Guest Post by Rosanne Bane
Some
writers don't write because they don't know what to write. They've
been misled by the conventional wisdom that you should "write what you
know." How stultifying, how limiting, how uttering boring!
A
bit of confusion arises here because "writing" is both a noun
referring to the finished product and a verb referring to the process
that leads you to that end product. When we talk about the finished
product, you do need to something about what you're writing when you
share it with an audience.
Maybe
the rule ought to be "Publish what you know," but even that's
risky--some of the worst writing (both process and end product) comes
from people spouting off about what they "know" is true when really all
they have is unquestioned and uninformed opinion.
Knowing
exactly what you're going to write before you start writing can be
deadly. We aren't supposed to know the answers when we begin. Start the
process of writing with good questions and you stand a chance of
ending with good writing.
Good
writing comes from exploring, researching, pondering, challenging,
forming and reforming your own thinking about things you don't know but
are curious or passionate about. Writing is a discovery process.
Writers should always start with more questions than answers. Start the
entire project with more questions than answers and start each day's
writing session with more questions than answers.
For
creativity's sake, don't wait until you know what to write--write to
figure out what you think you might know and more importantly, what you
don't know yet. Then you can go find out.
Don't
worry for one second about not knowing what to write. Write about what
you love. Follow your passions. Write about the people (real or
fictional), places and things (real or fanciful), problems and
challenges (real or metaphoric) that you care deeply about. Don't worry
you don't know enough; worry that you don't question enough.
Knowledge
is what you gain in the process of following your love. Love can't be
faked. Love is what keeps bringing you back no matter how challenging,
disappointing, frustrating or just plain hard it is to figure out what
you think and feel and then to shape that into words.
If you need a rule, let it be this: Write what you love.
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