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The Unexpected Shape Café

Public • 445 • Free

9 contributions to The Unexpected Shape Café
When We Were Seven substack
After a year of only posting to Instagram, I’ve turned my fascination with the age 7 into a Substack. I consider this my soft launch as I learn Substack’s various tools and how to crosspost on social media. I do this project as a fun mental break from the emotional intensity of writing memoir and personal essays. From this link https://open.substack.com/pub/whenwewereseven
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What are your main writing struggles right now?
I'd love to get to know you and your current work-in-progress! What's your current writing project, and what are your main struggles right now with that project? Struggles could be creative, could be life-related, could be body, mind, heart, soul — anything that's keeping you from making your envisioned progress.
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New comment Jul 29
2 likes • Jan 28
@Sayuri Ayers I’ve been occasionally pleased by my local library’s digital subscriptions to some journals and databases. Also, some colleges allow you to pay a fee for a non-student library access, which gets you access. I’ve also heard, but have never tried, that you can directly write to the author of the study/paper —- most are thrilled to share it for free as they don’t like the paywall situation much either because they don’t get that money anyway.
1 like • Jun 8
@Molly Dunn I can really relate to this! In 2020 I started writing a memoir project about a medical mystery I experienced from 2015-2020. Except it wasn’t really “over” in 2020; I hadn’t quite finished up treatment and I certainly hadn’t “processed” all that had happened in those years. I kept writing into 2021 and 2022 but those two years included both my kids moving to their own cities and my mother passing away. It all got jumbled up and at times the material about my illness was stale and boring for me. I have thoughts rather than advice (because I might be wrong!). I let myself write about my mom or kids or whatever when I needed to, when I was compelled to. I didn’t worry about it being “off topic.” It put some distance between the illness events and my reflecting on them, which was a good thing. By 2024, I am now sitting with either enough material for two memoirs or a memoir with a larger theme that relates to both sections of my life. Granted, the life events of 2021-2022 have obviously delayed whatever timeline for completion I had dreamt of in 2020. I do tend to get distracted and change new ideas without finishing old ones… because I get decision paralysis and it’s easier to do the fun bit of fresh creation than face down actually letting go of the writing (stopping editing and releasing my work into the wild is terrifying and while contrary to being a published writer, I still delay.)
Introductions ⭐
This is the introduction thread. Say hi, tell us where you’re from and what your writing is all about! In your introduction, answer these 4 questions: ➡️ What is your name (preferred pronouns as well, if you don't mind) ➡️ Why did you decide to join The Unexpected Shape Café? ➡️ What is your favorite book? ➡️ What are you interested in writing about? We can’t wait to meet you! If you'd like to share anything else as well, feel free! And welcome!
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New comment 9d ago
Introductions ⭐
3 likes • Jan 17
@Taylor Nunez Welcome! You’re in the right place. (I read your other post about neurodivergent.) I have bipolar2, rapid cycling, but that diagnosis has shifted a little once uncovering some preverbal PTSD. I’ve not sought out clarification on labels (I have behaviors of so many) but everywhere I go in life, I end up in the spaces with those who are neurodivergent because we just click. I’ve got recommendations for books written by people with bipolar—a poetry collections and a memoir, both for women of color (though not Latino). When I get back to my desk, I’ll post them.
2 likes • Jan 17
@Taylor Nunez I’m telling the truth but I’m lying by Bassey Ikpi (prose memoir) Bianca by Eugenia Leigh (poetry memoir) I will say that for me, I cannot read very many of the pieces in Bianca at one time. Particularly if I’m in a disoriented phase, not feeling grounded or safe…then I don’t read that one. I found that Ikpi’s story is more grounding… I can relate to that without feeling like my brain is spiraling. Ikpi is a poet and so it is more lyrical prose than traditional narrative and I really loved it. Hope you like them or at least find them reassuring in some way.
What are you reading?
Right now, I’m reading and rereading Astrid Parker Doesn’t Fail, which is a comfort read for me—a sapphic romance novel. It’s interesting to go outside of my usual genres; I never read romance novels until very recently. At the same time, I’m reading a forthcoming memoir by Morgan Parker. What are you reading, and how are you feeling/thinking about it?
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New comment Jun 3
3 likes • Jan 5
@Danne Jobin I am/was. Their app crashed the last time I tried it. Hopefully a good sign of more adopters.
1 like • Jan 15
My username is jensmiles3 - apps back up and fine. I’m happy they’ve gotten some attention. Amazon planned to let Goodreads die and it’s just a shame.
The daily pet thread
I thought it might be nice to have a daily pet thread. Here's Daphne, whom some of you might already know about. She's about 11 years old and an incredible sweetie (unless you're another dog or the USPS).
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New comment 25d ago
The daily pet thread
6 likes • Nov '23
Jack in his clingy-feed-me mood. (Featuring his brindle legs).
3 likes • Nov '23
@Patrick Lawlor He’s adorable and poses so nicely. Reminds me of our last cat, Tinsley.
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@jen-machajewski-5489
Writer and recovering child. Creative nonfiction and short stories while living with an overactive nervous system and ruminating mind.

Active 55d ago
Joined Nov 15, 2023
Texas
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