The Digital Bonnie

It’s nice to return to this blog and share this journey with members of our Hudson Valley Writing Project and with a larger learning community.

Both Jenn and Christine are taking this on in addition to finishing their teaching year and living the rest of their lives. Kristen is in the midst of taking our site’s inservice work through to the summer, and me, I’m gearing up for a visit to a writing project at the University of Maryland and then working with Christine to kick off our 10th Summer Institute at SUNY New Paltz.
But no matter what happens outside the confines of the very cool computer, the web marches on and we are all along and riding the web 2.0

So in answer to the first reflection:

1. The most challenging Habit: I think beginning with the end in mind is hardest for me. What’s the end? Hard question to ask with the limitless speed of technological innovation. From the moment I open my computer early in the morning, I am jumping from one thing to the next, never getting to the end.

2. I think the easiest habit for me is seeing myself as a lifelong learner and without exactly realizing what I was supposed to talk about on Voice Thread that’s what I did focus on- my love of learning. If that doesn’t happen, I view a project as a failure. I just completed a documentary film class and you know, it failed me because I didn’t learn enough from its teacher.

3. Most important Habit
I’m not sure here. I think maybe viewing problems as challenges. But i think they are all important.

Great List.

At the Edge of the Sea with T from Bonnie Kaplan on Vimeo.

Create your own video slideshow at animoto.com.

We needed a good movie for Sunday. We needed an early performance and one that wasn’t too long, because it would be a big day to watch Health Care PASS!

So, I did my research, read some reviews on the Rotten Tomatoes site and liked what I was reading about the Yellow Handkerchief, written by Pete Hamil.

William Hurt’s early career was spectacular: Body Heat, Kiss of the Spider Woman, Broadcast News, The Big Chill, Children of a Lesser God, The Accidental Tourist and he has continued.  But this early set of movies mattered to me as a movie fan and as he was finishing this stage of his career, as luck would have it, I got to meet him in my world. I was teaching an elective in media. One of my student’s, who could use a boost in her grade had a father who was very active in our school community. One morning he found me and offered his friend, Bill Hurt. Would you like it if Bill came to speak to you media class?

YES! Could there be any other answer?

What anticipation! What a morning!

And then Bill disappeared for awhile. He moved to France, made some funky movies and when he returned and found his way, actually to my town, even though we have never met face to face again, I haven’t stopped watching him on the screen in his variety of roles, but this movie allows him to take back the center, the core of the story and wow, it was good to have him back.

So this is not a big blockbuster.  I’m sure he made this one with love as a Sundance selection from 2008. He offers us a character with a buried past in the midst of an odd trio. Two young actors work along side him and together, they keep us very interested in them.

Freshly released after 6 years of prison for manslaughter the gate opens and he is alone to find his way back to life.  A wacky young guy and a freshly rejected young girl join his ride home. Maria Bello rounds out this acting group and once we got moving, the journey was breathtaking.

So I’m going to add this one to my list above.  It was a pleasure to see Bill back at the core of a piece.

Thumbs way up!  I need to take myself ( and Tuvia) on a William Hurt marathon. I have everything I need.

As I look over his body of work and films waiting for release, I’m always thristy for more Hurt!

Holiday Movies: UPdate 12/28/09

December 29th, 2009

Okay, I’ve been at the movies, of course and enjoying…
Here’s some of my highs and lows:

Christmas Day Movie Pick: It’s Complicated!

I’ve been waiting for this movie for months, from the first time I saw Meryl sharing a drink with her x, Alec Baldwin. Just got my DVD copy of Julie and Julia.

What a combination!

And  written/directed by Nancy Meyers, creator of my favorite, Something’s Gotta Give. Come on, of course it’s for me. I didn’t give it a second thought that it wouldn’t live up to my expectations. I can’t say the same for Tuvia, but for me, a woman the exact same age as Meryl,
Meryl at 60. Can you believe that?  And she let’s us see her at 60 in all her real  glory, without (much) work on her lines and wrinkles.

Her Jane has been divorced for 10 years after Alec(Jake) left her for a younger woman, yes, sounds very familiar. But he comes back, disillusioned and ready to let Jane take her swipes at him and challenged  to win her,  and his  grown up family back. He yearns to be “home sweet home”.  She is thrilled at first, to be sought after, but she is a successful woman in her own right. She owns a thriving Santa Barbara bakery/restaurant; a cool, passionate chef. Wow, can she make a sexy chocolate croissant! And there’s also Adam(Steve Martin, in the mix, recently divorced and designing Meryl’s home renovation.

