kriadydragon: (Dolphin)
kriadydragon ([personal profile] kriadydragon) wrote2011-11-26 11:31 pm

In Which I Wuuuuv My Story!

Seriously, I'm loving my new original story to bits. I want to hug it, I look forward to writing it, I get annoyed with myself if I stop or don't set enough time aside during the day to write (when, in fact, I have plenty of time). And hopefully saying all this won't scare the muses off (it tends to happen when I talk about projects to the public). Except this isn't me bragging and tempting fate since I'm still writing so have no real idea of how the story is turning out. It's just... I'm really enjoying myself with this one, and kicking myself that I didn't write it sooner though I had the desire to do so for some time.

It's also confirming what I'd already figured out about myself - that I need outlines like you wouldn't believe and that I'm very much a linear writer. I hear people talk of having particular scenes in their heads that they write down as those scenes come, and what I've come to realize is that my scenes aren't so much scenes as images with a lot of fill-in-the-blanks. It's stuff happening, but I don't know why, or when, or what's being said, and won't know until I've written whatever comes before that scene. It's what I mean when I say what comes before inspires what comes after, because the scene may be fully formed image-wise but all the little details - what is said, what happened to lead to that scene and so on - can't be added until I know where the scene sits in the grand scheme of the story.

And it's nice to have my method of writing fully figured out and to let that method have its way with the story. I've been whipping through this thing pretty quick and am now at 44,000+ words. I'm writing almost every day while my last story - the one that was like plowing through waist-high mud - I was lucky to write a few paragraphs a week.

Again, not bragging, just basking in the relief of a cooperative story. My last story was such a struggle that I was afraid all my stories would be like it. I expect some stories will give me trouble while others I'll breeze through, but it's good to know that not every single story will be a struggle.

That said, I still have to read through the new story when it's done. That part I'm a tad nervous about since you don't truly know what a story is up to until it's written and read, so for all I know the editing aspect will be what gives me grief. On the other hand, it's been my experience that a story that starts off cooperative stays cooperative.
sholio: a cup of cocoa and autumn leaves (Autumn-cocoa)

[personal profile] sholio 2011-11-27 05:54 am (UTC)(link)
*grins* That's fantastic - I'm so happy for you! It's such a wonderful feeling when a story cooperates and just feels good to write. Mine -- the sequel to the urban fantasy novel I finished earlier -- is currently stuck in the "slogging through mud" stage. But I hope to get out of the mud soon! And I like seeing your writing squee -- it makes me feel more optimistic and writerly. :)

[identity profile] kriadydragon.livejournal.com 2011-11-27 06:17 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you :D There's been so much writerly talk lately that it got me all fired up, not just to write but to talk about writing as well. It's so much fun to have people to talk about writing with and gush about writing and squee about accomplishments (or gripe about stubborn stories - oi, my first original, such a brat to write though I love it to pieces), and finding that extra burst of motivation in doing so.

Now if we could all just get published, because I really want to read all these stories being worked on.