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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

RudolfLioness In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 22:03:09 +0000 UTC]

Greatness. Pure greatness.

Everyone always bugs me about why I don't finish any of my fan-fictions (I write fan-fiction because I never have been terribly great at thinking up my own characters *sigh* I'm such a failure), and I always say something like "I want to finish it, but I just... can't." I have /very/ descriptive language in my writing, but sadly, I don't get to use it often, for I'm so busy concentrating on dialogue and other interactions, because I honestly don't know how to fill up space between point A and point B, so I just decide to jump into point B with little regard to details in between, though I am perfectly capable and more than willing to describe an empty room in five paragraphs.....

So yeah. thanks for writing this?

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

This describes my life lol.

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AuraXtreme In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 21:58:59 +0000 UTC]

What is NaNoWriMo?

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black-chrysanthemum In reply to AuraXtreme [2011-10-26 22:23:07 +0000 UTC]

National Novel-Writing Month. [link] People who enter try to write a 50,000 word novel in the month of November.

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AuraXtreme In reply to black-chrysanthemum [2011-10-26 23:47:30 +0000 UTC]

Ah.

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kristaology [2011-10-26 21:49:16 +0000 UTC]

Ditto. I seem to write more about my procrastination and frustration than actually adding to my NaNo.
It's just sad.

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bobkitty1123 [2011-10-26 21:42:34 +0000 UTC]

Amazing. This is me. Except I'll clear through thirty or forty pages in a sitting only to not know where the story is going. Then after hours of fiddling and fixing what has already been written, I'll give up and take a bath. Then right in the middle of said bath, i'll be inspired, only to realize that my fiddling has changed the entire plot of story and my new inspiration doesn't plug in anywhere. Then I'm back at square one.

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sebastian-shrikes [2011-10-26 21:40:35 +0000 UTC]

I agree with all of this except the title.
For me, two-tuna-sandwich-problems are glamorous and exciting. When I have to sit in the kitchen at two in the morning making my third cup of hot mint tea, it's because of NaNo. Something about that is exhilarating, in an odd way. Maybe it's because I save this kind of thing for November. It feels special.

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Kolnukbyne [2011-10-26 21:39:26 +0000 UTC]

Personally I just get a sudden idea and slam my hands down and say "Fuck, gonna write this" and do it without thinking about it. If I leave the idea too long I either forget it, or think too much about it. Then again, I tend to only write short stories, the concept of 30k words is just mind boggling to me.

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darkXangelXwings [2011-10-26 21:37:10 +0000 UTC]

oh my gosh , you just summed up my life in just about half a page.
this is sooooo true!

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Crescent-White [2011-10-26 21:35:45 +0000 UTC]

You don't need to tell me.

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river-cleaner [2011-10-26 21:29:24 +0000 UTC]

I totally relate. about a half hour ago i was trying to write one of my stroies, but i just couldn't. it was like my brain was on lock down mode.

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Omega-Prince [2011-10-26 21:25:07 +0000 UTC]

This, in some way, made me feel so much better about myself. I laughed throughout, thank you!!!

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Felixani [2011-10-26 21:21:06 +0000 UTC]

Reading this made me feel normal xD

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purplemudkip [2011-10-26 21:17:33 +0000 UTC]

I love the "Writers don't actually write because they spend all their time doing something else."

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MasterpieceImaginary [2011-10-26 21:08:10 +0000 UTC]

There are so many sentences I will now probably have to print out, frame, and tack on a wall at some point. This is beautiful! It certainly makes me feel better that I procrastinate in a similar fashion of sandwiches and baths. Because as much as I love writing, I always find myself in a bathtub more than I find myself at a computer.

Well done!

-M.Imaginary

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PeacefulSoul [2011-10-26 21:07:42 +0000 UTC]

Just about everything in here relates to Artists as well. They too procrastinate,
per se, are easily distracted, etcetera and etcetera. It's not limited to just Writers.

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MagicalPoliceBox [2011-10-26 21:02:47 +0000 UTC]

This is going to be my second year of NaNoWriMo, but oddly enough, I had the same problem you do before I did it last year. Writing is hard. Well, writing coherently is hard--but that's why I love it. I'm used to just writing without an outline, and so I only outline to figure out the problem. My best scenes come solely from my head as I see them happening. It's like I'm watching a movie.

