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How many times have
you heard someone say, “I’m going to write a book,” or talk about how
they would just love to quit their “day” job and become a full time
writer.
Writing has always
appeared to be a glamorous profession, a job which has only the
requirements of finding computer keyboard, a typewriter or even just a
pen and pad. But the
reality of sitting down to write is something else.
What kind of
an idea will make a good story? Where do writers get all those ideas?
What if I suddenly get writer’s block in the middle of the book?
How will I come up with characters? What if no one ever wants to read
my book? Shudder, shudder – what if I can’t get it published?
Suddenly there are lots of questions and very few answers.
For the dedicated
souls who really want to write, some of these questions never come
up. Those people are writers who can’t seem to help themselves. They
must write. Nothing can stop them. If they weren’t putting words on
paper they would go insane. They were born to be writers. Even if no
one reads their work, they would want to write.
How can you tell if you’re the person with just the urge or that
driven writer filled with dedication. There’s only one way to find
out – sit down and write. If you’ve always done it, then you should
already know the answer. But some people have the aptitude and don’t
realize it. Some people want to try but have never had the nerve.
Whatever has kept you away from writing, you need to know that the
only way to find out if you can write, or want to write, is to sit
down at the computer keyboard or take that pen and paper in hand and
start putting down words.
Just like so many things, you need to
make that first commitment. Whether you need to write it down or make
an internal decision, the first step is to make that commitment to
write. Real writers write everyday. Stephen King and Nora Roberts,
both highly prolific writers, tell audiences that they look at their
work as a full time job and spend eight hours a day at their writing. Whether it be journaling your
thoughts or writing down a fantastic tale, if you plan on being a
writer you should be writing every day. Make the commitment to write
at least a page or two. Don't start with a fantastic goal to have your
book finished in a month unless you enter a speed writing group. You
can write 1 page, 50 words or just a few sentences, but make the
commitment to writing something everyday.
Exercises to get started:
- Write
down the commitment to write everyday
- Write a journal entry before you
go to bed at night
- Write a description of the
morning sunrise while you drink your first cup of coffee
- Write a plot outline based on a
news item you hear on the morning news
- Make a list of story ideas
- Write a description of a neighbor
or husband or wife
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