Write Strategy: Think, Believe, Attack
BY SHERY MA BELLE ARRIETA-RUSS
Think of writing like karate... it's about DISCIPLINE.
Writing, like other forms of art, work or talent, requires discipline. It
won't ever be enough that you say to yourself that you are a writer. Only
when you write and write with discipline can you call yourself one. Before
you can earn a black belt in karate, you have to dedicate yourself, practice
and instill discipline in yourself to learn the moves and techniques.
The same goes for writing. Don't just read books. Devour them. Ray
Bradbury, author of
Zen in the Art of Writing, suggests books of essays,
poetry, short stories, novels and even comic strips. Not only does he
suggest that you read authors who write the way you hope to write, but "also
read those who do not think as you think or write as you want to write, and
so be stimulated in directions you might not take for many years." He
continues, "don't let the snobbery of others prevent you from reading
Kipling, say, while no one else is reading him."
Learn to differentiate between good writing and bad writing. Make time to
write. Write even though you're in a bad mood. Put yourself in a routine.
Integrate writing into your life. The goal is not to make writing dominate
your life, but to make it fit in your life. Julia Cameron, in her book
The
Right to Write, sums it best: "Rather than being a private affair cordoned
off from life as the rest of the world lives it, writing might profitably be
seen as an activity best embedded in life, not divorced from it."
Believe that EVERYONE HAS A STORY — including you.
Extraordinary things happen to ordinary people. As a writer, your job is
to capture as many of these things and write them down, weave stories, and
create characters that jump out of the pages of your notebook. Don't let
anything escape your writer's eye, not even the way the old man tries to
subtly pick his nose or the way an old lady fluffs her hair in a diner. What
you can't use today, you can use tomorrow. Store these in your memory or jot
them down in your notebook.
Jump in the middle of the fray. Be in the circle, not outside it. Don't
be content being a mere spectator. Take a bite of everything life dishes
out. Ray Bradbury wrote, "Tom Wolfe ate the world and vomited lava. Dickens
dined at a different table every hour of his life. Moliere, tasting society,
turned to pick up his scalpel, as did Pope and Shaw. Everywhere you look in
the literary cosmos, the great ones are busy loving and hating. Have you
given up this primary business as obsolete in your own writing? What fun you
are missing, then. The fun of anger and disillusion, the fun of loving and
being loved, of moving and being moved by this masked ball which dances us
from cradle to churchyard. Life is short, misery sure, mortality certain.
But on the way, in your work, why not carry those two inflated pig-bladders
labeled Zest and Gusto."
Attack writing with PASSION.
The kind of writing you produce will oftentimes reflect the current state
of your emotions. Be indifferent and your writing will be indifferent. Be
cheerful and watch the words dance across your page.
Whenever you sit down to write, put your heart and soul in it. Write with
passion. Write as if you won't live tomorrow. In her book, Writing the Wave,
Elizabeth Ayres wrote: "There's one thing your writing must have to be any
good at all. It must have you. Your soul, your self, your heart, your guts,
your voice — you must be on that page. In the end, you can't make the magic
happen for your reader. You can only allow the miracle of 'being one with'
to take place. So dare to be you. Dare to reveal yourself. Be honest, be
open, be true...If you are, everything else will fall into place."
Copyright © 2004 Shery Ma Belle Arrieta-Russ
Shery is publisher of
WeeklyWrites.com and the creator of WriteSparks!, software
that generates over 10 million Story Sparkers for Writers.
Download WriteSparks! Lite for free.
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