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Thursday, August 4, 2016

Finding Creativity Through Tranquility



Serenity echoes deep in a central Wyoming lodgepole pine forest with the sights, sounds, and smells of nature. Chickadees chirp from tree branches, mule deer munch late summer grass, and orange-spotted butterflies wing through waves of yellow daisies. Within the stillness of the woodland, a group of 20 people spread like spokes on a wheel, finding inspiration, tranquility, and creativity.
            
 For the past four summers I’ve welcomed a group of writers to my secluded mountain property. We spend an afternoon soaking in the solace of the landscape, escaping traffic noise and the ring of telephones. This is my special retreat, a place where I’ve written articles and developed book ideas. I share it with my writers’ group one day of the year, and during those afternoon hours, creativity flows, from poetry to children’s stories.
             
Located a short 20-minute drive from my house in town, my woodland hideaway seems hours from the barrage of droning disruptions. This peaceful parcel of forest land has become my writing refuge. Thoreau had his Walden's Pond; I have my Peaceable Kingdom, 3+ acres of Rocky Mountain forest at an elevation of 8,000 feet. Within the timbered setting stands a 12x40 foot wood-sided cabin, which receives electricity from the sun via solar panels and heat from a russet-enameled woodstove. Although other cabins are visible through the lacy lodgepole branches, rarely is my quietude disturbed, for other property owners don't frequent their private paradises as I do mine, even during summer. 
            

In the midst of such peacefulness I create stories, sitting at my laptop that's powered by either its own battery or the solar panels connected to a cluster of marine-celled batteries, the collection which also lights our paneled cabin. Each form of energy helps me produce chapters of books or develop feature articles for magazines and newspapers. Although I can write at my home office in town, the visits to the cabin rejuvenate and revive my creativity, priming, prompting, and pumping the flow of words. Amidst the solitude, I've written three books and partially-written two others, as well as countless magazine articles, newspaper stories, and blog posts -- and more muse flows forth. Sometimes my creations are generated within the cabin itself, other times sitting under the shade of the towering lodgepoles or while reflecting in the enclave of the screened porch during twilight. The twittering of songbirds and ruckus of raptors, the fluttering of butterflies, scolding of pine squirrels, and wafting of a breeze in the tree tops tug at the tendrils of my brain and sing within the crevices of my heart, culminating in a creativeness that soars from my soul.
             
Setting is important in stories, from the written word to the backdrop of a movie screen. I am inspired by my mountain property much as Laura Ingalls Wilder was by her surroundings, whether it was Rocky Ridge Farm in Missouri or the great plains of the Dakotas. The inspired woodland location atop Casper Mountain encourages writings that will, I hope, uplift readers of my words. Whether the product is a book about my dog that helps children facing adversity, a story that teaches an environmental lesson, or an article that encourages people who are down on themselves, the excitement I feel when I sit across from my laptop in the stillness of my mountain acreage cascades through mind and spirit. For me, tranquility equals creativity and productivity.
             
Laura had her Little House in the Big Woods, Little House on the Prairie, and the Farm House in the Ozarks. I have a combination – my Little Cabin in the Tall Woods of the Great Plains. And tomorrow I will again share this unique environ with fellow writers. I smile as I envision the amazing compositions which will bloom within us as we savor the serene surroundings.






Gayle M. Irwin is a Wyoming writer, author, and speaker who creates inspirational pet stories for children and adults. She is the author of seven books and a contributing writer to six Chicken Soup for the Soul compilations. She is also a contributor to last month’s Sundown Press release Memories on Maple Street U.S.A.: Pawprints on My Heart. She volunteers for various Rocky Mountain region pet rescue organizations and writes for several newspapers and magazines, sharing stories about people, pets, and nature. Learn more at www.gaylemirwin.com.
 

15 comments:

  1. Gayle, you have your own private paradise! I would love to have a place like that to just get away and do nothing but think and write and plan. And I think it's wonderful you have a place to meet with other writers, too. We are so glad to have you with us at Sundown Press. I absolutely loved your story in Pawprints!

