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Adorning the Dark: Week 4

This week we're reading chapters 8-9 (I just realized this morning that I forgot to include that in Friday's post!), and there is almost too much good stuff in here to cram into one sitting. So thankfully we have forums! This excerpt is from chapter 8, "The Black Box." I'm going to put some of his words in bold, just to help them stand out for discussion's sake.


So, songs require patience. Books require endurance. Songs are 100-meter dashes. Books are marathons. You have a lot more opportunity to question your sanity when you’re battling your way through the jungle of a novel for a year.

But how are they the same?

They both take work. Different kinds of work, but it’s all work.

They both require imagination—“imaging” something in your mind that doesn’t yet exist—and also creativity, which is the work of incarnating the idea.

They both require courage. That isn’t to say that I’m particularly courageous, but that I’m particularly afraid. Afraid of rejection. Afraid of failure. Afraid of ridicule. Fear is a mighty wind, and some of us merely have a creative spark.

Perhaps most important, they both require revision. And revision usually means collaboration. Whenever I talk to students, one of the key points I try to make is that their teachers aren’t crazy or cruel to make them edit and revise their papers. Author Jonathan Rogers gave me that advice on things to talk about at school visits. Not only do the kids need to learn revision, they need to hear from someone else that their teachers are right. The thing the Resistance doesn’t want you to know is that revision is the fun part. My brother, an author and playwright, is also a formidable editor. He understands story as well as anyone I know, and he delights in revision.

Once he told me that the hard part is finding the clay, the raw material of the story. It takes work to harvest clay. You have to go to a stream and grab a bucket of mud, mix it with water, sift out the rougher sediment, pour off the water, allow the moisture to seep through a cloth for days. That’s your first draft. After that you get to flop the clay onto the pottery wheel and turn it into something better than mud, hopefully something both useful and beautiful. That’s revision. Whether you’re writing a song or a story, you have to shape it and reshape it, scrap it and start over, always working it as close as it can get to the thing it wants to become. But first you need that muddy lump, the first draft.

After that, when the shaping begins, how do you know if you’re on the right track? You share it with someone. (Again, courage is a requirement.) But not just anyone. Share it with a better writer than you. Share it with someone who’ll be careful with you, who will tell you the truth in love. Sometimes you’ll thank them kindly and ignore them completely because what do they know, anyway? Other times they’ll confirm your worst suspicions, because you knew all along that something wasn’t working, but, let’s face it again, you were being lazy. You just wanted to be done. That’s the cancer. That’s the nest of roaches you have to exterminate from your story. Roll up your sleeves and kill them dead, because the world has enough bad stories. Nobody said it would be easy.


Discussion: Which of these requirements (in bold) is most difficult for you? Which is most exciting?

Andrew talks most in this passage about revision. Why do you think that is?

If your creative work is neither songwriting nor novel-writing, how would you characterize that kind of work? What does it require that is the same? What's different?

Come on over to the forum to talk about other sections of this week's reading. I can't wait to hear what stands out to you.

Adorning the Dark: Prompt 3

This week we read and talked a lot about non-writerly kinds of creativity, so I want to challenge us to think in creative ways about how we can be creative. ;-)

In the forum, Caleb noted that math can be a kind of creativity—solving problems, any kind of problems, requires both skill and imagination. And Kara quoted Sandra McCracken, who says that caregiving (mopping, cooking, teaching, nurturing) is just as creative as artmaking. We talked, too, about how to "pull up the carpet" and make the place where we are a real home.

So today:

  • Look around you. What's one way you can add beauty or home-ness to your world?
  • Look at your to-do list. What's one task that needs your creativity?
  • What's a task that doesn't feel creative? Can you bring your creativity to it anyway?

Bonus, if you just need to write: Try your hand at a sonnet.


Come over to the forum if you want, for discussion, encouragement, and to share your creative work! I am really appreciating hearing from you all as we read together. :-)

Adorning the Dark: Week 3

This week in chapters 6-7 we read about longing. Longing to belong. Longing for purpose. Longing for adventure. Longing for another world, or maybe a redeemed understanding of this world. What does this have to do with writing? What does it have to do with creative work? Are those two things the same thing? (Spoilers: No, not quite.) Before we dive into those conversations, let's see what Andrew has for us in today's excerpt.


I was born homesick. Maybe we all were. In 2006 I was in our subdivision house on Harbor Lights Drive, holed up in the spare bedroom-turned-office while the kids bumped around in the living room and Jamie cooked dinner. When I read the last few paragraphs of Wendell Berry’s towering novel Jayber Crow I felt such an overwhelming collision of sadness and joy that I literally slid out of my chair and curled up on the floor, weeping in a patch of sunlight. Other than the end of The Lord of the Rings and The Chronicles of Narnia I’d never been so leveled by a book.

