When a brain goes wild
4 Nov 2007 09:19 am“What are you trying to do to me?” is a thing I whiningly asked my mind on a regular basis these past few days as I fought to come to a decision. You see, my brain has taken an idea and literally gone wild with it. The idea is huge, too huge for this small brain, I tell you. If brain thinks I can pull this off, then brain is going to have to be super cooperative and be willing to learn, to grow, to question more deeply, to...study and Research. Yeah, Research with a capital R because if I go along with the mind’s latest schemes and machinations, this isn’t going to be a project where imagination trumps facts. Yes, well, imagination will win out--I'm a fantasist and write fiction--but to make use of the brain’s twisty turns, there have to be a lot of veracious details.
Because of these developments, I am going to have to stop NaNo. There is just no way I can write this novel right now. I have lots of Research to tend to first. Another option has occurred to me, but I'm unsure of it. I could write on another project for a few hours a day (I can usually get my NaNo words in 1-2hrs), and use the rest of my time to dig and poke at the Big Story. I'm afraid of not being able to maintain momentum, though. I tend to get sucked into one thing and go at it whole hog. Nevertheless, part of me just hates giving up something I've started. *sigh* In this case, I think I need to do what is best for me and that means removing the pressure. But something else is bothering me: I can see the new project taking a loooong time to get finished. It would be nice to have something "lighter" in the works, too. Could it just be a matter of discipline and acting like a professional, a matter of better organizing my time?
What to do, what to do? Has anyone else ever been in a similar situation? If so, how did you handle it? Anyone have advice?
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Date: 5 Nov 2007 09:56 pm (UTC)Well, I'm lucky in that the second project is willing to wait until the first is at least off the ground! But yes; recently all the ideas I really like seem to be research-intensive.
Isn't the quote a wonderful emotional support? *g* It's kept me from despairing time and time again.
When several seemingly unrelated things suddenly show me not only their relation but their dependence on one another, I get positively giddy.
Exactly. And I think that might be the key to avoiding "taking the low road," as you put it -- at least it was for me. Allow yourself to do research while trying to keep your hand in with smaller pieces, and hopefully, eventually, you'll begin to feel more comfortable on the bigger project and less like you're rushing in where angels fear, etc.
That joy of finding the pieces fall into place is a big one, isn't it? *grin* Sometimes I have to fight the urge to jump up and down and shout, "Oh my god this actually works!"
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Date: 6 Nov 2007 06:59 am (UTC)Oh, don't fight it! We writers are allowed to be weird. Jump and shout and dance! :P