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ML-LarsonBeing 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

Tisala In reply to ??? [2011-10-27 04:33:43 +0000 UTC]

National Novel Writing Month
[link]

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DNA-The-Authoress In reply to Tisala [2011-10-27 04:50:44 +0000 UTC]

Oh no... Oh, I should just look away now before I get involved with another project... XD Thanks for letting me know, though! ;D

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Tisala In reply to DNA-The-Authoress [2011-10-27 15:23:43 +0000 UTC]

lol
good luck if you decidde to do it

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DNA-The-Authoress In reply to Tisala [2011-10-28 00:19:28 +0000 UTC]

Thanks! I'd most certainly need it! XD

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Tisala In reply to DNA-The-Authoress [2011-10-28 01:34:02 +0000 UTC]

That time of year, I've given up even trying

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enteringmymind [2011-10-27 01:32:41 +0000 UTC]

Wow this is Awesome, thanks for writing the truth because there were so many things you addressed and I was like "whoa I so do that too!!" A well deserved DD!)

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FlufflyHATE [2011-10-27 01:19:37 +0000 UTC]

NaNoWriMo will be.............. interesting this year.... ;

Even with you explaining these bits, I still hope I can pertictpate without becoming a writing-whore.. henh....

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LockeBlackCloud [2011-10-27 01:11:47 +0000 UTC]

This is one of those times when you could say you feel like you've known someone, mostly because they sound so much like you. It seems you're much more outgoing in your writing than I am, and a good deal more perfectionist, but just about every hang up listed is what seems to keep me from ever really getting started. This really is a wonderful piece and I say congratulations on the DD and hope all went well with that writing.

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Baliseth [2011-10-27 01:06:17 +0000 UTC]

I can't argue with any point in this writing.

Yet...I'm still getting my outline together for NaNo in -T 5 days and counting......

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Scheifen [2011-10-27 01:01:44 +0000 UTC]

This applies to writing, undoubtedly, i've had this feeling before...

but it also applies to drawing, especially when you want to be a comic artist, and thus the two are inexorably linked together...

Thanks! i'll be sharing this with my writer friends!

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Kohachi-Productions [2011-10-27 01:00:05 +0000 UTC]

So true! I did NaNoWriMo last year, and some of the stuff my novel focused on needed some serious research... I just went without it and made stuff up. xD

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Axe-Cell [2011-10-27 00:52:00 +0000 UTC]

'Writers don't actually write, because we spend all our time doing something else.'
This sentence (above) has my up most attention, because I am always doing lots of crazy stuff (in real life) just to understand how stuff works before I could explain them in words. ^^

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SpiritOfTheWolf08 [2011-10-27 00:50:58 +0000 UTC]

Sigh. I can never get the fluff of the story down. Those crucially trivial details about my characters' lives between major happenings? They might as well not exist. Sometimes I can only think from one major plot moment to the next. It's rather frustrating. I mean, how do you get down just the right amount of detail, without going overboard?

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ivyflightislistening [2011-10-27 00:46:03 +0000 UTC]

TRUTH! And very amusing-definitely appreciate this.

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deideiblueeyez [2011-10-27 00:44:17 +0000 UTC]

I hate having a great idea and writing it and then having to connect the dots between the major points! Plus I don't understand empathy, so I rarely put romantic feelings with characters and even when I do it's shallow.. ._.

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wh0rem0ans [2011-10-27 00:43:16 +0000 UTC]

Ok, I can now add to my long list of justifications and excuses for not writing ... "I am not alone." But I prefer turkey sandwiches on potato bread with mayo and pepper, orange Crush (the soda), and I reread anything onscreen or in print that is within easy reach. Cleaning is at the outer extremes of desperation.

I have writing ... no ... I started my novel 3 years ago. I go in great bursts and get a big chunk done then I wither away. My last withering was proceeded by a discovery that southern Welsh mythology has deep roots in Irish mythology, which prompted about a month of intense research and left me quite frustrated. I am on wither mode now.

But it will not always be true.

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Eve-Rebil [2011-10-27 00:38:13 +0000 UTC]

My life. In a nutshell. Minus the squash.