It’s complicated!

I laughed OUT LOUD for most of the movie.  Stopping only for  the last 20 minutes when we headed for home, focusing more on the necessary resolution.

No surprise-I loved it:Meryl’s look, her girlfriends- I would have liked to see more of them, and a bit about her kids and how they have to continually deal with the family divorce, Alec’s honesty. Now  Steve- I missed the funny Steve Martin but he did have to tone himself down to create a character. He could have upstaged everyone but didn’t.

I can’t wait to see it again. Is that enough of a thumbs up? I’m still laughing…smiling at least.

Yesterday, Sherlock Holmes. Like It’s Complicated, I loved the early trailers in October and November but as we got closer to its opening on Christmas Day, even though the box office was impressive some of the reviews concerned me. Of course, I love Robert Downey, Jude Law, and Rachel McAdams and yes, my memories of Basil Rathbone’s SH are still vivid  So from the start it was hard to understand Amercian Robert Downey’s  attempt a proper British accent for over two hours. I wondered if it was me, but no Tuvia too was having trouble with his muttering to sustain his approach.

Like many modern adventure films the violence is non-stop so the mind of Sherlock Holmes took a back seat to this Sherlock’s rock ‘im sock ‘im approach to solving a crime. Sorry, but I pined for Sherlock of old.  I missed the cerebral Sherlock, the calm and collected guy of Baker Street.

Oh well…it was just for the entertainment but no thumbs up, sorry.

More…

Happy 2010 !

December 26th, 2009

Happy 2010! from Bonnie Kaplan on Vimeo.

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Moving into December without snow, so far.  Great weather is on the horizon for today and I have movie tickets to the Private Lives of Pippa Lee, which has great reviews at a funky theater just over the bridge.

Our iAnthology is rockin’ in a shot of new members and I’ve been sharing there more and more. Now that the NaNoWriMo is over I am reading again- two books at the same time, with a little help from my Kindle that’s filled with books and new samples for the future.

Guitar- finally I’m making music.  I can keep up with the pros using great software- The Amazing Slowdowner that lets me play along at a tempo I can handle and some pieces I can almost play right along at the right speed and sound good, to my ears, anyway.

And then there’s Hebrew and after a bit of a meltdown last night when I was ready to chuck it all, I took a breath and kept going and the torment passed, for now.

There’s probably much more to write, more important things to write about but that’s what the New York Times is for and the Week in Review, section 4 is right there waiting for me to get reading, so for now, I’m off.

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No more NaNoWriMo challenge!  It was great and I’m glad I finished before the deadine.  I hate that kind of pressure.  It never worked for me in college. And now what?

Well I’d like to try a real NaBloPoMo in December to build on my blogging community but I’m going to return to my PHoto blog for that.  Photo a day and text, that’s my favorite kind of digital writing.

I am feeling guilty that I couldn’t return the great comments of support I was getting during this challenge but I promise to improve next month.  I promise.

For now, life kicks comfortably into watching the Christmas shopping season from the sidelines.  Jews without kids just don’t feel the pressure.  I love a good mall filled with decorations and shoppers.  Brings out the best in me.  My camera is ready for the documentation.

Let the season begin.  A bit of snow would be nice,

Bonnie

NaNoWriMo Days 25,26 & 27: Done!

November 28th, 2009

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Yes, I did miss a few days here.  I could go back and write them in but instead I’m going to stay here and remember and reflect on my month of novel writing.

This was my second NaNowriMo effort.  Last year I discovered the challenge and that it had been happening without me for years.  I loved the online idea and began exactly at midnight on November 1st. I  was going strong for the first 2 weeks, writing about my ladies: Jessie and Molly, loosely based on my relationship with my first manicurist. I was keeping up with my demanding daily word count and feeling great until I got to the NWP conference in San Antonio and then quickly, on the first official day of the conference, I realized I couldn’t continue. I am presenting three different workshops and there was just too many distraction.  I didn’t feel any guilt, just promised myself that I’d be back for another challenge and this year, even with the NWP conference scheduled for the middle of the challenge as it always is, I was ready to stay with it.

