Noticing Newbies: November 13, 2024 Issue [#12844] |
This week: Failure to Launch Edited by: Jeff More Newsletters By This Editor
1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
"You never know what you can do until you try,
and very few try unless they have to."
-- C.S. Lewis
About The Editor: Greetings! My name is Jeff and I'm one of your regular editors for the Noticing Newbies Official Newsletter! I've been a member of Writing.com since 2003, and have edited more than 400 newsletters across the site during that time. If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to contact me via email or the handy feedback field at the bottom of this newsletter!
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Failure to Launch
Have you ever had difficulty figuring out where to get started?
There's lots of talk about writers who struggle to finish projects, but for some just getting started can be an equally tall hurdle to overcome. In this week's newsletter, let's take a look at some of the things that can cause difficulty in actually getting started on your writing.
Indecision. Sometimes, it's just a matter of trying to decide what you want to write. Whether that's because you're not happy with a particular idea or because you're struggling with which of your many ideas to stick with, making a choice about which thing you want to focus on can be a challenge for some writers.
Over-preparation. Some writers spend so much time preparing to write something that they never get around to actually writing it. Especially when it comes to writing disciplines that prioritize worldbuilding (fantasy, science fiction, grounded realism, etc.), it can be easy to convince yourself that you need to spend additional time researching and fleshing out all the details before you actually begin the writing process.
Anxiety. Worry can be a huge impediment to writing progress, and it can take a lot of forms. Some people stress about whether or not what they write will be any good, while others worry about how it will be received by their audience, or even what might come next after the thing they're currently working on.
Ambition. Being overly ambitious can be a problem all on its own, or it can fuel any of the other issues listed above. Writing, at least in long form (books, scripts, stage plays, etc.) are serious undertakings that will take weeks, months, or even years of our lives. But some writers have grander aspirations and also fret over how that one book, that one story, that one creative effort will fit into a larger narrative series, or even their identity as an author. Ambition can be paralyzing when you can't get started because you're spending so much time thinking about what's farther down the road.
Aversion to Revision. Some writers want to make sure the words they write are perfect so they don't have to rework any of words they've painstakingly put on the page. In the worst cases, this can result in the agonizing over every single word that's written, and make writing progress painfully slow to the point of unproductive, if the focus is on achieving perfection one baby step at a time.
I'd argue that all of these different manifestations of "failure to launch" are ultimately different facets of a general fear of failure. They're all things that get in our head and convince us that we aren't ready to start writing yet. At best, it delays you starting the actual writing of the story you want to tell. At worst, it can completely derail your efforts and convince you to give up a project, or even jump from project to project, never actually getting started on anything.
I have a few friends who are really successful "pantsers" (writers who believe in getting words on the page as quickly as possible so they have something to work from, even if it's a mess) and I envy the fact that they're able to so confidently dive into a project and start putting words on the page with so little effort. While I don't think I could ever be a "pantser" from the perspective of plotting (I dislike writing without knowing the direction I'm going in), one thing that I think I could learn from my friends who employ this method is to be less precious about my writing. To accept the fact that anxiety and revision and indecision are part of the writing process, and that ambition and preparation are elements of a writer's process but shouldn't overtake it.
At the end of the day, a writer's job is to put words on the page... and if you're stuck on a hurdle that's causing you to not put words on the page, then that's a hurdle that needs to be figured out and overcome because not writing is the one thing that will absolutely ensure you fail as a writer. You can't succeed if you never make an earnest attempt in the first place!
If you find yourself struggling to get started with your writing, I'd recommend finding something that will allow you to get words on the page ASAP, whether that's "pantsing" a story that you're not particularly invested in and know you're never going to show anybody, blogging, writing a short story, etc. Writing is like exercising... it gets easier and you get stronger the more regularly you do it. And it can be really hard when you're out of shape and rusty, so if that applies to you, get yourself back into fighting shape by starting small. Find easy victories and short-term tasks that get your confidence back so that "failure to launch" - in any of its variants - isn't something that's likely to derail you in the future.