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ChibiStarr [2011-10-27 00:35:58 +0000 UTC]

"It's not the points that get me stuck, but the details between them. "

Oh my gods YES. This is my exact problem right here.

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JetPropulsion [2011-10-27 00:33:36 +0000 UTC]

Oh man, I feel your pain! Every day... every... single... day...

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princessofthnileoffa [2011-10-27 00:18:52 +0000 UTC]

I have never heard(seen?) more true words especially from another author.
I like you.

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LupisDarkmoon [2011-10-27 00:04:27 +0000 UTC]

Everything said here I can completely relate to. Every withering fiber of my body - decaying on a computer chair is it is - agrees completely with everything written above.
Bravo, sir. Bravo.

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Natsumi-Tan [2011-10-27 00:04:22 +0000 UTC]

I had a comment to write, but then I changed my mind. Again. So now I'm stringing on sentences which are absurdly short and undefinitive, and I have no earthly clue why. But then again.... I'm a writer. This, my... Not-quite-acquaintance-but-I-feel-like-I-know-you-because-you-write-about-writing-in-a-way-only-a-writer-would-understand, this isn't art. This isn't a novel. This isn't even a narrative. This is just plain, simple truth. And treating it as such I am going to fave it and bookmark it and maybe print it out for the days when I'm uninspired. So there.

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ShineeSerenDipity [2011-10-27 00:02:45 +0000 UTC]

Now I'm too scared to start 0.0
I know what you mean though... I'm always blaming DA and School for taking all my writing time away when really all along it was just me D:

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MeriambersNicora [2011-10-26 23:30:21 +0000 UTC]

and to think that some people say that writing is unproductive!

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orphicfiddler [2011-10-26 23:18:18 +0000 UTC]

"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."

I think that is, in a fashion, the best definition of what writers do. Certainly found a lot of myself in this one.

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MoonlightWillow6 [2011-10-26 23:13:10 +0000 UTC]

This is so true. Every last bit of it.

Nanowrimo.....

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Veronica1600 [2011-10-26 23:11:25 +0000 UTC]

I only have one word to describe my reaction for this entire thing and that word is as follows:
AMEN

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i-am-me-hehe [2011-10-26 23:08:16 +0000 UTC]

so thats why I can never write anything! (it probaly dosn't help that I'm the type that can stare into space for an hour) I'm armed and reaty for nanowrimo this year with 5 difrint plot's and this awesome thing that I will be faving. thanks so much for puting what every writer I know feels in to a one page thing!!

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The-last-black-rose [2011-10-26 23:05:44 +0000 UTC]

You just summed me up. It's amazing.

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Leap-of-Faythe [2011-10-26 23:01:50 +0000 UTC]

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

SO TRUE. DX

Insta-fave.

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BonesBleachedBare [2011-10-26 23:00:48 +0000 UTC]

This is completely my writing process. I'm reassured that someone else does this! Nice piece.

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Dynamo-Deepblue [2011-10-26 22:57:42 +0000 UTC]

Oh thank God. I thought it was really bad for writers to procrastinate (supposed to be writing a chapter right now, OTL) And yes, I have that same problem... one or a set of sentences doesn't sound good and I have to change the ENTIRE thing. And then I spend days thinking about it.

Story of my writing life.

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VampireDesdemona [2011-10-26 22:54:21 +0000 UTC]

This is so true it should hurt.

Now that I've been at writing for five years (seems longer, really) I look back and wonder where the heck people get the idea that writing is so glamorous and really just a breeze compared to everything else. To me it's more like 95% procrastination and 4.9% staring at the screen wondering how I can make the sentence flow better or how to resolve a tiny plothole that no one else sees but I know is right there.

And showers the best place to go to resolve difficult matters. Or to get unwanted new ideas.

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SnowOutsideMyWindow [2011-10-26 22:49:59 +0000 UTC]

GREAT!

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

id like to print this out and hang it on my wall

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zebrazebrazebra [2011-10-26 22:44:39 +0000 UTC]

Especially in fiction, I tend to believe that the cadence of the narration does everything to set the tone for the entire story.

