By Sharon May
Textbooks describe
writing as both a linear yet recursive process. They give activities for researching,
prewriting, planning, drafting, revising, editing, publishing, and
proofreading. Of course, don’t forget to pay attention to audience, purpose,
and style along the way. This looks like such a clean process, like a
paint-by-numbers kit, but beginning writers learn quickly that the process
often brings more chaos than direction. Writers do all of this even though
textbooks don’t describe anyone’s actual process.
The classroom setting
further makes the writing process unreal for beginners. Writers don’t sit in
uncomfortable, undersized desks arranged in rows filled with other struggling
writers. Teachers usually demand silence, although it is broken by pencil
sharpeners, shuffling through book bags, crumpling of pieces of paper deemed
useless, and the occasional sigh or groan.
Beginning writers want
the process to be easy like the textbook describes. They envision “real”
writers following these steps and producing the finished product in one sitting
and in one draft. These beginning believe in their frustration that they aren’t
real writers because they have to keep revising.
If they only believed
me when I explain how many pages and versions the authors probably wrote to
produce the textbook. If they only believed me when explain that they have to
find a process that works for them using the toolkit provided. And many times
that process will have steps no one else does.
Let’s admit it. All
writers have quirks that drive their process. Some have favorite places to
write – a coffee shop or library. One of my groups in a reading class produced
their papers in a McDonalds. I knew a writer who sat in his car in a parking
lot far from home because he had to be alone without the chance of
interruption.
Some prefer the predawn
dark, either because they’ve stayed up all night or just gotten up. This is the
only productive time for many female writers with children. Some need
background noise, which is why I let my beginning writers use their
IPhones.
Quirks get quirkier
when trying to solve writing problems. I have a colleague who writes a sentence
or two and then paces around the room until the next sentence comes. A poet
friend shuts down his Mac, and rolls a sheet of paper into one of his many
collected manual typewriters because he loves the clanking of the keys
capturing his poem. Another colleague wrote her Masters’ thesis on sticky notes
that decorated her walls for months. If I’m stuck, I leave the computer, lie
down on the couch, stare at the ceiling, and concentrate on the characters and what
they would say or do.
Take a few minutes to
examine your process and quirks. Learn to appreciate them and be thankful you
found what works as you weave your way through the chaos of trying to say what
you think, feel, and imagine in ways never been written before.
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