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Excerpt
from Chapter 4
The
Outer Journey
Capturing
the Scene
This is a free excerpt from Globejotting:
How to Write Extraordinary Travel Journals (and still have
time to enjoy your trip!) by Dave Fox.
If you like what you see here, you can order
autographed copies of the book on this website.
Scanning Your Senses,
Picturing the Scene
Before you start writing about your outer journey, take
a moment to picture yourself back in the scene you want
to cover. This brings the day's details to the forefront
of your mind. Close your eyes if you like. (If you are jetlagged,
however, be careful not to start snoring.) Recall the events
of your day. As you do this, scan through each of your senses
- sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch.
We've got five senses, but they're not equal. The focus
of our senses shifts from situation to situation. Ponder
for a moment which of your five senses would be the dominant
ones in the following situations:
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Spotting a rainbow from a moving train
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Wandering through a spice market
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Eating a gooey, chocolate dessert
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Going to a concert
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Watching a fireworks display
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Splashing in an icy stream
...Our dominant sense in any given situation often seems
like the most important one, and there's a tendency to ignore
or simply not notice the others. But when we fail to check
out the other senses, we risk missing big details. This
is why it's so important to do a quick scan of all of your
senses -- not just the ones that stand out the strongest.
Details, Details...
If you've ever taken a writing class, there's a cliché
you might have heard:
Show. Don't tell.
Those three words, when fully understood, are some of the
best writing advice in the whole world. (Also, "Don't
poke your eye out with a pencil," is eight other good
words of advice.)
Second only to the time issue, the most common frustration
I hear from students in my journaling classes is their writing
in the past has felt flat and lifeless. This is usually
because they are telling instead of showing. I'll give you
an example.
During the summer, I guide tours in Scandinavia. On one
afternoon, we take a boat ride through the Norwegian fjords.
The fjords in western Norway are so spectacular, National
Geographic once rated them the most beautiful tourist destination
in the world.
People on my tours glide through this spectacular scenery,
and when they journal about it, they write, "The fjords
were beautiful."
Well...duh!
This is not a newsflash. Norway's fjords have been beautiful
for thousands of years. We expect them to be beautiful before
we ever see them. When we do see them, they meet that expectation.
If we return home and someone asks us how the fjords were,
they probably already know the fjords are beautiful. They
want to know more. Writing that the fjords are beautiful
tells very little.
Some people take this journaling mistake even further.
"The fjords were soooo beautiful!" they
write. "The fjords were the most beautiful place I
have ever seen!"
If these journalers are REALLY feeling PASSIONATE about
how beautiful the fjords were, they might add to the excitement
with lots of CAPITAL LETTERS AND EXCLAMATION MARKS!!!!!!"
They have written nothing of substance.
Don't tell me the fjords are beautiful. Show me - with
lots of detail. What is it about the fjords that makes them
so breathtaking? The swooping, dark granite cliffs? The
sparkly clean, turquoise waters? The little maroon farmhouses
that freckle the nearby land? For me, part of the fjords'
beauty is the seagulls. The birds follow the boats, squawking
and flapping their wings with a grace that to them is second
nature. Glacier-fed waterfalls send an icy mist plunging
toward rocks below. On a foggy day, the haze that settles
over the water is so mystical, you expect at any moment
to see a real live troll come lumbering down the mountains
to grumble at you.
Details like these breathe life into your journals. If
you're journaling for yourself, these details will keep
your memories bright and clear long after you've returned
home. If you choose to share your journals with others,
people need these details in order to really feel like they
were there with you....
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