Attending Haven I Writing Retreat: Part One

Attending Haven I Writing Retreat: Part One

Last month I was lucky enough to attend Haven I Writing Retreat, and while I posted several pictures from the retreat on Facebook, I’ve received many requests for additional information. The pictures are stunning and certainly tell part of the story, but not all of it. These requests for more information have felt a bit invasive, even as I understand them. I, too, would be asking for more if the roles were reversed. I haven’t quite been ready to discuss it, I suppose. It was all a bit overwhelming: emotionally, mentally, and physically too. Sometimes we just need to sit with our experiences awhile, marinate in them, before we have the words to express what they were and what they meant to us. Let’s see if I’ve marinated long enough.

Before attending Haven Writing Retreat, each applicant goes through an hour long phone call with Laura Munson, the multiple New York Times Best-Selling author and leader of the Retreat. For this reason alone, I almost didn’t attend. Silly? Maybe. I have two children, four and seven, and getting them to be silent for five seconds let alone one hour is an impossible task. My anxiety over being able to hear properly over a phone even without the kids around is high as we have pockets in our home where the connection gets lost or fuzzy and those pockets aren’t the same from day-to-day. The very idea that I may be asked something I don’t properly hear or understand is mildly terrifying, and the idea that I may say something that ought to have remained a thought (a very real concern) was almost more than I could stomach. But a few months ago a writer friend had instilled in me a need to go to a retreat and I would therefore attempt walking across water if that’s what was asked of me.

My hour long phone call became nearly three hours during which I cried (a lot), the emotions surrounding putting myself out there for my writing, truly claiming my writing as mine and what I want to do with my life, a thing I thought I’d already done, was soul opening. Meeting Laura on the phone was fascinating because I hadn’t yet read her books or anything else she’d published, I had no idea who she was other than the pictures I’d seen on the Haven website. I was a bit awed by her writer status (of course! An NYT B-S Author!! *swoon*) and to find that she was also a kind and thoughtful real-live person who reminds me quite a bit of myself…it was all a bit overwhelming. By the time the call was over I needed to do three things: pee, write a Haven Scholarship Application Letter, and find patrons/donors to cover the remainder of my fees.

The ensuing weeks were a blur of tears. A lot of emotions were coming up and out over this: “saying I’m a writer and actually going to a writing retreat are two different things,” “writing a monthly article for my paper is one thing, but going to a retreat with actual writers is another,” “going to this retreat means buckling down and writing a book, am I really doing this?,” “this retreat will legitimize me to the publishing industry as well as to anyone finding my page or following my Facebook,” “I’m about to find out from real live people that aren’t my friends or family whether or not I have a chance at doing this writing thing, whether or not there’s any there there.” Could I put any more pressure and expectation on this retreat? By the time I got myself packed and said my goodbyes to my family and hit the road, I was an exhausted and excited mess.

Arch
Arch

I’m lucky to live a short two hour drive from where the Retreat is held so I had plenty of time to decompress from the role of mother and wife and enter into the role of student and writer. As I approached the Retreat, the first thing I saw was a monolith of stone, a structure both organic and obviously man-made. There are tons of these throughout the Dancing Spirit Ranch, and I would spend the next few days stumbling onto most, if not all, of them.

Bunkhouse
Bunkhouse

Parking the car I went to the office to check-in and was given a quick tour of the bunkhouse (a gorgeous structure that deserves a much more sophisticated name), my room (adorable little cubby of rest), and shown where I would need to be and when.

Cozy Room
Cozy Room

I had about two hours before the other attendees and I would be meeting: two hours to do whatever I wanted. I went back to the car and grabbed my things: a backpack with my laptop and tons of pens and notebooks and reading books, and my duffel bag of clothes and toiletries. I dropped everything unceremoniously in my room, grabbed my journal, pen, and water bottle, and took off toward the Adirondack chairs by the pond.

Pond
Pond

No one else had arrived yet. I had acres of land to myself and so much I wanted to explore, I’d also been sitting for two hours already to get here. But I needed to write. I needed to put down for myself the story of the journey, the reveal of the Dancing Spirit Ranch, the anticipation and hope I had for what the next few days would bring. I needed to ground myself in the fact that I was actually there: this thing, attending a writing retreat, had become a reality. It was Day One of the rest of my writing life…there have been many Day One’s and I hope that never changes…but that’s another blog post.

The other writers began to arrive and I’d hear voices floating over to me or hear footsteps off to my right and look up to see someone attempting cell reception or taking photos of Glacier National Park in the distance. Beauty was everywhere you looked and the collective anticipation of the day was palpable. Everyone was here hoping to form a writing group, everyone was here hoping to find out they were on the right track. For that first night, the energy was buoying.

Lodge
Lodge

We all met in the Lodge for drinks and appetizers. We’d been introduced via email but especially as I was a late addition to the cast I had no real idea who anyone was aside from names. I was nervous and excited and terrified of what might come out of my mouth. I needn’t have been.

Continue the journey with Part Two here.

