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#1 |
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all hail zombie babies!
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Rocky Mountains
Posts: 2,537
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Stuck/Unstuck
I'm in a bind. I have a scene and I've attempted to write this sucker half a dozen ways. Nothing is working. Nothing feels right. It's an important "link" from one act to the next for two of my characters.
I'm sure some of you have been in this situation. I feel like I'm living in "groundhog day" where I have to rewrite the same scene until I get it right. THEN, I can escape the loop of eternal doom. How have some of you dealt with this? I imagine I could continue trying to write different scenarios. I've tried verbally talking myself through it. I've tried making pro/con lists for each scenario. This has been a thorn in my side for a month. I return to this scene, make an attempt, then set it aside. I'm at a point where I can't proceed until I crack this sucker. While I understand that tenacity will likely pay off, I'd sure feel better if I know others have faced this. Why do you think it happened? How did you deal with it? What did you learn from it? Anything at all. Again, I can't drop it or the following chapters will make no sense. It's necessary. It moves the story ahead. It's vital. I'm just having a bear of a time executing it.
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stephantrain.com Curiosity killed the cat. Satisfaction brought it back "The first draft of anything is s***." Ernest Hemingway |
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#2 |
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New Fish; Learning About Thick Skin
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Kansas
Posts: 6
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When I have a hard time getting a scene to go right, I find it's helpful to back up in the sequence of scenes. Usually I find that I need something else to come before it that allows the scene that's plaguing me to go smoothly.
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#3 |
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Keeper of Fort Blanket
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: The Coffee Shop
Posts: 1,375
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If you know what comes after, why not mark it as unfinished and write the next scene or two? Sometimes moving ahead will make things clearer, or hint at why the previous material wasn't working.
Then too, when you come back to it later, you may have found a different way to create the necessary link.
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"We are plain quiet folk and have no use for adventures. Nasty disturbing uncomfortable things! Make you late for dinner! I can't think what anybody sees in them.” -JRR Tolkien The Hobbit |
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#4 | |
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Retired Illuminatus
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: The sovereign state of Baja Arizona
Posts: 4,295
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Quote:
Sometime in the following week or two, a solution will generally pop into my head out of nowhere. But I know that all the 'unsuccessful' work will have contributed indirectly to the solution.
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Dangerous Bill 'Lessons at the Edge' - College student and his mother's best friend share an apartment. CAUTION: Explicit, 18+ http://www.amazon.com/Lessons-Edge-P...ns+at+the+edge Reviewed 'two thumbs up' at Erotica Revealed. |
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#5 |
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14 and writing.
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Australia
Posts: 65
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I think most writers have been in the same experience, it's part of making a good story.
You could leave it and allow yourself time to think about it, if its an important part of your story, you should try and make it as good as you can and not leave it out. Spend some time thinking about it, looking at how others have done it ect. But remember, if its a crucial part, make it decent, otherwise you will have a hard time writing ahead because you wont have written it down exactly as its happened. -All your failures will make your final copy all the better!
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![]() Head over to http://www.randomgameranting.blogspot.com.au for awesome reviews and rants! Email suggestions questions ect to randomgamerants@gmail.com! Last edited by Federator; 03-05-2012 at 10:16 AM. Reason: Left something out. |
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#6 |
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Princess of Mars
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Oklahoma (Sometimes Mars)
Posts: 11
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This may or may not be happening to you, but I know when I get stuck it's because some part of my brain knows what I'm doing is not gonna work out. Generally I have to take metaphorical dynamite to the scene and alter it drastically, move it, or cut it completely. However, our brains all work differently, so YMMV.
What might help is if you strip the transition down it to it's barest bones. What absolutely HAS to happen for the story to continue? Why does it have to happen now? and so forth. |
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#7 | |
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Come on you stranger, you legend,
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: you martyr and shine.
Posts: 7,611
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This method doesn't work for everyone but it has never failed me. My tricks are: 1. Notify the character ahead of time. Just put a note in the MS that says "Bob, tomorrow I'll be interviewing you about what happened. So think it over." 2. Always ask open ended questions, and write down the answers even if they conflict with your expectations or with other things in the plot. You'll iron that stuff out later. Listen to your character. 3. No editing the character's words as you go. This is fact finding, not writing. 4, Always thank your character when the interview ends.
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"Dude, sucking at something is the first step toward being sort of good at something." --Adventure Time Last edited by Devil Ledbetter; 03-05-2012 at 05:58 PM. Reason: typo |
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#8 | |
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practical experience, FTW
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Shrieking in my own shack
Posts: 291
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My recommendation is to step back from the piece for a couple of days or more then come back to it and write it as it flows, not as you're trying to make it go. See if that works - for me it does 100 percent of the time.
