Writing in the Midst of Chaos

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“I wrote in the living room, with the radio and my family all talking at the same time.” – Ray Bradbury

I’m learning to write in the middle of family chaos and noise right now, and I’m ashamed to admit that I’m not doing it very well. I’m making progress on my story, but I’m grumpy a lot of the time and I don’t like being grumpy.

I grew up in a small house – 900 square feet, one small bathroom, and four of us sharing everything. The tiny piece of real estate that I called my bedroom was very precious to me, but interestingly enough, it wasn’t the place where I did my homework or writing assignments. Instead, like Ray Bradbury, I did it in the middle of everything. Talking and laughing, the television and the telephone, my brother and his friends – all of it was background noise that I learned to write around. I didn’t insulate myself from the world and I think my life was richer for it.

Somewhere along the way though I got spoiled. I moved out on my own and my little apartment was a very quiet place. Too quiet most of the time, but I learned to adjust. Then I married a man who traveled frequently for work and somehow I taught myself that I could write only when life was calm and I was by myself.

Now I have a child and my husband works from home part of the time. Things around here are never calm and I am very rarely all alone. The past several months have been a process of un-learning as I train myself to focus amid the craziness and messes that surround me. I’m choosing to be in the middle of it all, but it’s rough-going. One of the good lessons that I’ve learned is that time goes by so quickly and I know I don’t want to miss a thing. So that means learning to write while I’m living my life and helping the people around me live theirs.

I’m hoping that my novel in some ways is a reflection of that. No, not messy and scattered like the toys, costumes and books in my living room. But I do want my characters to be people readers relate to, people who are imperfectly plodding through life just like I am.

Okay, time to go. I’ve got to pick up my child from school, feed her a snack, help with homework, make dinner, do a load of laundry, and revise a chapter all before bedtime. And I promise I’m not going to be grumpy while doing any of it. Wish me luck!

The State of the Novel – Part 2

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I had a friend gently remind me to update my blog. Not that I have many readers – mostly friends and family – but I should be doing it.

For those who don’t know, I haven’t updated because I’ve been busy – wait for it – writing. I finished the first draft of my novel and I am currently knee-deep in revisions. In some ways, it’s a huge relief; I’ve been playing with this story in my head for almost two years now. But the story isn’t yet where it needs to be and I feel like it keeps hounding me. On some days the ideas are flowing and the changes are made easily. Other days are painful. (Like the past week, but who’s complaining? Not me. Okay, maybe me.)

Real Life has been crazy (good crazy!) and I think it’s interfering with the writing process. Nothing I can do about it though except to keep plugging away, day after day. I read The War of Art by Steven Pressfield a couple months ago and without it, I think I would be completely lost in this process. But Mr. Pressfield reminds me that I am a writer – a professional writer at that -and that means showing up every day and not worrying about how the work is going. Of course, I worry about how the work is going, but I understand his point completely. Here’s to the continued hope that my “butt-in-chair” approach really works.

Happy writing!

The State of the Novel – Part 1

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I started planning the book I’m writing over a year ago. I was in a writing group and was working on a “practice” novel when the idea came to me. I knew that it would be the type of story that I’d eventually want to share and perhaps publish. I actually began working on it in January, but the more anal retentive part of my personality (I was an Accounting and Finance major in college after all!) decided it would be best to study more about the writing process itself first.

I completely threw myself into learning more about the craft. I read books on writing. I began keeping a writing journal. I spent several weeks doing character sketches and “interviews” in an effort to get to know my characters better. Finally, I read. A lot. I re-read some favorite novels, this time taking notes and highlighting things that struck me. I also started reading new authors, often noting how he/she developed the story.

With my daughter in pre-school and my husband’s erratic work schedule, I knew that any real work would have to begin this past summer. By the end of June, I had an outline and a rough draft of the first chapter. Throughout July and the first half of August, I wrote several more chapters. Problems set in, however, when I went back to review everything.

There was something wrong with what I had written.

I couldn’t put my finger on it, but something didn’t feel right. I started to lose confidence. I put my story aside for a couple weeks, completely disheartened and fearful that perhaps I was in way over my head.

Then I reminded myself that I am a writer and this is what writers do. They start stories and re-work them over and over again until they know they have something good. I also reminded myself that I may be a newbie at writing fiction, but I have written oodles of other materials over the years. I know when something’s wrong, when an idea isn’t coming across as well as I’d hoped, and I know how to fix it.

I forced myself to re-group and go over my materials again. The story wasn’t terrible; I had just started it in the wrong place. Nothing changes, not even much with the outline. It’s just a matter of letting go and allowing the story to unfold in a better way.

So here I am, starting over again. Or maybe it’s starting over-ish. I’m still loving the story and having fun, and in the end that’s all that matters.

“Beginning a novel is always hard. It feels like going nowhere. I always have to write at least 100 pages that go into the trashcan before it finally begins to work. It’s discouraging, but necessary to write those pages. I try to consider them pages -100 to zero of the novel.” – Barbara Kingsolver

 

How exciting!

Yay! My first blog entry. Is it tacky to use the picture from the demo for a while? Oh well. C’est la vie.

I’ll be updating this for the next few days – playing around with it, adding things, all that great stuff to make it mine and to hopefully show more of who I am.

If you’re reading this, welcome! And please come back to visit.