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Am I the only one who has lost interest in their WIP?
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I always have several projects going so that I can move from one to another as the spirit moves me. Just don't let it die in your head. Go back every so often and read it at least. At some point the clouds will part and you'll be happy to work on it again.

I always have several projects going so that I can m..."
I surely hope so, at least, people I run into do. It's been hard to see their disappointment when they realize I haven't really worked on it.


I've also had a lot of those too. Unfortunately, the one I'm talking about is actually in demand.

Two cents from a readers point of view: I would suggest not to give inn into fans demands if you, the author, is not feeling like writing the book 100%. It's really easy to see when a book is written by an author who's heart is not in it. I've read some series where it seemed that the story ended after the second book, the rest 2, 3 books where just words with no passion or interrest from the author themselves. Then you read on their website that "Because you, fans, asked for more..."
Don't write for someone else, write what you love and for yourself.
Good luck!

IMHO, when we write commercially we are doing it for ourselves but also for our readers. And that means sometimes having to be professional and produce something that helps to generate profit without necessarily being what we would want to be writing.
True, we probably write our best stuff when we are dealing with a subject we enjoy. But we also need to treat this like a business and be able to "write to order" when the situation calls for it. Think of it as another skill to develop.
The trick, maybe, is to look for ways to make the sequel less of a chore. I'm doing exactly the same thing at the moment - writing a sequel to my first book - and I am livening it up by telling the story from a different character's perspective. Plus a few other twists.
So, yes, what you are feeling is perfectly normal. Unless you are absolutely hating it, I'd recommend carrying on and looking for ways to make it fun.

Sometimes, it signals that you need a complete break.
Alp



I always have several projects on the go and write in at least three different genres.The only way I'm able to stay organized and keep myself in each different story is to write detailed outlines and know exactly where each story is going well before I ever try to write it. If you depend on your imagination to plot as you go along - it becomes hard to stay on one project. Everything piles together.



I wouldn't say that. While I don't make enough to live on, it does generate a useful stream of income.

I find writing fiction profitable - but it's a business for me. Making it in any business takes training, hard work, planning, funding, and a commercially viable product. It also requires time and patience - nothing happens overnight.
@S. - My apologies for going a bit off topic, but to circle back to the issue at hand. A WIP should be a planned and executed. If you are writing to earn profit, and since you have published that would be the assumption - that new story waiting to come out - would have to wait. Since you do not feel you can write two stories at the same time, then write out a brief outline of the new story and get back to it when you finish your sequel.

Just wanted to concur with Christie. Throughout my writing 'career' have found many times, especially when not feeling like it, myself surprised by what comes out when I just sit down and write. I believe every author should do this particularly when suffering what some refer to as 'writer's block'.



Don't waste time writing a story you don't love.


I also realize that life interferes with schedules sometimes and that makes it unpleasant when you aren't able to keep the flow going.
When it happens i just start writing and write until i come to a place that has meaning for me and that works.



Possibly obsessive. Sometimes you have to make yourself take a breather.

That sounds a bit indulgent for me. As I've already stated, I consider writing a business. I love to write, but writing only stories I "love" is very restrictive. What if the best story I have, is one I hate?
Basing my work on an emotion does not lend to building a profitable or practical business. For me, it's all about planning, hard work, dedication, and discipline. All those things required to create a story my readers will remember.

That sounds a bit indulgent for me. As I've already stated, I consider writing a b..."
Christine, if you want to spend weeks or months with characters and settings that you hate, knock yourself out.
Personally, I'd rather spend my time in a world that I've created, that causes me to lay awake in the middle of the night, wanting to get out of bed and get back to the keyboard. I want to have the story running riot in my imagination, even when I am not at the keyboard.
To force myself to write a story I'm not excited about would be as bad as the daily slog I used to put up with before I retired. Now that my time is my own, I intend to spend it in worlds of wonder and mystery that I didn't have time for when I was working for a living.
And I consider my writing to be the same as my painting. When it becomes work, it will cease to be fun and in the words of Renoir, "if it wasn't fun Mr. Gleyre, I wouldn't do it."

