Hitting a Wall Writing?
Writing can be so frustrating. You start out with a brilliant idea, and you fling yourself into it with abandon. And you write up a storm. And after a while...
Jim C. Hines says exactly what I feel. Happens to me every damn time. Here's what he wrote:
I decided to talk about that part in my process where the novelty and shininess has worn off, and I realize my outline is broken, and suddenly it feels like the story is crumbling in my hands, and what was I even thinking???All I can say is, Amen to that. And to everyone doing this year's NaNoWriMo, good luck, and write on!
It happens with pretty much every book I write, usually around 1/4 to 1/3 of the way through the first draft.
Here’s an excerpt from the pep talk:
This is the time in Jim’s writing process where, like Charlie Brown kicking at that elusive football, I lose my footing and end up flat on my back, staring into the sky and wondering what the heck just happened.
My shiny new idea isn’t quite so shiny anymore. I’ve gotten lots of words down, but they don’t exactly match what I was imagining. And this next part of the outline doesn’t make any sense at all, now that I think about it more closely. Good grief, the Jim who was outlining this thing last month is an idiot. And now I have to fix his mess.
Everyone’s writing process is different, of course. You might zip through the entire month with never a doubt, never a stumble. (In which case I hate you a little bit.) But most of the writers I know, beginners and pros, hit a point at least once in every project, sometimes more, where everything feels like it’s falling apart.
[Read the rest on Jim’s blog. Or the longer version here.]
1 Comments:
I read something the other day that said writers block isn't the lack of anything to write, but the inability to have any belief if your ideas! I think that changes the issue a little bit.
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