best was how she was finding inspiration:

"When I’m stuck on writing I read. I steal things. Check for grammatical quirks or transitions that I admire....I’m also watching a ton of movies. Like, Takeshi Kitano’s mob series, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, The Last Picture Show, Badlands, Barry Lyndon. I’m learning to work without committing words to the page. Film is so instructive for proxemics and micro-expressions and the tension between what people are saying and what they’re doing."

Sometimes I read and watch for the story, but sometimes discovering how a writer or storyteller works is fascinating. And film is such a fantastic way to build your emotional catalogue of actions between people.

I always ask my students not to direct actors in their screenplays, but we should drink those moments up when in prose mode.

Mapping the Vocalization of Emotions

How about a visual map that shows "the complex, high-dimensional space of emotion conveyed by brief human vocalization within an online interactive map."

Vocalization Map
Vocalization Map

Writing Apps

I continue to monkey around with writing apps, specifically to connect ideas from multiple sources and disciplines. I hope to find something that makes more solid connections to ideas for this newsletter and future essays.

Since experimenting with Roam and Workflowy, I've also tried Dynalist and Notion (which I used to organize my thoughts for this newsletter).

Dynalist is similar to Workflowy, acting as an endless outline that you can link together. Notion (which was mentioned in a previous newsletter) is an open canvas, allowing you to input regular writing, but also lists, outlines, boards, databases... It seems the possibilities are endless.

But I'm not 100% Hell, Yeah yet, so I will continue to play and share my discoveries.

Bonus - Emotional Joy

I only discovered Taskmaster last week, but it's silliness and fun is well worth the watch. I'm sharing the first task that introduced me to the show: eat the most watermelon in 1 minute (warning, it's kind of gross at the end). All episodes are now on YouTube.

Newsletter

David Gane Twitter

Co-writer of the Shepherd and Wolfe young adult mysteries, the internationally award-winning series, and teacher of storytelling and screenwriting.

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