Just Get It Done: Stop Putting It Off & Get Writing Now!

Picture the scene. You’ve had an idea for a story. No, not just a story – a novel. You’ve been tinkering with your idea for a couple of weeks. Maybe you’ve worked on the idea after reading writing books like James Scott Bell’s Plot & Structure, or Larry Brooks’ Story Engineering. Best of all – the idea stands up. This could be a book – an actual novel. You could be its author! You can even imagine the Hollywood adaptation that will introduce your name to millions of potential readers, and bring you face to face with Johnny Depp or Angelina Jolie.

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Yet you’re still sat there with no book and just a fistful of dreams. Why? Because you’re putting off doing any real work on your idea. Brainstorming, outlining, mind-mapping – they’re all useful strategies, and they’re all valid ways of structuring your work in the initial stages, but they are not writing. They are preparation. You could say they’re still essential to ensuring the finished product is a well-structured story, but no matter which way you slice it, they are not writing in and of themselves.

Familiar Excuses?

  1. You tell yourself you need to buy a new notebook for planning purposes. I took this one so far that I could only buy a notebook from a particular store, and it was almost a relief when my local branch of the store closed, meaning I couldn’t buy a notebook, and I couldn’t possibly start writing yet.
  2. You need to discuss the idea with your fellow writers, which entails time on Twitter or Facebook, but somehow you end up clicking through someone’s holiday photos, or you become embroiled in one of the many hashtag chats. An hour later and you realise you haven’t actually discussed your idea yet, and you can’t possibly start until you’ve had feedback from others.
  3. You’ve run out of special note cards for jotting down scenes, and you can’t possibly start to write until you’ve got every scene accounted for, and in its correct place in the pile.

The Only Course of Action…

If any of these sound familiar then there is only one course of action. You have to start writing. I know, I know, you can’t start until the circumstances are right, but when it comes to writing, that moment will never come. There will always be distractions, and life will always throw you curve balls. There comes a time when you just have to stop avoiding the issues, when you have to leave your outline alone, and just start writing. No one is asking you to re-paint the Eiffel Tower with a toothbrush – they’re just asking you to get that story down on paper.

It’s alright, I understand how it is. You’re too afraid to start because if you do, it’ll cease to be that wonderful possibility in your head, and it’ll become a clunky, graceless first draft. I’ve already written about first drafts, but how do you overcome this fear and actually begin the real work on your story?

Take Baby Steps

Write a sentence. Now write another one. Maybe a third sentence? See, you’re writing! Now you have three sentences of your book written. You can’t possibly leave it there, so you’ll just have to write some more, won’t you?

Make a Pact

Humans work better in groups, so find a fellow writer who is also struggling to write a novel, and team up. The mutual support is invaluable, and you can set each other deadlines and targets. Writing a novel doesn’t feel quite so scary when you know you’re not the only one doing it. NaNoWriMo is excellent for this.

Hold Onto Your Idea

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If you’re putting off writing because you’re worried you won’t do the original idea justice, then boil the idea down to its fundamental essence. Write it out and put it somewhere near your writing area. Maybe keep a copy in your notebook so you can continue to work on your idea or story while you’re away from your computer. If you keep revisiting your idea, it’ll help keep your writing on the right track, and keep your story closer to your original idea.

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Have you got any special tactics that help you get started on a major project? Please share your ideas in the comments below!

Images courtesy of Thanakrit Gu and purplemattfish.

Icy is a die-hard Northerner in old London town. She can still remember the days when she wrote her first stories in crayon. These days she favours a laptop, and cranks out weekly flash fictions, web-based serials and even the odd novel, usually about telepathic parrots, superheroes, Cavalier ghosts, and her own peculiar brand of steampunk.

 

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