GO ON, TRY my interactive calendar of emotional high holy days, regular-version high holy days and more. It’s probably my number one memoir writing tip, since writing on deadline, or to a deadline, is one of the single best ways to learn how to write memoir.
How to Use the Memoir Project Calendar
Hover your cursor over a cinnamon-colored date to see what pops up. Use it to start personal essays, radio pieces and op-eds to submit on deadline. How? Look three months out for radio ideas; six to twelve for magazine pieces. Pluck something from the calendar and start now to submit the very best work you can produce.
Here is how to stop using writing prompts and writing exercises, those time-wasting devices leave you merely practicing writing. You want to write with intent, and you want to succeed. So start today and do so.
Write with intent: Pick it, write it, submit it. Read and react. You’re a writer. That’s what writers do. So write on.
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1September, 1 2024First of the MonthSeptember was the seventh month in the ancient Roman calendar and became the ninth month when the calendar was revised by Julius Caesar, though its name was not changed. Caesar gave the month 31 days, but when the Emperor Augustus changed the name of the month Sextilis to August, after himself, he took a day from September and added it to his month so that it might have the same number of days as July, the month named for his uncle. Ah, hubris. The old Saxon name for this month was Gerst-monath, or barley month, as barley was harvested then. I love the Saxons for that, since they seemed to be paying attention to the important things in life. Titanic Remains DiscoveredOn this day in 1985 the remains of the Titanic were found. American Robert D. Ballard headed the expedition. Ballard spent the bulk of his career at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, the world’s largest private, nonprofit ocean research, engineering and education organization, a marvelous to do a little research when your topic is the sea. Check it out. http://www.whoi.edu/ Back to School for Memoir WritersIt’s back to school time. Use this as a deadline to get your own work in shape. How? Be hospitable. Read up, and see what I mean by that. |
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2 | 3September, 3 2024Mushroom Month. Really.Did you know that September is national mushroom month? Well, it is. And in some places it is celebrated more fully than others. In Pennsylvania, the mushroom industry contributes more than $391 million to the state’s economy, making Pennsylvania the leading mushroom producing state with more than 495 million pounds annually. Got a mushroom story? Here’s your chance to tell it. | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
9 | 10September, 10 2024An Historic Day in Gardening. Sort of.On this day in 1855 was the birth of Robert Koldewey, a German archaeologist who discovered the fabled Hanging Gardens of Babylon, one of the seven wonders of the world. What are other six? The Great Pyramid of Cheops at Giza, the statue of Zeus at Olympia, The Temple of Artemis t Ephesus, The Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, The Colossus at Rhodes and The Pharos or Lighthouse at Alexandria. Use this date as a news peg. For more on that idea, see my blog category News You Can Use. | 11September, 11 20249/11It’s September 11th. Everyone has a story about that day in 2001. Here’s an essay I read on NPR’s All Things Considered right after the attacks on America. See if it inspires you to write yours. | 12 | 13 | 14September, 14 2024Ode to the LighthouseOn this day in 1716 America’s first lighthouse was lit. Located in Boston Harbor, on Little Brewster Island, it was not our first land-based navigation signal, since history records that there was a beacon on Point Allerton in Hull as early as 1673 in the form of an open iron basket or grate in which “fier-bales of pitch and ocre” were burned. Have you got a lighthouse story? I bet you do. Having trouble getting started? Try my Memoir How-To category on the blog. And write on. | 15September, 15 2024The Birds Are on The WingThe birds are on the move. They’ve actually been at it for a while, though it’s just becoming noticeable in most regions of the country – as well as online. Haven’t checked out an online bird site yet? Type in the name of your town, and the words “bird migration” and be amazed to see the calendar for who is visiting on their way south. Do some research and write a piece. Look online at http://www.birdnature.com/fallfl.html |
16 | 17 | 18 | 19September, 19 2024First Frost? Got a story?What does frost really do? Many things, including reviving the story of Jack Frost. We’ve almost lost touch with the folklore of the man who is kind of a cross between Father Christmas and Old Man Winter. He appears in Viking folklore and early English tales as well as Russian stories, all in an attempt to explain who paints those marvelous patterns on our windows when the frost arrives. | 20 | 21September, 21 2024Black and White and Still Read All Over. Thank Goodness.On this day 1784, The nation’s first daily newspaper, the Pennsylvania Packet and Daily Advertiser, began publication. By the beginning of the Revolutionary War, 37 independent newspapers kept our colonists informed. And these days? Well, we all know the tragedy that is befalling our newspapers. Want to write them a love letter? Go right ahead. Having trouble getting started? Try my How-To category here on the blog. The Birth of American NewspapersOn this day 1784, the nation’s first daily newspaper, the Pennsylvania Packet and Daily Advertiser, began publication. By the beginning of the Revolutionary War, 37 independent newspapers kept our colonists informed. Do you love newspapers? Write a love letter and send it along to your local paper as an op-ed. | 22September, 22 2024The Autumnal EquinoxToday marks the Autumnal Equinox, that time of year when the sun crosses the celestial equator and moves southward, marking the beginning of autumn in the northern hemisphere. Hipparchus, a Greek astronomer and mathematician who lived around 190 – 120 BCE, is known for first observing and recording the equinoxes. The word “equinox” comes from the Latin for “equal night,” referring to the time when the sun crosses the equator and the day and night are nearly equal at 12 hours apiece. The Autumnal EquinoxToday marks the Autumnal Equinox, that time of year when the sun crosses the celestial equator and moves southward, officially marking the beginning of autumn in the northern hemisphere. The word “equinox” comes from the Latin for “equal night” and refers to the time when the sun crosses the equator and the day and night are nearly equal at 12 hours apiece. If the end of summer makes you sad, mark your calendars for the vernal equinox, March 20, 2012, when the sun appears to move back across the equator, bringing with it the beginning of spring. If that doesn’t cheer you, consider all the penguins way down south of here who are whooping it up seeing the Sun peep above the Antarctic horizon. Those penguins have waited for the return of the sunlight in nearly 6 months of chilly darkness. And for them, it’s time to shed a few pounds of blubber, find a mate, and bask in the sunshine. |
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