the feminine urge to turn trauma into art

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the feminine urge to turn trauma into art

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help Iām having ideas beyond my available free time
I do not write to be the greatest writer out there. I write because...
I LIKE it
someone else might LIKE it
it is FUN to do
I get those THOUGHTS out of my head
it's fun to look BACK on
have I mentioned it's FUN?
it's CATHARTIC
it's nice to see what I CAN DO
And also because I just like it.
Your dialogue is stiff because everyone is being too honest
Great dialogue can come from radical emotional honesty. But in most real conversations, people
dodge questions
answer indirectly
lie (badly)
change the subject
crack jokes to avoid serious answers
lie (convincingly)
say half of what they mean
tell the truth but get so anxious/angry/defensive others now think they're lying
If your dialogue feels unnatural, it might be because everyone is saying exactly what they think, or articulating their thoughts too well. Try letting characters hide things instead.
Subtext is where tension lives.
Went to the doctor today, got diagnosed with Writers Block. Turns out 10/10 writers contract this in their life. The cure? Keep on writing, even when itās hard.

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One of the best things about being a writer is thinking of something small you can add to your work thatās just. Devastating. Like youāre sitting there going. Oh. That would be diabolical. People would get really riled up about that. Exquisite. Letās do it.
suffering from chronic insomnia, over stressed, eating nothing but ritz crackers, and never leaving my house: "why am i in a writing slump right now?"
new characters clawing their way out of my subconscious: "Mother?"
me beating them back with a stick: "Shit! Not another one!"
some highlights from my writing seminar with honestly one of my favourite authors of all time who shall remain nameless bc i dont want her to know i was spilling her secrets online
The first trick is to detach yourself from your idea. You donāt have just one novel inside you, and itās not a big deal if you donāt finish this novel.
She was skeptical of the common adviceĀ ājust write!!1!ā - she talked about how long ideas for her most popular novels were marinating inside her before she properly wrote them
As a continuation of that, she was a big believer in knowing what you want to write before you write it. Not what youāre going to write, what you want to write.Ā
The first thing she decides about a novel is what the mood is going to be, and this informs every other decision (e.g. the mood for Shiver was bittersweet)
Ideas should be personal, specific, exciting and they should exclude secondary sources. A personal idea isnāt necessarily autobiographical (which should be avoided), but it speaks to your emotional truth.Ā
She said she had been read Ronsey fanfiction and she couldnāt view her car in the same way since.Ā
Story is the thing that seems most important to reader but is most changeable to the author - story is subservient to your mood and your message. Change what you like in the plot as long as your book retains its sense of self.
Story is conflict, exploration and change. A good story has active tension -the characters want something, instead of just wanting something not to happen (e.g. wanting to kill an enemy instead of simply defending a stronghold against an enemy)Ā
A story needs to have a concrete end, something to be done.Ā
Satisfaction is important - deliver what you promise to the reader. The other shoe has to drop. Ronan Lynch doesnāt ever talk about his feelings, so its rewarding when he does.Ā
Earn your emotional moments (she threw shade at Fantastic Beasts lmao)
Forcing a character to be passive is dissatisfying to the reader.Ā
Characters are products of their environments, consistent/predictable, nuanced and specific, moving the plot, and subservient to other story elements.Ā
She always starts with tropes for ensemble casts like sitcoms. Helpful for building good character dynamics.
Write scenes with characters saying explicitly what theyāre thinking and then go back and make them talk like real people in the edit.Ā
An action can also prove what theyāre thinking, instead of making them say it or another character guess it (e.g. Ronan punching a wall).Ā
Move the readerās emotional furniture around without them noticing.Ā
All her books follow the three act structure. Established normal -> inciting incident -> character makes an Active Decision -> fun and games -> escalation -> darkest moment -> climax.Ā
Promise what youāre going to do in the first five pages.Ā
Read your book out loud. Record yourself reading it.Ā
If you have writerās block, itās because youāve stopped writing the book you want to write. She likes to delete everything sheās written until she gets back to a point where she knew she was writing what she wanted to write, and then carrying on from there.Ā
writerly reminder that explaining something well and explaining something completely are not the same thing. the first one makes for good writing. the second one adds 17 pages to a project that was supposed to be a 5 page short story

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one of the best parts of writing is spending hours in baby name websites searching for cool character names instead of opening your document
By Ed Himelblau
As a writer Iām just glad that Iām good at saying āThatās future meās problemā when it comes to the first draft. Yeah Iāll write this even while Iām cringing and certain that I wonāt keep it, itās a first draft, Iām here for quantity not quality
the feminine urge to abandon the novel and start a newer, hotter, less emotionally demanding novel
i'm putting the rough in rough drafts with this one folks

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The cruelest joke is when the scene you've daydreamed about for six months becomes the most gruelling to actually write.
This, Iāve got a couple of mountain top scenes Iām worried this will be the result when I get to one of the other characters.
if i ever get stuck in a scene well damn that's just where it ends now
the fates have spoken, no conclusions needed. slap a period on that thing and move on to the next one