This essay is from a column I wrote for a now defunct British writer magazine in 2006. No matter how many books I publish, free writing to me is like warming up before exercising. Most of my blogs are warm up exercises before I get to my "real" writing.
THEORY
Many writing teachers urge new (and
not-so-new writers) to free-write daily. Free-writing comes under other
names called practice writing, daily writing, etc., but the concept
behind it is the same. Regular writing exercises are for a writer what
playing scales are for a musician or hitting balls are for a tennis
player or golfer. They warm you up. They help you fine tune your style.
What
is free-writing? It is taking a piece of paper or your computer
keyboard and you start to write without stopping. You never worry about
spelling or editing. You don’t think, “I can’t say that, it will hurt my
Aunt Minnie.” You say it. You let it come out.
Even if you freeze you are supposed to go on by repeating your last few words such as:
I went to the store to buy a case of Coke, a case of Coke, a case of Coke because I loved Coke since i was a kid, a kid, a kid, and my mother only would let me have three and my brother had the other three and and and and I often stoled his.
Yes there are mistakes, yes there are repetitions, but the idea is to keep going.
So
many times as writers we are stopped by what we feel is safe and
correct. We need to get away from that concept in our free-writing. What
dedicated free-writers find is that often the free-writing produces the
energy that leads to other good writing. Take the free-write about the
case of Coke. That led to a short story about sibling rivalry acted out
with a brother and sister stealing each other’s treasures in the third
person from the point of view of adults.
What if it doesn’t
produce anything? So what? Does each piano scale produce a sonata? No,
but with enough scale practice the sonata will be played better.
MEASUREMENT
There
are two ways to measure free-writes. One is by a timer set for ten
minutes. The other is to fill up three pages. Less than that really
isn’t enough. More is fine.
STARTING
Put
your pencil/pen/fingers to paper/keyboard and start and don’t stop until
the time/pages are filled. Don’t answer the phone, go to the toilet or
take a sip of tea.
WHAT IF I DON'T KNOW WHERE TO START?
1. Find a trigger such as emotional phrases: I love…, I hate…, I want…, it pisses me off…, I remember…, I don’t remember…
2.
Use a color. I wanted to wear red as child but mother said it clashed
with my hair. Work your way through the rainbow. Just think how many
writing exercises you can do around different words for purple:
lavender, lilac, violet, mauve, purple…
3. Find a sentence in a book, newspaper or magazine and use that as a trigger.
4. Use a piece of conversation that you overheard.
WHERE DO I FREE WRITE?
Anywhere
you want: on a bus, train, airplane. In your kitchen, office. At a
café. Sure it is ideal to be locked away with quiet or soft music in the
background, but it is more important to do it.
WHAT DO I WITH WHAT I WROTE?
1.
Ignore what you wrote. No one ever needs to make every word written
count. We don’t see the canvases that the artists didn’t like. A
professor at Simmons College once said that every writer has 250,000 bad
words in them. Free-writing gets rid of some.
2. Go get a cup of tea or coffee and come back and reread what you wrote circling something you like.
3. Transfer what you like into a journal for later use or not.
4. Develop what you started. Turn it into a full essay, story, novel or play.
Check out my website www.dlnelsonwriter.com
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