I must say that emotion is part of writing and the feelings of the characters, if you have a character driven book it will be different from a plot driven book. I write because i need to and love to. If you look at the money people make who write good and even great books you will see writing is often not a good way to make money. Why don't we just have our own reasons and respect and enjoy each other as we move through the writing because most books never sell. I hate to say it. And I hate the fact that so many are badly written. Maybe you will dislike me when I say that writing must include love. But Christine, after doing this for a long time and keeping the writing and the marketing kind of separate but necessary I don't have a lot of feeling about writing except that if you do not write for need and love writing for business will not put a person in the realm of success. The arts have been historically supported by the wealthy. At this point we can publish anything we want and good, bad, or ugly, it can be published. So I don't write for business. I hope we can respect each other as far as point of view about why we do it. Let's just be friends. Can we do that? Is is possible?

Best to you and I am sure you will do great.

As for the OP's question about losing interest, no, I've never lost interest in a WIP. I'm telling a story to myself and my readers with each book, and how could I possibly stop half way?
On the other hand, I have created story outlines that I later decided were not something I wanted to actually write about and abandoned. But once I've actually started a story I've never failed to complete it.

To require me to “love” a story does not make sense to me. I’m more interested in how my readers will react to what I write, than how I react. Reaching my goals through hard work and discipline is how I’ve always functioned. I find many new writers don’t even have goals or a plan of any kind. IMHO Assuming most new writers will fail anyway is defeatist - setting the bar way too low. I prefer to emulate highly successful writers. I get excited about new story ideas, and I’m very sure best-selling authors do the same. Whether they love those ideas/stories or not is probably never as important as the reaction they get from their readers.
Back to the question - I don’t lose interest in a WIP. I have already plotted out the story and the characters, so all I have to do is write it. I’m usually working on several projects at the same time.

Where I think we should be very careful is when we pass judgment on other people's approaches. Some will persevere with a WIP that they no longer "love". Others will move on to something else. Neither approach is right or wrong. It is a highly individual choice.
So when we answer questions like these perhaps we ought to stick to comments like "This is how I do it" and not "This is how it MUST be done."
And we do all realise that we are answering a question which was first asked more than seven months ago, don't we? The OP has probably long since moved on.

Very well said. I agree completely.

Where I think we should be very careful is when we pass j..."
I had been about to make a similar comment when I came across yours Will. You have stated the situation clearly. I hope everyone takes the point.

Perhaps what one calls boredom is really a symptom of two or more causes. Is it writer's block? Is it the result of not knowing where the story is going? Is it because the story arc hasn't been fully developed? Is it because of insufficient conflict - (1. Man vs. Nature, 2. Man vs. Man, 3. Man vs. Himself, and/or 4. some combination of these) - to hold not only the reader's attention but our own? Is it fear of writing because we don't know HOW to write a particular scene or chapter? Or is it that we are paralyzed with the magnitude of writing a whole book? Or is it ___ (you fill in the blank)?
I can't say I have any definitive answers for anyone else, but for me, my best solution to these questions is to write down, stream-of-consciousness style, everything and anything that pops into my head as I ponder the subject or problem. I do two things: 1) talk with writer friends about my dilemma to see what ideas they have for a way out and 2) noodle around with scrap paper and refuse to engage in any self-editing. These activities have enabled me to find the resolutions - the endings - to my published novel and my WIP, which is a complete story that I am reworking sections of in preparation of going to print in the fall.
Write, write, write! If you don't have anything written down, you have nothing to work on, no wheat and no chaff to separate. (And I can manufacture lots of chaff!)
I am now trying to finish the sequel to that first one, but I'm really struggling because I'd rather be writing romance. If it weren't for my fans begging me for that sequel, I'd not worry about it ... so, in the meantime, I'm plugging away at it (Ugh!) while 2 more WIPs would rather take center stage in my head.
Am I the only one who has this problem?