Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Writing Conundrums by Bonnie Le Hamilton



I think Konnie got more writing/editing done this past week then I did. Of course, (and I have mentioned this before) Konnie doesn’t have to deal with ADD. Then again, I’m not sure my problem this last week was ADD.

Or maybe it was.

Here’s the gist of it − I spent all week trying to get some writing/editing done, but I couldn’t bring myself to open the manuscript I’d been working on, nor did I want to open my sci-fi, I wanted to work on another one of my unfinished manuscripts, the one I was thinking about at the time. So, I opened it, read through it, however, I only found a few typos, and had no ideas for changes, or additions.

Then my mind turned to another story I have sitting unfinished (I have way too many of those) so I opened it and started reading. And what happens? I suddenly have an idea for yet another story! Dang. So, I opened that one, and started reading it, but what happens? My head fills with a story I haven’t written yet.

A story with too many problems for me to fix. I’ve actually considered it several times, and tried to write it several times, and none of those attempts have come close to the idea in my head. I just can’t seem to write it. I’ve actually made four attempts at starting this idea and have four unfinished manuscripts to show for it. They just aren’t anywhere near what I have playing in my head.

So basically, I kept opening one or another of these four, or a fifth one kind of on the same theme (I actually have six manuscripts on what is essentially the same theme but I started those other two before I came up with this idea I’m talking about), intending to work on them, only to either just find some typos or find myself thinking about one of the others I didn’t have open, i.e. getting nowhere in my writing, all while Konnie managed to write her post, finish one of her manuscripts, and get some editing done on a second one, all between taking kids to doctors, attending meetings, and doing all her other chores, like grocery shopping.

I do know the story I want to write, and I even know when I come up with it – just before NANO 2016.

For those of you paying attention, you know that in 2016 I actually worked on two different stories for NANO. I started one, then started over with another one which intruded, but the fact is that the story I started writing first wasn’t quite the vision I had and the new idea seemed to fit the bill. Sadly, it didn’t.

Actually, what I need is a story somewhere between those two, with maybe a dash of the two I started since that. And maybe not. Then again, all four manuscripts are pretty good as is, and I really should finish them, even if they aren’t what I started out trying to write.

And I’m still not sure how to fix the issues so my idea makes sense and works as I envision it instead of how it is coming out on my computer screen, times four.

Adding to that is the problem that I do like these four stories, so I have to come up with even more character names and backgrounds to try yet again to write what is in my head, but I haven’t actually written this story because of the big problem I haven’t been able to solve in my mind.

So, anyway, have any of you ever had trouble writing a story that you can see in your head, but can’t work out on paper, and every time you try, you end up writing a decent story, but it isn’t the one you set out to write, not by a long shot? And I’m not talking about pantsing it, and things go off on a tangent (though admittedly I am a pantser), I’m talking about not even coming close to the story in your head.

I’ve used a written outline only once (and I veered off that anyway) and that was my sci-fi. My stories usually go off on tangents, but they don’t normally veer off course in the first paragraph. And I’m not sure how I can fix this.

Outline?

I still have the believability issue.

Brainstorming?

Maybe, but I’m not sure that will help, because that is how I came up with my first attempt at this idea.

What would you do?

If you have any good suggestions, please let me know. I could use it.

Happy writing everyone. 

11 comments:

  1. Take time before you go to bed and think thoroughly about your book.(meditate) and write down your ideas that are on topic. Please use good notes and outlines but you must stick to them. O yea take a communications class at your local community college.

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  2. Thank you for your suggestions, but I don't understand how a communications class will help me.

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  3. I don't understand the last suggestion either. Not only because I don't know how a class on communication would help with writing but not everyone lives where they have access to a community college. My sister being one among them. My home state has several universities but I can't think of a single community college anywhere in the state, especially where my sister lives.

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    1. I.F., American Falls, and Twins Falls all have community colleges. Needless to say, I don't live in any of these cities.

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  4. Online classes are not an option. Trust me I thought how would communication help me at all but my structure and implications on writing would never have been to what I jave now. I learned how ro structure my pre writing for speeches and I used that same structure in writing as well. I would say English98 but all I learned there was that I meeded help in correct writing. When tou learn that most of how we write is actually "communicating" with what we wants to a place it was easier. So really just learning from a class could open doors to complete something and not just mash all your thoughts.

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    1. I have considered online classes, just haven't decided what I want to study.

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  6. I can see how a communication class can help, but I'm a pantser also. I'll take the ideas that pop into my head and I'll let the story guide me, but I keep an end goal for my books. It may change somewhat as I go along, but it remains similar as time goes on. The end goal allows my story to veer off course, but gives it a destination to guide me on the course I need.

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  7. I do the same, Evelyn, but this time the story is veering too far off course.

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  8. I'm generally a pantser too. The most planning I've done was when I wrote my opus, my sci-fi and that took a great deal of planning to get all the needed scenes and make sure I kept track of where I was on the timeline.

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  9. You fantasy is epic too, why don't you have an outline and timeline for that? And there is a difference between an outline you write before you start writing the story and a timeline you put together as you write the rough, I do timeline/calendars all the time.

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