Sometimes it’s easy getting caught up in envy for other writers’ processes, especially the Stephen King-esque writers who hammer out manuscripts at an astonishing rate.
Last night I found out (again) why I’m not that kind of writer. I was feeling frustrated and anxious about the scene I was writing (or as
idaho_laurie so aptly put it, I felt twitchy) until I went back a few pages to where the writing felt good and then, with a running start, read to what I’d just written.
It took a couple reads but then the problem was suddenly so obvious. And the fix was very easy.
Now, if I’d caved into those demon voices that ridicule me for producing just hundreds of words per day, that taunt me because I’m nearing forty-five and still haven’t sold a book, that admonish me to get the lead out and produce something marketable, well, I’d either have curled up in the fetal position or started pounding the keyboard in a panicked attempt to write pages and pages just to prove I was a real writer writing a real book in a take that, demon voices! kind of way.
I’m so glad I didn’t. I know from past experiences that it’s so much harder for me to rescue a book from tangents and mis-placed emphasis than it is to write at a slow but solid pace.
I need to remember that this fall when I participate in JoNoWriMo+1.5; a couple hundred solid words per day, every day, is a perfectly fine way to draft a book.
I hear you. And I feel quite twitchy today, myself.
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Fight the twitch, Lizzy, and stay with your story.
Don’t let the voices steer you wrong.
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I hear you. And I feel quite twitchy today, myself.
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Fight the twitch, Lizzy, and stay with your story.
Don’t let the voices steer you wrong.
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Fight the twitch, Lizzy, and stay with your story.
Don’t let the voices steer you wrong.
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Did you read the thread on Verla’s about writing speeds? I thought there were a lot of good points, and a couple of us noted that those of us who do write really fast also tend to do everything else quite fast (just our natures, I think)…and all that really matters is the wonderful books we produce, regardless how long it takes π I’m nearing 40 and still haven’t sold a book (nor do I even have an agent, sigh)…so I understand those voices!
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Yes, I skimmed that thread and I think you’re right about some people having the speedy gene. I’m a fast reader but a relatively slow writer. Ah well, all I’m shooting for is producing a good book (and not a land-speed record). HA.
Sorry those voices are nagging at you, too. I do believe your agent will appear very soon, Robin. And then you can listen to the voices on all the other issues…..
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Yeah, I suppose those voices never quite leave, do they? Thanks for the support, Tracy π
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Did you read the thread on Verla’s about writing speeds? I thought there were a lot of good points, and a couple of us noted that those of us who do write really fast also tend to do everything else quite fast (just our natures, I think)…and all that really matters is the wonderful books we produce, regardless how long it takes π I’m nearing 40 and still haven’t sold a book (nor do I even have an agent, sigh)…so I understand those voices!
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Those demons must run back and forth between our houses, Tracy. Aaack. And I’m OLDER than you.
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That’s a great image. I can just hear them cackling as they travel back and forth, rubbing their dry hands together. Smirking. Congratulating themselves on a particularly painful jab.
Oh, look! They tripped and fell. Wonder how that trip-wire got there? Wow, they’re sure having a lot of trouble disentangling themselves from the pile o’ demons on the ground. Should we help them up?
Nah.
I can’t feel too sorry for you being older than me when you look so damned good and young, Laurie.
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For anyone reading this comment trail, I *paid* Tracy to make that last remark.
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No, she did not.
I stand by my unsolicited remark.
You can’t fight the truth, Laurie, so give it up! π
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Those demons must run back and forth between our houses, Tracy. Aaack. And I’m OLDER than you.
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Thank you, Tracy. I’m trying to be at peace with my own writing speed and rhythms, too.
Seems like I’m always having to relearn that important lesson.
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It is one of those “rewind lessons,” isn’t it? The tough ones always are.
And I know it’s especially hard for you now because of The Great Flood taking your time and energy. But soon you’ll be back floating on your sea of creativity, bobbing in the waves, putting down those words.
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Thank you, Tracy. I’m trying to be at peace with my own writing speed and rhythms, too.
Seems like I’m always having to relearn that important lesson.
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Thank you, Tracy. I’m trying to be at peace with my own writing speed and rhythms, too.
Seems like I’m always having to relearn that important lesson.
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Yes, I skimmed that thread and I think you’re right about some people having the speedy gene. I’m a fast reader but a relatively slow writer. Ah well, all I’m shooting for is producing a good book (and not a land-speed record). HA.
Sorry those voices are nagging at you, too. I do believe your agent will appear very soon, Robin. And then you can listen to the voices on all the other issues…..
LikeLike
Yes, I skimmed that thread and I think you’re right about some people having the speedy gene. I’m a fast reader but a relatively slow writer. Ah well, all I’m shooting for is producing a good book (and not a land-speed record). HA.
Sorry those voices are nagging at you, too. I do believe your agent will appear very soon, Robin. And then you can listen to the voices on all the other issues…..
LikeLike
That’s a great image. I can just hear them cackling as they travel back and forth, rubbing their dry hands together. Smirking. Congratulating themselves on a particularly painful jab.
Oh, look! They tripped and fell. Wonder how that trip-wire got there? Wow, they’re sure having a lot of trouble disentangling themselves from the pile o’ demons on the ground. Should we help them up?
Nah.
I can’t feel too sorry for you being older than me when you look so damned good and young, Laurie.
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That’s a great image. I can just hear them cackling as they travel back and forth, rubbing their dry hands together. Smirking. Congratulating themselves on a particularly painful jab.
Oh, look! They tripped and fell. Wonder how that trip-wire got there? Wow, they’re sure having a lot of trouble disentangling themselves from the pile o’ demons on the ground. Should we help them up?
