That "wandering" feeling
Posted: April 04, 2009, 04:53:41 PM
Don't you just love that feeling you get as you're writing when you ask yourself, "Now, how do I get out of this story? What's the conclusion?"
Flash is such a short snapshot, you don't always know how it's going to end before you begin. Sometimes you only start with a scene or interesting hook in mind. Knowing how you want to end is the best way, but that doesn't mean you're always going to have that luxury. Deadlines happen to us all, and much as I'd like them all to be award winners, sometimes you have to go with what you have. (That is, if I was ever nominated for something.)
Since I only have 1000 words to reach the end, occasionally, I have to wander a bit until I can find the way out. But there's not much room to wander, because I have to get to the conclusion as quickly as possible.
That usually means I'm going to have to throw out a lot of wandering later.
I'm wandering this afternoon, and I don't have time for that. Lately at work I've had to pull double shifts Monday and Tuesdays, which makes you just dead after Wednesday's work. Thursday is all OT, but you're running on fumes. I get Fridays off in compensation, but it's more of a catch-up, lounge around the house alone, feeling tired day. Too tired to even look at a computer screen. I don't feel halfway normal until Saturday. The "My Pet Monster" post day is Friday. If I get hit with the same schedule again next week, I've got to have this story in the can by tomorrow.
Anybody know a good shortcut for finding the ending when you didn't know where you were going in the first place?
Nate
Flash is such a short snapshot, you don't always know how it's going to end before you begin. Sometimes you only start with a scene or interesting hook in mind. Knowing how you want to end is the best way, but that doesn't mean you're always going to have that luxury. Deadlines happen to us all, and much as I'd like them all to be award winners, sometimes you have to go with what you have. (That is, if I was ever nominated for something.)
Since I only have 1000 words to reach the end, occasionally, I have to wander a bit until I can find the way out. But there's not much room to wander, because I have to get to the conclusion as quickly as possible.
That usually means I'm going to have to throw out a lot of wandering later.
I'm wandering this afternoon, and I don't have time for that. Lately at work I've had to pull double shifts Monday and Tuesdays, which makes you just dead after Wednesday's work. Thursday is all OT, but you're running on fumes. I get Fridays off in compensation, but it's more of a catch-up, lounge around the house alone, feeling tired day. Too tired to even look at a computer screen. I don't feel halfway normal until Saturday. The "My Pet Monster" post day is Friday. If I get hit with the same schedule again next week, I've got to have this story in the can by tomorrow.
Anybody know a good shortcut for finding the ending when you didn't know where you were going in the first place?
Nate