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    1. Thank you for your kind words, Cheryl. Yes, I feel very blessed to have a peace-filled, peaceful place at which to write. And I enjoy sharing it with other writers, so when you visit Wyoming in the future, let me know and I'll share the spot with you! :)

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  2. Gayle, happy to have you in the fold, so to say. My friend, your retreat sounds like heaven and you are so generous to share it with others. I have my cemetery that is so peaceful, and inspiring as odd as that sounds. To be surrounded by the stories of a time in the past, it is almost impossible to describe.
    I've been a fan of you work for a long time, and may you continue to offer your talents the world for many years to come. Doris

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    1. Doris, you are so very kind -- THANK YOU, THANK YOU!! We all have our special spots, or we should; I'm glad you've found yours where stories spring to life, even in the midst of dry bones. :)

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  3. Oh wow! That place is perfect. My husband and I have an old cabin 10 blocks from the bay on the Texas coast. We go and soak up the sun, sit on the beach working out plots, and then head back to the cabin to work undisturbed. The air is cleaner there coming off the bay and my brain works better. We have to drive almost 400 miles to get there, so we can't go as often as we'd like. Your place sounds like paradise.

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    1. Thank you, Livia, for your comments and for sharing about your special place. Before getting the place we now have, my husband and I looked at an acreage next to forest service land that was about 4 hours away -- I'm thankful we waited! I know I'm blessed and I am filled with joy each time I go to the property and write!

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  4. Your cabin sound like a wonderful place. My house that we sold in WV was a lot like your cabin, but now I can sit in my lanai and watch the birds and animals, and I'm close to beaches. The ocean has a wonderful peace too. Cher'ley

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    1. We're both blessed, Cher'ley. I enjoy water, too, and the only thing I wish was different about our forest escape is that we'd have a creek. But, I'm thankful for what we do have!

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  5. Your cabin sound like a wonderful place. My house that we sold in WV was a lot like your cabin, but now I can sit in my lanai and watch the birds and animals, and I'm close to beaches. The ocean has a wonderful peace too. Cher'ley

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  6. A writing retreat is valuable. Mine is my wife's family's ranch near the Texas-Mexican border, about 30 miles inside Mexico. They live in town, so the ranch house, used during the roundup and other events, is free for anyone needing a get away. I wrote a good part of The Hardest Ride there. When I wanted to experience something I went out and did it, like riding across a river on horseback in the winter or having three vaqueros charge directly at me screaming and "firing" revolvers. It was good for little things too liking describing a campfire at night or watching the antics of corralled horses.

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    1. Sounds quite wonderful! I have friends who have a ranch about 70 miles from where I live; I'm able to go there, and have done so, to write, especially during winter when getting to the cabin is too difficult... at least for me -- I don't ski or snowshoe... and really don't want to. LOL Thanks for stopping by and commenting!

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  7. Your cabin in the woods seems ideal for a creative retreat. I know your fellow writers must be so happy to go on these excursions with you. I like that you have a little cabin with solar power.
    My retreat is citified--a deck off the back of my house. I would have loved returning to my parents' house and going down into the orchard, but those days are gone now. I loved that orchard.
    Lovely article, Gayle. It does remind all of us to find tranquility wherever that may be to boost our creativity and find peace.

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    1. Thank you, Sarah -- I appreciate your comments. A retreat is a retreat; however we can best use our place and time is all that counts. I love the woods and am blessed to live near them (and actually, my backyard has two large trees, and I often sit on the porch there to write). Thanks for sharing!

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  8. Hi Gayle, I so enjoyed your post. What a great escape for writing. I wrote a comment and it wasn't accepted for some reason, so I'm cutting this one short. I too have the benefit of beutiful surroundings--a bird's eye view of the beautiful Finger Lake I live on in NYS and my office is our loft over our bedroom. I gaze across the gentle waves to the surrounding vineyards that quilt the rolling hills and valleys. Then I get back to work. Your hideaway is awesome. Wishing you the best. And I too am so pleased to be part of the Pawprints on my Heart.

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    1. Thank you, Beverly, for stopping by and commenting and for sharing about your special place. I love water (though not swimming), in particular lakes and streams. I do enjoy my little place in the woods, but I also write on the back deck overlooking a large apple tree and at a friends' ranch near a river. I'm very blessed ... and thankful. Thanks again for sharing -- and I truly enjoyed your story!

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