Please welcome
C. Hope Clark to the blog today. A few weeks ago she posted on Facebook how she
was interested in doing guest posts. I figured sure that by the time I saw her
message she had met her quota. Thankfully, she still had some open spots and
graciously agreed to do a post for here. I am extremely grateful to C. Hope
Clark for doing this today and hope this is the first of many more.....
Two Steps to
Picking Out the Right Project and Finishing It
By C. Hope Clark
A
writer recently cried on my shoulder about not being able to complete a project
because he had so many great ideas swimming around his head.
"I've
become a project hopper. I start but don't finish. Like convicts who look
through iron bars at nervous guards, these story ideas glare at me from their
Microsoft prison cells and question my authority. A walk to clear my head.
Journaling. Listening to classical music. These exercises sometimes liberate 'the One.' I eventually find my way clear of
the forest and pick the lonely little Charlie Brown Christmas tree. But, good
grief, it’s a painful process."
Two
suggestions, my friends.
1)
Set time on your calendar for a business meeting with yourself.
At
least monthly, format your goals for the next month, and then look back at the
previous month to study what you accomplished (or didn't). So many people wave
off this part of being a writer when it could define the writer you need to be
. . . or need to avoid.
Some
writers plan and plan, and rarely produce. They talk about what they're going
to do but rarely see their projects through. Their polar opposites write and
write and don't stop to plan what they will do with their stories.
You,
however, must be different. Monthly, (or weekly is preferred) take a moment to
study where you're headed and where you've been. Did you write a piece last
week and could not find a home for it? Did you start writing one piece, then
stop and switch to another? How many times did you hit a dead end?
In
other words, study your writing habits? Which are not good? Which came through
for you?
2)
Whatever project you pick, go with it to THE END.
I
wrote Lowcountry Bribe over two years, after work, at night. I did a few short
pieces in the middle of this effort for diversity and entertainment, but my
focus was this manuscript. I made myself
reach THE END. Couldn't sell it. So I put it on the shelf.
It
wasn't a partial manuscript. It wasn't an idea. It was a completed job.
Eventually, an opportunity presented itself for me to resubmit. I could only do
that because I had a completed project, one that I could verbalize with a
beginning, middle and ending. Not just a partial attempt, and far beyond a
rough idea.
When
you hold your meeting and decide your projects, lock away the ones you don't
select. Don't look at them. Don't look at what others are doing and get drawn
away. Finish the one you start. Do that a few times, and you just might find
opportunity knocking harder on your door because you have an inventory of
finished products. What also helped sell Lowcountry Bribe? The fact that I had
book two completed as well.
Nothing is more frustrating to a writer than to stockpile a hard drive full of partial projects. Delete most of those. Seeing them will only muddle your senses as they accumulate into a huge list, eventually representing your inability to complete what you start.
Bottom
line: Pick what to write...and finish it. Repeat.
C.
Hope Clark ©2014
C. Hope Clark is
editor of FundsforWriters.com, chosen by Writer’s Digest for its 101 Best
Websites for Writers for the past 14 years. She is also an award-winning
mystery author, currently promoting Palmetto Poison, book three in The Carolina
Slade Mystery Series. www.chopeclark.com
Excellent advice. I hear would-be authors often talking about much of the same--too many projects and never finishing. Also there are those who want to tell you the whole plot of the novel they plan to write but have not written one word.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Miss Clark. Simple and effective.
ReplyDeleteWe talk too much and do too little. When I start wanting to talk about a future project, I pinch myself, because it's just lip service, bragging, whatever. The best way to flaunt one's self as a writer is to publish your work.
ReplyDeleteAnd yep, I love simple.
Big time thanks to Hope for her post and comment as well as everyone else. Very glad to have had the opportunity to share something from Hope.
ReplyDelete