Thursday, May 04, 2006

The Writing Process

"Like most writers, I don't like to write; I like to have written."

-- William Zinsser, "On Writing Well"

True, isn't it? A writer will do anything to get out of writing -- another trip to the coffee shop, an episode of The Jeffersons on cable, a phone call, or even an extended discussion about the idea the writer has for his story, song, novel, play, or what have you. But actually sitting down, turning the cell off, and writing ... man, that can be scary. Here are some nuggets to help, courtesy of Thomas H. Uzzell's article "How To Get Story Ideas:"

With the young student, the chief impulse to write comes from his love of reading. The great works of literary art stir him profoundly, arouse in him burning desires of emulation and launch him forth without his quite knowing it, on a deliberate, rash enterprise of writing equally well and that rather soon, too ...

The trouble with it is, however, that a young writer's first scribblings in comparison with these majestic performances just about floor him; the contrast is too great. His own ideas -- how utterly trite, banal, childish ...

The young writer seldom remembers that these masterpieces which he adores are never typical of the work of their performers. They are the careful selection from the output of an entire lifetime ... Give yourself time ... The first output is nothing; the habit everything.

***

If you find yourself ready to "get" story ideas and absolutely unable to write a single word, do not be shocked or panic-stricken. Your trouble is not that you do not have ideas, but that you do not have the habit of setting them down. The very first thing is to cure yourself of "typewriter panic." Write anything. Begin by cultivating a habit of writing, of setting words on paper; the quality of the copy is sure to improve as you persist. At first write for quantity only.

4 Comments:

At Thu May 04, 06:21:00 AM PDT, Blogger Laura said...

I remember in my college Creative Writing class being so annoyed that we were made to keep journals and write five entries a week! FIVE! An entry could be anything -- a snippet of overheard dialogue that intrigued us, a haiku or three, or ten pages of lyric poetry -- and it wasn't graded for content (though the prof gave us feedback on everything). But I was amazed to see how I progressed, just out of the discipline of writing daily.

 
At Thu May 04, 11:06:00 AM PDT, Blogger Katie said...

Funny how intimidating writing can be, talking often not (we do that without thinking), but writing seems so permanent, so final. The words we commit to paper are real and we judge them.

 
At Thu May 04, 12:34:00 PM PDT, Blogger Lorie said...

This is good...

And, as you know, it is a delight for me to go back and look at the mandatory journal from English class my sophmore year (the only time I've ever journaled consistently). There is a bunch of crap in there, but a couple of gems too...

 
At Thu May 04, 01:17:00 PM PDT, Blogger Bobby said...

Only remember that time when you said, "Want to see a poem I wrote," and as a joke I said, "No," and since then you've NEVER EVER LET ME SEE EVEN ONE FREAKING WORD OF IT?!?!?

 

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