“When we surrender our weapons, our true writing and our true selves begin to emerge in our lives and on the page in a way that is brave, beautiful …”

Valley Haggard is one of her hometown’s best-loved heroines, both for her own writing and for the programs she’s founded to help others find their voices as new writers. Broad Street is proud to claim her as a contributor to our summer 2018 “Small Things, Partial Cures” issue, available now on iBooks and soon in hard copies.

July 26, 2018, saw the launch of Valley’s second book,  Surrender  Your Weapons, a collection of her memoirs about trauma and healing, commingled with tips and reflections for new writers.  

She describes the book on her website:

Of all the lessons I’ve needed to learn as a writer and a human being, “Surrender Your Weapons”  resurfaces most. Weapons take many forms and manifestations, many of which we wield against ourselves. Judgment, comparison, impossible expectations, perfectionism, doubt, insecurity, destructive behavior, self-sabotage.

Surrender Your Weapons began as the first rule of  The Halfway House for Writers [Valley’s first book, a how-to for emerging authors] and grew until it became a book all its own. When we surrender our weapons, our true writing and our true selves begin to emerge in our lives and on the page in a way that is brave, beautiful, and true.

Surrender Your Weapons is a marriage of selections from my own memoir and a guide for writing, exploring themes and threads that have emerged classes, workshops, and retreats. It is a guide for writing your story while showing you how I wrote mine. I hope that you, like me, find healing along the way. 

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Dig into an excerpt:

When Our Writing Begins

After my mother saw me swinging a chain on the playground to protect myself from the kids who threatened to beat me upside the head, she moved me to another elementary school across town. I carried a bear-handled knife traveling with my girlfriend across Eastern Europe alone. I’ve scratched, bitten, and hit when I thought I had to. But my best defense has always been my tongue. Sharp, cutting, and deadly words that know where to strike.

For several years I was involved in an online sado-masochistic affair. Words were the currency of our weapons and whips. The only way I could begin to repair the psychic damage done was to step out of the ring altogether. I could no longer win or lose. I had to surrender.

I quit drinking, doing drugs, and smoking. Addiction was a war I couldn’t win. I had to surrender.

I’ve berated myself as a writer, letting the inner critic dictate subject, pace, tempo, line, and language. The inner critic who said I’d never be a real writer, never be good enough, would never measure up. That was a war I couldn’t win. I had to surrender.

When we come to the page it is best we lay down the weapons we hold against ourselves. Shame, secrecy, perfectionism, the violence of self-loathing. Each of these will kill our creativity, damage our self-worth, violate the truth of who we are. Maybe not all at once, but eventually. Slow death by a thousand cuts.

We each have our own power, beauty, strength, and vulnerability to own. We can arrive on the page of our stories without apology, without allowing anyone, including ourselves, to hold us down.

When we surrender to the page, to the process, to the great world of the heart and the spirit that writing inhabits, this is when our writing is able to begin.

We don’t have to fight what comes. We just have to let it.

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As a passionate advocate for the power of storytelling to heal (partially or wholly), Valley has created two workshop programs to help other writers.  Life in 10 Minutes, a brief-memoir program and online literary magazine, has yielded one multi-author print anthology and many fans … and is soon to publish a second volume.

She also founded Richmond Young Writers, with workshops for all pre-college ages, offering courses and “camps” in character and world building, plotting, and other aspects of getting words on the page.

Along with her own book, Valley has embarked on another adventure: Life in 10 Minutes Press–a.k.a. L10 Press–a new publisher of memoirs and creative nonfiction.  Read about the next anthology in this article from Richmond’s Style magazine, 24 July 2018.

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Valley’s contribution to Broad Street’s “Small Things, Partial Cures” was “The Body, in Parts,” a memoir that responds to her mother’s observation that “Your body is not a thank-you note.” It’s accompanied by portraits of Valley and her body by Susan Singer and Mary Chiaramonte.

Your body is not a thank-you note, my mother wrote to me in a card when I was in Alaska, half in love with the captain of the fleet, half in love with the deaf deckhand teaching me American Sign. Half dead, half drunk, half sober, half crazy…. Oh, but it was. It had been. It has also been my passport, my license, my excuse, and getaway car before it became a grave, a temple, a tombstone. My body has been a deadweight lump of unformed clay that I’ve kneaded and rolled and tried to shape, full of hidden treasure I’ve been desperate to find and spend. I’ve thrown it at strangers, hidden it from my husband, given it like a shield of flesh, an orchard of sustenance, a playground to my son.

Image: “Valley’s Folds,” by Susan Singer, shows history written on the author’s body.

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Find out more about Valley and her approach to telling the truth–and get a few boosts for your own memoirs–in her Spotlight Interview here. 

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Praise for Surrender Your Weapons

“Part memoir, and part how-to, Surrender Your Weapons is like a hug from an encouraging best friend who believes in you wholeheartedly and wants you to live your best, most authentic, most creative life now. For anyone who knows the words are inside (or hopes they are) and needs some help guiding them towards the light — this is your book.”

—Anne Soffee, author of Snake Hips: Belly Dancing and How I Found True Love and Nerd Girl Rocks Paradise City

 

“By sharing her stories, truths and wisdom, Valley Haggard’s new book Surrender Your Weapons: Writing to Heal, compels us to put our own stories down on paper. Addictively readable, the book is partly instructional, wholly autobiographical and generously inspirational. I will reread this book when I need a simultaneous hug and kick in the rear as a writer. I will recommend it to every writer I know. Valley Haggard’s book is the coolest, edgiest and most encouraging writing book I’ve had the honor of reading.”

—Michele Young-Stone, author of Lost in the Beehive, Above Us Only Sky, and The Handbook for Lightning Strike Survivors

 

“Whether you write for therapy, literary prestige, fun, or a combination, you can find something in Valley Haggard’s Surrender Your Weapons to catalyze your process. Haggard’s writing will make you laugh out loud, jump up and down in joy and in terror, then turn to your own writing via both overt and covert prompts. Students, individual writers, and teachers will love this book as it offers examples of brave story telling, brilliant moments of writing advice, and sage reflection on the process. I cannot wait to run this through my writing courses next year. Every writer, every teacher of writing, every human needs this book.”

—Dr. Cindy Cunningham, Dpt. Chair of English and Director of Literary Arts at Appomattox Regional Governor’s School

 

“Valley Haggard writes her heart out (and back in!) as she leads the way to help us heal ourselves in her new book. Surrender Your Weapons is part memoir, part writing guide and all the vulnerable generous genius healing spirit Valley embodies on the page. She has distilled her fierce generosity as a teacher between the pages. My clients will see themselves and heal themselves as they read this book.”

—Camille Adams, LPC, Psychotherapist

 

 

True stories, honestly.