I’m kind of surprised I don’t have a blog entry with this title yet. Give it time, I always want to recycle the good ones.
Today, personal story meets writing moral. I think.
I had a screaming bitching idea this morning for a later chapter in the novella I’m struggling to write. This thing is my bane now. This morning I thought it wouldn’t be. I wrote the idea down, added a whole extra thousand words to my WIP, and was pretty happy with the results.
I was so happy, I went back to the part of the story where I’m actually at and tried to pick up there.
And then I made the mistake of re-reading what I’d already written. And then I thought “what if this is boring to other people?” And then…I couldn’t write any more. I’m staring at
Ethan had inferred enough from letters he had received over the years to know that very little was what it had been when he’d left. “You guys pick. I still like the same stuff, so wherever you think is good.”
Jason opened his mouth to respond.
Something occurred to Ethan and he cut his friend off. He wasn’t in the mood for McDonalds. He was looking forward to something they didn’t have overseas. “My treat.”
Neither of them protested. Ethan hadn’t expected them to, but it still nagged him a little. Another reminder of how little the two had changed.
“I know the perfect place.”
And I can’t go any further. I’ve rewritten the two paragraphs after that like ten times now.
There’s this little voice in the back of my head:
“Readers don’t like it when you introduce too many characters up front”
I’m only giving out her name. She’s his twin sister. I have to introduce her sometime
“A name and a relationship. Someone to keep track of. Four people in less than a thousand words. Are you retarded?”
*pouts* Not completely
“While we’re on the subject, remember that last time you wrote a novel? You know, last November, when you wrote that tedious story about people living life that bored all two of your readers to tears?”
That’s not fair. You don’t trust the opinion of one of them, and the other is more into speculative fiction than contemporary.
“Oh, good excuse. How many more have you got stored up?”
Shut up. I can write what’s in my head now and fix small errors in editing. That’s why I have awesome reviewing friends.
“Who will pass over and fall out in a pool of their own tears when they read this. It will be ‘Reunion’ all over again. Why are you wasting my time?”
…*crickets chirp*
And now you have a general idea of how my insecurities work. Which is funny because I’ve never had this particular arguement with myself until very recently. After I started getting feedback on the aforementioned novel and short story.
It won’t keep me from writing, but it will keep me from writing quickly. I just need to figure out a way to shut up the self-doubt demons for a couple of days. That’s really all I need to get this down. I tried decongestants. (I know, huh?) Because the morning after, they pretty much remove all of my ability to care and make me ultra apathetic. Unfortunately, that seems to enhance the portion of my brain that drives the self-doubt, not the part that shuts it off.
This is just another excuse not to get something done. But this is the underlying one. I don’t know what to do about it.
{/whine}
I’m so pleased to discover someone else has that same voice in their head. I argue with mine daily, with every scrap I write, and it sucks. Eventually, you just have to bash it over the head with a heavy object, or send it to its room for time out… Or write to spite it.
“So there stupid, nagging self-doubt. I can too write this. And nobody’s gonna stop me.”
*sticks out tongue and pouts*
And on self-doubt, you want a whole bunch of it? Start querying a novel. Bucketloads turn up in your in-box daily.
I’m going somewhere to cry now….
Heres soemthing to think about- does the interaction you posted above move the story forward? If the answer is yes, then move it forward….as far as introducing a new character- well you could do it now and get past it then when you go back for critiquing decide to change it or leave it. Chances are if you are unhappy with the way the story is moving forward then your readers will be too. Maybe the character you want to introduce can have a surprise visit right at that second?
What I think is fitting here is some great words of advice from the great podcaster, Mur Lafferty. If you have never heard the podcast “I Should Be Writing” I recommend looking it up. It can be heard on Itunes or on the i should be writing web site. Basically, she says this often…
“You’re allowed to suck.”
If this is a first (or second) draft, you just need to tell the voices to “shut up” and “that’s what rewrites and edits are for”. All those writing rules don’t matter as much in the general writing stage. Sure, it’s good to know but you can always fix those adverbs, repetitions, extra characters after the story has been written down.
I get those feelings sometimes too and it can be hard. I had one novel I showed my critique group the first chapter I had written, and they didn’t like it. Well, I’ve done minor scene for it but nothing more since then.
But I know you can write this story in a great, interesting way and once it gets edited/rewritten it will be super awesome. 😉
@Kate – I queried my novel 4 times. All got form rejections. One I got back in less than 10 minutes. I kind of put it aside after that, so you’re stronger than I. We’ll cry together and share some ice cream ^_^
@Summer & Dawn – fantastic words of advice, and good reminders. Thank you.