5 Minute Stretch

5 Minute Stretch

“she locked the bathroom door”

They were a family that only locked doors when they were out: restaurants, hotels, gas stations. At home, the very idea of closing and locking a door was the antithesis of the home they’d created. The act of closing a door could be acceptable for a phone call or a nap, although even then doors tended to be left open, a quick retreat from one room to another, all that was required. The forethought required to close and lock a door, the meaning of the lock in particular, was not lost on anyone. Who were you keeping out and why, were we not a family? And yet. She locked the bathroom door, and not a quick closing and turning either, this was subtle, surreptitious, the door brought to a close with a slow and deliberate attempt at silence, the handle held at full rotation to keep metallic parts from clanging, the lock turned with bated breath and a prayer that it wouldn’t make an echoing click. Her face burned with the shame of it but she tried to ignore it.

5 Minute Stretch Exercises are a creation of Laura Munson and were learned at Haven Writing Retreats. Write for five minutes, no corrections or stopping.
This prompt was taken from Another Name for Madness by Marion Roach (Smith).

5 Minute Stretch

5 Minute Stretch

“sparse inventory of reasons”

There were always excuses. Always. Excuses are easy to come by and sound as weak as they are. True reasons, now those were harder to come by. In a world with a sparse inventory of reasons, she picked and chose with a delicate hand. She became adept at saying, “I could give you excuses, but they’d be just that. I do have a reason though.” People would stare for a moment, perhaps give a long slow blink, digesting this bit of information that supposedly made sense. Eventually they’d realize it did make sense, and they’d want the reason…or not. Usually they didn’t. Usually people were very much aware that they walked this same tight wire of excuses vs reasons. Most people were simply happy you’d cancelled. Unless they truly needed you. Those people, the needy ones, couldn’t understand the difference, couldn’t find any justification for why you weren’t where you’d said you’d be or worse, why you wouldn’t say you’d be there at all. There is nothing wrong with being needy, of course, we’ve all been there, but the ability to have someone drop everything and be there for you…that’s a big ask. It’s a huge ask. And she’d always thought of herself as a person who would drop everything, who would always be there…until she realized she was not that person at all. She could be, sometimes, but with children of her own and a sparse inventory of reasons that she wasn’t even allowed to voice, she was now relegated to

5 Minute Stretch Exercises are a creation of Laura Munson and were learned at Haven Writing Retreats. Write for five minutes, no corrections or stopping.
This prompt was taken from Last Tango in Melrose, Montana by Dan Vichorek.

5 Minute Stretch

5 Minute Stretch

“the dry season came”

She had a way of loving people instantly, fully, with her whole being. It took nothing really, a look, a smile, a word said with just a hint of irony or with a bit of a lilt. Anything could do it. She’d be sunk, One minute friends, the next minute smitten. In a snap. This ability to fall quickly in love ought to have been a curse perhaps or a blessing, some sort of super hero power: “Go-Go Gadget Love!” But it was simply her; she loved fully and often and with no rules. A great way to live really, until the dry season came. And it always came. Not tied to moons or winds or the migration of the birds; the emotional dry season always came. One minute she was in love and hte next…she still loved, of course she still loved, but the all-in quality, the off-a-cliff quality, the depth and intensity were gone. Suddenly, she could hardly

5 Minute Stretch Exercises are a creation of Laura Munson and were learned at Haven Writing Retreats. Write for five minutes, no corrections or stopping.
This prompt was taken from Stolen Lives by Malika Oufkir.

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5 Minute Stretch

5 Minute Stretch

“chasing the light”

It’s not so much that she was chasing the light as she refused to be swallowed by darkness any longer. There comes a point, perhaps several, when one must choose, after all. As though it’s only as simple as a choice. As though one simply decides, “Today I shall chase the light, tomorrow, who knows; but today, why today I have all figured out.” Or perhaps that’s exactly how it’s done. Precisely how. If it’s always a matter of today, today, today, the only moment promised, then perhaps it is exactly like this. What a lovely idea: to chase the light. Almost like a sunflower tracking the sky of one’s depression. Does this make life the sunflower chasing the light, or oneself the sunflower? It’s all a bit too poetic for the likes of me, to be sure. Still. One wouldn’t want to chase the darkness, as though that’s the opposite of chasing the light, when perhaps the opposite is simply not chasing anything at all.

5 Minute Stretch Exercises are a creation of Laura Munson and were learned at Haven Writing Retreats. This prompt was taken from A Year by the Sea by Joan Anderson.

5 Minute Stretch

5 Minute Stretch

“braid of creation”

It was a spring storm and it came at night. Not the daytime summer storms that brought such relief from the oppressive heat that even those afraid of lightning, afraid of thunder approved. This was a storm that began around ten at night, when heads were heading towards pillows or already sound asleep. A storm that began with thunder, built with lightning, crescendoed with rain, and brought the kind of wind that slammed doors and woke the heaviest sleepers. Up all night anyway with the excitement of feedback, the energy of a room full of people, the thrill of clapping, she heard the puppy whine and was up, heard the puppy whine and was up, heard the puppy whine but felt sure it was a false alarm, heard the puppy whine and cleaned up pee. The braid of creation became the unbraiding of her plans, her needs postponed yet another day, until the 3:30 am waking became an inability to fall back to sleep, the need within her driving her to get up, get up, get up.

5 Minute Stretch Exercises are a creation of Laura Munson and were learned at Haven Writing Retreats. This prompt was taken from The Wild Braid by Stanley Kunitz.