When those moments happen, like my last chapter last year, I can't stop writing until I finish. When I finally do, I turn around to edit like usual and I realize that there's no way I would--or could--edit this. My first draft is my final. I'm not sure if this is good or bad, but whatever--it happens. Anyways, I thought that was an interesting tidbit

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Onopahnov [2011-10-26 20:52:13 +0000 UTC]

You know what? I'm going to try NaNo anyway because, in the end, otherwise, I'll probably end up feeling like I wasted high school or something by not doing it when I had the chance. It's terrible how much of a motivation that is senior year, but I think I almost don't WANT to be able to do it freshman year of college because I should be too busy with things that I actually need to get done for my major or something.

Anyway, speaking of that, this was strangely motivating to read, because I need to mail at least 5 to 10 pages of writing sample, preferably in short screenplay form, to Boston in the morning so it hits their Post box by a November 1 application deadline. So thanks for the motivation, and congrats on the DD.

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zebrazebrazebra In reply to Onopahnov [2011-10-26 22:35:52 +0000 UTC]

Dude, the whole point of freshman year is to avoid the things you need to get done for your major. I say go for it.

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Onopahnov In reply to zebrazebrazebra [2011-10-27 21:40:08 +0000 UTC]

Haha, yep.

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SayaStarshine [2011-10-26 20:52:06 +0000 UTC]

Wow. I thought I was the only person who wrote/lived this way.

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pixie-rings [2011-10-26 20:46:15 +0000 UTC]

Ah, procrastination.Β It's like chocolate cake with too many calories: tastes so good, but makes you feel disgustingly guilty afterwards.
Anyway, this is precisely the reason why I will NEVER do NaNoWriMo. It took me six months to do 12k. I suck so badly, it's not funny. Luckily, however, I can throw words down and be content with how they work immediately. The trouble is getting those words out. Inspiration is rather fleeting indeed.

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Lostkavi [2011-10-26 20:44:35 +0000 UTC]

You know - I thought I was unique in these aspects. But now I realise just how perfectly average I am if this is 'normal writing behaviour.' D:

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RebbieChan [2011-10-26 20:43:13 +0000 UTC]

This is my first year doing NaNoWriMo
I'm already terrified of what will become of my life XD

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TehKatieMonster [2011-10-26 20:18:53 +0000 UTC]

This is so true and I'll read the rest of it later when my head stops hurting. Procrastination right here. xD I've mostly been writing poems lately because I can't write a story to save my ass right now. I'm glad that you do research for your writing I like it alot better when a book is more realistic, or atleast makes sense.

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Akai-karasu [2011-10-26 20:13:30 +0000 UTC]

THIS is awesome. Yey for us writers, nobody else is that skilled at procrastinating.
I love how you wrote this, I can definitely agree to everything, especially since I'm in a kind of writing crisis at the moment. (I'll have to try that tuna sandwich thing )

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The-Theory-Liz [2011-10-26 20:04:47 +0000 UTC]

I absolutely adore this because it is so true, however I wished NaNoWriMo is earlier seeing as I did right 120 K in about a month during the summer...
...and I have a graphic novel idea that I want to collaborate with my sister on (a creative writing/literature major).

Anyways, regarding this there is one point I wholeheartedly agree on:

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.

I don't understand it either, how can others do it? I mean you need scene one before scene two, either that or you might right the ending and go backwards? Dickens was known to do that I believe...

Anyways, congrats on the DD!

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The-Silent-Call [2011-10-26 19:59:06 +0000 UTC]

wow. That's all I can really say. This is so true, and some things I never thought about.

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davidanaandrake [2011-10-26 19:58:57 +0000 UTC]

XD This is perfect.

Congrats on the DD. XD

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Team-Switzerland [2011-10-26 19:56:02 +0000 UTC]

How true! I'm sure any writer (NaNo participant o not) can totally relate to this. Awesome. Did you win 2010?

I'm feeling a little weary this year since I don't know who any of my characters are, though I know my plot.

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AlbertKirkegarde [2011-10-26 19:52:58 +0000 UTC]

Yerp.

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ShaozChampion [2011-10-26 19:35:11 +0000 UTC]

o.o...This rung a bell for Writers and Creative Minds everywhere

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Seven-Sins-incarnate [2011-10-26 19:15:32 +0000 UTC]

Amen. I adore this.

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JiaRoyale [2011-10-26 18:50:29 +0000 UTC]

I don't do the outline or research very much (*ever*), and tend to write just what pops into my head, and yes, that ends up with some strange universes where one has to go back and FIX everything. What I find harder, though, is what you pointed out: sometimes it doesn't flow, and you're stuck. I clean when stuck with writer's block as well, and when inspiration finally hits, it hits like a trainwreck and when I look around I realize that while I've made progress on whatever it was, I'm very behind on term papers and house keeping and "my goodness, dinner is supposed to be cooked by now, but there are still so many ideas!" And that's what touched me most: the disaster that you discover when you come out of writing.

