--SYNERGIA RANCH, SANTA FE, NM, May, 2019
It’s a tricky thing, sharing the same air, in
close proximity, day after day, in sometimes raw and emotional settings, with
people you vaguely know or may just be meeting for the first time.
It’s tricky, yes, but it’s also fantastic.
For instance, you might wonder how vulnerable you
should be, how verbal or engaged, how transparent.
You might also wonder why you can’t write like
her or him--dense, layered prose that somehow manages to pull off the Happy
Ending with a flourish that isn’t trite whatsoever.
But then, you realize, this a Bending Genres
writer’s retreat. You realize you’re with like-minded people who make you feel
safe, as close friends or family do. You
realize quite quickly, that you don’t have to write like anybody, same as you
realize that no one has your exact voice.
It’s been a week now since the Bending Genres retreat
ended… a week, though it feels like a lifetime ago. I miss the experience and I miss those
wonderful people terribly.
Being the kind of guy (wimpy, mostly) who hates
goodbyes, I hung out in a field as the parting hugs went around on the final
day.
Why? Because
my heart hurt. My head was still
spinning. The week had felt like being
continually water-boarded, if you can be water-boarded with love, wonder and
creativity.
Each morning began with Robert Vaughan and Meg
Tuite feeding us hand-picked flash or poetry.
It was the kind of writing filled with nitroglycerin, the type that
blows the back of your head off. We did
our best to parse and coddle what the authors were saying. We became students and apprentices.
From there, we had all sorts of exercises meant
to open up our imaginations. Sometimes
we did so wearing goofy costumes.
Then it was time to write. Synergia ranch is a secluded piece of
property on the outskirts of Santa Fe, NM, replete with one-of-a-kind adobe
housing units. All around are hills and
cacti and the occasional peregrine falcon swooping by. It’s quite easy to write in an environment
like that.
Mid-afternoon we gathered to share our words with
each other, to see what our new friends thought worked or didn’t work. It was always done in love, with kindness, and
it was always illuminating.
Nights became a raucous bonfire, or a makeshift
party, usually in my room, always with gut-busting tear-streaming laughter
which, I’m certain, made the nearby coyotes jealous.
It was a week of prodigious productivity. A wonderful week of fellowship with people I
adore and will adore till I die. It was miraculous and unforgettable.
The only thing missing was you.
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