August Theme: How to Deal With The Curse of Page 25 by Trudi Trueit
This month, we’re writing about how we’ve dealt (and are
dealing with) some of our biggest personal writing obstacles. My
brain nearly exploded with the possibilities. If there is an obstacle to
writing, whether it is the ‘I Have Enough Rejections to Wallpaper My Entire
House’ nightmare or ‘Nobody Cares About My Latest Release Because It's Nonfiction’ blues, you can be sure I’ve had it.
After some thought, I, finally, settled on a challenge I’ve heard other writers deal with, too. I call it the Curse of Page 25. It starts when a brilliant idea shakes you awake in the middle of the night. You fly to your computer and begin writing. For the next several days or week, you write maniacally every chance you get, only stopping to cry, “This is genius!” Then, around page 25 or 30, you stop cold. You don’t know where the story should go next. Your ‘brilliant’ idea, suddenly, seems to have fizzled out. Should you stop? Start over? Keep pushing through?
It took me awhile to discover there are many answers to this dilemma. Sometimes, you should stop. Sometimes, you should start over. Sometimes, you should push through. But how do you know when to do what? Since I love food and cooking, let’s measure it out in the kitchen.
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Turn on the Slow-Cooker: Sometimes, I hit a stumbling block because my brain needs time to process what I’ve written and consider where the story should go next. I used to panic and think that if I didn’t hit my quota of words for the day I was dry and would never write again (I do have a flair for the dramatic, which may be why, as a child, my mother nicknamed me Sarah Bernhardt). Now, I find a quiet spot to relax and let my mind wander down all of the paths the story could take. When I find the right road, I know it. Sometimes, it takes a few tries to get it right. This contemplative process can take a few hours, days, or sometimes, weeks.
The Back Burner: If, after thoroughly thinking things through, I can’t see clear to the next section of the story, it’s time to put the idea on the back burner. It doesn’t mean that I can’t or won’t eventually find a solution. Sometimes, I need to admit that I am not ready to write this particular story. At least, not yet. Other times, I must acknowledge that my idea didn’t have a strong enough base to build a book around. Sadly, not every good idea makes a good book.
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Only you can truly know for sure if your idea has the staying power to last beyond the Curse of Page 25 (or 30, or whatever it is for you). Trust your heart. And don't worry. You won’t run out of ideas. New ideas will always come at you. Your mission is to stay open to them and then choose the ones that really let you cook.
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And please take a moment to comment and share how you handle breaking through your own writing walls. I'd love to know. I'll be in the kitchen, burning something or eating pie or both . . .
Love this post, Trudi! I've recently put aside two manuscripts, so I know how painful it can be to acknowledge when something just isn't working, no matter how much you've invested. But I also believe that nothing is ever wasted--sometimes you end up recycling material in a much better context!
ReplyDeleteGood point, Barbara. Sometimes, it just isn't the right place and time for your idea to blossom, but put it in a different context and if you've got magic. I'd love to interview you or have you guest post sometime for Smack Dab about your experiences!
ReplyDeleteWhat a creative post! I, too, dislike writing middles...but this is just filled with so much fantastic advice for pushing through to the glorious finish line!
ReplyDeleteThis post made me hungry! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Holly! And Lisa, from a great writing 'cook' like you, I'll take that as a compliment!
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