The
Bright Light Café Presents ...
Mark O'Hara
Biography
Photos
Poems
FREE eBook
When
were you born?
I was born in
April 29th 1984.
Where were you born and raised?
I was born in
Blackpool, a small town in the North West of England.
How has your up
bringing influence your writing?
I
consider myself to have had an excellent upbringing. My
father is a very strong headed individual with a good heart
and my mother is intelligent and creative. I was always
encouraged to find my ‘niche’ in life and confront
adversity, I guess the resilient nature of my father and
artistic temperament of my mother managed to manifest itself
into my psyche; resulting in what I think is an uplifting
and insightful style of poetry and writing.
Are you married?
If so, when and how did you meet?
I am
not married, but I will marry the lady I am with, Claire. We
met around 5 years ago. She owned a night club and I was
employed to control security. We developed a deep friendship
which then became a relationship and we have been dating for
18 months.
Have you any children?
We are expecting a baby girl on the 2nd February
2010. She will be named Emma O’Hara.
When did you first
start creatively writing and why? What prompted you to become a writer?
Initially I began writing as a way of stress relief. I was
working in New York and the situation became very stressful.
After two months of long hours and little reward I decided
to write my thoughts down rather than expressing what I
thought verbally. Having had great feedback from my work I
decided to compile it into book form and self publish the
final copy. Luckily I managed to sell a few hundred copies
locally and received more positive feedback from a broader
audience. This gave me the confidence to continue writing.
What is your favourite
book?
I
don’t have a particularly favourite book. If I am to choose
one I think Leonards Cohen’s – Book of longing would have to
be it. My girlfriend opened my eyes to Leonard and I haven’t
looked back since. His attention to detail when constructing
each line is phenomenal and the humour is subtle yet
sublime.
What is your favourite
poetry?
Again,
Leonard Cohen has pipped others to the post with ‘A thousand
kisses deep’. I adore the concept that something can be
loved to the depth of a thousand kisses. Having never been
truly in love until I met Claire and given that Claire
introduced me to this poem/song, I felt as if my level of
understanding deep love and this work crossed at the perfect
time.
Who
is your favourite writer?
More recently I have really taken a shine to ‘Buddy
Wakefield’. I was likened to Buddy by the kind folks at
‘Bright Light Café’. I really enjoy the way he captures a
single moment and projects it into the reader/listener mind.
His live performances are unbelievably uplifting.
What is your Favourite
song?
One of
my favourite songs would have to be ‘Meatloaf – For Crying
Out Loud’. The song captures a moment most people have
experienced, when your partner questions the love you have
for them. To which meatloaf replies ‘For crying out load,
you know I love you’ and recites the incidences that have
attributed to his growing love towards somebody he didn’t
realise was feeling neglected. It is a great illustration of
appreciation toward those that you love but often forget to
tell.
What are your Writing
goals?
I
would love to continue writing another poetry collection. I
really enjoyed the process and liken it to flexibility
training for my mind. I am currently finishing a book titled
‘If I give my two cents, will I get change?’. This is a self
development book where I attempt to express my thoughts on
aspects of success such as ‘adversity’, ‘teamwork’ and
‘ambition’. I also attempt to reverse engineer my previous
achievements in hope that I can apply the lessons to other
areas of my life.
What are your dream
and goals?
At 17
I made a list of goals I wished to achieve by 2012. They
included: Representing Scotland Rugby League, Gaining a
Diploma and an Honours Degree, Starting a credible business
and writing a well received book. I managed to achieve all
of these by 2010 plus a few additional bonuses such as a
baby daughter. I am currently looking to generate a new list
of goals but have yet to finalise anything. A few things
that will certainly appear on my forthcoming 5 year plan
are; propose to Claire, take Claire and Emma to America for
a holiday, write another poetry collection and buy a home. I
have a feeling that this list will be much larger than my
first.
What are your Hobbies?
I
enjoy exercising but have found it difficult lately due to a
number of commitments. Cooking has slowly crept in as one of
my favourite Sunday afternoon activities. I also enjoy
driving as odd as it sounds.
What is the writing
process like for you? Do
you sweat blood or do the words come easily? How many edits do you
normally do before you feel your work is completed?
When
it comes to writing I have to be free from potential
‘random’ noises such as the inconsistency of people speaking
on TV and outside disturbance. However, I have a playlist
that I can have on near full blast yet find that I can
concentrate without distracting myself, as I know exactly
what rhythm and word is coming next. I tend to find poetry
extremely easy to write, most of my work took less than 30
minutes to write from start to finish. The longer non
fiction work is another story, I often find myself writing
in small blocks then leaving it for a day or two. My first
book, ‘The Winners Monologue’ was the final product out of
no less than 13 previous edits. My poetry collection, ‘Life,
Love, Death’ endured around 4 and my final book, ‘If I give
my two cents, will I get change’ is looking at 4 or 5 edits
before being 100% complete.
Do you have an advice
for aspiring writers?
Don’t
write for fame or money; write because you believe in what
you are penning. Money and fame should only ever be a by
product of your work, not the reason for it. Don’t believe
that just because you haven’t been snapped up by a
publishing company or literary agent that your work is
worthless. Take the time to edit and fine tune your work,
there will be mistakes you have made. I cannot tell you how
many times I have constructed a better and more effective
sentence as a result of editing. My final piece of advice
would be to welcome constructive criticism with open arms –
Improve your strengths and strengthen your weaknesses.
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