26 March 2014

Record of meeting 26 March 2014


Words of the day

Beggars belief = unbelievable (it beg to be believed)

Vociferous = loud and unrestrained shouting

Coxcomb = a conceited foolish dandy or fop

Cogitate = to take careful thought or think carefully about; ponder
 
Scintilla = a tiny trace or spark of a specified quality or feeling. A particle, atom, iota, bit, modicum
 
Euchre = a card game or to trick
 
Paucity = small quantity
 
Paradox = an enigma, riddle
 
Lycanthrope = suspicion that a person can turn into a wolf
 
Uber = extreme, over the top
 
Postulate = make a claim or demand, take for granted
 
 
Writing from words of the day
 
The noisy motivated group created a wealth of stories covering - Outliving the competition a racy story from Melissa, Our PM by Helene, Hair from Wendy, The NT murder from Terry, The story is false from Cath, The State election from Jo, Short and sweet from Lynn, Go to the middle of Australia from Leonie, A part in the play from David C and The rooster who dressed as a fox a quirky poem from David R.
 
 
Reading of homework
 
I once was a kookaburra a believable story with sound effects from Jo, The interview from Lynn, Looking for Lily a great story by Leonie, The accident from David C, Meeting with Gran mama from Garry and read by Cath, Acclimation about talking trees and other messages from David R and connections with Jervis Bay from Terry.
 
 
Writing exercise
 
Melissa bought from the Op shop the book “A recipe for dreaming” by Bryce Courtney, which contained the inscription “To Sharon from John 1994”.
 
We created a range of imaginative stories namely - Secret Santa present from Melissa, Are you OK? from Helene, John loved Sharon from Wendy, Simon, Sharon and John from Terry, Hooked on Sharon by Jo, a poem about the cat and the cream by Lynn ,They met in Byron Bay by Leonie, What will I buy for Shazza a funny story by David C and the poem Are you just a cow from David R.
 
 
Homework – the middle
 
Select a book; choose the first sentence of one chapter and the last sentence from another chapter. Write a story using one sentences as the start and the other as the end of your story or poem.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

19 March 2014

Record of meeting 19 March 2014

 
Words of day

Kneaded = to work dough

Voluptuous = full of curves, ministering pleasure & delight

Acuity = keenness, sharpness

Bonhomie = cheerful

Mesmeric = attractive, compelling, alluring, fascinating

Raconteur = teller of stories

Insatiate = never satisfied

Prestige = achievements, kudos, status, esteem

 
Writing from words of day

The small group of dedicated writers took the words of the day and crafted a range of creative stories on the topics of Elvis, The performing chef, Glued to his words, A master baker, He watched through the window, Did he really live those stories, “Good day viewers” from an ex baker and I went with the flow and it did me no harm.

 
Reading of homework

A yet smaller group of people who have lots of spare time shared their homework.  In particular Felicity and Thelma from Garry read by Cath; New life from Helene; Autism, colour and art from Terry (an emotional story); The strange man – a poem read by Jo; Last will and testament from Elizabeth and The golden plume from David C.

 
Discussion

We shared experiences about barking dog, speeding cars and trucks and using letters rather than telephone calls to make our opinions known and recorded.

 
Reading

Terry read a poem - A simple stare – a sad story of violence  affecting families

 
A writing exercise - What started out as a casual walk

After many suggested ideas were rejected, the facilitator the masterful David C chose the topic. The even smaller group wrote a range of different and sometimes similar stories - I’ll be back later from Elizabeth, Twilight of the night from David C, Where had she gone wrong from Cath, Catching up with friends from Helene, On my street Brussels sprouts, fish & flame throwers fly - a wonderful poem with graphic images from Wendy, How I met my wife from Terry the Taxi driver and My hidden world from Jo.

 
Homework

Truth is stranger than fiction

 

 

 

 

12 March 2014

Record of meeting 12 March 2014


Words of the day

Banal = devoid of freshness or originality

Whetted = excite, stimulate, sharpen

Obliged = under a debt of gratitude for debt or favour

Cowed = disheartened or subdued

Contretemps = unexpected

Globule = drop, blob, bead, glob, ball

Crepitate = a crackling sound

Clout = thump, wallop, influence and type of nail

Excogitate = think out loud

Chagrin = feeling of disappointment, humiliation

Vestibule = passageway into a house

 
Writing from words of the day – less than six degrees of separation happening

We created a range of intersecting stories about Saliva and potato chips, Skin hugging tights, Precious, The scouts competition, Learning at the writing group, Claptrap investigating a mystery (Melissa confirmed that claptrap was word of the day on her IPad she just opened – na, na, na, na, na), The mob, His former self, Lycra undergarments and A tear and a cough.

