About writing...

I need to ramble. I need to put words down that aren't a story, or a tweet, or other nonsense. I just need to ramble a bit.

I had an interesting thought tonight. Sometimes I think Writing is like an Enigma Machine. It's what sits between the ideas and characters in your head, and the prose that appears on the page. The machine is the collective of my writing skills and techniques. When used correctly, I put out readable prose. Used not so correctly, and you get an unintelligible mess. Or worse, a misunderstood or misinterpreted one.

And of course there's a good chance that I'm completely full of it. The thought occurred to me and I thought it was kind of neat. Now that's a word that doesn't get used much in that context anymore. Hmmm. I am getting old.

Sometimes I find that the most frightening thing in the world is the blank page. The cursor blinking it's silent demand to move, to reveal the words that are waiting at your fingertips. I don't know if anyone else ever feels that way, but I do. I think that's why I never wrote until I could on a computer. Holding the notebook pen in hand, or putting the damning blank page into the typewriter and to just stare at it, waiting. Usually, I have enough ideas running around in the cobwebbed cavern of my head that I have the enthusiasm of that latest idea to just go. Jump in. No, it's the times when something is due. When there's a specific call or demand to be creative about this in that situation. That's really when I find the blank page scares the hell out of me.

I find it hard to come back to a story that I haven't worked on in a long time. I'm not the same person who put that down then. I don't have quite the same point of view. Often that is a good thing. You get the perspective looking at that work you didn't have before. You look at it and say something to yourself along the lines of, "Dear god what a piece of shit!" Or, you look at it and remember with pride how it felt when you finished it. You re-read it and realize besides a word choice or two, you wouldn't change anything. Those moments are fun, if only all too few.

Back in my past, I've played a variety of musical instruments (I know, what the hell does that have to do with writing, I'm getting there) and I've played quite a few percussion instruments. Rhythm. There is a cadence, a rhythm to words. It's how patter dialogue sequences work. For my own taste it's how poetry works for the most part. I love a poem that has a good rhythm. A writing teacher once told me that if you get good at playing with cadences and rhythms, add in a few differences in word choice and you can easily have a dialogue only scene with three or four characters and most readers will be able to keep track of who is saying what. My favorite poem is probably Eldorado by Poe.

And the length of that sentence reminds me of what another teacher once told me. Most people don't read sentences that are longer than twelve words. There's a variety of reasons that I won't go into because I won't do it justice here. I find things like that fascinating. As some of you know, I'm using an old Dell netbook as a comp these days. I've managed to convince it that it's a Mac, even though the little Dell logo still lights up when I'm using it. Heh. I shouldn't laugh at my own jokes, but what the hell.

I honestly don't know that sparked this little stream of consciousness rant of mine, but there it is. And you're welcome to it.

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