But why? I wondered. What was it about this particular book that resonated with me so? If I ask myself the same question about Narnia and Middle-earth, the answer becomes clearer: I wanted to find my way through the wardrobe; I wanted to sail with Frodo to the Grey Havens. I longed to belong. Jayber Crow is about a lot of things, but one of its major themes is community, or in Wendell Berry parlance, membership—by which he means belonging to both a people and a place. Looking back, I realize I’ve always been on the hunt for belonging. We left small town Illinois when I was seven and, though I really tried to make it work, small-town Florida never felt like home. I lived a sort of half-life there through middle and high school, and got out of Dodge as soon as I could. Jamie and I ended up in Nashville, where we’ve stayed long enough that at least all our kids can say they belong to a place. They’ve always lived within a few miles of where they were born. It’s a start.

During our first ten years here, our family lived in four different houses. We liked the adventure of a new place. But after Jayber Crow I was done with transience. I was stirred by a longing to care for the land under my feet, to work in partnership with the earth instead of in opposition to it, to learn the names of the birds and the flora and fauna as well as the names of my neighbors, and to shepherd some corner of this planet for the sake of the Kingdom. As far as it was in my limited power to do so, I wanted to mend the world—even if it was just a few acres of it.

As nice as it was to live in a little Nashville subdivision, pushing a stroller through the neighborhood in the evening and being close enough to Percy Priest Lake to take our little Sunfish sailboat out at a moment’s notice, Jamie and I both knew it wasn’t the house we wanted to die in. Our neighborhood, like so many subdivisions, practically embodied the word transitory. Neighbors came and went. New streets were always being carved out of the tree line. Every other day, it seemed, a “For Sale” sign showed up in someone’s yard. It wasn’t the kind of place we could imagine our grandchildren getting excited to visit.

By then, several of our friends had moved to East Nashville, where at the time you could still buy a pretty bungalow and renovate it on the cheap. There were cool restaurants and historic neighborhoods (a little known fact: the outlaw Jesse James lived there for a while when he was on the lam). Now East Nashville is the hipster center of town and the bungalows are priced like mansions, so we missed that boat. Then one day we visited my old roommate Mark (the same Mark who picked me up from the bus station and helped me record my indy EP all those years ago) because he had just moved with his wife and kids to a farmhouse in South Nashville. Only minutes from the city, a winding road took us past cattle ponds and ramshackle barns, over bridges that spanned Mill Creek, and finally up a gravel drive to their hundred-year-old farmhouse. As soon as we arrived, I broke the tenth commandment. Sort of. I didn’t exactly covet my neighbor’s house, but I coveted the land. I coveted the peace and quiet, the story of the farm, the stands of hackberry and white oak and cedar. I immediately wanted to move there. By this time I had found in Nashville a people to belong to—could this be the place? ...

Then about a year later, Mark called and said his neighbors had in fact decided to sell, at a price we just might be able to afford. ...

The catch was, the house was 25 percent smaller than our current one. And it wasn’t exactly pretty. The kitchen was literally the size of a walk-in closet and the décor wasn’t, shall we say, “aligned with Jamie’s taste.” But the building itself wasn’t what interested me. All I could see when I looked out the front window was that daydream of Skye’s pigtails bouncing through the meadow. (The boys probably weren’t in the daydream because they were busy building forts in the daydream woods.)

In the end, we went for it. Without knowing America was on the verge of the Great Recession, we sold our subdivision home for a tiny profit and bought a house in one of the last rural pockets of Davidson County. The day we moved in, Jamie cried. They weren’t happy tears, mind you. Our kids were growing by the minute, I was touring more or less constantly, and we had just done a very un-American thing: we had downsized. We had also down-styled. The old vinyl flooring was, well, old. One corner of the outdated carpet had been chewed up by the former owners’ cat. The kitchen, as I said, was miniscule. None of this would have been hard for her except that we had gotten used to the relative niceness of the subdivision house. “But look at the land,” I would say, encouragingly, with a grand sweep of my hand. Bless her heart, she took a deep breath and dug in. I love that woman.

“Can we please replace the carpet sooner rather than later?” she asked on the day we closed.

“Of course,” I said without really looking at how bad the carpet was. “We’ll get to it.” My mind was on cutting trails and building tree houses. I went out for a weekend of shows and came home to a shock. There was a pile of old carpet in the front yard. Jamie had singlehandedly torn it up and hauled it out with an iron will.

