By Alina Chase
When all you’re trying to do is capture thoughts, develop ideas and
explore possibilities, why restrict yourself to sentences, paragraphs
and chapters? Nothing will bring your train of thought to a screeching
halt faster than stopping to ponder a comma or word choice or sentence
structure. If you scribble and draw instead of write, you can capture
ideas more quickly and more ideas on one page with no rules to distract
you.
Try
using a cheap spiral notebook (or the flip side of wasted printouts)
and a pen or Crayons instead of your laptop. Then "write"
using symbols, graphical representations and your version of
shorthand. Advanced doodlers may even want to add stick figures or
sketches. Do this in any way that makes sense to you, keeping in mind
that the fewer words you use at this stage, the more time you'll
save.
Then
number, letter or otherwise code your ideas. Connect conepts with lines
and arrows. Combine points with boxes that represent paragraphs, scenes,
or chapters. Then, later, you can shuffle sheets around, spread them
across the floor, or tape them to a wall to experiment with different
scene and chapter sequences
Think
of these first drafts as half drafts for pantsters, graphical
outlines for plotters. Quick to develop and review, they'll minimize
time wasted on tangents and writing clunky first-draft prose destined
to be deleted. They contain just enough information to jog your
memory so that when you do get back to the laptop, you can focus all
your energy on writing brilliantly!
No comments:
Post a Comment