elisi: Edwin holding a tiny snowman (Being an author... by kay_brooke)
elisi ([personal profile] elisi) wrote2010-11-03 06:46 pm

Day 3.

I'm finding that focussing on the word count, rather than the words themselves, is working rather well. Of course what I've written is pretty terrible, but it's there, and that feels good. Plus, today I wrote lots of arguments, and they're always fun. Especially since I've had them in my head for many many months, if not years, now and again running through them, making sure I remember all the details and bits of dialogue. Really, writing feels like transcribing a film only I can see. Which also sometimes makes me feel almost divorced from the story, if that makes sense? I mean, I know that I came up with it, but it's sort of like my brain came up with it independently of me and it feels weird to take credit for it.

Aaaand I should probably stop now - if anyone reads this I'll come across as a complete nutcase. Ah well.


4171 / 30000 words. 14% done!

[identity profile] poshcat.livejournal.com 2010-11-03 07:18 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm pretty much exactly like you, except even though it's a freaking movie in my head I still have problems getting it on paper. I must, must, must try harder to accept that a lousy first draft is okay, great even, as long as I'm getting it out there. As the saying goes, the only you can't edit is a blank piece of paper. My daughter the artist's motto (literally - she used it on her coat of arms for Social class) is: I'll Fix it Later. LOL! And she does, too. I really have to make that the family motto.

Nice to read about your writing exploits, because writing is a damn lonely business even with all those voices in your head. :0)
promethia_tenk: (what uuuuup?)

[personal profile] promethia_tenk 2010-11-04 02:29 am (UTC)(link)
about writing and ideas and the absolute AGONY it can be...)
My favorite bit is the email in response to the question about "how do you know when to start actually writing?" And he replies with four pages of the truest truth that's ever been truthed about procrastination and last minute panic and gut-eating fear and self-loathing and and and . . .

It is the single most reassuring thing I've ever read.
promethia_tenk: (Default)

[personal profile] promethia_tenk 2010-11-05 04:02 am (UTC)(link)
I wonder what I'd be like if I wrote professionally, because that is just such a pit of terror to fall into.
Oh, dear god, I would be a wreck. And yet, I approach most things I do in much the same way, so if that's just how I'm going to be, maybe it wouldn't be such a bad thing to get the satisfaction of writing out of it.

One of my favourite parts is where he gets an idea as he is writing (WHAT IF IT WAS WILF???) and the exhilaration just shines through wonderfully.
LOL, so are you saying this doesn't happen to you? Hmmm. It is fun to get swept up with RTD's enthusiasm, though.

'Do you ever want to just open the window and shout 'I don't have a clue what I'm doing!'?'
Yes! That was awesome. Something about Moffat just makes me feel better about life.
promethia_tenk: (Default)

[personal profile] promethia_tenk 2010-11-06 04:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, that is an excellent fanwank; I think I shall adopt that. I'm also reminded of the way the brain is still plastic and susceptible to languages at a young age--if you're exposed to a language before you're 12 or so, you pick it up naturally, afterwords, you'll never quite adapt to it the same way. Perhaps around eight years old is the right window in more ways than one?

I love the back and forth between fic and meta, the way they interfuse each other. I feel like when I burn out on one I switch over to the other and the creativity starts flowing again and everything I discovered on one side of the equation transfers over to the other :-)

I'm putting together a fic right now that's like super-fused meta about River being . . . not superstitious, exactly, but ritualistic--needing her own personalized ceremonies and such to structure her life.