Thursday, January 31, 2013

3 Tips For New Writers




Write Often And In Varied Ways
Of course we all want to write a novel that grips the collective attention of the world around us, but for most writers this goal is too far in the future to satisfy the internal need to create.  So, instead of focusing on that final goal, turn your attention to what can be accomplished today: putting fingers to keys or pen to paper. 

Write something right now and at this very moment! Stop wasting time reading this insightful and terrifically written blog and go create something amazing. Send an email, tweet a funny remark, write a letter (if you have any stamps), inscribe a short story, or scribble on the sidewalk with chalk. Trust me, you’ll feel better about today if you just take time to create.

Read Everything—Not Just Books
This is easier said than done for many writers whose lives are spread too thin by work and responsibilities to worry about much of anything else—especially reading.  After all, we have to hit our word goal, blog, tweet, network, be a functioning member of society, and rinse and repeat.  This is the cluttered stage that writers and non-writers act on these days.  It is an era of keeping busy and staying distracted, so pausing to read can feel like it gets in the way of that frantic pace. 

Trust me, if you take even the smallest amount of time to sit, stand, lie down, or kneel to read you’ll be happier for it.  Any skilled writer will encourage aspiring authors, myself included, to read, read, and read some more.  Books are of course fantastic and you should gobble up as many as you can, but online articles, twitter feeds, magazines, and countless other reading options are easy to access from anywhere at anytime.  So, if you have a couple of free minutes just stop and read something. The great C. S. Lewis said it best, “We read to know that we are not alone.”

Enjoy The Process
Stephen King once wrote, “The scariest moment is always just before you start.”  It’s the perfect quote for understanding what goes on in the mind of a writer.   Ideas for a great story, a stirring poem, or a pulse-pounding screenplay can keep any writer up a night.  Yet, when the time comes to actually write it down the creative door can often slam shut without warning. 

My advice is simple: Enjoy the process! There will be mountaintops of euphoria when you write that perfect scene that explains your idea for a story so perfectly. There will also be the valleys where you can write the same sentence over and over again until you decide, for a brief moment, that your story is terrible and everyone will surely hate it.  When you inevitably get to that point take a walk, read a book, listen to music, and just let your mind be free for a little while.  Then come back and try that same sentence again and you may find yourself climbing up to that mountain peak once more.

- C. D. Kearby

- Follow me on Twitter @cdkearby

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