I’ve been writing fic all morning. I have tons of other stuff to do, but I’m feeling self indulgent; got a massive coffee and a choc-chip cookie; I’m waiting for the kitchen floor to dry and not at all inclined to do real work.
So, I’m writing this TS fic; just finished a bit of exposition between Jim and one of the OCs and realising I haven’t really much of a clue where the story is going – I mean, I have the basics sketched out; I know who Jim and Blair are in this universe, I know what’s happened to them, their traumas; how they got to where they are; I even have a vague idea about the complex case-history that’s bringing them back together, but details have I none, where it’s going to end – not a clue; what’s going to happen along the way? Beats me.
And – thinking about that (and my total lack of a problem with this state of affairs), my most popular stories to date (Wind Whispering, Chasing Rainbows and other stories in other fandoms) were all written like this. Like Mike Leigh and Larry David; I have only the vaguest ideas about where it’s all going and who’s going to be involved, but I know all my characters intimately. I have all the details of their back-story – what made them the way they are - so, I’m OK with letting them dictate their own story; happy to be surprised when they take the tale off in whole new, totally unanticipated directions (as Eli Stoddard did in Chasing Rainbows – I didn’t even know he was going to be in the story till Blair spotted that poster advertising his lecture) without any apparent input from me.
And the more I mused on this (as I brewed my second cup of coffee), the more I realised that, this is the joy of writing, for me. This is what keeps me at it – it’s that voyage of discovery; never knowing what’s coming up over the horizon. Whole new characters might appear and do - who knows what? Someone might suddenly blurt something you had no idea they were going to say and send the tale spiralling off in a direction you’d never even dreamt of, and that’s what makes it all so damn strange and wonderful and magical and fun.
IMO.
What do you think?
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Oh yes, most definitely I totally get this. I find that, even in a story I have mapped out beforehand, the unexpected often happens. It's a very organic type of thing - the way unexpected stuff pops up, making the story grow in unpredictable ways.
I'm finding that is most definitely the case with Immersion, which began as a couple of snippets with no direction whatsoever. After a short while, it became clear to me where it was headed, and I've had a plan for it in my head ever since. But the path it is taking to get there is anything but direct, and all the more fascinating for me to write as a consequence. Naomi, in particular, keeps surprising me, much to my delight!
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::smooches you again for Immersion, because it makes me feel good::
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::smooches you back and points out that the next part has just gone up:: ;-)
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