Tuesday, February 11, 2025

Plotting Along




Plotting Along

 When a writer stares off into space, that writer is usually working. A writer acquaintance of mine once told me about how her young daughter -- the child was about seven at the time -- piped up one day and said, "Mommy, I'm going to work like you!" And she sat down at her desk and stared out the window.

What we do takes place in our heads -- in our fertile imaginations. If you don't have an over-active imagination, you'll be hindered as a novelist. Although I had one sibling, I was, for all extents and purposes, an only child because my sister was almost 10 years older than me. Therefore, my closest playmates were in my imagination. In my bedroom or backyard, I acted out whole TV shows and films I'd seen. I was Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, and their horses.

Which brings me back to the point of this. It might look as if we're just sitting and staring, but there is more to it. We're imagining. We should wear a sign that states: Caution! Writer At Work.

I just returned from sitting out on the patio. I went out there for a minute to let the dogs do their thing and I ended up staying there for half an hour because I was working out a tangle in the plot I'm developing. Something about the story was wrong. I couldn't put my finger on it, but I knew that some element wasn't firing properly. Out there on the patio, I finally saw the trees and the forest. My antagonist was wrong. Not nearly frightening enough or disturbed enough. That pivotal character was coming off mild, and that's the kiss of death for a suspense novel. Problem solved. I blinked, realized that the dogs were dancing around me, wanting back inside, and I came back to myself and my desk and untangled the knot in my plot.

That's how it works. Half of writing a book consists of not writing. It consists of staring while your mind whirls, pulling up this plot thread, examining it, casting it off, grabbing another, until you finally find one that you can weave in and out seamlessly to tighten your story. The best outline ever still needs tweaking, revising, and bolstering. That's because as characters take shape and find their own voice in your head, plot points can change. What once made sense for a character is now out of character. Actions taken by a character now are preposterous.  Dialogue spoken by your protagonist suddenly seems forced. So, it's back to sitting and staring or jogging, doing laundry, vacuuming the rug -- it all works. Mindless activity to allow your brain to create scenes, conjure places, and pen dialogue.

As Dee Hock once put it: "Clean out a corner of your mind and creativity will instantly fill it." 

8 comments:

Julie Lence said...

I do this frequently, and then run for paper and pen to jot down notes or sentences or conversations so I don't forget.

Kristy McCaffrey said...

This part of the process is so important. Sometimes my mind gets so busy that I forget to slow down and just let the story percolate in my head. I always find gems though when I do.

Deborah said...

Sometimes I ever converse out loud because I want to hear how the dialogue sounds. If anyone is watching, I'm sure they would think I was a few eggs short of a dozen.

Deborah said...

Yes! Percolating is very important!

Reggi Allder said...

Hi Deborah, a great post. As a writer, my mind is always writing, even if only in my mind. I will jot it down as soon as I can. :)

Ruthie Manier said...

Hi Deb, I enjoyed your post. I find myself lost in another world, a different decade, richer or poorer, quite often in my head, and like you, sometimes I talk to the wind about it.

Deborah said...

A writer's mind is fertile ground. Right, Reggi?

Deborah said...

Writers are a weird bunch, huh, Ruthie? Wouldn't have it any other way though,.