You may have noticed that a number of bloggers have been
posting about their writing process. At
the end of their post, they then tap a couple of other bloggers who they want
to see write about their own processes.
Well, my friend Jessica from Leelafish, the
pride of Shreveport and my birthday buddy, gave me the tap upside the head, so
here I am.
When Jessica wrote up her process, she had it divided in
two: work writing and blog writing. I
write for my company as well, but for the purpose of this exercise, I’m going
to stick to blog writing. The “work”
writing just isn’t that interesting. I
write procedures and any general communications my boss requests. She asks, I write. That’s the process.
So, let me run through the questions, as they appear
throughout these “process” posts.
1)
What are you
working on right now?
Just my blog. Well,
OK, I’m often told that I should write a book.
I always say that I am writing
a book, and I’m posting it online bit by bit.
Maybe one day, I’ll sift through it all and pick out and self-publish the
posts I consider book-worthy, probably those containing the wild stories of my
misspent youth.
Other than that, aside from a list of ideas I plan to write
about when the mood hits me, I tend to write about whatever strikes my fancy at
any given time. I rarely have a schedule
mapped out in advance, unless it’s a multi-part story.
2)
How does your work differ from others of its genre?
I don’t know that it does.
There are lots of all-purpose blogs around. I know that I never wanted to be limited to
one general arena. I want to be able to
write about family stories as well as sports, politics, TV, movies, and pop
culture. I will concede that this is probably the only blog to delve into the
scientific study of game jersey mojo.
3)
Why do you write what you do?
I feel my primary mission is to entertain. I love to tell stories… no doubt heavily
influenced by my maternal grandpa.
I’m also a compulsive documentarian. I’ve kept journals off and on throughout my
whole life, and it’s funny because sometimes when I’d go back and read through
them, I’d find a passage or two that I thought was particularly well-written or
entertaining. Then I’d mourn the fact
that no one would ever see it but me. So
when blogs came along, it seemed like a natural progression.
4)
How does your writing process work?
That’s a tough one. I
don’t know that I really have anything I’d call a “process.” I pick a topic that interests me that day,
and just start writing. Often, I
literally don’t know where I’m going with it until I get there. I’ll start out with a little seed of an idea,
and just start tapping. Next thing I
know, I’ve got three pages and it’s time to put a bow on it.
There are exceptions from time to time. Like early this year when I started writing
about my experiences with chat rooms, I knew it would be a multi-part series,
and that Island Girl and Virginia Girl would each need
their own post. And I knew the end of
the final post would lead
directly into reuniting with my old girlfriend.
It was funny though… when I started the series; I thought it
was going to end with this amazing and improbable love story. Instead, it ended with another crash and burn. Just goes to show how reliable long-range blog
post planning can be.
As for my physical process, I do all my writing and editing
in Word, and then copy/paste it into the blog template, then add pictures as
necessary. I hate writing directly into
the template. Plus, I file all the Word
docs, so that I have backup that’s independent of an outside storage source.
I do have the Blogger app on my iPad, but I only use that for
short posts when I’m on vacation.
So, that’s it? Any
questions? And thank you Jessica, for
considering me worthy of this exercise.
8 comments:
Beautiful discussion. Three ingredients necessary to writing: story; symbol; incantation. Your blogs include them all. This is an important essay.
Thanks bluzdude, I always enjoy your posts. I always seem to stay with the same few I have enjoyed for awhile, you, Cassie, Debbie and Lynn also because of you Misty. Keep up the good work.
Technical issues.
Then I must have come by this thing genetically, because I have no idea that I'm doing... whatever it is I'm doing. I'm just writing in a way that makes sense to me.
What, as in "do I have any?"
Blogger makes it very easy to put up a blog; it's all templates and options. I had no idea how to do it when I started, I just dove in and fumbled my way around until I settled on a format I liked.
THAT IS the writing process. Dive in, fumble around and finally finish with smooth strokes.
" I will concede that this is probably the only blog to delve into the scientific study of game jersey mojo."
That seriously made me laugh! I love your posts and your writing: mojo and all. Thanks for taking me up on the suggestion.
And thank you for assigning such fun homework.
Post a Comment