Tuesday 8 January 2013

Writing is not simply putting words on a page

Writing is not simply putting words on a page. The process of writing begins somewhere else, and the words on the page are the result of this process. So where does the process begin for me? I’m not actually sure. My first book, The Dashing Debutante, came into being because a funny piece of dialogue popped into my brain, and I built the entire story around this piece of dialogue. The story appeared in my mind, in pictures, and I translated those pictures into words typed on a page. But the story had been germinating in my mind for a long time before that.

Words, thoughts, ideas, fragments of conversations, startling realisations, wise sayings, other writers’ words, interesting concepts, dreams, mind paintings, different philosophies, and the ongoing analysis of relationships, all form part of the process of writing for me. I’m not only writing when I’m seated at my desk in front of my computer. I’m “writing” when I’m standing in the check out queue in the supermarket or reading a book, or when I overhear an interesting piece of dialogue in a coffee shop. I can “write” when I’m at the movies, or when I’m dreaming, or when I’m walking around my neighbourhood or running on a treadmill at gym.

Writers are constantly involved in the process of writing. We live it, and from somewhere in our deep subconscious, and often when it’s least expected, a book will rise to the surface, slowly separating into form, rather like cream rising to the top, separating from milk. And when it becomes substance in the form of words, the process of writing ends, rather than begins, when the words are typed onto a page.

6 comments:

  1. Totally agree with you! I'm "writing" everywhere and at any time (accounts for that 'look-in-the-clouds' airhead expression, I suppose *grin*).

    But true, a snippet of anything can trigger a story, and we authors are always on the lookout for the next idea. :)

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    1. Exactly! I think most writers probably look a little switched off at times :-)

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  2. Fascinating post! That concept always makes me feel less discouraged that sometimes I don't have the time to write because each moment of living life goes into my memory bank for my future books.

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    1. True - I used to feel when I was younger that I didn't know enough about life to write anything of consequence. But all those experiences are in my "memory bank" as you say and they can all be drawn on in the future.

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  3. I thought up such a brilliant passage of dialogue last night as I was falling asleep, then memorized key words so I would remember it this morning. Did I remember? Nope!

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    1. It's in your subconscious somewhere! I'm sure it'll surface again :-)

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