I agree with this 100%. And the piece as a whole is a fascinating personal glimpse into your writing process--some of which matches my own experience and some of which doesn't, which is, y'know, why it's fascinating. A few too many people here have confused editorial for tutorial, I think. I enjoyed it either way.

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Sierraness23 In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 22:34:19 +0000 UTC]

Brilliant stuff, this. Love it

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StoryMaker91 In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 22:31:36 +0000 UTC]

You mean I'm not a terrible person because I love to write but I spend way too much time procrastinating?

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Cagliostro929 In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 22:30:48 +0000 UTC]

Well, I don't agree with everything you said.
When you have something to write, nothing can distract you.
The problem is having something to write. Before sitting in front of the computer you should have your story ready. You have to know every detail of it before writing it down. And then you should be organized, give yourself rules - like for example "I'm going to write one page every day".
When you have a story that you really love, you have just to write it down, and just go on until it's done.
That's all that I think!
Obviously a writer's block could happen, but not every day! Or you are not going to write anything!
Good luck with your NaNoWriMo!

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kiramaru7 In reply to Cagliostro929 [2011-10-27 02:01:38 +0000 UTC]

I agree with dagoth-jeff, I can't sit there & have everything preplanned. Just give me a prompt, and time to let it mellow in my head, and then if I'm lucky, I'll start working on it tomorrow. Sometimes things just flow and other times it takes days before I can get anything beyond an opening sentence. I've had one prompt where I stopped & start several times before I found something that just flowed! I also can't write out of order, nor can I do an outline beyond a vague idea of how I want things to end.

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Cagliostro929 In reply to kiramaru7 [2011-10-27 12:08:39 +0000 UTC]

I think that this works only if you have to write less than 50 pages.
But it's really hard to fill 200 pages if you don't know before every part of the story. At one point everything becomes to much complicated and you'll get lost.

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kiramaru7 In reply to Cagliostro929 [2011-10-27 20:47:05 +0000 UTC]

While I do write less than 50 pages for the most part, I've done some longer things where I sat & simply wrote. As long as I know where I want to end up, I'm fine working the way I do.

I think it basically comes down to what work for each person and what you're attempting. Writing a short story is much different than writing a novel. So is writing a fanfic vs. writing something original. And there are professional fanfics, I own several well written books based on George Lucas' Star Wars universe, so I consider it a legit genre.

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dagoth-jeff In reply to Cagliostro929 [2011-10-26 23:05:35 +0000 UTC]

We're all different. 99.7% of my writing is done on the fly, nothing is pre-planned. Ever.
It works out better when you can surprise yourself.

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kiramaru7 In reply to dagoth-jeff [2011-10-27 02:02:21 +0000 UTC]

I also write on the fly.

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dagoth-jeff In reply to kiramaru7 [2011-10-27 02:04:01 +0000 UTC]

*phew!* Glad I'm not too crazy.

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kiramaru7 In reply to dagoth-jeff [2011-10-27 02:07:09 +0000 UTC]

I wouldn't say it was crazy at all.

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dagoth-jeff In reply to kiramaru7 [2011-10-27 02:09:28 +0000 UTC]

Goody! Let's be sane...together... *grits teeth*

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kiramaru7 In reply to dagoth-jeff [2011-10-27 02:22:29 +0000 UTC]

Yes!

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Cagliostro929 In reply to dagoth-jeff [2011-10-26 23:47:17 +0000 UTC]

It's harder to write without a pre-planned plot.
But if it works for you it's great!

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Isabienne In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 22:30:24 +0000 UTC]

The funny thing is ... I really should be writing a novel instead of a comment right now.

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joethulhu In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 22:08:02 +0000 UTC]

So very true. I've learned I'm even more a Writer than I thought. I forget who said, but there's a quote, something along these lines:

"Someone may pop off one book, and be considered a writer. But the real Writers will never stop writing."

I dunno. I've mucked it up somewhere in there. But that's the gist. Which is why I can fully consider myself a Writer. Everything in here applies to me as well.

Especially the thing about music.

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