I have found my writing mind wandering rather a lot over the last few days, seeking out the perfect words to start a story.
It comes, of course, from studying the importance of language and the need to find the right word.
I don’t have a story, as such: what I want is an opening line. A selection of sounds that creates a rhythm, a selection of ideas which form a substance. A selection that say exactly what I want them to say.
But I am torn, because I know this urge to just write has to be contained in some way: I jump into writing with no plan too often and struggle to build a back story to support my beginning.
So I am going to try a new writing exercise, an experiment in control. I am going to work at writing a great sentence, honing it and moulding it until it is exactly what I want – and then I will put it aside and start on another one. And then another, and another and so on. But I will not use them; instead they will sit, ready and waiting, for my planning and shaping to be done.
It feels odd and slightly ridiculous to want to find a perfect sentence and risk never using it, but that isn’t the point of the exercise.
No, the point is that all sentences deserve that level of attention – and still they might never make it into a story. Meanwhile I will get into the habit of working harder at seeking out the exact word I need, and checking for the sound of my work, in all aspects of my writing.
I am really excited to see what I can produce!
Happy writing,
EJ
🙂
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