The Lifewriting approach to
your writing career demands a relatively high creative output. It isnt
designed to coddle people who nurse a single story for years before sending it
out.
But students often protest that they simply dont come up
with many good ideas, and that the ideas they do generate are appropriate for
novels.
In my opinion, basic ideas have no intrinsic length. The
TREATMENT of an idea has an intrinsic length. The Civil War can be treated in a
one-page story, on in a library of books. It all depends on the skill and
intent of the writer.
Let me tell you a story:
When I was in
college, I knew a woman who wanted to be a writer. She told me that she was
working on a short story, and I said great. A few weeks later, I
asked her how the story was going. She said Its getting a little
longI think its a novella.
Great! I
said.
A couple of months later, I asked her how the novella was going.
Well, its getting a little long, I think its a novel!
Wow! I said, although a warning bell was tinkling at the
back of my mind. A couple of years later, I asked her how the novel was going.
Well, it seems to be turning into a trilogy, she said.
Hmm. I made optimistic sounds, and left it at that.
A decade
later, I was traveling on the East Coast, and knew Id be passing the town
where this lady lived. My wife and I stopped in to visit. Just because I have a
masochistic streak, I asked how the trilogy was going.
There was a
pause. Then, sheepishly she said, I got tired of it, and put it away. But
just a couple of months ago I started working on a new story. Its good!
But she said, as I knew she would, it seems to be getting a little
long
That is so sad. My friend had encountered one of the
stealthiest forms of writers block: to be able to write, but not be able
to finish and submit. It serves the same purpose to an insecure subconscious:
it prevents you from suffering rejection.
After all, the idea is so
bright and appealing when it enters your mind! The process of actually slogging
your way through multiple drafts can be a joy-killer.
Short stories
are a perfect means to combat this. A short piece employs all the same basic
tools that will be used in a novel, with a crucial difference. In the time it
takes you to write a hundred thousand word novel, you can write twenty to forty
short stories, and youll learn vastly more about your craft in the
process.
Also, because you are going through the complete arc of
generating story, planning, researching, writing rough draft, polishing, and
submitting, you find out where your technical and psychological weaknesses lie.
And yet another advantage: if you write a story a week, or every other
week, you dont need to cling desperately to an idea, thinking it is the
only good idea youll ever have.
But how to generate ideas? Here
are some suggestions:
1) Keep a dream diary. A little digital
or tape recorder at the bedside works great for this. Just tell yourself before
sleep that you will briefly awaken after a dream and dictate the essence. In
the morning, transcribe.
2) Search the newspaper. Make an
exercise of looking through the various sections of the paper, looking for odd
or interesting stories. Imagine how it would be to be the people caught up in
these situations. What story would capture the essence of their lives?
3) Read books and watch movies. Imagine grafting the end of one film
to the beginning of another. When a book falls apart, come up with a better
endingand write it.
4) Create modern versions of favorite old
fairy tales. Have fun with thisremember, its just practice!
5) At the next family reunion or gathering, get the old folks
to talk about their youthful days.
6) Go to a playground and watch
children playing. Really notice the power games, the sharing, the crying,
the laughter, the struggles and triumphs. Every single child, every day, has a
story to tell.
7) Mine your own life. Learning to walk, to
talk, to drive, to win, to lose. Your first fight, your first kiss, your first
job, the first time you got fired.
There is really no end to the
possibility. All you need is a belief in your goals, and the recognition that
any individual story is just a step along the waynot some soul-searing
win-or-lose proposition.
Have fun!
About the
Author:
NY Times bestselling writer Steven Barnes has lectured on
storytelling and human consciousness at UCLA, Seattle University, the Maui
Writer's Conference, and Mensa. He created the Lifewriting
high-performance system for writers and readers. Learn more at
http://www.lifewriting.biz, and
http://www.lifewrite.com





