My Muse

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My Muse
By Teek
March 2023
450 words long

 

I stare at the page, a blank white page. I know the characters, setting, and where the story is going. What I don’t know is what to write. Time is limited, and time to write is precious. Sitting down and having the brain go blank is devastating. Ideas aren’t gone. I have plenty: girls coming out of Gymnastics class, singing group all getting together for the first time, Parent’s reaction to School meeting about disability evaluation, etc. They are all great, and things that will be included in the finished story but turning those ideas into words on a page is elusive. Writing something that shows heart and emotions is not just writing the words out. They need to be weaved down onto the page in just the right way.

I claim the credit as the author and put my name on the stories and poems I write. I am just a front, however, for my muse. She is the creative genius. I’m just the person who types the words into the computer. When she is not inspired, not feeling up to it, or just taking a break, nothing I type will have emotion or a heart. Nothing will be worth reading. Usually, when my muse is not participating, I look at the blank screen and write nothing. I may try to write a sentence or two. Occasionally I get a paragraph or two. I have even written a few pages before, only to delete them because they were garbage. My muse is the artist. I am just a writer. My muse is loved by those that read her words, yet she lets me take the credit. She asks nothing of me, which means I can ask nothing of her. Wanting her to provide on-demand is just that, a want. If I am blessed that day, my muse will grace me with her presence. If she doesn’t want to, I can do nothing about it.

I am at the mercy of my muse, and I feel honored when she shows up. Today she didn’t have anything to share. So, I sit here looking at a blank page. I want to write, but I know anything I write will be deleted because my muse has not joined me today. I share my struggles with you, for the ones who can understand my problem the most are those like you who also have a muse that works through you to share a precious gift with the world. I will do as others do with me. I will praise you and think how wonderful you are when you publish a new story. Honestly, I mean no disrespect to your muse.

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Comments

How true

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

My muse is a fickle mistress. When she graces me with her presence the words flow out of my finger tips and the story writes itself. Characters take on a life of their own. My finger fly over the keyboard trying desperately to keep up. In some stories, the characters, fueled by my muse, take over the whole plot line. The story goes places I never imagined.

It is frustrating when I have to quit writing due to time restraints. I come back to it with every good attention of continuing the story, but my muse if miffed that I would walk away while the juices are flowing and simply isn't in the mood. I re-read what's written, trying desperately to pick up the tread only to reach the last line written facing a blank wall and stare off into oblivion.

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt
Ich bin eine Mann

I Don't Have One

joannebarbarella's picture

All my stuff is done with hard drudgery. Inspiration comes rarely and the few remaining brain cells have to be tortured into action.

Still, I admit it's nice when I get something done.

Drudgery

Penny Lane's picture

Don't knock drudgery!

Milsy was a drudge and look what happened to her!

Well . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I’ve said it before: my muse is a hussy. Wanders in when she wants, snaps her elegant fingers, and off I go, following wherever her swirling hips lead, totally lost in her perfume. Perfume that is always different— sweet or subtle or light or pure musk — but somehow always hers. Then she laughs and leaves me, linking arms with some other, equally beguiled writer. And I have to struggle to finish the story she inspired, all alone. And that part is 100 percent as Joanne describes it.

I can write without a muse. I did it for decades professionally and haven’t lost the knack. But sure as hell, it’s more fun when that sexy minx is sitting with me, blowing in my ear, playing with my hair, and making me feel — for that brief, shining moment — like she is mine, as I am hers.

Emma

I can write without a muse.

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

I've done a bit of technical writing in my time. (Mostly software manuals or tutorials.) That's easy, compared to fiction. It's simply a matter of addressing the question, assembling the information and organizing it into a coherent line of thought and drawing the obvious conclusion. The rest is just putting into practice the skills learned in high school English regarding sentence structure punctuation and spelling.

Having a logical mind that thinks linearly helps. To quote Joe Friday, "Just the fact, ma'am. Just the facts."

Fiction is something else all together. As Aladdin's genie once said, "... Comes from the nowhere, and goes to the no place." It literally come from nowhere. Like a weed in a manicured lawn it just pops into existence and demands attention. Some weeds are beautiful but require attention to bring out that beauty. (That's called domestication.) As a writer of fiction that's my job. Domesticate the idea that pops into being in my subconscious and leaks into my consciousness. For it to be worth while, I need help.

Enter my muse. She pushes the plot, gives life to the characters and directs the storyline. She allows me to get inside the head of the protagonist; experience their emotions and reactions to what happens around them. And to a certain extent into the heads of other supporting characters.

From this combination the story proceeds. My only real input is to organize it and put it (I was going to say "down on paper" but I haven't put anything directly on paper since high school) onto the hard drive. Edit it and juggle its components until the story flows nicely.

Any attempt to that without my muse fueling the story, is an exercise futility.

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt
Ich bin eine Mann