by Jackie King
Rule-breaking
goes against my nature. However, the older I get, the less sure I am that
rules and regulations in regard to writing shouldn't sometimes be broken. I’ve seen too many dictates followed without success, and too many broken
with astonishing success. It’s advisable, of course to learn the rules until
you follow them without conscious thought. Then it's okay to break them.
When you do
something contrary to textbook writing rules and then delete that sentence, you
may have made a serious error. So be cautious when you decide to discard a
paragraph. Leave it for the moment and make the judgment later. (Unless you’re
on deadline, when you do whatever is necessary to finish on time.)
Today is one of my
uphill-writing days. If I ever had a muse, he’s off shooting pool somewhere.
Certainly he’s not sitting on my shoulder whispering words into my ear.
The thought I
woke up with this morning on how to continue my current story-in-progress,
breaks all of the rules. I can actually hear my old writing teacher’s voice in
my head shouting, “YOU CAN’T DO THAT!”
The best
writing, IMO, is when an author puts her (or his) heart on the paper. If this
sounds messy, it’s because it is. Very. And hard. And exhausting.
I've mentioned
to other writers how tired I am after writing. Most agree. The average
person, husbands, wives, etc., don’t get this, and there’s no reason they
should, unless they also write.
Back when I
taught fiction classes I told my beginning students to commit themselves to
writing 30 minutes a day. The important thing was to write every day, I assured
them.
Several hands
always went up. “But, I love writing and want to write for hours and hours,”
students would say and most of the class would agree.
“Just make sure
you clock 30 minutes. It’s harder than you think,” would be my answer.
The next week at
roll call, I’d ask, “Did you write every day?” Few could answer, “Yes.”
No one knows how
hard it is to put your heart’s blood on paper. Not until you've actually done
this in a consistent manner.
In each class
there would always be one or two who ‘got’ what I was saying. Those were the
students who became selling authors. You just have to stay with it. You have to
plod through the days you wonder what on earth ever made you think that you
could write.
Usually I follow
the rules. Today I think I’ll break them and see what happens.
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