Broken Phoenix = No mas :(

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Most of you probably know by now that I lost my outline for Broken Phoenix due to a lackluster job by a computer repair chain. I have the first two chapters still and what Little I had started on chapter 3. But that does me no good if I don't have the outline to finish the story. So it pains me to say this but Broken Phoenix is toast. I don't even know where to go as far as a new story goes. I'm a "novice" in this genre of fiction so it's kinda hard to find a plot that'll actually work and not feel completely illegible so to speak. I'm not even sure where to start without my new story sounding "cliché" . I'm just upset beyond belief at this point.

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My condelences

laika's picture

For a writer I can't think of anything worse.
Burn my house down I would cope somehow,
as long as I got out of there with my story files.
Why can't computers have the decency to give us
a 5 minute warning before they give up the ghost???
hugs, Veronica

The art of recovery

For you Lilly I would say, that to give up now would be to admit defeat. Yes you lost a precious part of your story. The one that helped you forge where you wanted the story to go. An outline of what you wanted to say.

And as a novice in a digital world of where many no longer see a need to write on paper or have even done so given how schools require digital copies and not paper one. To even consider to print out such a thing where one thinks it old fashion. You need to not give in, but to pick yourself up and learn from it. To look over your story and think about where you had decided you wanted the story to go and jog ones memory.

You can see this in not wanting to continue this and in so doing leave many who have read what you have placed before them wondering. You are not the first, middle or last to have lost a part of ones manuscript. Even the pro's have done so only to find it within themselves to carry on the story as how they could best envision it and to find that it hadn't mattered for they saw ways on how to improve upon what they had once thought.

So don't give in to despair. Pick it up and refocus your efforts, redouble your desire on wanting to entertain us with what you have to give us.

I know from personal experience on what I had lost for I, myself and done it not once, or twice but many times. I have learned from it by not only backing it up on thumbdrives but to take the measure of e-mailing it to myself thus having a place in the event such things happen.

So don't berate yourself for you could succumb to the gremlin of wanting to quit. Get back on the keys, type what you can remember and give your readers the story from ones creative mind.

Fly Blind For A While

Just let the story take you where it will. There's a good chance that this new direction will be the one you were always looking for. Even if it isn't, you're certain to come across ideas that remind you of - and improve - your original vision.

Ban nothing. Question everything.

Try to write a bit without an

Try to write a bit without an outline and see if you can spark something. The ideas that come out don't have to be used in the story but you might find something worth keeping for future use. I discarded a few ideas only to incorporate them into stories, one even proved a major plot point that changed a story into something larger, more grand that I originally imagined.

I'm told STFU more times in a day than most people get told in a lifetime

I sent you a message

Andrea Lena's picture

hope it helps

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena