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And if you can’t be with the one you love, honeyLove the one you’re with.~Stephen Stills
Oh, I want to write all the stories. I want to write them
all the time and all at once! In December, I took stock of all my open
projects. I’ve blogged about how important it is to finish. I believe that it
is one of the keys to improving as a writer. Good stories need a beginning, a
middle, and an end – and the process of creating a story has the same
components.
Yet over last twelve months I managed to accrue several
unfinished* projects.
When I get stuck, or my current draft starts feeling like a
slog, that’s when one of my other unfinished stories starts to look oh so much
more appealing. Writing a good story isn’t just mentally difficult, it’s
emotionally challenging. I believe writing a good story, one that’s at the top
of my game, should scare me. It’s natural when things get tough for that little
voice to start saying that maybe I should jump ship.
This is the danger of multiple projects. I’m certainly not
going to say you shouldn’t have a few irons in the fire. There are solid,
legitimate reasons to let a certain piece of writing marinate for a time and
that time can be spent on another project. But, it’s important to examine your
reasons when the going gets tough, because that’s when you’ll hear the siren
call of an unfinished project. I know, that other project looks amazing! And suddenly
you’ve got so many great ideas for it. That’s what your journal is for, scribble
down those ideas and get back to the project at hand; because it is crucial to
commit emotionally to the story you’re writing. It’s scary. As a writer you
know that it will cost something, but that’s your job – to give a little piece
of your heart away with every story.
The good news is that all those other stories vamping around
in the unfinished pile will wait until you get to them – and when you do you
will be fully present when it’s their turn.
* I have finished things! I currently have ten stories in various slush piles, just no publication announcements yet. So the grind goes. The cure is to keep writing more and better material and to keep launching it out there.