GUEST BLOG: SHERRY GLOAG

‘In the Zone’ is a phrase you will often hear writers use.  But what does that mean?  How do they achieve it?  And can they sustain it?

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I can almost hear some readers shouting, “Of course! You only have to look at mega-successful writers to know they can sustain it.”
Okay, so let’s take a closer look at the first two questions.
What is ‘The Zone’?  
For writers it is the period when their writing flows.  A time when everything appertaining to their writing goes right, goes smoothly.  The plot unfolds in a way that enriches the story.  Even the most hardened plotter knows when to give the characters their head, or to follow their plot when it goes off at an unexpected tangent.  Something within convinces them that to ignore this new facet of the story would be detrimental.
For many writers, hitting ‘the zone’ is sporadic but for others it is almost the norm.  No, I am not implying there are authors out there who go through their writing careers without coming up against blocks and setbacks when their characters refuse to comply with the synopsis set out before writing a single word.  Every writer hits a black spot of their own at some time in their career. Most smash into it more often than they’d like! 
So what can a writer do to experience the flow of the zone more often? Almost, in fact, on demand.
Meditate.  
Meditation is not the product of the flower-power hippy sixties era.  Meditation goes back for millennium and has been practiced in the Orient by billions of people over time.
It is far too complex a subject to cover in depth here, but meditation is a means of training the mind to focus.
It is used by the most powerful people in board rooms across the world and by the poorest in the deepest recesses of the countryside.  The goals they strive for may seem poles apart, but in reality both the powerful and the poor, when they meditate, are striving for focus and discipline over their own minds. They have learned not to become prisoners of their mind or their subconscious.
I am not talking about mind games here, but a conscious effort to train and discipline the mind to work towards your own benefit.
When a writer slips into The Zone, they are in effect, slipping into a form of meditation.  The place every writers yearns to be.  And can be.
There are so many different forms of meditation that even offering links with this blog is not the simple solution it may appear. [Simply put ‘meditation’ into Google and see what comes up.
Meditation is a powerful tool that can help writers find and maintain that wonderful place known as ‘The Zone’, not just when the muse co-operates, but whenever, you, the author, calls upon the power of meditation to help with your writing.
Meditation has become an integral and successful part of life for people from all walks of life, so why not writers?
Why not explore the benefits of a regular meditation program that will take up little of your time and increase the chances to enjoy experiencing ‘the zone’ more often while you write?
Acclaimed author of The Brat, Sherry Gloag, is enjoying the release of both her latest novel, Duty Calls, from Black Opal Books on February 11th, and her short novella, “The Wrong Target” which is part of the Cupid’s Gone Wild anthology and published by eTreasures early in February, both of which follow closely on the publication of her latest short story with LASR early this year.
When she is not writing Sherry Gloag enjoys reading, walking in the English countryside, gardening and craft work.
Duty Calls = Coming February 11th from Black Opal Books
The Wrong Target = February 2nd – a short Valentine story/anthology from eTreasures Publishing http://etreasurespublishing.blogspot.com/
Buy The Brat here   = http://bit.ly/d5nVDC
And at Amazon = http://amzn.to/bclDhY
The Brat Book Trailer = http://bit.ly/9O6j6C
Facebook =
http://bit.ly/daeGN7

Jingle Bell Blog Fest: Sherry Gloag

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Click here and tell us how long Ben and Gina have been married for a chance to win a  $50 Amazon or Barnes and Noble gift certificate.


“You shouldn’t be on that ladder!”  The sight of his heavily pregnant wife reaching up to place the fairy on top of the Christmas tree shot Ben across the room, his briefcase falling to the floor unheeded.

“What!” 

The ladder swayed, Ben grabbed it and cursed.  The fairy arced into the air and landed at the other side of the room. 

“For goodness sake, now look what you’ve done Ben.” Gina cast an exasperated glance down at the shaking man now welded to the ladder. “You startled the life out of me.”

