23 mayo 2005
SOLO PARA ESCRITORES (y bilingues)
1. EXPERT SERIES: The Myth of Sacred Writing Time by Stephen Berger
I would like to address a problem that many writers contend with
every day. It's a problem that can delay a project's completion by a
few days, or it can stop work dead in its tracks, leaving it
permanently unfinished. It can hinder a single project's momentum,
or it can lay waste to an entire writing career. And the most
amazing aspect of the problem is that most writers don't consider it
a problem at all. What I consider a plague on the entire creative
process is something many writers would consider an ideal, a work
ethic, something to struggle to achieve. If you're thoroughly
confused now, allow me to elaborate. I am talking about the Myth of
Sacred Writing Time.
Most of us spend time studying and struggling to master certain
aspects of the craft of writing, such as story, plot, character arc,
dialog, archetypes, hero's journey, you know the drill. These
subjects are noble and necessary if you hope to be a competent
purveyor of the craft. They are what I call 'external' skills. The
great mistake many writers make, however, is stopping once they feel
they've learned said skill-set. Now this is not to say that good
writers don't attempt to hone their skills by writing, or that
they're not open to learning whatever they can about the above,
external subjects. The tools that are so often neglected are
'internal.' By 'internal,' I mean mastery of the 'inner self' -- a
writer's individual habits, her beliefs about her own writing, her
relationship to her own creative process.
All of the above may sound like New Age gobbledygook but, as I'll
demonstrate, these principles have vast practical application. The
one application I'll focus on here concerns the time (or the number
of pages) you set each day for yourself as a writing goal. Even if
you don't have a set page/time quota and your method is just to sit
and write, you'll still find great value in the techniques I'll
discuss.
So, back to External Knowledge. Typically, you take courses, read
books and find an idea for a story. You are now armed with the tools
you need to create an amazing piece of work. All you have to do is
go off and write, right?
So, do you? Are you writing consistently, every day? Is your
output a steady, dependable stream of pages, or is it more like water
sputtering from some old plumbing -- occasionally gushing, but most
of the time trickling or even backing up in a stagnant sludge? If
you're more familiar with the gush/trickle syndrome, then you might
be a victim of the 'Myth of Sacred Writing Time.'
What is the aforementioned myth? It's the belief that in order to
seriously pursue your writing it's necessary to carve out an IDEAL
time, place and set of circumstances in which to write. Now on one
level, this makes perfect sense. If my goal were to master the art
of chair-making, I'd certainly be wise to find a workshop and set
aside time each day to build either a specific number of chairs or
spend a specific amount of time building the chairs. This appears so
obvious it almost seems beyond question. Yet, the act of writing
brings with it some special circumstances.
To illustrate, see if the following scenario sounds familiar:
You're starting a new project; you want to get it out and not lose
any momentum. You start out strong; either writing several pages a
day, or for a set amount of time, say a couple of hours. You vow to
keep it up, cranking out the same number of pages or spending the
same hours writing every single day. You won't let ANYTHING stop
you...
... Until something does. Inevitably some other work or some out-of-
town guests or the kids or SOMETHING gets in your writing way one
day. No problem, you vow to yourself, you'll make up for it
tomorrow, DOUBLING your output or hours. And you do...until
something else interrupts you. Before you know it, you're in the
hole for an impossible quota of pages/hours, you've lost critical
momentum and, to top it off, you feel guilty that your Sacred Writing
Time keeps getting trampled. The net effect of all this is exactly
what you wanted to avoid: a loss of momentum. You're stopped dead in
the middle of your project, you can't even start to get back to your
writing time and you feel like a failure. The insidious problem that
Sacred Writing Time causes is the feeling that if you can't do it
CORRECTLY (that is, get in at least a good portion of your
pages/hours) every day, you end up not doing it at all.
While intuitive and noble in concept, Sacred Writing Time is almost
impossible to maintain. The solution? Lose it. Don't have Sacred
Writing Time. Instead, choose a new model. Write JUST A LITTLE BIT,
but do it every day. Even if your writing quotient is MINIMAL (and I
mean minimal, as you'll see below), it will still get done.
Think about it. There are numerous things you do throughout your
day that seem to get done, day after day, and yet you don't even
think about them. You don't have to set aside Sacred Shower Time or
Sacred Reading-the-Paper time. They're just habits. Similarly, if
you write AS LITTLE AS 1/3 OF A PAGE A DAY (or even JUST A LINE OR
TWO), your writing will become internalized, a habit, and soon it
will become something you do without having to even think about it.
Now at first blush, this may offend the sensibilities of serious
writers. It's like saying that practicing your craft is on a par with
taking a shower or watching TV. If this is your reaction, I would
ask you to consider if adhering to your own Sacred Writing Time has
paid dividends for you. If not (or if you feel you could improve
your writing output in any way), I'd ask you to put aside your
prejudices and try something that truly works.
The method I've developed is called Momentum Writing, and it works
like this: For the next 21 days (researchers have determined that
it's necessary to perform a new action for 21 consecutive days before
it can be internalized as a habit), write A FEW LINES, no more. This
isn't as easy as it sounds, but it's essential (often when I give
this exercise in a workshop, overachievers think they've done extra-
well by writing a whole page.) Again, WRITE ONLY A FEW LINES, three
or four at most. Then, for the NEXT 21 days, write only 1/3 page.
Continue this way, adding 1/3 page of writing to your quota each 21-
day cycle, until you're writing two pages a day. Once that two-page
limit has been reached, you will be able to write two pages a day
automatically, habitually and, most significantly, without your
Sacred Writing Time.
Once you've achieved the two-page level of Momentum Writing, there
are other benefits. On many days, you'll be writing three, four,
five, seven, ten pages at a sitting, and it won't feel like work, it
will just be what you do -- a habit, automatic. You'll be able to
write in the spaces of your day, or when you have a free moment; the
tiny places in which you would never attempt to achieve Sacred
Writing Time. And even if you only write 1/3 page a day and no more,
you'll still have over a hundred pages of text at the end of a year.
But what about those days when even two pages are impossible (and
there will be those days)? On those impossible days, simply write
JUST A LITTLE, a line or two, as in the early part of your Momentum
Writing training. This will preserve your momentum and, when
circumstances permit, you'll be able to go back to your two-page-a-
day habit effortlessly. It's essential to think of two-pages-a-day
not as a quota, rather, two pages will be what you automatically do.
You won't be keeping track, only stopping after two pages have been
reached. Instead, you'll just notice that you seem to average two
pages a day. But if you do come up short, it's not a problem. As
long as you write SOMETHING, ANY AMOUNT AT ALL, you're maintaining
momentum.
Finally, lest you think that banishing Sacred Writing Time lowers
the respect you have for your craft, remember this: the only way to
become a better writer is to write, and Momentum Writing allows you
to do just that, consistently. The fact that you haven't sanctified
a place in your life for it should be of little concern. You're
doing what all successful writers do -- adopting habits that work.
Ultimately The Work, and working, is what it's all about.
* * * * *
Publicado originalmente en el e-zine de The Writer´s Store.
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