It doesn’t matter what you write… CON
This is the second of three blogs
on what you should be writing. What follows the ellipsis
in the title is “…as long as you’re
writing something.” Last week was the “pro” arguments in support of that
statement. This week I’ll present
the opposite side of the argument—the con
position. I’ll take the position of compromise in the next blog. Two blogs from
now, I’ll present my conclusion/compromise/”what I believe” position.
Of course it
matters what you write when you write. Each type of writing has its
idiosyncrasies, whether in different fiction genre or switching from fiction to
non-fiction. When you switch back and forth, you force your brain to
“reset”—something that takes some time and diverts your thinking process from
what you were writing to what you are now going to start writing.
When you are
writing a story, you (should—see
earlier blogs or Idea Farming A Science Guy’s Read
on Writing) have an end
point in mind. When you divert your thinking from the goal, you derail your
train of thought. Like any train that’s derails, it takes time and effort to
get the locomotive back in place and moving forward.
If you stop
writing a story and work on another story or a non-fiction piece, you will have
to retrace your plot before you pick up where you left off. If you don’t review
what you have written and where the story ends, you will most likely end up
somewhere off the pathway you envisioned for your story. Worse case scenario:
you’ll have to backtrack and rewrite part/most/all of what you started because
you’ll not be able to reconstruct the pattern your brain was using for the
story you stopped writing.
Unless (s)he has
a masochistic tendency, and enjoy self-inflected pain, “do overs” in manuscript
writing are not something a writer looks forward to. Retracing steps in the
writing process leads to frustration. Frustration leads to worry. Worry leads
to writer’s block. Writer’s block leads nowhere.
If you’re stuck, take a break.
Take a nap. Read a book. But, don’t deflect your writing process by “writing
something else.”
In my New Writers Corner is
Kayla Bluster (@kaybulster). She’s got a Young Adult book out now. Titled, Wishful Thinking,
it’s a very good read. I suggest keeping your eye on her progress.
Next blog: It doesn’t
matter what you write… My Position
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