“Not half as much as the sight of you about to lose your balance up there scared me, I can tell you!  I don’t want to spend our first Christmas as a family at the hospital A and E department.”  He lifted her to safety and lowered her gently to the floor then rested his forehead against hers.  It took several moments for his heart rate to drop back to normal. Then with one hand he caressed her swollen abdomen, then cupped her face and drew her in for a kiss.  “I know we were married last Christmas, but there’s something about being together and knowing our child is a part of it that makes this year special.”  He glanced at the decorations strewn across the floor and the lights carefully laid along the back of the settee, and let the love surround him.
For the first ten years of his life Christmas was a cold lonely room with little to eat, and for Gina the sights, sounds and stench of surrounding streets and damp cardboard boxes, were reality. He vowed then and there, with Gina snuggled up against his chest, that he’d keep her and his children safe, and wrapped in love.

“You know?” Gina pulled away and smiled up at him, “I find it hard sometimes, to believe we were lucky enough to find each other.” 

“Synchronicity.”

She shook her head; then looked back at the tree. 

“Magic!  The same magic you find in Christmas.  I don’t mean the commercialism,” she added quickly when Ben snorted.  “I’m talking about the basic message of Christmas, the continuity, the trust and belief, the love…”  She stopped, thought for a moment then continued. “The kind of love I’m talking about is boundless, has its own energy, finds its own level and destination.

“Contrary to expectations we came together and overcame the odds against us.   Christmas reminds us to celebrate each day and the newness of life.”  Gina’s hand curled over Ben’s cradling the son their doctor insisted would arrive on Christmas day.

* * * *

Sherry Gloag delights in the knowledge her debut novel, The Brat, released in October 2010 by The Wild Rose Press, is ‘out there’ in time for Christmas.  Twice in the past decade fortune tellers told her she would have a book published in 2010.  Twice she disbelieved them.  Now she blushes with remorse for her cynicism.

When she’s not writing, Sherry Gloag enjoys gardening, walking and reading. For relaxation she disappears into her workshop and involves herself in crystal craftwork.

Monday Spotlight: Sherry Gloag

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I gave the low-slung silver sun that threatened rain on that early spring morning a cursory glance, and continued wiping down my kitchen when I was interrupted.

The sunlight caught the woman’s silvery-blonde hair making it glow. Her eyes shone, not with glee or fun, I realised with a jolt, but with anger and frustration.

“How much longer are you going to ignore me?” Her temper snapped and crackled round the room like a lightening bolt.

“Excuse me?”

O.K. I knew my characters often turned up expecting me to know all about them, but never had one been so aggressive on our first encounter. Didn’t she realize I could snuff out her chances of reaching a publisher?

Perhaps she did. After all if we worked well together she’d achieve her public acknowledgment and I’d bask in the joy of seeing my debut novel out there in print and ebook.

The woman stood there in my mind as clearly as though she stood in front of me. Her essence filled the room.

“I’m Gina Williams,” she said, and her smile challenged the reluctant spring sunlight.

I ignored her disclosure and followed my instinct. “I don’t believe Gina Williams is your full name,” I replied, and watched the heat rise up her neck and into her face. Not many thirty-something’s I knew still blushed so easily. “Why the intrigue?” I asked.

“All will be revealed.” Her smile turned feral, and I returned to wiping the kitchen surfaces.

“I have a secret,” she said, then paused. “A dark secret.”

Again I waited, but this time she remained silent.

“Most people have secrets,” I prompted. “What makes yours worthy of a full length novel?”

“It is a secret so dark that my life as it is now, and my future would be destroyed if someone unearthed it.”

“You are…” I studied her closely. “…in your mid thirties, I’d guess…”

“You don’t understand.” The ever present fury beneath her façade snapped. “Someone is stalking me.”

~~~~~

And so began my close association with Gina Williams, the heroine of my debut novel, The Brat, released on 1st October 2010 by the Wild Rose Press.