Spring!

Today is the first day of Spring. I have a cold, and it feels like my nose may fall off at any moment, but I still feel excited.

Two of my favourite things about Spring have appeared in the last week: jasmine bushes are flowering in the streets around my house, and tomatoes are available at the co-op where I do my groceries. Ah, Spring, I love you so. You find me slowing down to catch the scent of jasmine and cooking up delicious lunches.

Now to kick this cold and get outside to make the most of the change in weather…

Do Fun Stuff – A Kids Album for Parents

There’s something kinda big happening over on one of my favourite blogs. I’ve been reading this blog for a long time, and have always been touched and astonished by both the love this man has for his family, and his sheer creative talent. If you get the chance, have a look at his two maternity series or any number of his videos.

But to business: this week Ryan Marshall from Pacing the Panic Room is launching an album called ‘Do Fun Stuff’.

Ryan’s step-son LB (the Littlest Buddy) has a rare genetic disorder, known as Smith Magenis Syndrome (SMS). Ryan’s made the most of his music industry contacts, and has put together an album of songs, written especially for this project, by some of his favourite artists. All of the money from the sale of this album will go towards research into SMS. That is, it will go towards helping people with this syndrome, and their families, live fuller and more rewarding lives.

Unfortunately the widget won’t work in my browser, but I can provide a link! Please, please head over here and check out this album. Not only is it for a good cause, it’s an awesome collection of songs.

PS. The album hit number 1 on iTunes in the kid’s category! Well done Ryan. You’ve done a wonderful thing.

Yum

Over the weekend I went on a food tour in Sydney’s Bankstown with one of my housemates, as part of some research I’m doing for a story.

I learnt so much — about Bankstown’s culture, about food, about my own likes and dislikes.

I won’t go into any more detail just yet, but here are some pictures I took on the day. Yummo!

Internet cheating

So, I’ve been cheating on this blog a little in the last few weeks. I’ve been working on another online space. But the good news is that I’m pretty much done there, so I’ll be back here a little more frequently now.

I’m kinda excited about the thing I’ve been working on. See, it’s a yoga website, and yoga (doing and teaching) have pretty much been taking up all my head space lately. Have a peek!

As for writing, well, I seem to be taking a break from doing it regularly. I’m not writing every day, even though I’d like to. But I have had a few fairly intense sessions in the last few weeks, where pages and pages have flown out the end of my pen. I’m not writing anything new. I’ve picked up an old short story with renewed interest and have realised how much more work I need to put into it before it’s anywhere near finished — an exciting prospect, really. It never ceases to amaze me how a little space from something can completely change how you look at it. I’m going to try and get a few more pages in today.

It’s such a lovely day in Sydney that I might even take a picnic rug down to the park to write. Ah, sun.

Lucky

Every now and then I realise just how lucky I am to be enjoying my days as much as I do. I’ll be honest: I’m poorer than I’ve ever been. But I can’t really complain because the work I’m doing is something I enjoy, and, more than that, I feel like it means something.

On top of that, because I do most of my work in the mornings and evenings, my days are slow, and usually see me pottering about the house cooking, writing, reading, researching.

Don’t get me wrong; I have regular moments of overwhelming fear or upset, when I wonder what on earth I’ve done (or how I’ll next pay rent). But when I find myself sitting down to a piece of toast and a cup of tea at four o’clock in the afternoon, or cooking myself a warm lunch, I can’t help but feel privileged to be able to live this way.

Today was one of those days. I had a productive day: I did a few loads of washing, I got my groceries done, I cleaned the bathroom, I cooked a couple of meals, I chatted to my brother on the phone for a couple of hours about life and thinking, and I did some yoga. Then it was dinner time. And now I’m doing some research for a class I’m teaching. My idea of a perfect Monday, really.

Follow your dreams, people. The obstacles along the way are well worth the struggle.

Yoga Class

Updated: I’m no longer teaching in Woolloomooloo, but my full teaching schedule is available here.

I’m teaching a class on Wednesday evening at Monstrosity Gallery in Woolloomooloo and I thought I might post here to see if any readers might like to come along.

The class will start at 6pm, and will cost $15. You’ll need to bring your own mat and some socks and warm clothes for the final relaxation. Places are limited, so if you’d like to come leave a comment here and I’ll get in touch with more details.

I’ll be teaching these classes every week, and possibly one other class in the same location, so even if you can’t come this week, let me know if you’re interested in future classes.

I received a letter in the mail today addressed to ‘Sophie Langley, RYT’ (registered yoga teacher). I think I blushed with excitement. It’s all official now, and starting to feel real.

Update: my yoga website is up and running — have a peek!

Thinking time

I seem to spend a lot of time on my own these days. I only realised just the other day how much time I spend in my own company. Most of my work is in the evenings at the moment, and I’m not a late sleeper, so I spend a lot of time pottering around by myself during the day.

