dr_mabeuse
seduce the mind
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2002
- Posts
- 11,528
The more I write, the more I think writing is a two-stage process. There's the actual writing, and then there's the revision: the reading of what's been written and the fixing of it, the editing. You really can't just write something once and turn it in. That's like doing a painting with your eyes closed. To really call yourself a writer you have to read and edit, and that's where the real skill and art come in -- evaluating how something reads and knowing how to make it better.
Writing is kind of unique as an art in that the process used to decipher it is so different from the process used to manufacture it. Reading doesn't even use the same part of the brain as writing. It's an entirely different phenomenon. So when we write, we have to constantly go back and read what we've written and fix it, smooth it, shape it and color it till it reads the way we want it to read. It's like cooking, where we're constantly tasting the mix to make sure it's right; not too much salt or too much sour, not too fast or too slow.
I think that's why we learn to write by reading, and why, when we're stuck in writing, the best course is to suck it up and force ourself to write through it, no matter how bad it is. We have a much better chance of fixing bad writing than we do of waiting till we get it right the first time through.
Writing is kind of unique as an art in that the process used to decipher it is so different from the process used to manufacture it. Reading doesn't even use the same part of the brain as writing. It's an entirely different phenomenon. So when we write, we have to constantly go back and read what we've written and fix it, smooth it, shape it and color it till it reads the way we want it to read. It's like cooking, where we're constantly tasting the mix to make sure it's right; not too much salt or too much sour, not too fast or too slow.
I think that's why we learn to write by reading, and why, when we're stuck in writing, the best course is to suck it up and force ourself to write through it, no matter how bad it is. We have a much better chance of fixing bad writing than we do of waiting till we get it right the first time through.