Topic: Losing Touch With Work

I have been the victim of what I like to call the Alzheimer's Writer's Syndrome more than a few dozen times. I begin to write a story, but then something comes up, and then I can't write the next day, or I don't finish the day with at least the minimal amount of words in my word count. I put it off until the next day, but by then, the AWS sets in. I try to write the next day, but by then its too late.

I've lost connection with my work.

How do we prevent this?

One thing that could help would be to have a "Writing Playlist", full of songs that you like. You should play it while you are writing. This will not only affect your writing technique, but it will also help you get back in the zone if you are thrown off course during you writing session.

Tell me about other ways to help you get back in connection with your work.

Re: Losing Touch With Work

I have memory problems from medication, so I'm forced to keep track of all kinds of information for easy reference (spreadsheets!), plus I reread/tweak my earlier chapters frequently as a way of remembering what I said and, therefore, what I want to say next. Sometimes I just go off on a tangent and research something that I'll eventually need to know anyway. I also take chapter-length detours just to see where the story takes me. Eventually, I get back on track.

Re: Losing Touch With Work

I force myself to start writing again, even if I don't feel that connection. For me, the connection feeling isn't even a reliable feeling. Sometimes I'm in the fine and writing away, thinking I'm doing great and then I go back and read it a month later and it's terrible. Other times I'm really struggling and not happy with my work but when I reread it, I think that it's not so bad.

I guess what I am dating is that as long as you have done idea of where the story is going, you might not need a connection.

Re: Losing Touch With Work

I outline a story by writing a short paragraph of what I anticipate to happen in that chapter. Sometimes, I can only outline a few chapters to get started, then add to it as I go and things pop in my head. If I have to insert chapters because the characters created events as they developed, all the better because they are coming alive on the page. When I get frustrated because creativity is not flowing from a bottomless pit of imagination, I take a break and read someone elses book. In the end, if I lose connection with the story or find myself nodding off while writing it, I know the reader will be bored with it too. At that point, I blow something up, kill someone off, or have a vampire attack.

Re: Losing Touch With Work

Well, I'll be darned.  I though I was one of the few who did things like this.  I've never counted, but I bet I have 20 stories on my computer that have anywhere from 1 to 5 chapters and they just stop - dead - and haven't been touched in months.

What is really strange is that I use every method mentioned to continue the work.  My favorite way to do it is like Philisha, do a paragraph on what I want to accomplish even though I may not get to it in weeks.

Since I type so fast (120/130wpm), I can rap out seven or eight paragraphs in a half hour or so.  Then I let it drop for a few days or a week.  When i go back, I start fresh, edit, and continue.  It helps break the doldrums.

Sorry for adding so late, but I just found this thread - and the group - and joined this evening.
~Tom

Re: Losing Touch With Work

For me, I don't actually lose full connection with my stories, in fact even my old unfinished novels that I work shopped on here when I first became a member of tNBW are still solidly ingrained in me. My first one I'm unsure of the complete story arc, the second one that I started writing as a member on tNBW "Blood Ties" I know the ending to and may in fact complete it some day after I finish writing my current novel. I also know I should write down a brief outline of where I see each of these novels going, just in case AWS strikes me, but right now I'm so intent in finishing "The Aurora Mission" that I want to spend every moment I can in writing the last few chapters without worrying about outlining them on paper, from the ideas I have in my mind for this novel. 

I would love to try the music thing, but I love to sing and I'd be too afraid I would sing more then write if I did that. Hmmm...maybe I should have my guitar teacher start writing the soundtrack for the movie now, so I could have that as my background inspirational music - the only problem with that is I can't afford to pay him for that yet, so I guess that's out.

The one thing I do do while I'm sitting down to continue writing is review the last few chapters that I've written to make sure I'm being consistent with where I'm taking the story at that moment. My only struggle at the moment is that as I'm coming closer to my main climatic scene of the novel that I feel I'm only tuned into my main characters story arc and not so much of all my secondary characters. Is that okay? This is the first draft and I know I shouldn't allow it to worry me too much, because that worry could derail me from at least completing the novel if I allow it to grow inside me.

7 (edited by John Byram 2015-03-06 21:14:25)

Re: Losing Touch With Work

I have had this problem, and I now use a process much like PByrd says she uses. I do narrative outlines, and read what I have written previously, no matter how long ago it might have been. Even doing all this, I still get writers block.

Re: Losing Touch With Work

I've found a good way (for me, anyway) to counter writer's block.  I have a huge German-English dictionary and I open it up to a random page and finger a word.  Then I sit down ant try to write anything that uses the word, or can be attributed to the word.  It works well for me.

~Tom

Re: Losing Touch With Work

John, do you feel that your internal editor is making you worry that your writing anything isn't very good? Even if its not true?

10 (edited by mikira (AKA KLSundstrom) 2015-03-07 02:47:29)

Re: Losing Touch With Work

This evening I decided to write a loose outline for the events leading up to the climatic event, I plan on writing in my novel. I feel reading this thread inspired me to do that, so I don't lose any of the ideas that are floating around in my mind about what's going to happen next. I'll keep you all informed how that goes for me tomorrow night, since I plan to have a long writing session tomorrow.

Re: Losing Touch With Work

I'm like mikira. I can't stop the stories. I wake up at all hours and have to put down what came to me in my sleep. Now, if I don't do that, that particular tidbit might go to Neverland.

