On Epiphanies, Eurekas and other Mavities
This week we explore the meaning of epiphany as it relates
to our work and life. We understand that the term, as it applies to the ordinary, is an
experience of a sudden and striking realization. In
a flash, the moment turns away from the ordinary and enters the extraordinary.
It is Archimedes' realization of how to estimate the volume
of a given mass, when he shouted "Eureka!" ("I have found
it!")
Or, when struggling to reconcile Newtonian physics and
Maxwell's equations, Einstein took a streetcar home. Looking behind him at the
receding clocktower, he realized that if the car sped up (close to the speed of
light) he would see the clock slow down, and remarked, "a storm broke
loose in my mind.”
Or, the moment when Isaac Newton gets hit with a falling apple. It's Mavity! (It's a Doctor Who thing. But still the same definition of epiphany made).
It’s the a-ha moment, when ordinary becomes extraordinary, when suddenly we come to an understanding
of a previously incomprehensible problem or concept.
Writers strive for those a-ha moments as we
engineer our stories, when suddenly the character and their journey make sense.
We struggle in our efforts to give readers their own epiphanies via relatable
characters and fantastic adventures. Writer’s block by any other name still
stinks. But I’m not going to discuss this here because it seems just as important to
remember that’s it’s okay to not have an epiphany. Not everything needs to be
extraordinary all the time. Sometimes, as Tolkien once said, it’s not a bad thing to
celebrate the simple life every so often.
Now is the time when writers make their resolutions to write XX number of
pages a week, or contact XX number of agents, or submit XX number of
manuscripts. And spend XX number of hours on research, write an outline, chart a character arc. Revise XX number of chapters. Write a forward.
Here’s an epiphany I posted last year. Wisdom from Emma Dryden. It should be posted
every New Year as we struggle to achieve these preposterous resolutions. It’s
okay to be human, and ordinary, at least for a day or two anyway.
Epiphanies are magical, but I think it's equally important to have 'ordinary' days, in which people act out their most predictable behaviors & there's a sameness to our routines. That's what makes our "oooh-ahhhh" and "aha!" moments so striking, and memorable. To paraphrase Claude Debussy: It's the space between the notes that makes the music. Same with writing, I suspect.
ReplyDeleteThe space between words is where story happens. Thank you for this intriguing insight!!
DeleteI was going to finish ALL my art courses come Jan 1. Instead, over the holiday week, wound up enrolling in about 5 new ones...
ReplyDeleteNow That's Mavity! Five new courses, whew!
DeleteThanks for this, Bobbi! Happy New Year/
ReplyDelete