Tag Archives: Thought

Writing into the Darkness

This entry is part [part not set] of 73 in the series The Writing Life Blog

It’s almost 1 AM now and I’m still awake. Despite having morning class tomorrow and knowing that being up this late is going to make me super tired for my favorite class. This isn’t the first night this week I ended up late. Why? I’ve been asking myself that very same question and so far I don’t really have an answer.

Things aren’t particularly bad right now even if I do have a tone of work from school. With just three weeks left of classes, plus one week of finals, things are getting pretty intense. The two literature classes that were manageable all semester have become a bit overwhelming. Yet really it’s just a lot of reading. Nothing I’m not used to in the end. Except I’m having trouble sitting down and doing it. I’m distracted and I have trouble concentrating.

Dead Wesley Smith talks about writing into the dark on his blog. It’s the phrase he uses to describe writing when you have no plan, no plot, and no idea what you’re going to write about. You just start writing and go. I really like this idea and I’ve been itching to try it. Then I realized that’s pretty much what I always do with my blog entries. I don’t have a plan. Sometimes I have a thought and that’s my starting point. One little thought. Tonight my thoughts are rioting among the streets and alleyways of my mind and it’s making me crazy.

I’m sad and depressed, yet hopeful and determined. Mixed feelings describes it well. Then there’s the fear. The nagging, little voice in the back of my head fear that this is all going to come crashing down and I’m just a stupid little idiot for every thinking I could pull off writing for a living.

A poem written about fear and anxiety. By Aaron Lowe
A poem written about fear and anxiety.
By Aaron Lowe

Ending a Novel

This entry is part [part not set] of 73 in the series The Writing Life Blog

I finished up chapter 20 today, which wrapped up the climax shown in the prologue. That meant it was time for a big decision: do I end the book here? My first inclination was that yes, I should end it here. After all, the climax itself was resolved in a very thorough manner. It would be a bit of a cliffhanger, though that’s not necessarily a bad thing. I am certainly eager to be done with this story as well. Impatient really as I can’t wait to get to the whole editing and publishing part. So when I finished chapter 20, I was ready to throw in the towel. Write a little epilogue so I didn’t leave readers hanging completely and call it done. It was the reaction from my girlfriend, who has been reading this story as I wrote it chapter by chapter, that changed my mind and got me to thinking. I was super excited to be done. She was very much not excited. I’ve asked her not to give me any feedback until I do my first edit since I have a list of things I’m going to add/change anyway. She’s done a great job sticking to my request too. It was her tone that gave it away though. She was very disappointed.

So I’ve been thinking about it all day now and even tried to put myself in the readers’ shoes. The story is really for them after all. Then I realized ending the story right here might just piss people off. I spent a lot of time and effort tiptoeing around a lot of secrets and subtext because my main character is completely in the dark about all of this and all of the others are actively keeping things that way. The climax is the breaking point, not just of the action, but of the information. I realized that if I didn’t keep going, I wasn’t going to give the readers the payoff they deserve for being in the dark along with the main character. This is why I’m two pages into chapter 21 and actually pretty glad I’m still going. I still plan to finish the book this weekend, it just means I’ll be doing more writing than I thought.

All of the writers that I’ve researched have said pretty much the same thing about writing a novel, or anything really: make it as long as it needs to be and no more. I have been keeping a close watch on my page and word counts because it gives me a feeling of accomplishment to look back every week or two and see just how far I’ve come. This being my first novel, the process has felt pretty long and drawn out. This has been discouraging at times so I always write down my page and word total when I finish a chapter. In the beginning, I was also worried that this story would be far too short. I grew up reader authors like Robert Jordan, J.R.R. Tolkien, and others. When I was that age I also thought that writing stories that long was what it took to be an author. Thankfully I am content these days to compare myself only to myself. For the most part. I’m doing this for me, because it’s fun and it’s something I’ve always wanted to do. So I am happy with how long my book has turned out to be, and amused that I was worried it would be too short. Character development takes awhile after all, or at least it does for me. Either way, I’m still crazy excited to be almost done!

Happiness and the Daily Grind

This entry is part [part not set] of 73 in the series The Writing Life Blog

I don’t know how it is for most people, but for me the daily grind is such a soul sucking experience it’s extremely difficult to come home and have much desire to do anything besides relax and pass the time until the next work day rolls around. I’m not saying that my job is horrible.  Far from it. It can be challenging and rewarding at times. It even pays fairly well. There was even a time when I was much younger that I believed that having a job that I didn’t like would be doable long term if the pay was there. I have since learned differently. It has actually been a fairly interesting personal learning experience. In my case, I’ve come to realize that once I have the money to pay my bills and save for retirement while still having a bit left over for my hobbies, interests, etc., the money on top of that does not make up for a frequently miserable existence.

That’s not to say everything is horrible and I hate life. No, this dissatisfaction is more subtle. As the days grind on, it has slowly become apparent that my life is going nowhere. The life I want to live and envision on a regular basis is on hold due to reality. There’s little use denying the facts as they stand. The job market is terrible and is likely to remain so for quite some time. Those of us with steady employment are lucky. No way around that, even if it doesn’t feel that way most of the time. The alternatives are far worse. After all, who really gets to make a living doing what they love? Who indeed?  For that matter, how many people actually know what they love doing? I’m not talking about just entertaining ourselves to pass the time. I’m talking about a passion. Something that moves us beyond measure. That inspires us. How many of us have actually found whatever this is? How many of us recognized it for what it was? From there, how many had the courage to pursue it against all odds? Damn few.

So now I return to my situation. I am most certainly not doing what I love for a living. For that matter, I’m not sure of exactly  what I could be passionate about as a career. I would think that it couldn’t feel like a job. A job is something you do because the alternatives don’t bear thinking on. You get up five or more days a week, likely after not getting enough sleep, and go to work. You do you thing. You try not to think about what you’d rather be doing throughout the day. You distract yourself by commiserating with your coworkers, not looking at the clock, trying to lose yourself in your work for as long as possible. Anything to make the day pass more quickly so that you can trek home and not think about work for a few short hours. If you were to feel this way about something you had been passionate about, that passion would die a quick and horrible death. So the trick seems to be to find that passion and somehow make that work for you. Make it a success to the point where you can do that for a living because it is what you want to do. That is quite a trick though.

In my case, I have a few ideas of things I could possibly do that I might truly end up being passionate about. How do I go about trying these ideas out? How can I keep my regular job, do my regular job, then come home and take up my passion with the energy and creativity it needs to survive? I’ve actually thought about this long and hard. What can I do to make this happen? How can I motivate myself to do what I dream when the dream dies a little more with every passing day? When the enormity of the effort needed for the dream seems enough to crush hope? I have been searching for the answer for some time. Searching outside myself, casting about in a vain attempt to find a ready made solution. It is only recently that I have come to a dawning realization: there is and will never be a quick fix for such a task. The answers will never be found with someone or something else. I am stuck. I am unhappy. I can’t keep this up indefinitely. This is my problem. The world doesn’t care and really shouldn’t care. It’s time I start looking to myself for the answers to my problems. After all, even if I can’t solve all of the problems I perceive in one fell swoop, I can make the many small decisions and take the small steps needed to begin fixing them. Bit by bit, I can build the life I dream of. Once again, I find that I already have at least some of the answers, even if I don’t always like what they are.