Monday, April 29, 2013

The Value of Distraction

Okay, so after posting yesterday about how the television and music and other aural/visual distractions have to go off, what did I do today?  I watched a lot of Doctor Who (I'm not going to say how much, but it was not an insignificant number of hours) and scrolled through Pinterest looking at hairstyles and evening gowns instead of writing.  Why did I do that?  Was I stuck?  Did I not have anything to write about?  Was I having trouble getting started?  Well, I wish I could lie and say yes, but really the answer is no.  I'm not stuck, I've got plenty to write about, and I've already started.  So what was the problem?

The problem was that I never sat down and resolved to write anything.  I procrastinated and said, "After this one episode." and "Ooh, look at this, _______ would totally wear this." and "Well, I might as well finish..."  The end result being that nothing got written.  So now I'm writing this blog post instead of what I had intended to write.

All right, that was my confession, but what did I learn from this (aside from what I already knew, which was that I cannot be trusted to write and watch Doctor Who at the same time)?  Quite a bit actually, though I probably could have learned it without quite so much procrastination.

Characters don't live in a vacuum.  

It is not enough to say that a character is a female Scarlet Pimpernel or a courtesan on the run from her past.  Every character's actions is informed by her past, and that past informs her present actions.  Knowing the character's present isn't enough if you intend to write her believably for an extended period of time.  You have to know her past, maybe not every detail, but enough to know why she reacts in particular ways, what parts of her past impact her present.  Of course, that seems like a no-brainer if you think about it, but sometimes you can get too caught up with writing the present to consider the character's past.  Conversely, you shouldn't be afraid to allow your character to change as circumstances demand.  A character who has a history of feeling inadequate can still grow to be emotionally fulfilled, it will simply take time and careful plotting.  

Thus the lessons of Doctor Who as applied to writing.  Which could lead me into a whole discussion about the Doctors and his various companions and how...never mind.  This is a blog about writing and I'm only on my third entry, so I'll save the Doctor Who fandom for some other time.

Clothing tells you a lot about a person.  Well duh.  That's true in real life, why wouldn't it be true in fiction as well?  But between plotting the next major event, crafting dialogue, and introducing characters, sometimes fashion gets left by the wayside. Which is a shame, because what a character wears is part of what makes them who they are.  For example, wearing elbow length opera gloves to the ball isn't something worth remarking upon, but when the same character wears those same gloves down to breakfast and to the beach, then the reader knows there is something else going on.  But, it only works if you included those gloves in your original description at the ball.

Which brings us to Pinterest, that endless library of evening gowns and up-dos.  Just casually scrolling through my boards netted me a dozen hairstyles and outfits for nearly half a dozen characters.  Never will my characters be forced to wear the same dress twice because I'm simply not creative enough to come up with a new gown (if the plot demands it, then that's a different story).

Of course, that brings me back to the procrastination.  Could I have learned those lessons, found those images, and still gotten my writing done by spending a fraction of the time actually concentrating on what I was doing?  Yes.  So that's my resolution.  To stop procrastinating and disguising it as multitasking and actually get things written.

Tomorrow.

Sunday, April 28, 2013

The Sound of Silence

"*Hiccup!*"
"In breaking news..."
"*Beep!  Beep!  Beep!*"
"Oh geez, look at the cat..."
"What are you a trick?  A trap?"
"*Maaaah!*"
"Today on..."

Five hours later...

"Oh geez!  All I've got is three sentences of CRAP!"

We've all been there.  We've all done that.  We've all thought:  "Oh, I'm great at multitasking!  I can write this scene, eat my lunch, find cool YouTube videos, listen to my music, and catch up on my Netflix all at the same time!"  At least that's what I think is going to happen.  But what really happens is that I end up with a couple of paragraphs of trash involving Romana II as Daenerys ordering the crew of the Enterprise D to harness the power of friendship to the soundtrack of Wicked and a cold bowel of instant noodles.  All of which adds up to two things:  1)  I'm involved in way too many geekdoms for my own good and 2)  I'm really terrible at multitasking.

It turns out I'm not alone in being awful at doing more than one thing at a time:
Why Multitasking Doesn't Work
People Who Multitask Are Often Bad At It

Now, some people will tell you that they need background noise in order to get things done.  They need the television to be going, or music to be playing, or something to fill the silence.  For all of those people, good for you!  Unfortunately, I'm not one of those people.  I used to think that I was, but I'm really not.  If the television is on, then I get caught up in whatever narrative is playing--whether it's the news or a movie or even reality television--instead of continuing my own.  I can't watch YouTube videos for the same reason.  As for music, it's really sort of hit or miss.  Sometimes music can help me keep the rhythm of my narrative, but most of the time it just makes me want to find more music.

So if I want to write anything substantive, I need it to be quiet.  Really quiet.  No Netflix.  No iTunes.  No YouTube.  Which actually makes sense, now that I think about it.  Nature abhors a vacuum.  And what greater vacuum of creativity is there than silence and a blank page.  And really, if my mind is filled with other voices, whether it's Jon Stewart or Matt Smith or Kristen Chenowith, how can I hear the voices of the characters in my head?

So now, it's time to mute the computer, turn off the television, and get to writing.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Writer's Block


Writer’s block.  We’ve all felt it.  That dreaded enemy of writers and students everywhere.  That unexpected wall that we crash into when we're riding the creativity train.  That great yawing chasm of terror we feel when confronted with a blank page.


I am not a writer...or at least I'm not what most people think of when they talk about writers.  I have never published anything (or really written anything that I've considered worth publishing), so I can't really say that I know what I'm talking about with regards to writing.  

Actually, what I have the most experience with is writer's block.  I have a lot of experience with writer's block.  I spend a lot of time staring at that blank page.

But the best piece of advice I've ever heard or read to fix writer's block is to write.  To write anything.  It doesn't have to be whatever it is that you want to be working on.  It doesn't have to be what you think you should be inspired to write.  It just has to be anything as long as it is writing.

And that's what this blog is about:  writing.  

Writing about anything.  Writing about writing.  Writing stories and snippets of stories.  Anything to get past that dreaded writer's block that always gets in our way.