Sunday, September 26, 2010

If It Doesn’t Hurt, You’re Doing it Wrong

I hate jogging.  Hate it.  Congrats to all you runners out there—much respect—but I just can’t make myself do it.  What I do love is weightlifting.  Not the Olympic-style, grunting sort of weightlifting, just me and a couple of free-weights.  When I have a really thorny plot problem to work out, I go to the gym, turn up the volume on my iPod, and lift.  The harder the problem, the heavier the weights. 

For the past few weeks, I’ve been going to the gym a lot, because I’ve been working through some big plot overhauls on my work-in-progress.  It ain’t been easy.  The manuscript I’m working on was “finished:”  It had been through a couple of plot re-writes, then line-edited and copy-edited and polished ad nauseum.  I’d labored over the right phrasing for every line in every scene…to me, every word seemed necessary.

But of course, I wasn’t right about that.  I got some great feedback (and some distance) and identified the weak spots.  Parts of the plot dragged.  The pacing needed to be faster, and that meant slicing out thousands and thousands of my beloved words and replacing them with fewer, better ones.  Some characters ended up being unnecessary, and I had to cut them out.  It hurt.  I had to move up to the twelve-pound weights. 

It's been painful, but in a good way, like lifting that twelve-pound weight instead of the ten.  It hurts, but I know it’s going to make me stronger.  If it was easy, if I didn’t break a sweat, then I might be happy for that half-hour workout, but in the end, I’d be right back where I started.  Nothing really got done. 

It’s important for me not to push it too far, though.  Just like in weight-lifting, pain can be telling me something when I’m editing.  During my manuscript slaughtering, I ran into a character I just couldn’t cut.  It was agonizing.  Every time I tried to write scenes without her, they felt flat and boring.  I had to stop and ask myself: Is this decision going to make my story better, or just smaller?  I suppose I’m learning to walk that line between the good, strengthening ache and the stabbing pain that warns me I’m about to pull a muscle.  I want to be right on that border.   

10 comments:

  1. I saw you comment over at Glass Cases and I thought I'd drop by. I abhor running as well. It's so boring. Although, I don't mind running on the elliptical machine because it gives me 30 minutes of uninterrupted reading time on my Nook. But, yes give me free weights any day. Although, I don't think I can figure out plot problems while working out. I'm too busy gritting my teeth, trying to make it through the next rep. Best of luck with writing.

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  2. Hi Anita! Thanks for stopping by. I'm looking forward to being able to multitask, but I haven't gone digital yet, and it's too hard to hold a paperback open while ellipticizing. One day!

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  3. What a great post-good analogy. Other writers have discussed the pain that comes with writing, so looks like you got it right. There's a flip side to everything, isn't there?

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  4. i would imagine characters in a story are very personal to writers and the pain of removing them from the story is like the pain of erasing them from existence. This can be tough, especially if the character has parts of the author intertwined. it would feel like you're being asked to erase a part of you, a part of your memories, dreams or experiences. being told to do so by and agent or a publisher could feel cold and "business-like" becuase to them, it's just a character. but to you, it's part of you, part of who you are as a writer and a human.

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  5. So true! "Deleting" a character is much harder than killing one off in the story, like they've been erased from existence, as you said. It's heart-wrenching!

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  6. I sooo share your sentiment:) But hey, "If it doesn't hurt, You're doing it wrong," Right? The "balancing act" is essential with respect to your "strengthening ache vs. stabbing pain."

    You'll do well..I'm cheering for you!!!!

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  7. Thanks for stopping by my blog, AJ. That was a special compliment coming from you, since I've been lurking on your website a while and am excited to read your book! It sounds awesome. Get an editor on it, already! :P

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  8. ... and by editor I mean publisher, not "fix your book, duh!" Hehe.

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  9. @literarymoments Thanks! It's so hard to find that balance sometimes.

    @Jaimie :) I'll go on submission again soon...fingers crossed! And I really loved the piece you posted on your site. It SINGS.

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