Thursday, August 8, 2024

FREELANCE FRIDAY #8: WRITING PROCESSES

 



Freelance Friday #8
Finding Your Writing Process

Everyone has their own style for writing—not only your tone and voice, the thing that makes your stories uniquely you, but also the way you plot, outline, prepare, and complete the physical action of writing your novel. So for the author who struggles to get writing done, the young author trying to find their groove, or someone just looking for new methods to try, this can feel overwhelming. I wanted to offer some ideas and advice—and debunk some common “tips” that might just offer up roadblocks. Have some tips of your own? Shout it out in the comments below!

 

MYTHS:
1) Write what you know. While it’s helpful to have experiences in certain areas of life, you cannot limit yourself to only what you know. Research. Spend time studying what you don’t know, or creating what does not yet exist. Imagine if most of our most influential writers only wrote what they knew! Brandon Sanderson, J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Arthur Conan Doyle, George Lucas…well, if you’re a spec-fic or suspense fan, you get the gist. I don’t think God calls us to write what we know, either. God promises to equip us and prepare us for where He sends us, not the other way around. So by all means, if you feel out of your league with what you’re writing, but you feel led to write? Know that you can study, learn, research, create, brainstorm, Pinterest, and pray through the creative process.

2) Write as much as possible—or only a certain amount. I see a lot of people who pressure writers to write often and publish quickly because the more books are out on the market, the more money they’ll make. Conversely, I see folks criticize authors for writing a lot. And this is a process that is uniquely yours to answer. I’ve written and published books monthly, and other times, it was a struggle to write a book in a year, so I’ve been on both sides of the discussion and I can honestly say: the best way to find your own pace is to experiment. If writing three chapters a day is small potatoes and you can keep going, go for it. If writing three chapters takes three months, go for it. But you’ll never know quite what you’re capable of until you try.

My personal best for this year is ten chapters in a day (roughly 8500 words because I underwrite), and a few years ago, I wrote 10k words in a day once for a challenge and deeply regretted it for about a week afterward because my brain was seriously fried. When I’m in the drafting process, I try to limit myself to two chapters per day because I don’t have to sacrifice creative energy, I get work done, and I’m looking forward to writing the next day. That is the balance you need to seek out when you’re writing. Do you enjoy it, or is it a major chore? Do you feel a sense of accomplishment, and can you stick to your own publishing timeline without feeling stressed? Stress and pressure kill good books and make them fall flat, and that’s the last thing you want.

3) You have to follow certain fads, be a plotter, be a pantser, etc. etc. to succeed.

Guess what? Oftentimes, writers will end up using a mix of all of the above as they write. A plotter may need to adjust course, and someone who flies by the seat of their pants will still need a plan of action in why certain things must happen in the book. You also don’t need to read all of the craft books in the world and follow them to a T. Oftentimes, they’ll offer differing advice—so my advice is to definitely read books on the craft, but don’t limit yourself to what one specific person tells you to do. Personally, I read all of the books my college professors told me I had to in order to become a decent author, and it stifled my creativity horribly because they all followed a stiff order that didn’t work well for me. But I read Save the Cat! Writes a Novel and found out that most of the books I’d written beforehand actually followed Save the Cat! beat sheets without me even knowing it; it just allowed me to better understand my own process to simplify the plotting process. (And it taught me how to not despise the outlining process, since I came out of school very sour to the idea.) So do you see how important it is to experiment, read wide, and not limit yourself to someone else’s guidance?

4) You have to write in chronological order.

Nope! Do you remember in standardized tests in school? The instructions say that if a problem is taking too long to solve, to work ahead and then circle back to that problem if you have time left. The same logic applies in writing, and let me tell you, it helps writer’s block so much. You can write the ending first, the middle first, the beginning first—whatever works for you. I wrote The Lady of Lanaria in reverse order—last, middle, first—and other times, I’ve written the middle first, then the beginning, and then the ending. For my devotionals, I typically work start-to-finish unless I have a solid outline that tells me where the building blocks need to go, since each day builds up from the last.

