NoTalentHack
Corrupting Influence
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2022
- Posts
- 2,578
I've tried plotting. Once everything is in place as an idea, I lose interest.
This is my problem, too. "Welp, there's the story. Why write it?"
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I've tried plotting. Once everything is in place as an idea, I lose interest.
Exactly.This is my problem, too. "Welp, there's the story. Why write it?"
I'm a little bit spectrum-ey, and one way that manifests is that once something (a project, a task, whatever) is planned thoroughly enough, my brain says "it's done." Like actually executing it is just a trivial detail.This is my problem, too. "Welp, there's the story. Why write it?"
Yep. I can't wait to see what happens next.un[c]over the story just like a reader would. I love that.
That's an interesting point that I have considered. I can tell you that some of the stories I've published here and elsewhere are the zeroth draft as it came out, with just proofreading and minor sentence and maybe paragraph level editing. Others, there is some planning involved, but after the initial pantsing. I figure out what structure emerged and change it as needed, sometimes adding or deleting additional scenes, sometimes reordering them. And often that means fleshing out the characters that have emerged, sometimes even changing them completely.Each of you pantsers plans too, it's just a question of how much.
Chaos is a ladder...
I envy pantsers. They’re incredibly productive, firing words from their keyboards like a Vulcan cannon. Some even turn a profit.
I envy them because they have fun, riding a creative flow without restrictions-- no need for planning or structure. More is more; excess is best. Unlike us, the unfortunate goldsmiths, who labor endlessly, polishing tiny diamonds with painstaking care.
But I also pity them. Much of what they produce is junk. Their writing swings wildly in quality, sometimes even within the same scene. Their outlines are shaky. Characters can feel flat, their actions inconsistent or senseless. Entire sections could vanish without anyone noticing. Worse, their pages are cluttered with irrelevant events and personal ramblings that add nothing to the story.
I envy modern artists. Some get rich by splattering paint on a canvas, while others manage to analyze those splashes with a straight face. I wish I could see more than just scribbles.
Chaos is a ladder; diamonds are eternal.
Hur-hur, you said "pants and "nuts" in the same sentence. And "removing". Hur-hur, hur-hur.Truthfully, it's probably why I haven't gotten all the way to a novel-length story yet. I think if I tried that approach, I'd end up either planning it out (removing the drive to write it) or pants it to the point where I drove myself nuts.
In a similar vein, I've commented before that the difference between pantsters and plotters is the former call their outline their "first draft."I have referred to pantsing as just overly wordy outlining.
In a similar vein, I've commented before that the difference between pantsters and plotters is the former call their outline their "first draft."
I like to think of each subsequent pass as putting additional pants on over the pants I already had on.Indeed, a good writer (no matter their technique) is never too lazy to revise and edit.
I like to think of each subsequent pass as putting additional pants on over the pants I already had on.
This happens to me, I have an idea, and write some notes but it's always very light on details. I feel like I could improve if I actually sat down and thought 'This is the idea for the story in my head, now write a proper outline, get details about the characters, and then the story will reveal itself.However, despite writing like no one's reading, I do always have an idea where it should go, I just don't lock myself in and let myself freestyle within the "This is what I'd like it to be."
Okay, how do I write a story without knowing its story?
I began safe. A scene which introduces the brother, and does drop some foreshadowing that something is off about the small town their parents grew up in and he and his sister are visiting for the first time. I drop a twilight (or more like taboo) zone text from the mayor that goes to everyone in the town and describes the upcoming festival and the rules. Now I'm backing myself into the corner with no way out in my mind, but fuck it, as Alfred E Nueman would say "What, me worry?"
I do have the beginning and an end mind. For this one it was more just having "this is how it ends" because I could have started in a variety of ways.This happens to me, I have an idea, and write some notes but it's always very light on details. I feel like I could improve if I actually sat down and thought 'This is the idea for the story in my head, now write a proper outline, get details about the characters, and then the story will reveal itself.
I'm curious, do you have the start and the end to the story worked out in your head before you start writing? I'll have a basic idea for a story, but not always a start or end. When you describe it the way you have above, I feel similar, sometimes I'll be partially through a story and I know that I don't have the next chapter worked out so I type and hope for the best. However, I usually end up going back and deleting all of that and instead wait for inspiration or just listen to the ideas that seem to float into my head a few minutes before falling asleep at night. This then adds the complexity of hatching another story/stories idea and feeling driven to start writing that one as well, which ends up with me having too many irons in the fire at a given time.
Question: Have you ever started a story that you've ultimately given up on?
I like your formulation of the whole writer/reader relationship as creating a 'reader experience.' Not a bad way to proceed.What's really not fun is editing. Editing is a chore, but it is always necessary. Furthermore, the less that you plot, the more you will likely need to edit. When you open a story and start reading and the plot is good and the flow is good, you have no idea if it was plotted or pantsed, however, if a story is pantsed and poorly or not edited, it reads like a sloppy pants job. It's often super easy to tell. Chekhov is firing bullets in all directions. There are side scenes that go nowhere, unnecessary characters conveniently pop up out of the fog, stuff is elaborately introduced and never heard from again, recursive scenes drone on too long and generally the pace is bloated and erratic.
Pun intended?Wife didn't see that coming. It just flows from there. Lovecraft68 love your work. Cheers.
Accidental humor.Pun intended?
Thank you for the compliment always means a little more coming from another writer here.
I finished a story in January that I'd moved away from back in 2009. Meanwhile, the only story I've ever really tried to outline has been at the very top of the "slushpile" since about 2005. I know how it ends, I just haven't been able to get it there.I give you credit, I don't think I could pick something up years later. I'd lose the feel. Longest I've gone when leaving off and coming back is a few months and it took work to get the first and later parts of the story to mesh.