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	<title>Unstressed &#187; writing process</title>
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		<title>Method.</title>
		<link>http://linebreak.org/blog/2008/09/18/method/</link>
		<comments>http://linebreak.org/blog/2008/09/18/method/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Sep 2008 17:07:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandra Beasley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[readings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[travel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[writing process]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I am writing this in the Method Tea House, located in Atlanta; I&#8217;ll be reading at Emory later tonight as part of Bruce Covey&#8217;s What&#8217;s New in Poetry Series. I am trying to ignore the fact that the guy behind the counter is reading my book. 
This place has only been open a month, and it [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am writing this in the Method Tea House, located in Atlanta; I&#8217;ll be reading at Emory later tonight as part of Bruce Covey&#8217;s What&#8217;s New in Poetry Series. I am trying to ignore the fact that the guy behind the counter is reading my book. </p>
<p>This place has only been open a month, and it has that incredible young-business-owner vibe. Everything is sleek and polished, cool but mellow. They steep everything on the spot, by hand. No blenders, no high-fructose syrups. They fold shapes into the cappuccino foam. They are proud that each of their three international coffees came from a particular farmer in a particular field. They don&#8217;t mind that I&#8217;m sitting here for hours, writing away, nursing a pot to tea refilled four times over. &#8220;That will be three-hundred-and-twenty-one pennies,&#8221; the guy said, ringing up my order. And when I bashfully admitted that the poster on the community bulletin board was advertising&#8230;me (I haven&#8217;t gotten over the gee-whiz of that), he asked for my take on James Dickey and Lawrence Ferlinghetti.</p>
<p>I should probably be in on the MARTA train right now, making my way downtown to the High Museum or Art, or the Aquarium. In the theoretical, these two-day trips for readings are a chance to play tourist; I&#8217;ve got no one&#8217;s whims to cater to but my own. But instead I find myself wanting to find a local coffee or teashop, hole up, and use the time for writing. Maybe this is how one really gets to know a city, one indie business at a time. Absorbing the accent, the style of dress, the little differences in how someone says &#8220;thank you&#8221; or &#8220;excuse me.&#8221; The legendary friendliness of Atlantans is no fiction. On the train from the airport, a woman spotted my suitcase and asked if I needed the phone numbers for local taxis. Twice I&#8217;ve waited in a line only to have the person in front of me spontaneously say &#8220;you go ahead.&#8221;</p>
<p>I won&#8217;t lie to you. I feel lucky today. I&#8217;m in a pretty southern city, getting paid to read poems tonight, sleeping in a hotel on someone else&#8217;s dime. I visited an undergrad workshop yesterday and spoke with some degree of (pseudo)authority about how a first book of poetry can make its way into the world. My editor just wrote to say that Allergic Living (that&#8217;s right, as seen on your doctor&#8217;s waiting room table) has a little review in their new issue, and a university has just written to ask if I will come visit this winter.</p>
<p>But good lord, the juggling. A childhood friend wrote to ask about having dinner, and I looked at my calendar only to realize that I&#8217;m totally tied up for the next month. Fourteen days of travel, three classroom visits, three readings. Like every other poet I am eyeing fall contest deadlines&#8211;the thing about the second book is, it is even harder to publish than the first&#8211;and I need to write two more pages of material to meet the page minimum for a September 30 deadline. I&#8217;m overdue on assigning book reviews at my day job as a magazine editor. I&#8217;m overdue on sending a column in to the Washington Post. I&#8217;m overdue on being a civil, sane human being to the people I love. So I feel lucky but also, overwhelmed. </p>
<p>Everyone needs a method to their madness. The guys at this shop take a simple, sloshy source of caffeine&#8211;something people burn, gulp, take for granted&#8211;and make it an art. So I am following their lead. Instead of hitting the &#8220;must-sees&#8221; of this city I am stopping to unfold my filter, heat my water to just the right temperature, and steep in the quiet of uninterrupted worktime. Wish me luck.</p>
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