Sunday, August 23, 2009

Imaginationist

I have a confession to make. I am not a writer. I do love literature. I love a good story. Heck, I love books. Always have. What I don't really warm up to is the sitting down at the desk and staring at the screen part of the whole thing. I am not someone who likes to sit for long periods of time. And the typing. I can't really type. It's more pecking at the keyboard like a hungry bird looking for seeds in the grass. I can't spell either. Thank God for spellcheck.
So if I can't type and I can't spell, (and I forgot to mention my grammar), what am I? Not a writer. Nope.
I think I'm an imaginationist. Yes, that's it. That's what I am. It sounds good anyway. I explore the fields and woods of my imagination. I know. Weird. But I'm just being truthful here.
I have always daydreamed. It has gotten me into some awful jams over the years at school and at work.
I try to fit into the world of practical people, the people who don't have time for creativity, where others want me to be every day. I do manage to balance my time in the real world while finding the time to be creative.
Once I accepted that I am an imaginationist I could finally get down to writing my stories. The stories that had been floating around in my head for a long time. I stopped worrying what others thought of me. I struggle daily with the practical side of writng, but I allow myself the time to create. I get into my characters and walk around in their shoes. I hope it makes a difference in my books.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Letting Your Characters Do the Writing

You sit at your keyboard and stare at the blank screen. Oh no! It's the dreaded writers block. Racking your brain, you try to think of the next scene. You study your carefully constructed outline and all of the notes that you made over the last several days, weeks or months.
What would the next logical step be? Where does the plot go? What would I do in this situation? What's next? Okay, now try this. What would he/she, The person in your story, do next? That's right. Them. Those guys on the page. What kind of people are they? Let them drive the plot. Try getting inside the characters head, even if it is someone you can't stand. If it is a masculine hero, don't even think about how you, or any normal schmuck, would react in the action scene. Turn the man of action loose, or if it is someone more meek, turn the mouse loose.
What I am trying to say is, simply turn the manuscript over to the characters or that place where the creative stuff comes from. Let them flow onto the page. Don't try to control them. This could help with writers block. At least it worked for me.