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Walks help to flush out ideas for writing |
It has been years since I've handwritten a story in a notebook. Apart from writing group meet-ups and a bit of free writing, I write straight to laptop these days. There was a time when I never thought I'd be able to do that as I was so used to writing by hand. Now it's the other way around. This all started because I had no time to type my opening for my story onto my laptop. I was going out and scratching out my ideas with a pen and paper (I grabbed some printer paper), was the only way. I covered several sides before I left the house.
That's the way it this piece then went. I did type up what I'd written later, but as I was due to go on holiday and I didn't want to lug my laptop with me, I took my notebook. The idea had formed into something longer. I wrote by hand every morning before breakfast, and sometimes later. So, when I returned from holiday, I decided to keep it going that way. The piece was eventually finished whilst sitting in a cafe a bus ride away from me, where I also bumped into a lady from my writing group!
What did writing this way teach me? My head was still ahead of my writing as when I type straight to laptop, but it also slowed me down. Often I'd start not knowing what I was going to write next to continue the story, but once I started, the pen flew across the paper. That was a surprise. It was a bit like a stream of consciousness. On average, I wrote six pages in the mornings, but when on a roll, that was added to. The action took place in a confined space with only three main characters, and that helped. I didn't have to spend lots of time inventing a village, town or movement to other places. All these things worked in my favour. Because I was writing every day, I didn't have the usual worry about not remembering what came before. I also didn't set myself a word limit, and writing by hand, I had no idea how that was going anyway. Was it going to be a short story or something longer? I didn't know. I just wrote what I wanted to write to complete the piece. I got really into my characters and felt I was there with them. I also knew early on now it would end, so it was more about how to fill out the piece. Some of the walks I took on my holiday helped with that. Walking (with dog or not) helps me with my next moves. I see it in my head. Even the dialogue comes, and thankfully I'm pretty good at remembering what's in my head. I use this technique when I am writing anyway, so this one is familiar to me.
Drawbacks? Well, apart from having to type it up, which is a bind for me, and that maybe just me, there were none. I would read back what I'd written after I had written it to amend spellings, some punctuation and add the missing words my brain put in for me! I am further amending it now I am typing it up, but I haven't completed the typing yet.There will still be rounds of editing to be done.
Having thought about the way I write and whether my work is plot driven or character led, I have come out on the side of character led. I adore inventing characters, especially funny ones, annoying ones, feisty ones. Place and plot come together. If I look at all my pieces of work, they all begin with a character. That didn't change when I was writing by hand.
Will I do it again? Yes, and I have. I had another idea (I have our dog to thank for some of these lightbulb moments. Walking him has certainly helped). This time I knew it was a short story, and it began with a character. Set in the 1970's it is about a young teenager's first encounter with romance. I don't normally write romance, but this is more than just romance, it is also about friendship, and it is set in a fairground. I wrote this totally by hand again, but when I typed it up I tried to find some mood music and ended up with a track by Dire Straits called Tunnel of Love. I'm a big DS fan, but all it did was stop me typing as I wanted to sing along! That's why I usually only listen to Trance when I work because it's too distracting otherwise.
How do you write? Do you write by hand and then type up your work, or do you write straight to laptop? Maybe you do a mixture of the two. Do let me know.