Friday, July 13, 2012

Mozart Moves the Day Along

My favorite song to listen to today was Mozart's Symphony No. 25 in G minor. It focuses me in a way that no other song can. (I feel songs in minor often have the effect of making one more thoughtful.)

Rosanne Pagano is my primary writing coach. As a writer and professor, she chooses to set examples in all of her interactions with me. Each time I see her, we greet, discuss, and plan. She excuses herself at the end of nearly every meeting with, "Okay, Christy I must write now, so you have to go."

She is not only setting an example of discipline. I know exactly what she's feeling. Once you are in the writer's state of mind, you don't want anything to do with the outside world. It's like that for me, at least. If the phone rings, you hope to the Muse you don't become too engrossed for it will destroy whatever opus you had in mind.

I unabashedly sloshed coffee down my front. I find I don't care. I can slosh coffee whenever I feel like just as long as I do it when I'm in the writer's state of mind. I dislike cream and sugar today, or rather most of the time. I even bought coffee candy from the Asian market. Ah, placebo.

I wrote a progress report to Beth, Rosanne and Victoria. (By the way, they are all professors at Alaska Pacific University.) I'm supposed to write one every Friday. Some weeks in June, nothing would happen, so all I could really say was, "Met new people and read the textbook some more."

Here is a (revised) copy of my PR:

I felt that things I planned for this week turned out satisfactory because I did two interviews. I could have done more. We all have priorities and important dates, and sometimes they just have to wait. J (Ella forgot about the interview!)

I am learning about what doesn’t work. I’m not good at writing by hand anymore. I typed all throughout college. Shorthand is impractical and will take too much time to learn. Typing is best anyway, because you one can highlight it on the computer and pick any color. What’s a marker again? I don’t know! I’ll get one soon, so I can use it on print-outs.

Preparedness is the key! I feel like I learn things if I make mistakes. There is no telling me to do it right the first time, and I’ve learned that over a number of years. I find that all the lectures in the world would never have prepared me for my first interview. I was really engrossed in blogging right before Phillip Blanchett showed up and was unprepared and unfocused. I was simply waiting for the our 2pm meeting and was feeling like blogging. I found that I am slow to transition from one mode to another in seconds. I find that it takes at least ten minutes to “snap outta the blog fog.” (Phillip took it well, although I kept acting like a frozen deer. I think it was obvious too!) 

Research is important. It was not hard to research Pamyua, but finding something note-worthy was hard because there were many interesting things about Phillip and his group. However, researching everyday people brought up extraordinary results. I found a blog that Ella Tonuchuk kept when she was a First Alaskans Fellow for a legislative session earlier this year. It made me appreciate her work more and helped me understand her more as a person. I’ll do the same for the others. En route to FAI, I was prepared because I kept looking at my notes of Ella and Jorie. I had time to simmer ideas in my cauldron. I rescheduled with Ella. After interviewing Jorie, I went to a restaurant with wi-fi and highlighted everything immediately. I typed up her lead and because everything was so fresh, started on her story. Jorie promptly sent me her photo and all felt well for the moment.

In the interviews, I applied what I studied from Writing and Reporting News: A Coaching Method. (This is called active learning, right?) I found everyone has an image they want to project, and it is obvious when you interview them. Some want to project a more formal image, while others are fine with divulging answers to more personal questions. I find I am good at picking up on a person’s aura. Jorie wanted to stick to her work with AK Natives, and stayed away from discussing family plans. Phillip was the opposite. He wanted to take his family to the east coast and reconnect with his father’s family. This made him seem down-to-earth, which I suppose music artists strive for. Public policy leaders vs. musicians: both call for different approaches. Both people were very used to being interviewed, but one of them was difficult to approach with the right questions. It was Phillip. He likely gets asked the same questions over time. I finally got him to smile when we started discussing Pamyua’s new coffee blend for Kaladi Bros.

Work Goals:
  • ·         I feel I can and should do more. It would be nice to take on more than one project. Got in touch with Ella T. and Joyce M. and will touch bases with Sarah J. Now that I know myself better as an interviewer, I want to throw myself in from here on. I found face-to-face interviews drive me forward faster. I like getting the info sorted before it goes up in smoke. It’s more stimulating than e-mail interviews and faster too. Ah, I love communication.

Other goals:
  • ·         Continue learning and meeting people of course. I found that to become a real foodie, you befriend the restaurant owners. Go Victoria!
  • ·         Find the geocache that is supposedly hidden somewhere on this campus.

Note:
Phillip let me know about a job opening with his artist friend Paola Pivi because he was on the look-out for her. One thing he said was, “She’s looking for an assistant who is culturally-sensitive.” I was surprised, but wondered, “Is it a good idea to try it? Am I allowed to take up a second job?”
“They don’t own you!” Phillip replied, laughing. Paola asked me for my CV, which I will send anyway because she actually e-mailed me about it. My NMSU work with exchange students made me comfortable with internationals, so if I ever met her, I won’t be too awed to speak.

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