The Creative Writing Process

When we first learn about creative writing, we are taught one path to follow as the creative process:

  • Brainstorm/Research
  • Outline
  • Write
  • Edit
  • Revise

The exact wording of this list varies depending on where you were taught, but the bones of the list is inherently taught. For young writers, this is a good list as a place to start. The list gives them the structure and direction on how to get from point A (what do you want to write about?) to point Z (a finished story).

However, as we grow our creative writing skill, we eventually find that we don’t fit the mold we were taught as children. We have become, ourselves, a unique writer. One who blazes their own path forward in delivering stories. It’s a personalized approach that evolves as we become more seasoned.

You could be a plotter. You could be a pantser. You could be one who writes inspiration from a dream and only during the editing phase, figure out what the story is about. You could be someone who writes the ending first then goes back to figure out how to get to that end. You could be a mid-prose editor, who writes a chapter then edits versus editing when you have your story fully written. You could be someone whose process is what they were first taught.

There is nothing wrong with any of these processes. You are developing YOUR story through YOUR own creative writing process. There is no “one size fits all” process because we are individuals and our brains are wired differently.

How do you find the best writing process for you?

The only sage advice I can give is to experiment and find what feels right. Up until a few years ago, I was a pantser for all forms of creative writing. “Sit down and go” was my motto. Today, I am a psudo-plotter. What I mean by that is I write the ending first then write an outline starting from the beginning. Having my ending defined helps me build the plot and characters that will get the reader to that end. I am sure in another few years as my writing skill evolves, my process will morph into something new.

Thus, dear reader, I cannot give you any secrets to unlocking what your writing process because there is no grand secret. You have go out there and write! Your process will develop on its own to what feels most natural for you. Expect it to evolve over time as you grow as a seasoned writer and don’t worry if you notice that you have a different process for different story types. Your writing process for novels may look very different from your writing process for short stories.

What is your writing process? Have you seen your writing process change over the years? Do you have different writing processes for short stories, novels, poetry, et cetera?

The Drudgery of Outlining

Outlining.  It was the one thing that always annoyed me about writing.  I absolutely hated it.  I remember the long ago days when I was studying to be a Marine

Biologist, each every research paper that I wrote had to have scientific outline.  Each outline followed the same mundane rules of proper format, proper heading, and et cetera.  In the classes where the professor never checked the outline before the paper was handed in, the outline would be written after my research paper was complete so as to use the final paper as the defining guide.  For the classes where the outline was mandatory to hand before the paper was due, I would find myself in a place of pure and utter hell where I would languish long nights away with my head in my hands sobbing about how to structure some asinine outline.

Outlines annoyed me.  I found them tedious and mundane.  As a professional in Quality Assurance and Regulatory Control, you would think I would revel in the worlds of organized outlines… but you are dead wrong.

I found them completely pointless and detractors from the completion of the finished product.  I never saw the benefit of them.  So when I turned to creative writing, I nixed them.  Outlining was one and only “brainstorming” tool that I never utilized with short story writing.  I brainstormed by drawing diagrams, write down a couple notes, and then start banging at the keys, allowing the story just to flow on the paper.

The days of outlining were dead, and since graduating college I never wrote another one…  until last night.

(c) Amanda Headlee

The snowy inspiration of my week at the When Words Count Retreat. (c) Amanda Headlee

As a birthday gift, I treated myself to a writing retreat to help get me on track with my novel.  One of the perks of this retreat is to have a constructive critique from two well-established writers, Steven C. Eisner and Jon Reisfeld, who are the proprietors of the When Words Count Retreat.

One large take away that I received from them, after they critiqued the short story that I am trying to adapt to novel length, is that they both agreed that I needed to first outline the novel.   The outline didn’t have to be the typical, dreary scientific format.  It only has to be what I needed to get my story into the right flow.  In other words, keep it in check.

With a novel, I am finding that it is extremely difficult to get by writing a structured story without an outline.  You need an outline everything on track; characters, plot, settings, the little minute details.  I attempted to write my first novel without an outline and it became so scattered that I threw my first draft in the trash (shredded first, of course).

After the critique last night, I stayed up until 4 am this morning outlining the first few chapters.  Today, I spent another seven hours on the outline.  I am about a quarter of the way through at this point.

I know that seems a bit excessive – time wise – but I have found my style of outline to say, “Ok, here is chapter 1.  It will have this happen with these details and then this will happen with these details…” and so on.

Several writer friends have commented that it seems like I plot out my novel in short form before I plug in the details of the setting, characters, and plot.  In a way I do.  However, I like to think of it as more of a checklist.  I can’t move on to the next point until I covered what is in the current point.

As this is my first true, non-academic outline along with my first novel, I am hoping that this scheme works out.

So far I think it will.  My novel has already taken some sharp turns that I had not event planned out.  Turns that I wasn’t even thinking about last night as I was plotting it out into the wee hours of this morning.  Some terrifying turns that, as of this moment, has me wide awake where I will most likely be sleeping with the lights on in my room.

Now, I would like to know how many of you, my readers, outline your works before you begin drafting?  And what is your style?  Do you follow a systematized method or the free-for-all approach?  I personally don’t believe there is a right or wrong answer here.  It is all in what works for you.

Be sure to check in next week, as I will be discussing the benefits of writing retreats.