Muse Wrestling (Worst. Sport. EVER!)

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I think I promised/threatened a long, long time ago that I would not post anything new for either of my two open tales - Secondhand Life and Summer of Love, until I had finished everything offline and had a complete story to dribble out at regular intervals.

I had no idea how hard that promise/threat would be to keep.

(Major writer navel-gazing follows)

I resigned myself to writing what came to me, even if out of context. And found myself with lots of disconnected pieces I really liked. But finding where they fit in the puzzle of the big picture of both stories has been really challenging.... especially connecting everything.

I always knew with both stories (and past and future ones I've already started - to distract myself from finishing what I've already begun posting - it seems to be how I work)
A] The premise.
B] Where the story starts
C] Where the story ends.

Connecting everything should be easy. Right?

This has proved trickier than I ever imagined. I would blame the Muse, but I can't afford to antagonize her. And she had given me some fun stuff that I can't seem to tie into the main narrative of either story.

So my dilemma is to post what I have, although I still haven't connected ALL the dots to reach the end of the story (stories), or to keep my word and sit on everything until I force myself to finish. Although by then, it won't matter because momentum is already lost and no one will remember or care about either story.

I remember when the Muse & I were besties. Instead of sleeping, I would just write until it was time to go to my day job - which I somehow managed to do without any narcoleptic moments. Now I have to force myself to steal time to sit down and write before and after sleeping.

Good news: My sleep-debt FICO score is improving. Bad news: My relationship with the Muse is at-best ....strained.

The stories are still a delight to write. I sit in front of the keyboard and feel like I'm the first person to read what fills the screen, and I'm as surprised as anyone to discover where the stories and characters go.

I thought by now both stories would be wrapped and I'd be on to the half-dozen or so intriguing premises I'd thought of - and started - as sort of a taxi-way for when I finally got around to diving into them. Instead I grapple with filling in the details of the stories I've already started, trying to lay down all the stepping-stones to the end. Which I wrote along with the beginning.

I know understand better than ever the phrase "The Devil is in the details". ....and something tells me he just may be a sibling of the Muse. :-P

So do I keep my word and sit on everything until finished and eventually post polished pieces every few days to the conclusion... or put up the stories as far as I've advanced them with no guarantee (and a sinking dread) that I'll stall again before finishing?

Ambivalence doesn't begin to describe my dilemma.

Thanks for reading. And thanks in advance for any input.

K@

Comments

Start posting again

I'm not a big fan of unfinished stories. But I encourage you to forget your silly promise, and start posting again. Your episodes stand well alone, and I miss you humor.

Hollow laugh

If I had tried that for Somewhere Else Entirely I'd probably still be writing it.

There is absolutely no way I could have sat on 143 chapters before posting (+ 6 for Armsman of Joth). Mind you, if I had determined to finish before posting, I expect that the finished product would have been much smaller. Whether it would have been as good a story is a different matter.

The problem with sitting on stuff is the urge to go back and tinker with it. Once you have put it out into the wild the only thing you can do is live with it.

If you have been reading my commentaries you'll know that I am now fixing many of the minor problems and tweaking things like speech but the overall plot won't, and cannot, change. Because it is public I am not tempted to revise any part of the plot - not that I want to do so, fortunately.

Ultimately the choice is yours. If you are writing a 6-10 parter, you can enjoy the luxury of getting it all right before you post. If you think that it is going to be much larger, then think carefully. Posting once a week after you have finished writing may mean that it could be a year later before you are done with it. By that time your interest may be on other things.

Penny

About A) B) C)...

We were taught in the school, that it should be a) the premise; b) where the story starts; c) the story; d) where the story ends; e) what it was all about ;-)
And that a should flow into b, then c, then d, then e....
But... Sad thing is - there was no proof or explanation for any of the above.
And there are loads of stories, books, serials that do not follow that convention. Starting with ancient Greek drama where they create as much mess as possible, then some God ascends via deus ex machina system and resolves the mess...
On the other hand, one of my favorite authors has a book of "one liner books" where you can guess 99.9% of a story from a single line. (Following examples were created by me using guidelines) Like "He picked her up, kissed her and she understood that everything will be perfect." Or.... "He smiled, touched his hat and rode into the sunset..."

Finishing a story

Penny is just so-oo so-oo right. Way, way back in the mists of Beverly's early writing days she also resolved to 'finish-a-story-before-posting'.

Oh what a short-lived resolution that turned out to be. If she had stuck by that resolve she would hardly have posted anything. Nowadays I'm rarely more than one chapter ahead of posting or alternatively, I'm on stop while the muse escapes me.

Currently the well has run dry owing to real life activities demanding my time. ' Heir to a title ' is proving difficult to finish except with a mundane :- they-all-lived-happily-ever-after, scenario. (How boring is that!!!?)

bev_1.jpg

Boring "they-all-lived-happily-ever-after"

You could finish it like "The Welch Ram" - with a blood-soaked !Cliffy leaving readers gasping, screaming "Oh, no! She didn't!" and with their knickers in a knot over who lived and who did not.
Ha! I sense a rhyme somewhere there!
:D

Modifying the Not Posting

Daphne Xu's picture

I have already modified the rule that I'm trying to follow, by posting a couple entries in one of my incomplete long books. The idea is that they make credible stand-alones to a certain degree. I also refuse to promise that they remain intact upon revision of the novel.

Maybe I should repeat that more often. At least I post something.

As for Muse-Wrestling, admit it. You find it sexy and arousing.

-- Daphne Xu