 
Homework – lots more connections

 Our member in Thailand and other members shared their homework on the topics of The bicycle from Garry, The gawk hawk from David R, Like a bear from Helene, What a beautiful sight a self appreciative poem from Wendy, The silver tube from Terry could lead to more on the topic, My perfect day from Lynne, Wearing white for meditation by Margaret accompanied by a demonstration, Southern fried crush in a southern accent from Melissa, Busted at the bar by David C of course and My sister announced we are white water rafting on the Zambezi river from Elizabeth.

 
Afternoon tea

Snow balls (yummy chocolate coated marshmallows with coconut) and two varieties of Tim Tams for afternoon tea

 
Reading

David R recommends the P D James novel “Death comes to Pemberley” which he describes as fantastic. He will return it to the Sanctuary Point Library soon. 

David R will have a pacemaker inserted soon and shared his poem about it.

 
Exercise – physical not writing today

Terry and David C retrieved our cupboard containing fiction and non fiction books from the church. Books will be catalogued and are available for borrowing.

 
Homework

The forgery

 

 

 

 

 

05 March 2014

Record of meeting 5 March 2014

 
Words of the day

Cockalorum = a self important little man

Modernity = modern

Calliope = inspiration to write poetry and a steam organ

Surreptitious = under hand, secret

Quiff = a hairstyle and a woman who is promiscuous

Vigour = vigorously

Furore = a commotion, riot, public anger, uproar

Brick with eyes = Glen Lazareth

Erstwhile = former or once

Ensemble = band, company,

 
Writing from words of the day

We took the diverse list of words and crafted weird and creative stories about The writer’s festival, Bill Jay the poetry reader, Who would have guessed, Dances with blokes in frocks, The mayor in pink, Fat boy Tony, The little boys department, His mistress, The strip joint and Inciting furore.

 
Reading of Homework

Those present shared a variety of creative homework with the subjects - Not enough poor people by Leonie, The prawns for mum by Margaret, The rusty lamp from Garry and read by Jo, Modes of transport from Cath, Bananas by David R, I’m a disgrace from Wendy, A place to live from Helene, This too shall pass by Melissa and The need for speed by David C.
 
 
Afternoon tea
 
Margaret and Melissa shared tea cake and cookies with the group to celebrate Jo and David C's recent secret birthdays.


 
Reading and reading

Jodi Picoult – The storyteller – recommended by Melissa.

Jo read part of “The octopus” by Dylan Thomas and shared information about show not tell

Margaret shared information she used in teaching English.

David R – read the two comfy poems Preparation about his travel to his country retreat and Bed.

 
Exercise

Margaret gave us an exercise to write our first impressions from a variety of characters including an older person with long hair, someone with tattoos, piercings or red hair.

Some people quickly departed after hearing the exercise. Those left wrote about What people are thinking in their head – thoughts of a redhead and a blonde about the other person - a great insight from Melissa, Guess who, A cop and his captive, An attractive young man, In the reflection, No discrimination, Face like a road map and attracted by differences.

 
Homework

Caught staring - your character is caught staring, what happens next?

 

 

 

 

26 February 2014

Record of meeting 26 February 2014

 
Words of the day

Sanctimonious = hypocritical

Monosyllables = short conversation

Challenge = a claim a vote is invalid and four other meetings.

Clique = select group which excludes other

Ignoble = dishonourable, low birth

Vacillate = alternate or waver

Liminal = transition point, border

Solatium = money for compensation

Luddite = someone opposed to or not confident with new technology

Buss – kiss

 
Writing from words of the day

We created a fabulous range of imaginative stories and poems ie Nothing like a pollie from Terry, The fun moon from Cathy, An old man from Jo, It started with a buzz from Margaret, All kinds of excuses from Leonie, A new member from David C, The mayor from Susan, Bonsai Creek from David R, The press conference from Helene, and a great poem about The group from Wendy.

 
Reading of homework

The diligent writers shared creative stories and poems  - A flying challenge from Garry, The cardigan from Margaret, Some thoughts home, jobs and living with fibromyalgia from Leonie, Yoga and being bendy from Susan, In the shadows and Changes two poems from David R, What can I share from Helene and Music was in my blood from Terry.

 
Reading

Margaret is re-reading “A fortune teller told me”, sounds interesting but Margaret was mysterious.
 
Helene has read “Sex, lies and bonsai” by Lisa Walker - an interesting combination of themes.

 

 
Quick write - Lost and found

We used the inspirational words "lost and found" from the absent Melissa to write a variety of short stories as follows.  Jo - People, feelings, creatures; Margaret – a place in time, a new bright day; Leonie - at the beach; David C – my best man; David R – Forgetful; Helene – lost in a forest of bonsai; Wendy – taste for music; Lynne – lost my mind; Terry – jewellery and Cath – finding the way.

