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ML-Larson β€” Being a Writer
Published: 2010-11-30 02:18:06 +0000 UTC; Views: 15255; Favourites: 465; Downloads: 78
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Description On Why Being a Writer is Neither Glamorous nor Exciting

If you watch the blogs and various sites around the internet about writing, you've probably seen at least one list that details a few universal truths about writers, but they all pretty much boil down to several actual truths.

All writers write.
All writers procrastinate.
Writers don't actually write, because we spend all our time doing something else.

This probably explains why, in the dark hours of one of the very last days of NaNoWriMo, I'm sitting here writing this, when my NaNo is sitting in another window with a pathetic 31.8k words.

Will I finish by 11:59pm tomorrow? Probably not. Do I care? Not particularly, although I'm sure that there's probably some part of my brain, which has been hardwired in a certain way that will start seriously freaking out sometime around 5:00pm tomorrow night.

Why am I so far behind, you ask? Simple. I told myself that I was not going to do NaNo this year. I haven't written anything since February, because I haven't been able to find any inspiration. Clearly, I make a habit of lying to myself, since sometime on the 7th, I decided to do NaNo this year.

Mistake number one.

My NaNo did something this year which I generally try to avoid when I write; I got an idea, and I ran with it.

Mistake number two.

The problem with just taking an idea and running with it, at least for me, is that it tends to snowball to frightening proportions. Somewhere, my NaNo went from being a silly little thing about time travel to using concepts like hyperspace, time travel, and relativity to mercilessly make fun of the way such concepts are blatantly ignored in most science fiction. Eventually, other ideas got tacked on as well. At a friend's suggestion, I watched Survivors, a BBC drama about the last 1% of the human population after a virulent evil hyper-flu comes just short of wiping out the human race.

Some aspects of these sorts of shows and films bother me, and those bits that bothered me have now become an entire subplot about how a race whose planet was nearly devastated suffered terrible consequences when they tried to rebuild their population, owing to a monogamous lifestyle throughout the entire culture.

It wasn't until I was about 10k in that I realised that I seriously needed to do an outline for this thing, before it swallowed my soul.

There are other things that have wiggled their way in as well, like convergent evolution, and an almost obsessive need to use actual stars and constellations in the world building process.

Mistake number three.

These points are not why I am terribly behind and simply not caring. The reasons why I am terribly behind and simply not caring are because of the research, fact-checking, and general link surfing that goes into making sure I actually understand what I'm writing about before I write it.

Or so, that's what I tell myself.

I've spent a lot of this month doing hideously complicated sums, working out problems with genetics, and reverse engineering hyperspace drives. I've probably spent more time doing this than I have writing. But even this pales in comparison to everything else I've done.

Writing anything, terribly complicated or not, is not as simple as just sitting down to put digital words on a digital piece of paper, though. I know there are some people out there who can just throw words down, and consider it good. I'm quite the opposite. I'll spend sometimes several hours on one single paragraph – spirit of NaNo be damned – trying to work out the best way in which certain words fit together. Especially in fiction, I tend to believe that the cadence of the narration does everything to set the tone for the entire story.* If the narration can't construct a sentence that flows in an aurally-pleasing way, then everything else just seems to fall flat. Sometimes, I'll get a few words down, decide that I don't like them, and in fixing them will also wipe out half of the page that I'd already written in an effort to make the words fit together better. This morning, I realised that a line by one of my characters didn't quite scan as well as I'd thought it did last night. In fixing that line, I wound up changing half of the scene. Whether I lost or gained words from it, I'm not actually sure, but the scene reads so much better now than it did last night.

And it's this constant niggling with words that gets me hung up. I cannot write out of order. I don't understand how people can do it, either. If this bit is not perfect, then I simply cannot move onto the next bit.

It's this trying to move on that takes up most of my writing time. I'll be sitting here, at my computer, trying to figure out what to do next. My heroes have stolen the space ship, they're in a low orbit around the planet, and... what? I don't know. Even with my outlines, which are at best just neurotic dot point lists, I still have issues filling in the gaps between points A and B. It's not the points that get me stuck, but the details between them.