Paul Oh(NWP), also shared the NaBloPoMo, a monthly blogging challenge on our iAnthology site, and I thought, okay, let’s fold that in too.  I would write my daily word count for the National Novel Writing Month challenge and then reflect about it on my blog every day, inspired by my friend Nancy C. and I almost had them both done but it seems like my return home from Philly and Thanksgiving focused my energies on getting the novel challenge done. It’s good to know that the daily blog challenge is offered every month and I will be back for it.

NaNoWriMo ‘09 was great fun! Don’t tell anyone but I didn’t really write a novel.  It was more memoir: a healthy dose of life from  my point of view.

In October, when I was getting ready for the challenge with a group of writers on our NWP iAnthology, I thought look about hard about a book topic and focused on my upcoming trip to Israel where I would be reuniting with my roommate from 30 years ago, when I lived in Israel for a year (1979-80). She remained there and lived her life not far from where we met in the south on a moshav. She married and raised 3 children in that time.  I was inspired already, before we even began to pack.

On our return I realized that I had a great vehicle for a 50,000 word book, my life in Israel, during that first year at 30 and then many years later (16) when I met Tuvia and started traveling there once or twice every year with him.  To separate myself from the story I gave us fictional names- Lucy and Asher and wrote the first haft from Lucy’s point of view and then the second half from Asher’s.

I have never taken on the breath of a book before.  I  write every day.  I begin with an online journal and then move to one of my blogs, usually putting text to a photo  I upload each day.  I was concerned that I would run dry but for most of the writing that didn’t happen.  Just the last day when I was racing to finish.  Just a mere 2000 words to go.

I let the moment direct me.  I created scenes identified with a date and a place.  Yes, Israel was a major player in the piece but it was really about my rich relationship with Tuvia over our 14 years together. I moved from one moment to another and let the moment drive the scenes. As I finished one I was led to another totally out of sequence.  I am sure that some of the scenes were repeated with different words. I have written some of the moments before this writing but I never looked back.

I loved the theory behind this challenge.  We often are so caught up in revising that we never get to the finish and this way, plowing ahead each day, focused on keeping up the daily word count, moving the site’s blue line that measures the submitted word count, you have a good reason to keep going and not revising. There’s no time.

We also created a Group of the iAnthology to support the writers in this challenge and that kept me going.  Margaret Hartford and I are both retired from full-time teaching and even though our lives are busy, we were both writing into the day in the morning.  I often wrote for 3-4 hours at a time, allowing myself breaks along the way and returning often to the smoothness of a new MacBook Pro keyboard to keep going. I can’t imagine finishing if I were teaching and or raising children.

What was magical about the experience was sharing some of it with Tuvia, the other main character.  I had been sharing my progress with him but orally.  Then one day as I was working on a scene in Israel that caught me, the first time I met his sister, we talked about it and he was dying to read it so, I actually looked back and read a bit of it to myself first and then out loud to him.  He was impressed with its coherence and authenticity.  I enjoyed reading it to him.

After that experience as I moved into writing the story from his point of view I wanted to share more with him and even though he couldn’t say that was what was really going through his thoughts, it felt that it was authentic, that it could have been his thoughs. In the early days of our relationship, he read some of my early short stories and suggested that I write about his Holocaust experiences.  I refused him, feeling that I couldn’t do justice to this period or his personal experiences, walking home from a concentration camp in the middle of Russia. But our life together was a time I felt I could capture and that challenge, writing from his point of view was a wonderful and stimulating challenge.  Often, as I finished a section the scene lingered with me and Tuvia and I talked at length about our shared memories and more and more details made their way into the story.

I wrote every day, even during the NWP conference.  I wonder, now that I’m finished and won the challenge, will I miss the writing?  Of course I can keep going now  and I can return to the draft and start revising.

And then hopefully, there will be NaNoWriMo 2010.  Will I be back for more?

NaNoWriMo Day 24: 43,206!

November 25th, 2009

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Home and getting down to blocks of writing.  I dont’ know what happened today but I was in the zone writing away, stories that mattered and flowing from my brain to my fingertips.

I think I began this morning, early, around 40,000 and now I am up to 43.  How did I do it today?  Rested, renewed at lunch, sunshine outside, clean inside.  And I had my couch and ran ahead today.

I want to keep writing because it will get harder tomorrow and Thursday.

It’s still fun but I did have a crazy time last night.  Tough but today was amazing and fluid at the same time.

Bonnie

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