Allow your creative process to be flexible based on the idea you’re working on. Keep a worksheet with your foreshadowing and other details so you don’t get lost in the process or confused, but allow yourself to be flexible. If you’re hung up on a particular scene, slap a placeholder in there and keep going with the aftermath. Creativity is holding your personal balance between order and chaos. Chances are, even if you plot and outline to the ends of the earth, you’ll still find situations where you have to stray from your plan. (A lot like real life, honestly.) And if you wing it, you’ll still need some level of order to tell a good story. For Chasing the Lutetia Light, I didn’t know what my first chapter should even talk about until I had written the epilogue—and I got so wrapped up over the first chapter that I almost trashed the whole project. But then I wrote a chapter somewhere late in the beginning of the book, where the two main characters first meet, and I knew their story had to be told no matter what. That’s the key that will encourage you as you find your balance: finding out why your story has to be told no matter what.

 

NOW for some tips:

1) Experiment for one month. If you think you’re a plotter but you’re struggling to get past a plot point in your outline, try freewriting. It doesn’t have to be in your specific project. Write a short story where your characters are thrown into something terrible—an accident, a loss, or maybe it’s something unbelievably good. Google writing prompts to get a head-start. Try to put yourself in your characters’ shoes and see how they react, viscerally, to this situation. The purpose of this experiment is to free up your mind from the block you’re currently trying to get around. And you might find out a few things about your own writing process and your characters in the process! If you think you’re a pantser but you can’t get the story going somewhere logical, try writing down what has to happen in a stream-of-consciousness type of exercise. For example, “Character A has to go on this journey, where they find Character B. What’s the problem besides the journey?” (In Save the Cat!, that’s called the B story.) Oftentimes, you might find deeper layers to your characters and the why behind their motivation.

2) If you’re dreading writing…try a few fun exercises. Try freewriting. Try not writing at all for a few days, because you might come back refreshed. If that still isn’t working, sit down at the computer (or notebook) and write one sentence. That’s all. If you’re driven nuts because you want to get back to it, good! Wait until tomorrow and then get after it. Oftentimes, the dread comes from a looming deadline, uncertainty, or self-sabotage. Take a few minutes a day to do a personal inventory and pray on it. Why are you feeling this dread? What can you change to make it less of a chore? What can you change to make writing this week more fun? Learn from those struggles, and even think about keeping a journal with that inventory every day, alongside your victories for the day, and see if you notice any patterns emerging. That might help you recognize and combat issues like self-sabotage or prepare yourself when things like family problems, personal struggles, etc. arise that affect your writing habits.

3) If you aren’t sure where to start? Well, you clearly want to start. Write down WHY. Why do you have this story on your heart? What themes are you passionate about? What tropes are your favorite? Do you have a particular scene in your head that you just can’t get rid of? Write it out even if you don’t have a clue where it’s going. Save it. Chances are, writing that down will help you derive certain themes, character tics, and backgrounds for the rest of the story. The biggest hurdle is starting.

4) Be willing to change course as you mature and as your life changes.

My writing habits look nothing like they did when I started seriously writing and publishing back in 2015/2016. And sometimes, my writing process for one book is completely different for the very next one I write. That ability to flex and change course is crucial as you work on your projects, no matter whether you write fifty books in a year (if you’re writing that much…please share all of your tips below and possibly your optometrist’s office as well) or if you’re writing one book every three years. The most important thing you can do as a writer, or in any area of life, is to learn, grow, and mature. Don’t be afraid to hold onto tricks that work well for you, but don’t be afraid to let go of them if it’s not working for one particular project.  If you’re struggling to meet your own deadline as an indie author, it is completely okay to reassess and update readers if you need to push back a release date.

 

When it comes down to it, you’re serving God with the stories you write, and you’re serving your readers as well. Allowing yourself some extra time to get it right, if that’s what is needed, is perfectly fine.

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