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| How I Write |
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| Stop Whining and Just Do It! Sharpen these first, though....... |
HOW I WRITE
By
Mark Cohen
Author of The Fractal Murders and Bluetick Revenge
Writing
is simple. Here is my step-by-step
guide.
First,
use the bathroom. Unless you have an
overactive bladder or IBS, you shouldn’t have to go again for at least one
hour. Thus, you have already eliminated
one possible excuse that you might otherwise use to justify taking a break from
your writing.
Second,
find a quiet place where you won’t be interrupted by family members, friends,
or phone calls.
Third,
sit in a comfortable chair, close your eyes, breath easily, and visualize a big
dumpster on a hot day. Smell it. See the flies buzzing around it. Now visualize all the nitpicky little rules
your high school English teacher drilled into you, and toss them into the
dumpster. Good. Visualize all the cookie cutter formulas
reviewers love to use as a checklist in writing their reviews, and toss those
into the dumpster too. Walk away from
the dumpster. Don’t look back. You feel better already, don’t you?
Fourth,
now you must escape your analytical mind.
Remember, the root word of “analytical” is “anal.” Writing is not a logical process. If you write in a left-brained state, an
obnoxious little voice inside your head will criticize every sentence as it
appears on your monitor. “That sentence
sucks,” it will say. “I’ll never be a
good writer. I am a total failure and I
always will be. Maybe I should join the
Peace Corps.”
There
are proven techniques to help free yourself from your analytical mind. A glass of good cabernet is one, but that is
not always feasible because many employers disapprove of employees coming to
work drunk. If wine is not an
option, a few minutes of meditation should do
the trick. Count backwards from one hundred
in multiples of three. Draw a picture of
a platypus with your non-dominant hand.
Utter a few lines from your favorite movie. One of my favorites is, “Captain, it is I,
Ensign Pulver, and I just threw your stinkin' palm tree overboard! Now what's
all this crud about no movie tonight?”[1] It does not really matter how you do it –
just get your mind into a creative state.
Now
you are ready to write. This is the
fifth step. Don’t think about what you
are going to write. Thinking is bad. If you type “the” and immediately sit back to
ponder whether you might have used a better word, go back to Step Four. Have another glass of cabernet.
Just
write. If you don’t know what to write,
type one sentence – whatever comes into your mind. If the best you can do is, “The car was red,”
that’s fantastic! Now you have a
storyteller and an object – a red car.
Now
write a few more sentences – whatever comes into your mind. “Joe hated red cars. He had hated them ever since his stepfather
made him take the red Volkswagen on the night of his senior prom, more than ten
years ago.” Wow, we have a character –
Joe. We know he is ten years out of high
school. We know he had a
stepfather.
We
need a plot. Write a few more sentences
– whatever comes into your mind. “But
this car was different. Not only was it
red on the outside, it was red on the inside.
Blood red. And it was his
stepfather’s blood. Yes, Joe had some
‘splainin’ to do.”
Now
we have our first paragraph!
I
do not enjoy outlining or creating character profiles. That is work, and I don’t like work. I prefer to just write, knowing that I will
edit and change things as my story progresses.
By the time I complete this book, there may not be a red car, or a Joe,
or a stepfather. Maybe my subconscious
will come up with an idea while I am sleeping.
The point is that I got something down on paper – I now have some raw
material that I can shape and mold a little bit more each day.
That’s
how I write.
Oh,
I forgot to tell you. This process works
for me; it might not work for you. If
this does not work for you, toss it into the dumpster and find something that
works for you.
[1] That line was uttered by Jack Lemmon in Mister Roberts. He was talking to James Cagney, who played
the role of Captain Morton.
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