Since my computer is not near my window, looking out it is not a viable option. I have arranged my workspace like this intentionally. Since I'm usually doing most of my work after the sun goes down, I inevitably wind up staring out my window at the stars for hours if my computer is next to it. So, I'm on the complete opposite side of the room.

I'm very particular about my environment when I write. The lighting has to be perfect. The sounds around me have to be perfect. Bob Dylan is great for writing, but sometimes, I might require endless hours worth of remixes of the Doctor Who theme tune. And often times, I seem to take quite a long time to figure out just what music I need for writing.

And even then, my words still don't like to come to me. I recently had to work out the problem of getting two characters to meet up, when these two characters have already been established to be on opposite ends of the Galaxy. This, I decided, was a two tuna sandwich problem. So that's exactly what I got up and made; two tuna sandwiches, on white bread, with pickles and Miracle Whip, which I ate whilst staring at my screen saver. By the time I had actually worked out this problem, I'd had four more tuna sandwiches, three baths, a litre and a half of orange squash, had stood outside and stared up at the sky until I could no longer feel my fingers, and had gone to the shop for a bag of crisps and some more orange squash. And that was the sum total of my work that night.

If I get really stuck on something, I'll do something really drastic, like clean the kitchen or do the hoovering. You can always tell when I'm having a crisis of words, because my hair is amazing, and my flat is spotless.

Right now, I'm halfway there. My flat's kind of a disaster, but my hair has never looked better.

And that's what writers do. Writers everywhere will always be just like every other writer out there, because we're always finding new ways to not write the next bit. No matter how much we say we want to write it, that next bit just never seems to get written because we're too busy making sandwiches and having baths to actually get anything done.


*To really understand what I'm on about, read Sock by Penn Jillette. It's a murder mystery, as told from the point of view by a foul-mouthed sock monkey who is way too much into popular culture.
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Comments: 218

Racingalien3 [2014-11-11 03:01:28 +0000 UTC]

*looks around guiltily...*
(heh... I should probably get back to writing (...or sketching...) instead of being on deviantART... *sighs*)
really awesome!
can be pretty similar for sketching too... & for writing songs.......& pretty much anything creative....

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RainbowFay [2014-06-17 01:34:58 +0000 UTC]

What does NaNo and NaNoWriMo stand for? I don't get what they mean. But I'd appreciate it if you would give me the answers. By the way, I understand your title called Being A Writer. It's hard for me too and I don't like that they are many lousy writers who lack the things they aren't suppose to lack. Even some writers write some very stupid stories that really don't make sense and that's what I hate most.

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JPG816 [2013-10-07 11:57:20 +0000 UTC]

As much as I hate to say that this is accurate...

...It's accurate, I got nothin'. Different hang ups, same dilemma.

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briarscottlynn [2013-08-26 04:49:06 +0000 UTC]

Well said!

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Momojiro [2013-03-13 13:54:07 +0000 UTC]

Relatable to the T. Excellent.

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raspil [2012-11-14 02:36:55 +0000 UTC]

Writers everywhere will always be just like every other writer out there

come on, now. we're all different people, you know that. you had me up until that generalization.

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summersun4235 [2012-09-18 01:55:49 +0000 UTC]

I could not agree more ._. I CANNOT stand when the mood is not set right with my words. If the words I have written don't flow rhythmically within the paragraph, and their meaning doesn't fit the mood, I officially hate that paragraph. And the music I listen to has a lot to do with what I'm writing. If it's upbeat, my character is spunky, happy, sometimes even just plain weird. If the music is slow, my character is sad. I always have to coordinate what I'm listening to with what I'm writing.
And procrastinating!! It's really sad how I will tell myself that I will write SO much that day, and end up getting NOTHING done >.<

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girlwhowrites [2012-08-11 00:11:55 +0000 UTC]

Thank God, I'm not the only one.

