Ten
Playful Way Tips to Revision
These
Playful Way tips can be used to help you revise any kind
of creative prose--stories, short shorts, essays, novels,
memoirs, journals, plays, screenplays, performance pieces,
sketches, monologues--you name it! What is revision? Revision
is a juggling act in which you use both intuition and logic
to correct or improve your writing. It is a decision-making
process in which you add or cut words. Most of the time
you do both.
1.
Treat revision as play. If your attitude is "I'll die
if this doesn't work," you'll take all the fun out
of writing. Try things out. Make revising an adventure.
Even missteps have value. Allow yourself to be wrong. Nothing
is wasted. Whatever you do is part of your writing process.
Allow the unexpected to happen.
2.
When you revise, do what feels easy first. Save the most
difficult decisions for last. By the time you come to more
difficult decisions, you will feel more confident knowing
you have already made decisions that work.
3.
Save all your revisions. Whenever you feel yourself losing
energy--losing the "life" in your writing--retrace
your steps and return to the last draft that had energy;
the last draft that interested or excited you. Your saved
drafts are your safety net. If you go in the wrong direction,
you'll have nothing to worry about, since you can always
find your way back.
4.
Pay attention to those "pinpricks" of feeling
that tell you when something in your writing is off. If
you don't know what it is, try to identify the general area
that doesn't feel right, then either give yourself permission
to play with the writing, which means you are not invested
in the result, or put it away for several days so you can
see it with fresh eyes.
5.
Visualize the details in your writing. If you can't "see" every detail clearly, the writing is probably unclear. See
each image as though it is a film still.
6.
If you want to see your writing from a different angle,
change the font, the font size and the spacing. Change the
point of view. If, for example, you are writing in first
person, change to third person. You can always change back.
7.
If you're stuck on a sentence, forget about writing it.
Instead, say out loud whatever you're trying to write. Or
say it into a tape recorder.
8.
If you freeze or get nervous while revising, take frequent
breaks. Make a call. Have coffee. Distract yourself. Often,
when you're not thinking about what to do, when you stop
trying, the right words "come" to you as if by
magic. Those moments happen when you stop getting in your
own way. You might even turn on the radio or TV while you
write. This background noise may actually drown out the
fearful thoughts that stop you.
9.
Read into a tape recorder. Pay attention to any place where
you stumble. Each of you has an inner rhythm that is evident
in the way you walk, in your breathing, in your patterns
of speech. There is also a rhythm in the words you write.
When you stumble, there is a reason. The rhythm may be off.
Or certain words don't feel right: maybe their meaning is
wrong or unclear; maybe there are words that are superfluous
or sound "phony".
10.
To change the ending, use a timer. Set it for a time limit
of your own choosing--anywhere from 1 to 20 minutes. Read
over the last part of your writing, set your timer and go.
Write before you know what you are going to say. Keep doing
this exercise--as many times as you need to--until you come
up with an ending that feels right. |