Re: Losing Touch With Work

Oh my gosh Janet, you made me remember a time when I had been blocked in one of the stories I was writing, due to not being able to find a good way to describe a castle I wanted to describe, so I put the story away and started writing something else. Then one night while I was trying to fall asleep the ideas for that castle came to me and it wouldn't allow me to fall asleep until I got up and wrote a long note about it. The next day I sat down and wrote two more chapters in the novel I had put aside because of that creative blockage.

The lesson I learned from that experience is: Sometimes starting a different writing project can loosen your worry about what your trying to write, so the creative juices can start flowing again for the story you had put aside.

Re: Losing Touch With Work

I have read in several writer's advice to other writer's books and posts that is important to make notes on what you plan to write about in a bit of detail and/or ask some questions for yourself for the next time you sit down to write. It gets you started at least. Outlines also would help keep you on track. I'd tick off what has been covered but in a different color of ink or text I'd include on the outline any unfinished business or remaining questions.

14 (edited by Charles_F_Bell 2015-04-12 10:33:14)

Re: Losing Touch With Work

amcii cullum bellamy wrote:

I have read in several writer's advice to other writer's books and posts that is important to make notes on what you plan to write about in a bit of detail and/or ask some questions for yourself for the next time you sit down to write. It gets you started at least. Outlines also would help keep you on track. I'd tick off what has been covered but in a different color of ink or text I'd include on the outline any unfinished business or remaining questions.

It may be that novels (not applicable to non-fiction books) written from outline are formulaic, dull, and staid. If a successful writer has found his formula to make him plenty of money from book to book using the same formula from outline from book to book, writing from outline and notes is certainly a good idea. He writes out his outline including some facts to look up, practicality of scenarios to consider, etc, , pays his staff to fill in those pesky details, fills out the rest, and turns it back to his staff to polish it off, and he has written the same money-making book over and over again. For a novice, unpublished author, writing to formula and outline may mean writing to someone else's formula. I think an author, not a TV/movie hack, to make his mark ought to allow as much "organic" growing of his work as possible. Certainly,  the advantage of putting things down in notes and very rough drafts  is to enhance retention in memory those great ideas that can flash before him in a moment of inspiration but then as easily flash out of existence.

Re: Losing Touch With Work

mikira (AKA KLSundstrom) wrote:

Oh my gosh Janet, you made me remember a time when I had been blocked in one of the stories I was writing, due to not being able to find a good way to describe a castle I wanted to describe, so I put the story away and started writing something else. Then one night while I was trying to fall asleep the ideas for that castle came to me and it wouldn't allow me to fall asleep until I got up and wrote a long note about it. The next day I sat down and wrote two more chapters in the novel I had put aside because of that creative blockage.

The lesson I learned from that experience is: Sometimes starting a different writing project can loosen your worry about what your trying to write, so the creative juices can start flowing again for the story you had put aside.

I had a months-long writer's block last year. I used the time to read a dozen or so books, researching topics relevant to my story. Naturally, my reviewers had trouble picking up the story where I left off, it had been so long. I have the same problem writing most new chapters right now; each one is a daunting effort, so I take a break and just read other people's work. I'm starting to run out material to read, though. 500+ points and counting. :-)

Dirk

Re: Losing Touch With Work

Charles_F_Bell wrote:

For a novice, unpublished author, writing to formula and outline may mean writing to someone else's formula. I think an author, not a TV/movie hack, to make his mark ought to allow as much "organic" growing of his work as possible. Certainly,  the advantage of putting things down in notes and very rough drafts  is to enhance retention in memory those great ideas that can flash before him in a moment of inspiration but then as easily flash out of existence.

Looking back, my first draft was absolute garbage. I bought several books on writing, from which I learned a lot of what a typical book entails (story arcs, character arcs, hero's journey, outlining, etc.). I tossed v1 without ever finishing it, although I still borrow from it. I'm treating v2 as my figure-out-how-to-write draft, including some significant, unplanned detours that weren't in my outline. I'm overdue to reorganize the outline to ensure I haven't written myself into a corner.

It's a balancing act between the amount of structure a new writer needs vs. the ability to write based on inspiration. There are good authors on both ends of the spectrum.

Dirk

17 (edited by Charles_F_Bell 2015-04-12 19:19:56)

Re: Losing Touch With Work

Norm d'Plume wrote:

Looking back, my first draft was absolute garbage. I bought several books on writing, from which I learned a lot of what a typical book entails (story arcs, character arcs, hero's journey, outlining, etc.). I tossed v1 without ever finishing it, although I still borrow from it. I'm treating v2 as my figure-out-how-to-write draft, including some significant, unplanned detours that weren't in my outline. I'm overdue to reorganize the outline to ensure I haven't written myself into a corner.

It's a balancing act between the amount of structure a new writer needs vs. the ability to write based on inspiration. There are good authors on both ends of the spectrum

I have to agree that method of organization varies from individual to individual. I may be able to keep an outline plan in my head for a very long time, and others do not. I wrote my PhD thesis entirely without written outline, although it had already been organized by virtue of being printed up in four papers, with my supervisor at head, before I submitted the thesis. I did, however, in the orals get some comments regarding its 'uniqueness' of style (and not in a good way), and I probably gave myself unnecessary grief in worry about my method. As to fiction, I feel I have never finished anything, partly from perfectionism, but, I have to say, that an organic growing is a slow, never-ending process.