“Now. About that carpet,” she said with a smile. “Here are some choices for hardwood flooring.” Like I said, I love that woman. Without delay, she began making our house beautiful. And I started reclaiming the land. ...

Downsizing ain't easy, especially with three small children. ... But when the kids came in with skinned knees from climbing trees, or when the sun threw golden light at the hill in the late afternoon and we all went out to watch the clouds catch fire, or when we woke in the misty morning and walked the trails in Warren Wood and saw the kids’ tree forts quietly awaiting their return, or when we sat on the porch on warm nights and listened to the barred owls calling to each other from the dark branches, we knew we had chosen wisely. God had provided a place we could love, a place our grandchildren could love as much as our children did. About five years in, we were able to build an addition that made the inside as lovely as the outside—and once again it was because Jamie, too, had a picture in her mind, and did the hard, creative work of incarnating it.

I tell you all this because place matters.

Of course, not everyone can move to the country, nor should they. But wherever you are, you might as well go ahead and pull up the carpet.


Discussion: Do you relate to the need to belong, to a place and a people both? Do you have one or the other? neither? or both? In what ways can you "pull up the carpet" in the place where you live?

And back to the question at the top: What does this have to do with writing? Are writing and creative work the same thing? And what kinds of creative work matter if pulling up carpet and building rock walls matter?

Come talk to us in the forum about this stuff, or about anything else that's in your head after reading these two chapters. There's a lot to discuss. :-)

Adorning the Dark: Prompt 2

How is everyone doing at the end of our second week with this book? I really appreciate the good conversations happening in the forum. If you'd like to interact with and encourage other readers, there's a lot there to interact with and encourage. :-) I am thrilled to see that two people shared some of their art this week, also!

This weekend, let's let Andrew lead us on a scooter ride into a field, or a walk down a dusty road, and see what happens. Get out into nature, by yourself if you can. Find a walking path or bike trail near your house, or a natural area in town, or some other place outside, even your backyard. Stay out there long enough to relax. Touch things. Listen. Pay attention to what you hear and see and smell and feel. (And taste? Bring water with you.)

Then just write. Don't worry if it isn't perfect. Write what you feel, what comes to mind; your questions, a connection, or the sense of wonder in nature (or the lack of that sense; no pressure). Plant seeds on the paper. You can weed them later. You can even throw them away. The writing itself is worth doing.


Come on over to the forum if you want to share or to talk. :-) We'll read chapters 6-7 next week.

Adorning the Dark: Week 2

Welcome to week two of discussions on Andrew's nonfiction book about creativity and community! If you're just now joining us, you can find all the details here.


The idea struck and I couldn’t ignore it: What if there was a Christmas concert that was only about Jesus? What if it told a story? And what if it didn’t sound like your usual Christmas songs, but like the music I listened to the rest of the year? In other words, what if it sounded like Nashville, with dobros and hammered dulcimers and fiddles and folk singers, instead of Bing Crosby? Craziest of all, what if it happened at the Ryman?

High school Andrew would have been very surprised by all this. Back then I was way into rock and roll—everything from southern rock to hair metal. That may come as a surprise, given my folky vibe, but for years I listened to bands like Pink Floyd, Queensrÿche, Tesla, and Extreme. And each of those bands, in hindsight, had a direct influence on what was to become Behold the Lamb of God, because each of those bands released concept albums.

If you’re under twenty you may be wondering two things: (1) Who are those bands you mentioned? and (2) What’s a concept album? ...

The point is, all that stuff from high school is bubbling in the cauldron, and it floats to the surface in the most surprising ways. Even the stuff you’re embarrassed about isn’t beyond redemption.

In my case, I had to go to Bible College to complete the recipe that led to Behold the Lamb. My Old Testament professor always pointed out when Jesus showed up in the Hebrew Scriptures, whether in theme, theophany, prophecy, or foreshadowing. And though I’d grown up memorizing verses and listening to thousands of my dad’s sermons, it wasn’t until I was eighteen in that class that I realized Jesus is the center of it all. He holds the whole thing together. It was like God had written a concept album called the Bible, and I had finally realized what the story was. The story was Jesus. Everything clicked into place once I put him in the center. That’s why, at the Amy Grant concert, I envisioned an album that hearkened back to Pink Floyd and Extreme but sounded like the kind of music I actually made, and most important, was about the Savior I had come to know. Not only that, I immediately thought of the Ryman. Wouldn’t it be marvelous to sing those songs there, in the heart of this city I’d come to love?