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confidenceAlive [2012-07-19 19:25:57 +0000 UTC]

One word: Ditto!

I rather enjoyed this!

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TheMarcelo [2012-05-29 07:34:35 +0000 UTC]

Pretty much sums it up! I had a grin going the whole read.

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DorianHerestor [2012-04-24 19:46:44 +0000 UTC]

Wow.
Story of my life in a few hundred words...
Although it is strangely encouraging to find that I'm not the only one to whom those things happen, who procrastinates epically when it comes to writing and who changes everything on a story just because I didn't like a paragraph. Really, you just discribed my life for the past three years perfectly, so don't worry, you are not alone!

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Draikar [2012-03-18 04:38:24 +0000 UTC]

I know how you feel.

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hhiste [2011-12-13 00:34:54 +0000 UTC]

Oof.
I can come up with one thing that probably sucks even more than the enumerated ones above: it's the fact that I haven't even tried, and I've given up.

Well, sort of. My problem is that ideas come to me in discrete little packages and, like a horror-movie butcher, I hack them to pieces immediately. Nothing ever seems good enough to put down. Everything dies ASAP.

Then, I never get to the research stage--much less the planning stage. Or the writing stage.

There's low confidence. There's incompetence as a writer. And then there's me, that blend of almost-can-do-but-doesn't.

Egh. I digress.

Thank you for sharing your experiences, Mae-Jay. Your essay really rings true to me: partly out of what little personal experience I have, and then partly for the things I've read (Gaiman does this sort of thing as well ). It was wonderful to read such honest words from a fellow-but-senior writer, and I am glad you are on Deviantart to share.

Happy writing. Or, if you prefer, good sandwich making, bathing, and some typing to you.

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ChikaraTheWolf [2011-12-06 08:31:08 +0000 UTC]

THIS. This is the PERFECT description. This is why I can never get an essay done. This is why I write so slowly that by the time I've figured enough out to write a freaking epic, I've already started to lose interest. This is why I decided that I only write for me and no one else, because I'm the only one I can please with my habitual hiatuses. This is WHY!
You have managed to take every nitpicky thing that frustrates me as a writer and an artist and a student, and put it into a thorough explanation. You've put my irritation into words in a clear, concise manner, and for this I applaud you. I find it comforting that you comprehend my aggravation despite the fact that we have never met or spoken. Thank you.

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maSqueKawon [2011-11-09 15:10:42 +0000 UTC]

ThatΒ΄s really interesting visual angle of being a writer .))

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Eatfoodzap [2011-11-05 05:05:08 +0000 UTC]

So this is absolutely amazing. Not only is it snarky and hilarious, but it's also strangely motivational! And since I'm right in the middle of NaNo right now, I should probably go read that book that I've been putting off for a while.

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elemental-heiress [2011-11-05 04:26:34 +0000 UTC]

I agree completely! Except the fact that I'm a writer who often works backwards to forwards so to speak. When I write I normally know how I want the story to end and I've not a clue how to begin it. Or I'll be in the midst of one chapter and decide I absolutely need to write a later chapter right now. Either way, writers are odd and predictable creatures aren't we? ^^

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notepadgirl [2011-10-29 21:22:06 +0000 UTC]

Very motivational, indeed, thanks.XD

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dadona777 [2011-10-27 07:12:49 +0000 UTC]

omg

this is so true

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88pixiegirl88 [2011-10-27 07:00:45 +0000 UTC]

So freaking true..... sandwiches and baths and stargazing and Bob Dylan and editing and everything else.... Being a writer is so hard sometimes.

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vandalised [2011-10-27 06:53:29 +0000 UTC]

You have no idea how inspiring this is to me, I signed up for Nano this year for the first time, and was full of inspiration and excitement, then yesterday, cold feet syndrome hit me, and now my main characters keep whispering "Why?" and threatening to go off and abandon me!.
I needed to read how difficult it is to keep a hold of an idea for 50,000 words, thanks.

