Subject: Prep for Nanowrimo + The 5 Essential Tools of Creative Writing

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Prep for Nanowrimo + 5 Essential Tools of Creative Writing

October 29, 2021
Oakland, CA

Hi Friend,
Last week I taught Creative Writing in Saudi Arabia, Ithra Center

(Direct link: https://academy.ithra.com/courses/course-v1:IthraAcademy+00002+2021_H2/about)

I taught foundational elements of creative writing, including these 5 essential tools that apply to story planning too. 

In case you want to jump to my tips on preparing for Nanowrimo right away, here you go:

8 Tips to Plan Your Novel to Write With Confidence and Clarity

I do recommend checking out the tips below for support in entering the writing zone this November and any time.

There are more, I bet. These are just mine. A starting place.

1. Create a sense of safety to experiment and play. 

When I was a child, I played in sandboxes and built sandcastles and mountains inside the safe boundaries of the sandbox. 

Later, when I played at the beach with my siblings, I had my shovels and buckets, and the wild ocean not far away, but far away enough to not destroy my sandcastle until high tide. I was safe and could create worlds with sand.

Writing creatively is also like doing science lab experiments. You have your ingredients, your hypothesis of what you think might happen, and then you run the experiment. Anything can happen! 

Whatever happens, you can learn from it and make adjustments for the next experiment.

As in the lab, you may not know what will happen when you start writing. 

(Thank you Podge Thomas of the Small Business Co-Pilot for the analogy in your newsletter this week. 


What can you do to create a sense of safety to play and experiment as you write?

Hit reply and let me know.

***

This next step helps me if anxiety arises or when I find myself frozen in fear at the blank page.

2. Breathe. You are alive.

Breathing is good, as one of my NLP teachers says. (Direct link: https://www.nlpmarin.com)

Take a few deep breaths and feel the feels.

Writing fiction is about evoking emotion in the reader. 

To do that you need to feel your own feelings.

Contrary to popular belief, emotions are neither good or bad. They are flowing expressions of our needs.


3. Ba and Ya
Ba is a Japanese term that roughly translates into "the origin of everything."

In this context, I use it to include our origins as humans. I'm also including your ancestry, your origins in this life, all the ways things originate in you, including where your story idea come from, where the dream came from to be a writer. All of it.

Jan Jacob Stay calls it a "kind of mini Big Bang from which all the essentials" can be understood and explained. In his book, co-written with Barbara Hoogenboom, Systemic Leadership, the context is of companies, but I see it applies equally to our lives as creative writers. (Direct link: https://books2read.com/u/4EKYo0)

When you take a moment to acknowledge where you come from, culturally and psychologically, and include your desires, hopes, dreams, and fears, you can start your writing session from a place of strength, from a place of rootedness.

Like a massive oak, you are grounded deep. From this stable place, you can create.

Ya is a Japanese term that roughly translates as "that, where it can all lead to." (From Stam.) A place past the planned future, an emerging future that we may not be able to see or experience yet.

When it comes to planning and writing a novel, you are reaching into the far future. You are crafting something that isn't yet known or created for a moment in the future where readers will have their own emotional experience of the story you created.

Even in the planning stage, you can day dream about the moment a reader discovers your book and their heart speeds up in excitement because it's exactly the kind of story they wanted to read, and didn't even know it until that moment. 

Or maybe they were looking for exactly that type of book and they can't wait for that delicious moment where they get to sink into your story, their favorite beverage at their side, and their furry companion at their feet.

4. Choose a writing focus.

You may have a million ideas but when it comes time to write, you may feel at a loss, like a leaf on the wind, shoved about without a rudder.

That's why it's useful to choose a specific focus for your writing session.

It really doesn't matter what the focus is. You're looking for the doorway into your creative flow.

For example, you can start with this prompt: "What I really want to say is..." or ""What if..."

Once you find your creative flow, direct your focus more specifically to your story.

That's why I find useful to use this last essential tool to get writing: Timed writing.

5. Timed writing.

My favorite get-writing tool. Even after all these years of writing (fiction, nonfiction, journaling), I use timed writing almost every single time I sit down to write.

I recommend setting a timer for 20 minutes, then choose your focus -- either to connect with yourself and your creativity -- or a story prompt to brainstorm -- or a question to resolve in your edits.

And write.

Even if you've been writing for a while, you may find the guidelines I offered my creative writing students yesterday helpful.
  1. Set a timer.
  2. No judgement. Not the time to judge what you write.
  3. Write whatever comes to mind, mistakes and all.
  4. Quality is not important, expression is.
  5. Be in an explorer’s frame of mind. Be curious and open. 
  6. No stopping to fix anything, if you can.
  7. Allow play and risk and joy to enter, and invite judgement to step aside.
  8. Stop once time is up.
Let me know how these tools resonate with you and if you have any essential tools of your own you'd like to share.
NaNoWriMo is nearly here! Tools to plan your novel!

I've created a pretty comprehensive planning course for intuitive writers who want a safe place to explore their story before they write their first draft.

A roadmap, not a recipe.

Plan Your Novel: 30-Day Writing Challenge, Planning for Non-Planners: Get Ready to Write Your Novel.

Perfect for those who want to work at their own pace.


8 Tips to Plan Your Novel to Write With Confidence and Clarity


Enjoy this list “8 Tips to Plan Your Novel So You Can Write With Confidence and Clarity.”

This post is a table of contents for the 8 tips on planning your novel, so you can write it during NaNoWriMo, or another time.

Click here to download a checklist for these tips.

Use this checklist to make notes and follow along. It’s a downloadable PDF. No need to sign up for anything!



Have a happy and creative week!

All my best,

Beth

PS. I just learned of the death of Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, a pioneer of flow and creativity. I consider Mihaly a mentor as I had to read his book, Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience, for my creativity coaching certification and learned a lot. I highly recommend his work.

Direct links:





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Beth Barany is creativity coach for writers, a teacher, workshop facilitator, and speaker,
 who helps fiction writers experience clarity, so that they can write and polish their novels, and proudly publish them to the delight of their readers.

Owner of the Barany School of Fiction, an online training hub, Beth takes great interest in how humans learn, create, and grow, and includes all her students’ life experiences, including the ancestors, into the moment. 

Along with her husband, Ezra Barany, she offers a year-long group program to help novelists edit and publish their novels. See more here.

Want a course to help you prepare to write your novel? Discover the comprehensive Plan Your Novel course here, I teach alongside with award-winning, bestselling thriller author, Ezra Barany.

Yearning to publish your manuscript, but not sure if it's any good? Schedule a chat with Beth here to explore your next steps.

She's also an award-winning novelist and writes magical tales of romance, adventure, and mystery to empower women and girls to be the heroes in their own lives. 

Uncover her Henrietta series here (YA Fantasy) and her Touchstone series here (Fantasy/Paranormal Romance). And her new Sci-fi Mystery here.


beth@bethbarany.com

Barany School of Fiction

Writer's Fun Zone blog


Photo Credit: by c. 2018 Ezra Barany

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