I wrote “Gather ’Round, Ye Children, Come” back in early 2000 I think, and I told my manager Christie that I wanted to try a Christmas tour. No, I calmly explained, we wouldn’t be singing traditional Christmas songs. Yes, the songs would tell a story. No, there wouldn’t be speaking parts. No, the songs weren’t written just yet, but seriously, how hard could it be?

No joke, we started booking shows before the songs were written. ...

When the time finally came to record the album, we had done four tours. We had shaped the arrangements, figured out tempos, landed on harmonies, and tested it all on the road. But it wasn’t until Andrew Osenga, Ben Shive, and I were in a basement studio late one night that the remnant of Extreme finally bubbled to the surface in its hair-metal glory. Up to that point we had been ending the show with “Joy to the World,” and it worked, but I wanted to find a way to tie all the songs together somehow. We named the work track “Silent Majesty” as a joke (an obscure reference to Christmas Vacation), then came up with a chord progression and stacked lyrics from the key songs on top of one another until we found a cool way to build to the final, explosive reprise of, “Sing out with joy for the brave little boy who was God, but he made himself nothing.”

At last, my nerdy high school dreams had come true. It was a proper concept album. But my college dreams came true, too, because it was also a proper Bible album, unabashedly about the Israelites and the Incarnation. And my musician dreams came true because it had dobros and mandolins and dulcimers thrown in with the strings and electric guitars. Come to think of it, it answered my longing for a community because so many friends came together to make the record, and then tour it, and those friendships deepened and deepened over the years. “God, will you let me sing about you?” I asked when I was nineteen. In some ways, his answer was Behold the Lamb of God—which turned out to be so much more than I could have asked or imagined.

The whole thing has been such a gift. Not only did the Christmas tour carry my family through some really lean years, not only did it reset my heart’s compass to the true north of the gospel, it also gave me the great gift of friendship. It wasn’t so much generosity on my part that led to the community culture around this tour; it was necessity. There was simply no way I could pull off the concert alone. It had to be a community effort. And that led to the idea of the tour having the in-the-round component, which turned out to be one of the best things about it.

Each year we bring out a little slice of this sweet community of artists and musicians who genuinely love Jesus, and we tell his story. It hasn’t always been fun. Touring is hard. Our kids have never known a December where their papa was home. We miss plays, church concerts, Christmas parties. I miss Jamie and the kids, and I know they miss me. I’m sure the rest of the band feels the same. But it’s so very clear that this tour is a calling. How can I keep myself from singing? ...

Here’s the point. If I had waited until the songs were finished, this thing might never have happened. If I had merely tinkered with these songs for all the years it took to finally record them, chances are I would have moved on to other things and never given it a try. It wouldn’t have grown into what it was meant to be. You can think and plan and think some more, but none of that is half as important as doing something, however imperfect or incomplete it is. Intention trumps execution, remember? Sometimes you book the tour before the songs are written. Sometimes you stand at the altar and say “I do” without any clue how you and your wife are going to make it. Sometimes you move to Nashville with no money in the bank and no real prospects. Sometimes you start with nothing and hope it all works out. Not sometimes—every time. All you really have is your willingness to fail, coupled with the mountain of evidence that the Maker has never left nor forsaken you.


Discussion: What are some of the influences bubbling in your cauldron? What do you think Andrew means when he says "intention trumps execution"?

For more conversation, come over to the forum!

Adorning the Dark: Prompt 1

In this week's chapters of Adorning the Dark, we've been reading and talking about what keeps us from writing. Andrew's shared experiences of feeling tentative, like he has nothing to offer, like his efforts to create are gibberish. In the forum we've talked about feeling the same way, and about being nervous to share our work. And a few of us have been encouraged to think that we all have a quota of bad songs, and that there's value in writing those bad songs, too.

Today we're going to practice this together.

(Today also happens to be the first day of NaNoWriMo. I didn't plan that when making the schedule, but that program is a great way to get to work on your quota of bad writing, because there isn't time to second-guess or self-edit. ;-) You can check it out here.)

At the end of chapter 1, Andrew told us a story about Bach, about the way he would always start writing with a prayer: Jesu Juva, "Jesus, help!"

So, step one: Pick one of these prompts. (If you already have something in mind to write, skip the prompts and just write that.)

  • Write down (or ask someone else to write for you) 3-5 unrelated words.
  • Think about a smell. Any smell.
  • When you think of the word "home," what comes to mind?
  • Google "word of the day." (Merriam-Webster and Dictionary.com both do this.) See what today's word is and start there. (If you don't like today's word, you can use another dictionary's instead, or pick a word from a different day.)
  • What are you afraid of?

