Creativity’s Inevitable Hills and Valleys
Lately I’ve been splitting my writing time between fiction and fact. I’ve written before about how those challenges differ; today, I want to share the commonalities of writing a first draft. Because whether I’m trying to tell the truth or make it up as I go along, there’s a surprising inevitability to the hills and valleys of creating every single story—no matter how long or short they are.
Hill: Best Thing EverI always start off thinking this next piece is going to be the best thing I’ve ever written. Length doesn’t matter; neither does subject matter. The possibilities are seemingly infinite. And it’s going to include every unused anecdote, memory, and fun fact that seems even mildly relevant.
Note: this false confidence is absolutely necessary, because otherwise I’d never start anything.

(With apologies to The Princess Bride)
About a quarter of the way through the first draft, I always start to wonder what this story is “about”—because it can’t, in fact, include everything I dreamed up while I was climbing that “best thing” hill. I have to make choices, and in doing so I winnow the story down to one direction. For a 3000 word profile, that process takes a few hours. For a 75,000 word novel, that takes… well, I’ll let you know in a year or two.
Note: This is when I realize it’s going to be completely terrible and wonder why I ever committed to writing it.
Hill: Finding the actual sparkBecause I have made a commitment (to an editor, or just to myself), I keep slogging through… and somewhere around the halfway point, I stumble onto some tiny quote or event that points me in the right direction. Once I’ve found my “about”, the rest is just a matter of selecting the right details and anecdotes (or maybe, for fiction, creating a few) so the story moves forward toward its “inevitable” conclusion.
Note: There’s still a lot of work to do.
More to comeI’m not saying this is the most efficient way to create, and there are certainly plenty of valleys and hills ahead… which is why I’m not pulling any life lessons out of this post. But the next time I fall into the creative Pit of Despair, it will help to recognize it as an inevitable part of the process—the first step to figuring out what, in fact, this particular story is really all about.
How about you—got a process you don’t necessarily like but must go through every time you create something new? Share it in the comments below, or drop me an email. I read and appreciate every single one (from actual humans, anyway). Thanks for reading!
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