Fighting Writer's Block
- Part IV
Speed Writing: How
to Master the Blank Page
By David Taylor
Speed writing
is a way of thinking as well as a way of composing. Most of all,
it's a state of being when you sit in front of the computer. When
sitting down to write, I am convinced the very worst thing we
can do is to let our hands be idle. In other words, to headwrite:
when fingers sit upon the keyboard awaiting the thoughts to form
themselves into acceptable sentences in our head, then
transcribing them onto the screen. Ding dong, that's wrong. At
least for me.
During the process
of creation, our mind and fingers should work as one to produce
the rough shape of the artistic vision. Our goal should be to
initiate a flowing stream of thought and expression, to connect
word and thought in a simultaneous oneness.
Om.
But this isn't
New Agey at all. Like a painter's
brush, a keyboard is a tool for creating. Like a painter, we need
a process that helps us immerse our deepest selves into that passionate
moment of creation. Later, we can change colors (revise). Later,
we can get out the smallest brush and, like a painter, work up
close until the details are in sharp relief (edit/proof). But
first comes creation. Speed writing
is a way of inserting into your writing process a time when passionate
creation can take place.
How
Speed Writing Works
Speed writing
works very much like freewriting,
but you focus on getting from the beginning to the end of something:
a paragraph, a section, an article, a chapter, perhaps an entire
book. You set a time frame, you begin writing, then
you do not stop until you come to the end of the entire thing
you want to write: whether a sentence, or a novel. Yes, your novel
will be reduced to six pages, your
feature article will be nasty lump of clay, your screenplay absent
most of its dialogue. But its flaws aren't the point. After a
speed draft is done, you've got something you can either work
with or throw away -- a choice you didn't have before. Other rules
include:
You must not
interrupt the flow of words upon the screen, even if it means
making up quotes and facts, or taking up space with things like
"OK, I've run out of something to say, I really don't know
where to go next, let me think, what if I tried..."
You must not
stop to reread or edit what you've written until the speed session
is over.
Some writers, including Stephen
King, like to listen to loud rock music when speed writing. Some
do it standing up. Some like the feel of a number two pencil,
some love the sight of a yellow legal pad. Some drink coffee,
some drink that miracle of modern marketing: bottled water. Whatever.
Suck on a pacifier, if you wish. Just start writing and don't
stop. Don't edit. Don't second guess. Don't evaluate. Don't do
anything but listen to that little voice inside your head and
write down everything it says.
Beyond
Zero Draft
Speed writing
can be useful in just about every stage of the writing process:
planning, drafting, revising -- any
time you need to figure something out, whether it's a sentence
or a book plan. But between the end of the material gathering
stage and before the completion of the first draft, writers dwell
in a place I call the "zero draft." That's when this
technique can be important.
The fear of beginning
a first draft is legitimate. Until it is complete, we have no
way of knowing for sure that the right connections will be made
and salient points brought out, or how many dead ends we'll hit
and "do overs" we'll have
to perform. The traditional answer to this dilemma is the outline,
which can be helpful, especially in highly formatted articles.
But outlines have the tendency to dissolve like toilet tissue
in the rain once the real writing begins and each sentence must
build on the one before it.
Another solution:
the speed draft. During a speed-draft session, your goal is to
get from the beginning of the entire piece to its end in a single
block of timed writing. No matter what short cuts you must take
-- summarize entire sections in a sentence, put in XXX's
to substitute for blocks of narration or main points -- your goal
is to get from beginning to end in some form without stopping.
Do this for an
entire screenplay, and you've got your first stab at a treatment.
Do it for an entire novel and you got
your first stab at chapter summaries. Do it for an article, short
story, scene or a book chapter, and you've got
a first draft. Very rough, but very important. This speed draft
serves three distinct purposes:
It lets ideas
connect to each other where it counts -- on the page in actual
sentences and paragraphs.
Because several
speed drafts can be done in one morning, you can play around with
different organizational structures without committing serious
composing time to any one.
With the work's
overall structure in front of you, albeit in rough form, you have
slain the monster of the blank page and the work now exists at
least in some form. All you have to do now is to refine it and
have fun playing with it.
Speed
Writing's Other Uses
When I compose,
my computer's screen has two windows open. In one large window
is the actual piece in whatever form it happens to be at the time.
The other window contains a "Speed Pad," which provides
me a place to speed write. Any time I need to think about how
to do something, instead of pausing to stare at the computer screen,
I put the cursor on the Speed Pad and think by typing, whether
to:
- flesh
out an idea
- plan
a dramatic scene
- find
out what should come next
- talk
through what bothers me about what I've written
- write
different versions of a sentence to see which works better
- anything
else that would make me stare at the screen instead of write
- Once
the speed writing is done, there are two choices: (1) cut
and paste if it's good enough -- and sometimes it is; or (2)
print it out, set the hard copy by the computer and refer
to it. Regardless, the goal has been achieved.
Think with writing;
let writing become your way of thinking on the page or screen.
Let it become your way of relating to the world. Your way of being. Don't let anything get between you and
the words and the world you are exploring with them.
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