But by no means am I lonely. In fact, I thoroughly enjoy the time.

Most Mondays I get on a train and head up to Newcastle to visit friends up there and attend a production meeting for a creative collective I’m involved in. The trip is three hours long. At first, I thought of that three hours as a chance to get a little bit of writing done. Or some class planning. Work-time, that is.

As it turns out, I find it impossible to work when I’m in transit. I’ve tried, but I usually end up with two or three words on a page and frustration in the space between my eyebrows. I’ve found the same thing on the three-hour bus trip I sometimes take to and from Canberra when I visit my Ma, Pa and brothers.

So recently I stopped trying to force myself to work. When I did, an interesting thing happened: I started to think. Properly think. You know, about life, the universe and everything and nothing. I thought through the problems I was having with my writing and often came up with solutions — I thought through life problems and again, often came up with solutions. I also started to think bigger than myself, to think, dare I say it, philosophically about the world. No solutions there. But interesting nonetheless.

How often does one get a chance to just sit and think these days?

Now, when I travel alone, I call it Thinking Time, and I don’t understand how I ever did without it.

Here’s the view from my thinking seat on the train to Newcastle. Sigh.

Novel Challenge update

Reading for the Novel Challenge has been an interesting experience for me. I’m not sure if I’m the only weird one, but I have this strange guilt complex about reading fiction, despite the fact that I enjoy it immensely. On top of the idiocy of feeling guilty about enjoying something, I’m a writer, and reading fiction is invaluable for my writing, both as inspiration and as some kind of subconscious learning. Yeah. I don’t get the guilt complex either. It’s stupid. Something to do with being an incredibly proactive person — the not-so-great flipside of which is that I’m very bad at relaxing.

Anyway. I’ve got a pretty good excuse to read fiction at the moment and it’s been really wonderful. I’ve spent a couple of Saturday mornings curled up in my favourite armchair, winter sun shining through the window, nose in a book. Sigh. Why don’t I let myself do this more often?

As well as the relaxation factor, I’ve also thoroughly enjoyed starting to pick apart what, exactly, it is that I enjoy (or otherwise) about what I’m reading. I’m getting a bit of extra practise at this at the moment, because I’m tutoring a year 12 student in English, and a lot of what we’re doing is recognising literary techniques and trying to understand what their function is in the text. In our last session we looked at a book I read recently, The Anatomy of Wings, and tried to pull apart a very small section of it, discussing what some of the techniques might be trying to achieve.

I find it very hard not to just point out all the techniques I can see, because I enjoy the process so much (not a great teaching move). I want to do year 12 English again. I think I might be a dork.

In other news, I’m slowly picking up bits and pieces of yoga teaching work as well, and I can’t even begin to describe how much I’m enjoying it. Such a rewarding experience. Hopefully I’ll have a website up soonish that I can share here (and if you’re in Sydney you can come to some of my classes!).

But for now, back to reading fiction — guilt-free!

(PS. Pop by my page and sponsor me — it’s for a good cause.)

Music obsession

Have you ever found a song that you just listen to again and again? And again? It happens to me every now and then, and right now, this song by Radical Face is it.

Ryan over at Pacing the Panic Room (a blog I absolutely love) used this song in some work he did for a couple at their wedding. The video is worth watching — it’s put together beautifully, and it’s full of heart-string-pulling lovey-dovey moments. (I’ve watched it a few times now.)

In other news, I went to the Sydney launch for harvest magazine on Friday night. On a cold night, a glass of wine and readings by two of the writers published in the current issue of the magazine was exactly what I needed. Elena has a review of the issue up on With Extra Pulp. Check it out.

I’m hoping to get posting here regularly happening again. I’ve been led astray by the need to find work, and by cooking. P’raps I’ll put up some recipes for the stuff I’ve been cooking. It’s been pretty yum, if I do say so myself.

For now though, back to the song.

Sorting, sorting

I’ve been sorting things out this week. And procrastinating. I just worked out that me putting off sending my application for registration as a yoga teacher and getting insurance sorted out is really just nervousness about actually taking the next step in this little journey of mine. Will I be a good yoga teacher? Can I really do this? All that sort of stuff.

I can do it. And I will.

In the meantime, my writing’s taken a bit of a back seat. I’m still working on some things, but I haven’t thrown myself into anything wholeheartedly for a week or so now. I miss it. And, if I’m honest, I’ve missed it for a while now. Sure, I’ve been working on things the whole time I’ve been studying, but I’ve not really been very disciplined about it.

Things are slowly sorting themselves out, as far as building up my working hours again goes, and I’m really looking forward to having a bit more a solid schedule, so I can get back some writing discipline. I was talking about this with a friend today: we agreed that it would probably be a good idea to do regular writing exercises — the kind you find in creative writing books. You know, to actually practise writing, as well as doing it for real.

But for now I must have patience. Things will be sorted out soon…