Step two: Take a minute. Close your eyes. Breathe in and out once or twice. Say that prayer: Jesu Juva. Jesus, help.

Then I took a deep breath, opened the guitar case, and leapt.

Step three: Start writing (or drawing, or painting). Believe that your Maker is proud of you.


If you'd like to share what you're writing, come on over to the forum. You sure don't have to share. :-) Writing is the first step. Meanwhile, let's keep our conversations going.

Next week: Chapters 4-5.

Adorning the Dark; Hollows Guild quiz

Andrew's new book on creativity and community released last Tuesday, and I know many of you preordered and have already begun reading! I couldn't wait to read it, either. :-)

If don't have a copy yet and are curious about the book, here's a video from Andrew:

https://www.facebook.com/andrewpetersonmusic/videos/917350728646966/

So how's this book club going to work?

Each Monday I'll post an excerpt from that week's reading. You can read in advance of Monday, or use that excerpt to lead you into the reading, either way. I'll include a discussion-starter or two, and then we'll just charge in together to talk about anything the book is saying to us, both right there in the post comments and in a section of the forum I'll set up just for this book.

Since this book is meant to encourage readers in their own creative work, why don't we also practice some of that work together? After we've spent the week discussing, every Friday I'll post a creative prompt, and we'll just see where that goes. I hope it's empowering and fun to dig into this stuff together. :-)

The book club will officially start October 28, next Monday, so hopefully by then everyone will have their copy (even if you're ordering right after reading this). Here's the schedule for discussions:

October 28: Prologue through Chapter 3
November 4: Chapters 4-5
November 11: Chapters 6-7
November 18: Chapters 8-9
November 25: Chapters 10-11
December 2: Chapters 12-13
December 9: Chapters 14-15
December 16: Chapter 16 and Afterword

And! Here's a sample chapter! Just click here and scroll down a bit. You can buy the book at B&H's website (that's the publisher), at Amazon, at Barnes & Noble, or at the Rabbit Room. It's also available on Kindle. (If you buy before Oct. 22 (tomorrow!), go here for a free song download!)


p.s. Next week we'll finally unveil the long-awaited book club kit for The Monster in the Hollows! Do you know what Guild you're in? If not, now's a great time to take this quiz, sent to us by a reader named Katie. Her mom created it for a Wingfeather-themed birthday party. :-)

An excerpt from Adorning the Dark

[The following is reposted from the Rabbit Room, where you can read a much longer excerpt.]

You mumble a phrase. It’s gibberish, but it suggests a melody. You’ve gotten melodies in your head before, but this one feels different, like it’s made of something stronger and older. You notice this because you’re able to repeat it, and you like it, and you sing it again and again, enough times that you pull out your phone and record it. As soon as you get it down, you forget about it and move on.

Skip ahead a few days. Now you have your guitar in your lap. Fear and self-doubt are taunting ghosts at either shoulder. You try to find some combination of chords that doesn’t sound like everything else you’ve ever played, or everything everyone else has ever played. But after twenty minutes you’re sick of yourself and your guitar and the weather and your lack of talent. Then with a thrill of hope you remember that voicemail message you left yourself in the moment of mumbled inspiration. You listen to the voicemail, and you’re disappointed. It’s not terrible, but it’s missing whatever magic it had before. With nothing else to do, you try and find the chords that the mumbling melody wants. You play it through on the guitar a few times in standard tuning, key of G—the same four chords you learned when you were in eighth grade. Then you capo it up and try it with a different voicing. You happen upon a little pull-off with your index finger, a slightly different way of playing the same old chord. That sparks a melody that suits the gibberish a little better, and like a dying man in the desert who discovers a cactus, you get just enough juice to keep crawling. “O God,” you pray, “I’m so small and the universe is so big. What can I possibly say? What can I add to this explosion of glory? My mind is slow and unsteady, my heart is twisted and tired, my hands are smudged with sin. I have nothing—nothing—to offer.”

Write about that.

“What do you mean?”

Write about your smallness. Write about your sin, your heart, your inability to say anything worth saying. Watch what happens.

And so, with a deep breath, you strum the chords again...

Andrew's first foray into nonfiction, Adorning the Dark, a book about the interweaving of faith, community, and creative work, releases October 15. We'll be hosting book discussions here at the Great Library starting October 28. If you'd like to participate, you can preorder your copy right here. For a free download of a new song featured in the book, click here once you've preordered.