Nah.
I can’t feel too sorry for you being older than me when you look so damned good and young, Laurie.
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It is one of those “rewind lessons,” isn’t it? The tough ones always are.
And I know it’s especially hard for you now because of The Great Flood taking your time and energy. But soon you’ll be back floating on your sea of creativity, bobbing in the waves, putting down those words.
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It is one of those “rewind lessons,” isn’t it? The tough ones always are.
And I know it’s especially hard for you now because of The Great Flood taking your time and energy. But soon you’ll be back floating on your sea of creativity, bobbing in the waves, putting down those words.
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Yeah, I suppose those voices never quite leave, do they? Thanks for the support, Tracy π
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Sometimes I feel like *everyone* writes faster than me. I come out with fairly solid first drafts but it’s definitely a slow process.
I’ve always been a late bloomer. π I guess I just take my own sweet time in general but it’s definitely freaky to see what other people are accomplishing at younger ages and seemingly in the blink of the eye. The other day at Verla’s when people were citing their manuscript writing times I couldn’t get over how speedy most of them were.
So I’m with you on the slow and steady pace, Tracy. In the end we’ll get there just the same, right?
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Slow and steady is the only way I can do this, I think.
If you come out with solid first drafts, you’re WAY ahead. In my experience, it’s way harder and more time-consuming trying to salvage a mess.
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Sometimes I feel like *everyone* writes faster than me. I come out with fairly solid first drafts but it’s definitely a slow process.
I’ve always been a late bloomer. π I guess I just take my own sweet time in general but it’s definitely freaky to see what other people are accomplishing at younger ages and seemingly in the blink of the eye. The other day at Verla’s when people were citing their manuscript writing times I couldn’t get over how speedy most of them were.
So I’m with you on the slow and steady pace, Tracy. In the end we’ll get there just the same, right?
LikeLike
Sometimes I feel like *everyone* writes faster than me. I come out with fairly solid first drafts but it’s definitely a slow process.
I’ve always been a late bloomer. π I guess I just take my own sweet time in general but it’s definitely freaky to see what other people are accomplishing at younger ages and seemingly in the blink of the eye. The other day at Verla’s when people were citing their manuscript writing times I couldn’t get over how speedy most of them were.
So I’m with you on the slow and steady pace, Tracy. In the end we’ll get there just the same, right?
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It’s that kind of thing that makes me just skim briefly at the Blue Boards these days. I’ve decided not to read anything anywhere that makes me feel depressed, old, unworthy or slow.
By the way, I’m NOT OLD. I won’t even call myself middle-aged. Not in my mind. Not chronologically. I’m a Boomer and we are Forever Young. Anyone who disagrees gets a twack with my psychedelic rocking chair. :p
Tortoises rule! My first drafts are polished and pretty close to submission-ready.
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I think you’re onto something, Barb, about avoiding stuff that makes you feel less than you. I’m trying to do the same.
And it’s not that I feel old, I really don’t, but when I start thinking about the publishing world and how long stuff takes even after a contract, then I start feeling a bit low. Which is a waste of energy, I know. So I chase those thoughts away (or let William Faulkner do it) and get on with my writing life.
And good for you writing polished first drafts!!
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It’s that kind of thing that makes me just skim briefly at the Blue Boards these days. I’ve decided not to read anything anywhere that makes me feel depressed, old, unworthy or slow.
By the way, I’m NOT OLD. I won’t even call myself middle-aged. Not in my mind. Not chronologically. I’m a Boomer and we are Forever Young. Anyone who disagrees gets a twack with my psychedelic rocking chair. :p
Tortoises rule! My first drafts are polished and pretty close to submission-ready.
LikeLike
It’s that kind of thing that makes me just skim briefly at the Blue Boards these days. I’ve decided not to read anything anywhere that makes me feel depressed, old, unworthy or slow.
By the way, I’m NOT OLD. I won’t even call myself middle-aged. Not in my mind. Not chronologically. I’m a Boomer and we are Forever Young. Anyone who disagrees gets a twack with my psychedelic rocking chair. :p
Tortoises rule! My first drafts are polished and pretty close to submission-ready.
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For anyone reading this comment trail, I *paid* Tracy to make that last remark.
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No, she did not.
I stand by my unsolicited remark.
You can’t fight the truth, Laurie, so give it up! π
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No, she did not.
I stand by my unsolicited remark.
You can’t fight the truth, Laurie, so give it up! π
LikeLike
Slow and steady is the only way I can do this, I think.
If you come out with solid first drafts, you’re WAY ahead. In my experience, it’s way harder and more time-consuming trying to salvage a mess.
LikeLike
Slow and steady is the only way I can do this, I think.
If you come out with solid first drafts, you’re WAY ahead. In my experience, it’s way harder and more time-consuming trying to salvage a mess.
LikeLike
I think you’re onto something, Barb, about avoiding stuff that makes you feel less than you. I’m trying to do the same.
And it’s not that I feel old, I really don’t, but when I start thinking about the publishing world and how long stuff takes even after a contract, then I start feeling a bit low. Which is a waste of energy, I know. So I chase those thoughts away (or let William Faulkner do it) and get on with my writing life.
And good for you writing polished first drafts!!
LikeLike
I think you’re onto something, Barb, about avoiding stuff that makes you feel less than you. I’m trying to do the same.
And it’s not that I feel old, I really don’t, but when I start thinking about the publishing world and how long stuff takes even after a contract, then I start feeling a bit low. Which is a waste of energy, I know. So I chase those thoughts away (or let William Faulkner do it) and get on with my writing life.
And good for you writing polished first drafts!!
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