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I'm not really sure what's causing this. The only thing I can chalk it up to is I simply don't know my characters as well as I knew Connor and Kate from The Outlaw Bride. Then again, I had the pleasure of hanging out with Connor and Kate for the better part of two years. Isabel and Devlin are fairly new acquaintances. And when I look at it that way, I realize I didn't really get to know Connor and Kate until the second draft, when their motivations became clearer, their personalities more revealed.
Still, knowing this wasn't helping the stuckedness I kept experiencing (that's a new medical term by the way). I would write a few pages and come to a dead halt. I wasn't feeling that surge of excitement about what was to happen next. I think part of it was fear of how I would make what was to happen next as exciting on the page as it was in my head.
So I turned to the old standby, the tried and true method that always seems to unplug my stopped up creative juices. It's like Drano for the muse. I switched to writing longhand. And as an aside, for those of you who like this method, might I suggest you pick up the legal sized Cambridge Jumbo Wirebound Office Pad. It has a thick cardboard back to it that makes writing on your lap a cinch. No more wobbly writing pad.
Anyway, me and my Cambridge Jumbo pad parked it on the couch yesterday morning and again today. Yesterday I spent rereading what I already had completed for chapter six. Good stuff, I thought, what's my problem? I liked what I had. Liked where the story was going. That eased my worry a bit. It's not the story that's the problem, it's just me. I got to work. I reviewed my outline and then wrote two legal pages. Then this morning I re-read yesterday's work and started in again with another 5 written pages. I could have kept going too, but I had hit the end of the chapter and I was almost out of time.
I don't know what it is about writing longhand that seems to free the muse. Maybe it's because I started writing longhand way back in junior high when my friend and I would spend countless hours after school scribbling stories with no end. Maybe because sometimes being at the computer makes it feel a little more like work than play. Maybe it's the flow of the pen that puts me in some kind of weird trance. I don't know. But whatever the reason, when I'm stuck, I always go back to the notepad and start scribbling. And inevitably it always seems to work.
6 comments:
Kelly - I know exactly what you mean about how writing longhand really frees up the muse. I have a notebook almost full of scenes from WTHR, scenes I wrote when I found that sitting at the computer just didn't work. Some of the best parts of that ms came from writing longhand.
Glad you find it's working for you too :-)
I like writing longhand, but it just kills my hands. I can write for hours at the keyboard, but not so long with a pen.
Is that notebook wired down the side, or across the top? I definately always look for a notebook with a strong cardboard on it.
The legal one is across the top, but the smaller version is wired down the side and also has the strong back to it.
I used to write longhand all the time in junior high and high school. Now my carpel tunnel prevents it. But I still can't turn to that method because I feel like I write so much better on the computer. My pen can't keep up with my thoughts and that isn't an issue with the keyboard.
Still, I do like to keep a handwritten journal. There's something about a very cool pen and a neat notebook that inspires me.
It's funny about my CTS - sometimes switching back and forth b/w longhand and typing seems to help. I guess it's the variety. And the mousemitts have helped a lot.
I'm on the fence about writing longhand. I can type galactically faster than I can handwrite, and when I type, my brain can just fly. When I handwrite, it forces me to slow down--not always a good thing. I'm still trying to figure out what works best for me. :)
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