Monday, August 2, 2010

Writer's Notebooks

Writer's notebooks are a special place full of special words... And some not so special words. Honestly, they are a dumping ground for your brilliant, not-so-brilliant, average, and just plain horrible ideas. If you have an idea, it should go in your writer's notebook. That way, it's out of your brain so that there is room for new ideas (hopefully better ones).

I usually keep more than one writer's notebook at a time simply because I can't be bothered to pick one. If you do pick one instead of using multiples, then you should decorate it with inspiring pictures and designs. My current writer's notebook is a black 70 page with random blue pen drawings on it, and I've been using it at the beach. Pretty cool.

Anyway, about a writer's notebook. It's a central clearing house for all of your character sheets, lists, ideas, scenes, poetry, rants, diary entries, doodles, ect. You can tape pictures in it, attach colorful tabs, add a useful page of descriptive adjectives (I have a couple with sex adverbs and adjectives on it that I occasionally refer to).

The hardest thing about keeping a writer's notebook (and the best reason to keep one) is that it requires you to turn off your internal censor. Write everything: the good, the bad, and the ugly. This can help keep your muse churning out newer, better stuff. It is a good way to prevent the well from running dry. It's purging the bad in order to move on to the good. Besides, who knows, maybe you will end up noticing that your "bad" ideas aren't so bad after all.

Even if you can't think of anything significant to write, the act of writing not-so-inspired words flicks on a switch inside your brain. As you continue writing, the words will come easier. The phrasing will improve. As long as you carve out time in your day to write, eventually you will come up with something worth reading and transferring to your computer. You can always use that process as a chance to improve and edit your words.

Now, go write! Have fun! Take your new writer's notebook for a spin, or add to one you started previously. Just write something while I enjoy myself at thie beach... Later.

1 comments:

mrytale2-5 said...

I have many writer's notebooks, stretching back to when I started writing in my late teens and yes I too still refer back to them, even the first ones as sometimes they have little plot lines that were scribbled down long ago that can now, we the value of hindsight, be turned into a story. I wish I had more time to write, unfortunately family and work commitments mean that my time is severly restricted though I always find time to pick up my pen even if it is for ten minutes!

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