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David J. Marsh

~ Biblical Narrative ~ Literary Fiction

Category Archives: Creative Process/Craft

Writer, Editor

01 Wednesday Feb 2012

Posted by davidjmarsh in Creative Process/Craft, Role of the Writer

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One discipline of writing that is very difficult is developing the invaluable ability to get an unfinished idea down on paper.

It is so tempting (and often automatic) to give in to yourself – your most immediate reader – and start editing as soon as an idea hits the front of your brain. To allow a pure idea all the way through to the paper without any editing is nearly impossible. But it is a rare and treasured thing. For it is not the quality of the expression or the idea that is so important to capture, it is what might come of one word or some other detail in that unfinished, raw scribble.

One reason this aspect of the discipline is difficult is that we have been trained, especially in business, to refine everything before release, and to refine as soon as possible. We are groomed to interrogate a thought or idea as soon as we have it, to strengthen and polish it, and then – only then – allow it to see the light of day. For many of us, this way of working is part of what makes us successful in corporate life. But, such auto-editing is designed to produce quality analytical output, not quality creative output.

There are many raw thoughts, raw words, that should not be trimmed back, that are truest without being refined. As we tromp around our creative orchards, it is not about well-trimmed trees and weed-free brambles. It is about spotting the nubs along each branch, recognizing them for what they are, and making space for them to take off. dm

Subconscious Epiphany

18 Wednesday Jan 2012

Posted by davidjmarsh in Creative Process/Craft, Writing Discipline

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One morning recently I was working on a chapter of my current project. An hour and a half in, I came to a point where I decided to stop, heading off to work – meetings, email, and documentation – to make money.

Early that afternoon I was in a meeting. I was focused, contributing, really earning my pay, when it hit me. I had stopped writing that morning at a really strong chapter break, and had not realized it! It had been hours since I had “thought” about the passage at all, but suddenly I was really excited about this new-found fact.

The brain is a stunning device. While I was consciously working on business matters, my subconscious was scanning its images of the pages I had been working on at home more than six hours before. My subconscious had had an epiphany and it stormed up, kicking in the door of my conscious to deliver it!

The discipline of writing every day can earn you near constant concentration on your writing, regardless of what you might actually be up to. Give your subconscious something to do all day besides think about food and your weekend plans. Your brain has a back-office that can be working for you while you work for the man.

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