 
Homework

In excess - let your mind wander to excess, no not Exeter - although that is a charming place.

 

 

 

 

19 February 2014

Record of meeting 19 February 2013


News

Welcome to Sarah from ABC Open who stayed at the Coolangatta Wine Estate last night for paddling and food. Also welcome to Susan who is writing short stories including one using emails.

Terry met up with old friends attending the Hobie Cat races, Leonie has been swimming and doing her physio exercises, David C has returned from beautiful Tasmania, Jo not doing much, Elizabeth is back from a gathering of the clan, Cath had a busy time at home, Melissa went to see the play the Long way home, Helene is having some deck supports replaced, David R is living the idyllic life and editing his old poems. Garry news he is moving from Thailand to Malaya.

Welcome back to Morrie who was not able to write from the time he left the group until recently.

 
Words of the day

Flaccid = soft and limp, drooping feeble

Belligerent = hostile

Encase or incase = to put in a case

Cathartic = purging

Cognisant = aware, having knowledge

Abnegate = to deny and renounce

Hubris = overbearing pride or presumption

Emergence = appearance, surfacing

Personal = individual,

Bionic = having artificial body parts

Besmirch = defame, slander

Jejune = naive, unsophisticated, superficial

 
Writing from words of the day

We used the diverse list of words and created a wealth of stories covering the topics - In Parliament from Leonie, Personal comments in the department from Susan, Question time from Terry, From the bathroom by Sarah, Salad greens from David R, Banana cake by Helene, The fairy and her operation from Melissa, The bionic character by Cath, Experiments in life, and Not human – strangely from David C.

 
Reading of homework

A baby’s hand – Terry, Further description of Mrs Banks by Leonie, I’m a procrastinator by David C, The voice from the gorge – Jo, A haiku poem from Melissa, Readers Digest by Helene, The scene of schemes by David R and The medicine man from Garry.

 
ABC Open

Sarah Moss who is the producer for ABC Open South Coast and Tablelands made a presentation to the group about ABC Open. Sarah informed and encouraged us to contribute to ABC Open. For more details have a look at https://open.abc.net.au/projects or contact Sarah on mobile 0477 309 110 or work (02) 4428-4544

 
Homework

A personal challenge – take the challenge - it’s homework this week and the topic for ABC Open contributions for February 2014.

 

 

12 February 2014

Record of meeting 12 February 2014


News of the week - a week of cats and dogs

Geoff is not well and staying with friends at Calala Beach- we would send him a real get well card if we could - instead we send him out best wishes for a speedy recovery and return to the group.  David R has enjoying swimming, walking and writing. Cath announced her birthday on Facebook and made cats meat stew, she also received a condolence card from Fifi the cat. Melissa discussed SFA. Helene discussed frozen tomatoes. Wendy went to the dingo farm and shared interesting information.  Terry went to the sailing of the Hobie Cats on the weekend. Jo has been to doctors and other boring things, and wore her new glasses to impress us - see pic below.  Leonie has visited the beach but went home  quickly because of the strong wind. Welcome to Debbie who writes in her head (doesn't everyone she asked, she will fit right into the group) and is doing a writing course soon

 
Words of the day

Putative = generally considered or reputed to be

Niche = small space or speciality

Filch = to steal something small

Nascent = not yet mature fully emerging or developed

Sandstone = a rock of closely adhering sand

Hope = feeling of expectation of desire

Infinitesimal = very small or calculus term

Leeway = make allowances

Diaphanous = transparent, sheer

Contrived = planned

 
Writing from words of the day

From our eclectic list of words we created brilliant stories about The exhibition house - Helene, Stealing sugar and salt - Wendy, People storing - Terry, How many grains of sand - Jo, The statue of remembrance - Debbie, The department store from Leonie, Dreams of a man from David, Hidden away by Cath and Cherubs from Melissa.

 
Reading of homework

George’s lost marbles - a poem from David R, A description of Mrs Louise Banks by Leonie, Jo talked about a character she had problems developing further, Terry - on the other side of the curtain, Fifi lost her marbles from Helene. The competition from Garry in Thailand contained a dog called Fifi - where is your respect Garry? Have you been living too long in a foreign land?

 
Information and reading

Terry read out the message about the See Change festival - Wild about words. We expressed interest in participating in the trivia challenge on the weekend of 1 June 2014.

David R – read his poem Shades he wrote this morning and another poem Dreams. David also explained how he sees friends in colour and told us our colours.

 
Exercise

We participated in a progressive write starting with Welcome to my world. The cobbled together stories covered - my stomach and the witch doctor, fins and fangs, The mental hospital, A bumpy ride, Up the creek, A zombie, Outer space, An unforgettable party, the Angel and falling on my face.

 
Homework

Trust me I’m a …………

 

 


Jo impressive in her new glasses - she says she can see better