Are you in control?
Posted: October 5th, 2010, 1:35 am
This is a question to all the writers out there about your perception of the writing process. When you're working out a plot, do you feel that once you have created a character and placed that character in a situation that that character acts for himself, in disregard of your plans for his existence? Or do you continue to have complete control over the occurrences in the story? Do you feel that the course of the story--once you have a general idea of it and have gotten a good start--is predetermined by you, or determined by you as you go along, or determined by the rules of the world and the story and just what is "bound" to happen, as if the story preexisted you and you are simply discovering it?
Now, I don't know about you, but even though in life I prefer to be in control (not that I manage it, mind you), in writing I prefer not to be. Sure, I came up with the original idea (I don't mean original idea in the sense of no one having had a similar one before, just in the sense of the first thought that I had when working on a story), and I first envisioned these particular characters, but once I have started really writing, it's more a process of figuring out how the characters act, figuring out how the story works. It really doesn't feel as if I'm deciding; I have more of a sense of discovery.
I would love to hear more about the perspectives of other writers on these issues. Once you've started a story, is there a "right" and a "wrong" way for it to work out, or is there more than one way that can work? It's always seemed to me very strange that some writers (this is how it appears from my perspective) have the ability to impose a particular direction, incident, or character action into their work from the outside (i.e. themselves) rather than, past a certain point, being stuck with what feels natural to the story, independent of whether it is what they, the writer, would have liked to write about. I feel that my understanding of the "other" way of doing things is very limited; and, of course, I'd always love to hear about people who do see it the same way I do!
Now, I don't know about you, but even though in life I prefer to be in control (not that I manage it, mind you), in writing I prefer not to be. Sure, I came up with the original idea (I don't mean original idea in the sense of no one having had a similar one before, just in the sense of the first thought that I had when working on a story), and I first envisioned these particular characters, but once I have started really writing, it's more a process of figuring out how the characters act, figuring out how the story works. It really doesn't feel as if I'm deciding; I have more of a sense of discovery.
I would love to hear more about the perspectives of other writers on these issues. Once you've started a story, is there a "right" and a "wrong" way for it to work out, or is there more than one way that can work? It's always seemed to me very strange that some writers (this is how it appears from my perspective) have the ability to impose a particular direction, incident, or character action into their work from the outside (i.e. themselves) rather than, past a certain point, being stuck with what feels natural to the story, independent of whether it is what they, the writer, would have liked to write about. I feel that my understanding of the "other" way of doing things is very limited; and, of course, I'd always love to hear about people who do see it the same way I do!