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jadesfires [2011-10-27 06:51:09 +0000 UTC]

I have never attempted NaNoWriMo, but this is me all the time. I crave quiet and alone time so I can write, be it poetry or any of my other projects, and once I get it I generally use it up worrying about music and environment and food. And at the end of it all, I rarely ever accomplish anything *sigh* And I know what you mean about writing in order and not being able to move on until what you're working on is perfect. It screws everything else up if you have to go back later and fix it. The down side is that it lends itself to writer's block and even more procrastination *sigh* Great piece; thanks for sharing it!

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fireweed15 [2011-10-27 06:05:55 +0000 UTC]

This is me when I write... pretty much anything, NaNoWriMo included. xD Congrats on the DD!

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ladyAlyafaelyn [2011-10-27 05:49:49 +0000 UTC]

This is so very true; I cannot even describe. Thank you for letting me know I'm not alone. Seriously.

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Kotrebo [2011-10-27 05:35:25 +0000 UTC]

I'm feelin' you on this 100% >_<#

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misamattnmello [2011-10-27 05:12:06 +0000 UTC]

This is what writing is so much like to me. I constantly agonize over a paragraph while my boyfriend spews out a novel in a few months. So we've taken to me being a cowriter and someone who edits because it's what I'm good at.

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Gendreavus [2011-10-27 04:42:37 +0000 UTC]

Funny that I would come across this as I'm trying to write a story that should be up by the end of the day, and that definitely won't be up by the end of the day because I'm spending far too much time doing research and fixing sandwiches to do any real writing.

Personally though, I can't write to anything with lyrics. I just end up singing along, and that's not helpful for anything. My Instrumental playlist always gets a good amount of playtime when it comes time to write. It's almost entirely taken over my 100 Most Played list...>_>;

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nastwich [2011-10-27 04:34:58 +0000 UTC]

This is so gloriously accurate, but so well constructed. It's something that I think any dedicated or beginning writer can really really connect with. I love itttt.

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Shukumei-dessy [2011-10-27 04:20:42 +0000 UTC]

I think it would be interesting to see how many people stumbled upon your writing of procrastinating while procrastinating their writing (as I am also doing). I do so much research it quit being funny when it took me all day to write half a page for an academic paper.

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Airborne-Penguins [2011-10-27 03:51:27 +0000 UTC]

XD Lol. I like this a lot. :3

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CatOfManyWhiskers [2011-10-27 03:51:11 +0000 UTC]

I love this. Great job. I just joined NaNoWriMo myself and I totally understand. That's really all I can say, unless you want a two-page comment.

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BalunStormhands [2011-10-27 03:32:30 +0000 UTC]

So true sometimes.

But then there are those minutes and hours, when the vast creative power of the universe flows through our veins, and the magic really happens.

It doesn't look glamourous or exciting, but it feels so good those things just don't matter.

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AddoPluvia [2011-10-27 03:15:47 +0000 UTC]

Yes. Very yes. I can't even begin to count all the hours I have sat down with texts on siege warfare and ancient weaponry, trying to understand soldiers and men of that time; to make my characters into real people. The work I put into the research greatly overshadows that of the actual time writing.

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anonymous771 [2011-10-27 02:42:45 +0000 UTC]

Oh... my... gosh... this is ME to a TEA!!!!! I do ALL of this EVERY SINGLE TIME I WRITE! I can't begin to COMPREHEND how people just throw words together and call it literature, I try to rewrite one sentence, make it flow off the tongue better while still be visually appealing, and wind up rewriting an ENTIRE scene which I had not purposely intended to do! I pitter around on my computer all day, telling myself I'm going to write, have my writing program OPEN to the chapter I'm working on, while watching AMVs on Youtube, and listening to the same song for the fifteenth time. Aaaaaand~ about three days or so later, I FINALLY get that pesky little paragraph done, then realize, "You know, this doesn't really fit," then wind up just totally deleting it. I've been working on the same story for about four years now, not even past the single digits chapter-wise... it's kind of reassuring knowing that I'm truly not the only one that does this, thank-you Mae-Jay, I am exceedingly grateful that you wrote this ~
(Believe it or not, I'm actually in the middle of writing right now lol XP)

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Ankherite [2011-10-27 02:39:22 +0000 UTC]

god this is the most asshole thing ive ever read can you just sit down??? in front of a mirror??? and punch yourself???????

