Here to Create

We are here to create not merely survive.

Scheduling Your Creative Interests

I ran across an interesting idea at Blue Sky Shining yesterday—a Creativity Calendar. NaNoWriMo winner Terri has made a list of all the activities she wants to do, from knitting to photography, and scheduled each for a single month of the year. She is quick to point out that this isn’t a rigid schedule but a way for her to not forget about some of her interests.

As someone who has a never-ending list of potential projects, I found the idea of the Creativity Calendar intriguing. My other efforts at “scheduling” my creative activities have been pretty vague. “I’ll do that next summer, when I have more time,” I’ll say, but never really get to it. I might resent trying to fit my creativity into a more predictable schedule, but part of me likes the idea of varying my activities over the year and not letting anything fall by the wayside.

It would also give me a place to start when I’m feeling that creative urge but am not sure where to start. I’ve been wanting to start something new lately, whether a new writing project or a completely different creative activity. Now that I’m nearly finished with outlining my NaNo novel, I’m ready to do something different for a while before I tackle the revisions. And I’ll need something to distract me from the horrors of the holiday season.

I’m not sure yet if I’ll construct a Creativity Calendar, but I’ll give it some more thought. What about you?

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Writing in the Back of Your Mind

Yesterday, Write Stuff asked readers, “When do you write?” The ideal answer was “always,” meaning that when a writer is away from her keyboard or notebook, she is still writing in the back of her mind.

Although I didn’t think to answer “always” to the question, the post struck a chord. Most of my best ideas have developed when I first wrote down an idea, then later did some freewriting to explore its possibilities, then let the idea hang on the tree in the back of my mind until it was ripe and ready. When the same idea comes back again and again, each time with richer possibilities, I know it’s a good idea.

I’m reminded of what Orson Scott Card said in How to Write Science Fiction & Fantasy:

“Good stories don’t come from trying to write a story the moment I think of the first idea. All but a handful of stories have come from combining two completely unrelated ideas that have been following their own tracks through my imagination. And all the stories I was still proud of six months after writing them have come from ideas that ripened for many months—usually years—between the time I first thought of them and the time they were ready to put into a story.”

It makes me wonder if I shouldn’t let some of my ideas ripen a little longer before plucking them. Or if perhaps I should revisit some of the stories I wrote as a kid. They’re horrible, of course, but some of the ideas still come back to me after all this time. Maybe there was something there after all, something that could be combined with some of my newer ideas. I think it’s worth a look through the archives.

The old cliche to “write what you know” doesn’t really mean that if you’re a teacher, all your characters should be teachers, or that if you were born in the Midwest all your stories should take place there. It means you should write out of your experience of the world and human emotion. In this sense, all of us are always gathering material for our stories.

What about you? Are you always writing?

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