B. Roman's Blog: Inspiration From Unexpected Sources - Posts Tagged "writing"
Do You Fall In Love With Your Story?
Some writers are quite transactional and natural story tellers, looking at their work as just that - a project they enjoy but is just an interesting and hopefully profitable venture. But, for some of us, our story is more personal, more intimate, or develops into that over time.
Initially, it’s a love-hate relationship; it frustrates and angers you with its demands, then brings you joy when the intentions you brought to the relationship are realized: seeing the visions in your head transcribed perfectly on the page. Of course, getting there is sometimes a slog.
You have an idea, a premise, an inkling of the characters and conflicts, maybe an outline and some rough scenes. It’s been slow go because you are researching every minor little detail to make the story credible and are drowning in facts, minutia and web links. It’s work. It’s pages and pages of research printed out and scribbled with notes - where does this go, do I need this, do I need more? etc.
But somewhere along the line, as you plug away and add more substance, you begin to fall in love with your story. It doesn’t mean you suddenly think your book is the great American novel or will grab an agent’s attention before it’s even finished. What it means is that you now have to nurture that story, hold it dear, do right by it; It means that you will now protect that story, its pieces and parts, beginning, middle and eventually the ending - make it the best it can be, to represent the best that you are at that moment.
Even though it’s still a hot mess, and you have endless rewrites and edits ahead; even when the scenes are all out of order, the pieces and parts don’t quite fit, and you feel you’ve overestimated your ability to pull off such a complex plot - this is when you stay the course, pour more love into it and vow not to desert it.
It becomes a mantle you wear, and it warms you, envelops you, becomes integral to your consciousness. You allow your characters to grow and “gift” you with their version of the story’s truth, and write an ending you never could have imagined from your left brain.
When you are done with this, your most polished perfect creation to date, you set it aside, exhausted and relieved and content. You offer it up to be published and let it go, set it free to find its niche in the marketplace, like a child you’ve raised with your values and you now have little control over its path ahead.
At last you are able take a breath. Exhilaration builds up, an idea, a premise, a vision takes hold. And with it, there is the promise that your next book will be ever more challenging, more inspired - and more loved.
Initially, it’s a love-hate relationship; it frustrates and angers you with its demands, then brings you joy when the intentions you brought to the relationship are realized: seeing the visions in your head transcribed perfectly on the page. Of course, getting there is sometimes a slog.
You have an idea, a premise, an inkling of the characters and conflicts, maybe an outline and some rough scenes. It’s been slow go because you are researching every minor little detail to make the story credible and are drowning in facts, minutia and web links. It’s work. It’s pages and pages of research printed out and scribbled with notes - where does this go, do I need this, do I need more? etc.
But somewhere along the line, as you plug away and add more substance, you begin to fall in love with your story. It doesn’t mean you suddenly think your book is the great American novel or will grab an agent’s attention before it’s even finished. What it means is that you now have to nurture that story, hold it dear, do right by it; It means that you will now protect that story, its pieces and parts, beginning, middle and eventually the ending - make it the best it can be, to represent the best that you are at that moment.
Even though it’s still a hot mess, and you have endless rewrites and edits ahead; even when the scenes are all out of order, the pieces and parts don’t quite fit, and you feel you’ve overestimated your ability to pull off such a complex plot - this is when you stay the course, pour more love into it and vow not to desert it.
It becomes a mantle you wear, and it warms you, envelops you, becomes integral to your consciousness. You allow your characters to grow and “gift” you with their version of the story’s truth, and write an ending you never could have imagined from your left brain.
When you are done with this, your most polished perfect creation to date, you set it aside, exhausted and relieved and content. You offer it up to be published and let it go, set it free to find its niche in the marketplace, like a child you’ve raised with your values and you now have little control over its path ahead.
At last you are able take a breath. Exhilaration builds up, an idea, a premise, a vision takes hold. And with it, there is the promise that your next book will be ever more challenging, more inspired - and more loved.
Published on July 06, 2021 13:38
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Tags:
creating, inspiration, writing
Lyrics of Life - an innovative experience in self-awareness
Where does your inspiration come from? Unusual and unexpected places most likely.
"Man’s word is his wand filled with magic and power." so says Florence Scovil Shinn, metaphysician
The inspiration for Lyrics of Life came to me as I suffered one of my frequent, horrific headaches. Nauseous and depressed, I lamented that this painful condition exhausted and debilitated me. My brain was too tired to think, and I certainly had no desire to do anything but lie still, ice packs on my head, and wait it out.
And in this stillness, the “word” inside my head was the idea for this book, a heavenly gift that compensated for the pain. In some strange way, while blocking out all else, I opened myself to receive this inspiration. At last, all the lyrics I had written would have not only a forum but a purpose. By sharing all the stages of my life which I had scribed over many years, I could help others to open themselves to the messages of Spirit, and hear the songs in their own soul.
Lyrics have a profound place in all of our musical experiences. They are stories of life, of love, of hopes and dreams realized or crushed. Whatever your purpose, perhaps through my words, you can learn to write your own Lyrics of Life.
A perfect workbook for poets, lyricists, journalists and anyone who wishes to dig deep into their emotions.
AVAILABLE EXCLUSIVELY THROUGH Book-Blip.
"Man’s word is his wand filled with magic and power." so says Florence Scovil Shinn, metaphysician
The inspiration for Lyrics of Life came to me as I suffered one of my frequent, horrific headaches. Nauseous and depressed, I lamented that this painful condition exhausted and debilitated me. My brain was too tired to think, and I certainly had no desire to do anything but lie still, ice packs on my head, and wait it out.
And in this stillness, the “word” inside my head was the idea for this book, a heavenly gift that compensated for the pain. In some strange way, while blocking out all else, I opened myself to receive this inspiration. At last, all the lyrics I had written would have not only a forum but a purpose. By sharing all the stages of my life which I had scribed over many years, I could help others to open themselves to the messages of Spirit, and hear the songs in their own soul.
Lyrics have a profound place in all of our musical experiences. They are stories of life, of love, of hopes and dreams realized or crushed. Whatever your purpose, perhaps through my words, you can learn to write your own Lyrics of Life.
A perfect workbook for poets, lyricists, journalists and anyone who wishes to dig deep into their emotions.
AVAILABLE EXCLUSIVELY THROUGH Book-Blip.

Published on June 19, 2022 17:41
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Tags:
personal-success, self-help, writing
Inspiration From Unexpected Sources
Why Did I decide to make David's character deaf? I own a Singer crystal, shaped like a small sailboat, that inspired the Moon Singer trilogy’s first adventure, “The Crystal Clipper.” I found this uniq
Why Did I decide to make David's character deaf? I own a Singer crystal, shaped like a small sailboat, that inspired the Moon Singer trilogy’s first adventure, “The Crystal Clipper.” I found this unique crystal at a workshop (actually, it found me – which is what crystals are preordained to do). In pondering its energy, a story began to take shape. Young David Nickerson came by his own Singer because it was meant for him; he is the one true owner of the Singer which manifests into the Moon Singer ship and takes him on all of his adventures. David develops extraordinary powers in worlds he never knew existed, because of his deafness: this important aspect of his character allows me to demonstrate how David hears the inner cravings of his soul and finds his own strengths. Hearing people who meditate are always instructed to do so in a quiet, silent environment - "Be still, and know..." David learns how to use his natural silence, and so his "disability" becomes his greatest gift.
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