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Here's the typewriter I used for my first novel - in the 6th grade. |
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#9 | ||||
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all hail zombie babies!
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Rocky Mountains
Posts: 2,537
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Ygramul wrote:
Quote:
Federator wrote: Quote:
Devil Ledbetter wrote: Quote:
Quote:
The way it's been written before has been in depth. It's a conversation between two people after something traumatic has happened, and it was--honestly--too long, too overwrought, too soapy. But, there needed to be an emotional resolution. I THINK I can do that w/o a long, lengthy conversation. I think I can turn the volume way down on the dialogue and amp up physical action, body language and subtext. I don't know, but for some reason this connected with what I was thinking this morning. Thanks to ALL who responded! Unfortunately, I can't really let this go now. I've been going back and forth too long (months) on this. I need to solve this, but, I do believe that with the above ideas I'll brush up against the answer at the very least--if not fix it completely. Off to write!
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stephantrain.com Curiosity killed the cat. Satisfaction brought it back "The first draft of anything is s***." Ernest Hemingway |
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#10 |
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Queen of the Upmarket Bagladies
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Fort Wayne, IN
Posts: 1,182
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It's stuff like this that makes me wish "Anyhow, then they did some stuff, and I don't feel like writing this part anymore, so please turn the page," was a legitimate style choice.
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I write upmarket baglady fiction. |
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#11 | |
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Come on you stranger, you legend,
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: you martyr and shine.
Posts: 7,611
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Most of the time what they say makes more sense both from a plot and motivational angle than whatever I was stuck on. (Which was why I was stuck to begin with. Something doesn't add up; characters refuse to move.) Just keep them talking. And be sure to thank them.
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"Dude, sucking at something is the first step toward being sort of good at something." --Adventure Time |
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#12 |
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Come on you stranger, you legend,
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: you martyr and shine.
Posts: 7,611
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Please include this in your writing challenge entry. If you don't, I will have to steal it.
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"Dude, sucking at something is the first step toward being sort of good at something." --Adventure Time |
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#13 |
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Queen of the Upmarket Bagladies
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Fort Wayne, IN
Posts: 1,182
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We can start a movement.
We can change the whole world.
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I write upmarket baglady fiction. |
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#14 | |
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Weaver of Dark Delusions
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Where madness sleeps, and dreams
Posts: 3,510
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Quote:
![]() I'm another who usually lets sticky scenes go until I'm finished everything else. Usually that shows what the problem was. And if it doesn't, the sticky scene being the last thing standing between me and completion of the story is a good motivation for fixing it, lol. Random note: I thought this thread was going to be about getting your characters literally stuck in a place they don't have the means to escape but aren't supposed to be. Which is what I just did in my WIP . . .
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#15 | |
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She who distributes the cookies
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Seattle
Posts: 80
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I have a couple of scenes right now that I'm struggling with this problem on (in revision). I keep rewriting them, and just when I think I'm on a roll and it's going well... BAM. I write myself right into a wall again and wonder what the hell just happened. For the time being, I'm just letting them fester and am moving on with the revision. And then hope I'll be struck with the miraculous cure to their illness.
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#16 |
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Caped Codder
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: In MA, USA, across from a 17th century cemetery
Posts: 3,945
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Leave a marker and move on to the next scene. Maybe when you least expect it, the correct way to work the scene will simply come to you.
No, I mean it. I've done this a lot of times, just jumped over a scene (I usually write the scenes in order) and then come back after things sort themselves out in my head. The worst thing, though (imo), is to get stuck there, like a truck with its tires stuck in the mud and no progress is being made in any direction. |
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#17 |
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AW Addict
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Southern California
Posts: 859
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I've used this technique and found it extremely helpful. My characters do answer truthfully because they're eager as hell to share their opinions of all the other characters, not to mention justifying their own behavior. Just asking them why they deserve to be in the scene has broken the block for me more than once.
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#18 | |
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all hail zombie babies!
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Rocky Mountains
Posts: 2,537
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Quote:
__________________
stephantrain.com Curiosity killed the cat. Satisfaction brought it back "The first draft of anything is s***." Ernest Hemingway |
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#19 |
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Why is a raven like a writing desk?
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: West Spiral Arm
Posts: 3,756
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Have you considered that you might be burning yourself out on this scene? Perhaps you've lost objectivity and need input from another reader?
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#20 | |
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all hail zombie babies!
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Rocky Mountains
Posts: 2,537
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Quote:
But, yeah, burnout is a definite possibility!
__________________
stephantrain.com Curiosity killed the cat. Satisfaction brought it back "The first draft of anything is s***." Ernest Hemingway |
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#21 | |
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At the computer, opening a vein
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Canada
Posts: 506
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