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Forta-Verity-Amity In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 18:32:37 +0000 UTC]

I wonder why dA hates interesting titles... sometimes half of the work's meaning is in the title :C

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JS-Church In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 18:19:45 +0000 UTC]

I too have problems connecting point A and point B. Most of the time, I can't even connect point A and point C, and could spend hours trying to make something fit in.

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Tatsuyuri In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 18:19:13 +0000 UTC]

I applaud you both on your DD and your candid words on what it is like to be a writer. I have spoken with several published authors who have told me similar stories of procrastination or dawdling that have left unfinished pieces of work that were due to the editor within the next 24 hours. And, even in hearing such stories, I often find it hard to explain things to my friends or family that don't write.

"Just write," doesn't ever cut it. It is a process as involved as an intricate ballet without any of the glamour of it. And, for what it's worth, I have done the exact same thing you have and never finished. I do have a dream to eventually change that, starting with this year's NaNo. Should you be diving into that month-long insanity trip, I wish you luck.

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WarpedPurity In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 18:17:49 +0000 UTC]

Recently decided to do NaNoWriMo for the first time this year. I have this dilemma, also. I keep trying to just run with things and perfect them after, but it never seems to work out that way. I either get caught up, like you, or I do manage to run through to the end and then decide it's terrible and delete it all.

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Idariel In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 18:05:03 +0000 UTC]

this is awesome, simple as that

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MettagiriSuru In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 18:04:20 +0000 UTC]

Oh good, not just me, then.. >A< except I do it with comics..

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Shidaku In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 17:50:03 +0000 UTC]

Snowballing is certainly a dirty habit of mine. Fortunately even though it almost universally results in crap, it always creates at least one gem that will come in handy later down the road. But yeah, this is very spot on for my writing process, and judging from other commentators, a rather reasonable statement about writers.

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Chiiromi-chan In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 17:46:50 +0000 UTC]

You know that feeling of reading someones work and getting it? You feel like you know that person, or at least you feel like you do. And it reminds me of me. Not your issues or the way you write, nor our personalities, but something, deep inside is the same. I want to shout, and I want to scream, but I'm just another person in the crowd. Great work: it made me cry. The part where you looked into the sky until you couldn't feel your fingers anymore.

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madis-hartte In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 17:26:20 +0000 UTC]

The words all have to fit right-ways around one another.

Eventually I'll come up with a funny metaphor, or a made-up word. Or I'll find that oh, this scene works out better being handwritten, and then I'll type it onto the computer later. And then sometimes the characters shut up on me, and after talking about a bunch of inanities they won't actually move the plot forward . . . so I'll have to work around them. When they're standing RIGHT IN THE WAY. Cue the funny metaphors, stilted words, and generally scrambling out of there. But, eventually, what's odd is that it'll pull through SCREAMING. But it'll pull through. And I'm never quite sure how that works out, because it certainly wasn't I who was doing it. Because I, of course, was busy doing something else entirely than writing words.

And yes, the Doctor Who soundtracks have become my muse. Especially With Love, Vincent, I am the Doctor, and Vale Decem. Why those specifically? I have no idea. And when I'm in the mood for interesting plot twists? I listen to River's Theme because that always puts me in mind of plot twisting.

*rambling over now*

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MadChronicler In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 17:19:54 +0000 UTC]

Totally understand the snowballing part... It happens a lot!

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Zechira In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 17:08:06 +0000 UTC]

This has hit the nail on the head. Do you ever feel like the reason you can't write is because you're "waiting for something"? I feel that a lot.

Time to go make some sandwiches, I guess.

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Lupina24 In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 16:58:48 +0000 UTC]

good nigh, you have almost explained my writing process perfectly. I hate not having the right words in narration. I will scour dictionaries, grinding my teeth and pulling out my hair while I'm at it until the precise word is found. I have also learned that outlines are God's gift to writers, I cringe over my old nomadic writing process.

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toxic--sunrise In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 16:46:15 +0000 UTC]

Being a writer is just one big love-hate relationship.

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tiger002 In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 16:33:59 +0000 UTC]

I know how you feel. As someone who just got an idea for NaNo, I know I must be in way over my head, but I'm going to give it a try. And I can testify, writers do procrastinate...alot.

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Droemar In reply to ??? [2011-10-26 16:23:47 +0000 UTC]

I'm glad I'm not the only one who cleans when I have writer's block.

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