"I've spent a lot of this month doing hideously complicated sums, working out problems with genetics, and reverse engineering hyperspace drives."

GOD just


stop

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fireweed15 In reply to Ankherite [2011-10-27 06:05:15 +0000 UTC]

Who held the gun to your head and made you read it?

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Ankherite In reply to fireweed15 [2011-10-28 07:38:36 +0000 UTC]

haha HA oh my goodddddddness wow i hope you go up to people in real life and ask them shit like this

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fireweed15 In reply to Ankherite [2011-10-28 15:43:12 +0000 UTC]

If it's appropriate, yeah, I'd ask someone that.

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dietcocaine In reply to Ankherite [2011-10-27 04:04:28 +0000 UTC]

Oh, boo freaking hoo.

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Ankherite In reply to dietcocaine [2011-10-28 07:39:12 +0000 UTC]

LMAO what is this UH OH i just done got TOLD...OFF.....

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dietcocaine In reply to Ankherite [2011-10-29 00:50:31 +0000 UTC]

:\

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ATrue In reply to Ankherite [2011-10-27 02:42:33 +0000 UTC]

are you joking? or serious?

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Kaejii [2011-10-27 02:31:32 +0000 UTC]

YES! Finally someone who understands! This is totally me from start to finish!

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songdawg [2011-10-27 02:07:06 +0000 UTC]

Oh, yes! It is good to hear from someone else who cannot write paragraph 3455 until 3454 is just right.

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NothingYouCouldLove [2011-10-27 02:02:24 +0000 UTC]

This is very true. I try to write something everyday just to update on here, but I'm constantly distracted. Earlier it was by having to go shopping with my mother - I normally still try to write on my cell phone, but that didn't happen - and right now, I am both commenting on this and watching South Park instead. This totally deserves the DD.

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kiramaru7 [2011-10-27 01:43:48 +0000 UTC]

Truer words never spoken as they say... or written! I can so relate to this! *thinks about the stuff I should be working on instead of looking around DA*

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sk958 [2011-10-27 01:42:59 +0000 UTC]

I'm not really sure what Nano is but this is really interesting and pretty much explains writing right off the bat

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DNA-The-Authoress [2011-10-27 01:35:17 +0000 UTC]

Oh my word.... This is SO true! XD Every line I read I laugh and shake my head because I see myself. Except for the eating and looking nice part. Those never quite happen. XD I'm actually using this to aid procrastinating on my bio poster, four[?] fanfiction stories, and two art requests for the trade I put out over a month ago. And don't get me started on the pile of original works grumbling in annoyance as they sit uselessly in my thumb drive or the list of 20-ish comic ideas. XD

This is pure genius from beginning to end.

And curse dA's hate for interesting titles.

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DNA-The-Authoress In reply to DNA-The-Authoress [2011-10-27 01:45:59 +0000 UTC]

P.S. I'm one of those people who has a really difficult time writing in order. I didn't even use outlines until I began working with my co-writer, who sat me down and had me help her with an outline, which is helping us greatly... except we've gotten to the part that says "Fill in more events as we come up with them." We haven't come up with anything for a few months.... DX
But the result of NOT using an outline or going in chronological order is several horribly written scenes that you're glad you can't use and a few decent to well-written scenes that you're upset that you can't use, and then you decide that you simply MUST use them so then you try to start forming a story to go around them... Yeah... if my two other friends/co-writers didn't write chronologically we'd all be doomed. XD

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DNA-The-Authoress In reply to DNA-The-Authoress [2011-10-27 01:47:31 +0000 UTC]

P.P.S. The whole reason why I commented in the first place was to ask what NaNoWriMo is! XD

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