And
as much as I'd love to say Buzz speaks the truth, unfortunately that's
not always the case. Okay, sure there's tons and tons of ideas, in fact I
have over 150 email drafts in my inbox where I store my spur of the
moment thoughts. However, most of those ideas are just a single thought,
they don't have characters, plot, or depth to them. They aren't unique,
and they don't carry much weight.
Every once in a while an idea will strike and take hold, or in some cases if I'm very lucky, it'll take over. We all love when the words start pouring out of us, but I'm getting ahead of myself. How do we actually get to the point where the ideas just come. Where does that spark of inspiration come from?
In addition to writing in my free time, I'm also an aerospace engineer. It's not only something that pays the bills, but it's something I really enjoy. I love science and math. I also love science fiction and fantasy. And those ideals are so closely tied together. In my day job, I'm constantly surrounded by technology and research. The wheels in my brain are always spinning within the real world, and the world just out of reach. I'm always asking myself questions about what is, what could be, and what seems impossible. But the one question I find myself asking most frequently when it comes to my writing is 'What If'.
How far can I push that idea? What would that world look like? And how would a character react and survive in that situation? Those are the ideas and thoughts that help drive my stories.
So the next time your find yourself stuck...
5 comments:
I call that first spark THE ANCHOR. It's like an unmoored boat suddenly finding a place to stand, just long enough, from where the captain (that's you, the writer) can chart the journey.
ooo I really like that analogy. Thank you so much for sharing it :)
I feel like I come upon something inspiring almost every day - either in the paper, on the street, in my reading, in my thoughts, etc. So when people ask if I ever suffer from writers' block, I always answer that it's just the opposite -too many ideas, too little time to turn them into something.
I definitely suffer from the too many ideas problem as well, so I sympathize with that. But I still get blocked within ideas sometimes and get stuck trying to figure out how to proceed.
Very poetic explanation, Mirka!
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