Jeff
If you're interested in checking out my work:
"New & Noteworthy Things" | "Blogocentric Formulations"
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This month's official Writing.com writing contest is:
I also encourage you to check out the following items:
EXCERPT: Bill was pulled over at the side of a country road in the dead of night. He'd just come from a wild party and sought to sleep off his intoxication after a couple miles of questionable driving. Crickets chirped in the adjacent woods, the only sound besides the radio. A gentle breeze entered through the half-open window. The moon was out, full and beautifully bright. Samantha would love it, he thought.
EXCERPT: The repugnant odor had caught her attention—a scent like rotting fish flesh, impossible to ignore. Eden tightened the strap of her sagging leather pack, grounding herself back in the reality of her task. Her bright green eyes cut through the early morning mist clinging to the trees, the cool air stirring stray strands of her thick braided brown hair in the breeze. In the distance, birds called, their songs echoing through the quiet forest, filling her with a calm only solitude could bring. Moments like this—wrapped in silence, on the edge of discovery—were what made the hunt worth every risk. Yet even as she reveled in the stillness, a shadow of unease lay underneath, a sense that each step took her closer to answers that might only complicate the questions.
EXCERPT: "Wash your hands," Elmo's mother always said. "Wear your coat," "Finish your homework," "Don't approach the men with the masks." So there he sat, on the curb. His hands were grubby. His coat lay forgotten on top of his empty spelling assignment. After all, he was eight years old now- far too old to be listening to his mother. He sat on the curb with Dahlia and Joyous, waiting for a masked man to pass by. Joyous was wrapped in her little plaid coat, shiny clean hands hidden under red mittens. Her spelling worksheet was inside a folder in her bag, neatly finished. She had round cheeks that old ladies liked to pinch until they were red, and her two long, long braids were neatly tucked in, as they should be, so as not to get caught. She didn't want to see a masked man, but she didn't want to be alone either.
EXCERPT: During her last Christmas with her entire family, eight-year old Aliciabelle is given a slew of presents from all four of her sisters. However, the one she gets from her eldest sister is a bit different from all the others, a six-foot tall robotic father figure.
EXCERPT: Merry Ethel was her name. She has medium-length dark wavy brown hair and brown eyes. Merry was a British-American girl who attended an unnamed middle school and was currently in the eighth grade. She was a brown-skinned girl with a round body type. Her mother was a Mexican-American who met her British father while she studied abroad in the United Kingdom. Merry was an average girl who loved video games, cartoons, and anime. She was usually bullied for her speech impairment and her body type. Merry has been in a particular education class since first grade. She has a few friends and a favorite teacher. |
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Feedback from "Noticing Newbies Newsletter (October 16, 2024)" about ways to win at NaNoWriMo:
When it comes to NaNoWriMo, my technique varies. I try to be more incremental in order to get to the goal by the end of the month but the result can vary each year and during parts of the month. I've had some days where I will get 3,000 to 5,000 words and others with nothing. One year, I made it to 50k in 10 days. Other years I've not made it at all. So, it just depends on how things go. Won't know how this year will go until I start writing. Not having work may help, but the medical issues may hinder progress. We shall see when we get to November.
Thanks very much for article on how to approach writing the Nano and the feedback comments. I'm definitely a newbie, started writing in Jan 2023, had nothing published yet, and never attempted anything as intensive as Nano. A friend talked about it to me, encouraging me to participate, which I've decided to do. But I read several pages of opinions on Reddit about doing the Nano thing, either with Nano or with other groups or even individually, so I'm still deciding what direction to go in.
I haven't seen anything on WdC about Nano so I wondered whether they were 2 separate worlds, but to be fair I'm not here very much. I want to make it a greater part of my writing life. The article was great for me as showed there's an overlap and obviously there are WdC members that do the Nano.
Because I'm not here much I also don't know my way around the site that well but I'm working my way through it.
Anyway, thanks again, I did enjoy the article and it helped me think about what approach might work best for me.
Kind regards,
John
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