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HONORING THE FIRE

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To take the first step on the path of the creative journey, you must honor any moment that sets your heart on fire, because it's a sign that you've fallen in love with the work. Your creative life depends on it. The life of your imagination swings on the rusty hinge of your commitment to your inward life. The wellspring of your creativity depends on the presence of Eros, the god of love, the archetypal force that brings forth meaning, wisdom, and beauty.

If you're looking for clues to a robust creative life, you can find them in the courage to create out of a sense of unabashed joy. This is Rumi's “secret turning,” the slow revolutions in the soul of the dervish, the poet, and the lover that, in turn, turn the universe. It's the “creative breakthrough” that scientist Alan Lightman describes as the moment you finally flash on the answer to a crippling conundrum. And it's the “zest and gusto” that Ray Bradbury says is the prerequisite for honest and impassioned work.

I've had to make these tough turns throughout my career if I wanted to create honest work. When I was stuck on the forty-ninth draft of a story from The Book of Roads, set in the Philippines, I had to plunge back into that sultry world by cutting open a mango. The explosion of smell immediately vaulted me back to the rice terraces in Northern Luzon, where I heard the fruit seller singing, “Mango, mango, manggggooooo!” That sensory surge helped me finish the story. To write “Pitch Dark,” a baseball poem, I opened my dad's old army trunk and retrieved a box of baseball cards I'd put there many years before. I selected a few cards and was transported back to Tiger Stadium where the poem unfolds. To write about the myth of Sisyphus in Once and Future Myths

Stoking the Creative Fires

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