#oneaday Day 883: Freewriting

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I have no idea what to write about today. So I've decided to just start typing and see what comes out. Doubtless it will be a ridiculous flow of consciousness nonsense post, but eh. What can you do.

I've used this technique before, of course. It's called "freewriting" and it's a good technique if you're planning on perfecting your creative writing craft. Well, maybe not perfecting, but it's a good means of practicing the art of getting ideas out of your head and onto the page as quickly as possible. This is an important thing to do, as ideas, if left unchecked, float around your head for a day or two and then dissipate without warning, often before you've had a chance to do anything with them. I find that I can generally hold A Good Idea in my head for up to a week at a time, but if I don't do anything about it (even if that "anything" is simply "make a note of it to come back to later") then it is gone forever. Usually. (Sometimes if it's a particularly powerful Good Idea, then it will be back with greater force. This is usually a sign that I should Do Something About It.)

Talking of creative writing, I downloaded an app for the Mac called Scrivener yesterday, and spent a little bit of time going through its tutorial and fiddling with it. It's a "writer's toolbox" sort of application, taking the approach that programming environments do for application development, only for creative projects. You have a "binder" in which you can organise the various bits that make up your work, and when it's all finished you "compile" it into its finished product, whether that's a short document or a full-length novel. There are all manner of different handy tools in there, including a corkboard where you can rearrange virtual notecards, the facility to store all your research within the single Scrivener project file and the ability to split your work up however you see fit for later recompilation. It looks pretty good, and I'm going to make use of it. I'm thinking that if I actually organise myself to start writing something, I might be able to finish it. Whether or not that will be sooner rather than later will depend on my own enthusiasm for the project and whether or not I'm able to maintain momentum. I made a start today with a couple of character sketches, so we'll see where I go from there. No, you're not getting a sneak peek yet.

And now I'm running out of things to say again. I have broken my freewriting streak by replying to someone on Twitter, which was an error on my part. I shouldn't leave Twitter open while writing. It is distracting. Everyone knows this. Perhaps I was thinking that it would provide me with inspiration for something to write. I guess it sort of has, now. You're probably wondering what I tweeted about. Well, it's all in the context, but I told Aubrey "Chupacaubrey" Norris that she is the "secret boss of PR". She was lamenting the fact that she wanted to be the Final Boss of something (Penny Arcade Report's Ben Kuchera had been referred to as the "Final Boss of Games Journalism" a few moments earlier) so I said that to be nice. Also she is awesome, and a fine example to the rest of the industry.

Anyway. I think that's enough for now. Sorry for the lame post (I'm not sorry at all) but it's very late, I'm tired, I just finished Quest for Glory II at last and now I want to go to bed. Maybe after I've sent all my Pocket Planes flights on their merry way.

Night night.


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0 thoughts on “#oneaday Day 883: Freewriting

  1. I need to find something comparable to Scrivener on Windows. I'm putting together, um… something. Maybe it's a novel, maybe a short story series, or maybe it is just a single short. I don't know yet, but what I do know, is that it's a dang good idea (I think so) and something I want to take to the next level. It's just so flippin' hard to keep everything on track for those of us that are blessed with ADHD! 🙂

  2. Scrivener appears to be a very large application to download, and it also appears to be not free… Just a trial (right?). So when it said 'downloading… 17 hours remaining' (!!?) I decided to not give it a go. Otherwise it looks like a great app:-)

    1. No, it's not free. It's £31 for the Mac version in the UK — I'd assume the Windows version is a similar price. It downloaded pretty quickly for me (though I do have a pretty fast connection here) — perhaps you caught the servers on an off day? 🙂

      1. Maybe the servers. Or maybe my laptop has an off day;-)

        It is fair enough that (some) apps cost money so the programmers can eat, but my aversion to paid apps isn't about fairness… I just can't afford anything that isn't free for the time being.

        1. That is fair enough! You do often get what you pay for with productivity apps — compare OpenOffice to iWork and Microsoft Office for an example — but if you can't afford it, you can't afford it, and that's fine.

          The thing to do, I guess, is download the trial (if you can!) and give it a shot for a little while. If it seems to be something that appeals, then it's maybe something to set a little aside for until you can afford it. If it doesn't, no great loss!

          1. Actually I think there exist an amazing amount of free apps of high quality. But maybe not for that particular purpose (there are plenty, but not so advanced).

            I tried Open Office many years ago and wasn't impressed. But I am not impressed with MS Office either (which is what I use on my Mac… because that's what I am used to), at least not Word.

          2. Oh, there absolutely are some quality free apps out there — GIMP is a viable alternative to Photoshop for many, for example — but you have to spend a long time trawling through absolute garbage before finding something worthwhile in many cases.

            I don't love Office either, but there's no getting around the fact it is the industry standard and the most compatible suite of productivity software out there. I much prefer iWork to work on, but there are things it struggles with at times, so occasionally I have to use Office.

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