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  • Where Am I?

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    I recently rambled about the -30- at the end of manuscripts. If you happen to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, or any of the other social networks I have linked to my ping account, you are most likely well aware that I just finished a writing project. Hence the sudden interest in the number 30…

    But, while typing that symbolic notification of “the end” draws my “work in progress” to a close, I’m never quite finished. There are tweaks, editing, final revisions, and all that jazz – not to mention hopping onto the promotional bandwagon and “selling” the book. However, those aren’t the things I am talking about either.

    Anyone who has been around me when I am working on a manuscript knows that I go through phases. Simply for the sake of explaining my process, I’m going to try to break them down for you here. By the time you are finished reading this, you will likely believe I need to be living in a padded cell.

    PHASE ONE: I start out by diving into whatever research is necessary for that particular work. For instance, when I started the Miranda Trilogy, I knew next to nothing about Vodoun and Hoodoo. While I’m still no expert by any stretch of the imagination, I came out on the other side of that first book in the trio with more than just a passing knowledge of both. Granted, there are times throughout the penning of a manuscript where the story will take a direction I hadn’t foreseen, and this will require me to stop and take a day to research something in order to be accurate. But, for the most part, the reading, interviewing, and info gathering generally comes at the beginning of a project.

    PHASE TWO: Next, I move into the, “Gawd, this is like pulling hen’s teeth” phase. I’ve started writing and at about 10-15K (word count) I hit this imaginary wall. It’s a barrier that is built out of my own self-doubt and inner fears about whether or not the story is going to be worthwhile. Suddenly, squeezing out a thousand words in a day is laborious. Nothing has changed quality-wise, but I spend so much time doubting myself that the characters decide to go sit at the bar and wait until I get over my one man pity party. I have even gone so far as to say to E K, “I don’t know what made me think I could write in the first place.” This is usually greeted by a couple of slaps, followed by a stiletto heel to the head. She’s all about negative reinforcement, ya’know…

    Then, we move into PHASE THREE. Words are flowing, the story is unfolding, and I look forward to sitting down at the keyboard each day. Oddly enough, Phase Three is the least stressful of them all. (Not that the stress is all bad, mind you. There are definitely good kinds of stress…)

    PHASE FOUR hits at about 40-50K, and things change again. No longer do Iย  merely look forward to sitting down at the keyboard, I begin to dread having to leave it. The story has not only continued to unfold, but I am now sleeping on the couch in my character’s home(s). I’m sitting in the back seat of their vehicles whenever they go somewhere. I am standing right behind them when something happens. I am a part of their world, and I belong. This is generally the point where I become very hard to live with – not because I’m an asshole or anything, although you might want to check with E K on that just to be sure. The primary reason is that I am not here. Brainpan-wise, I am no longer a resident of the here and now. 24 hours per day, 7 days per week, I am living in a different world inside my head. I am seeing all of the things that are happening behind the scenes. What I mean by that is simply this: I see the manuscript happening in real time, and all of the stuff that never makes it to the page. The boring interludes where Rowan and Felicity might be sleeping, or Ben is fixing himself a grilled cheese sandwich using a folded sheet of aluminum foil and an iron.

    I am an observer in their world, and even though only a small fraction of their time is chronicled on the pages of that particular novel, I am witnessing it all. Every last second…

    When I come downstairs from my office I am told there is a vacancy in my eyes. It’s flat out noticeable. The lights are on, but Murv is long gone. E K will see it right away, and now that my daughter is older she sees it too. They both give me a wide berth, and talk to me only about what is absolutely necessary – again, not because I’ve turned into an ass, but because my brain is somewhere else entirely.

    PHASE FIVE is even worse. Not only do I live with my characters, I form an empathic connection with them at the basest of levels. What happens to them, happens to me. I feel their pains – physical and emotional. I weep with them, I fear for them, and I even become physically exhausted with them. At this point there is usually only 25-30K left to write. Now, the relationship between the manuscript and me becomes pseudo-sexual. The “foreplay” as I like to call it, is hot and heavy. The “climax” is only a few short chapters away. Everything quickens, and my daily word count, which started at 1K, then progressed to 2K, is now in the 3K or better range. My wife comes home to someone she doesn’t know. A taciturn and at times almost catatonic individual who stares into space while moving through the motions of life in a purely mechanical fashion. I am like a junkie looking for a fix. All I can think about is getting back to the keyboard, and although I take notes on a constant basis through every phase, by now if I am not at the keyboard I am scribbling on anything viable with anything that will make a mark, just to be sure I remember. I begin to spend all of my time sequestered away, living the lives of my fictional “family.”

    PHASE SIX arrives when the “literary orgasm” occurs. Everything has come together into an explosive, emotional ejaculation that leaves me tangled up in the proverbial sheets on a bed of my own making. I’m spent, as are the characters, but it’s not over.

    PHASE SEVEN is the cigarette and cuddling. All of us – characters and me as well – have to debrief. We talk it out among ourselves, making sure we understand what it is we just experienced.

    And then comes the -30-, the scotch, and the cigar…

    But, like I said, it isn’t over. There is a PHASE EIGHT… For several days following that numerical end mark, I continue to sleep on their sofas. I dine with them, I walk the dogs with them, I watch them when they sleep, like some kind of nebulous, fictional stalker. Then, slowly, I begin to fade from their world. I feel myself being tugged back into reality by those who need me here. And eventually, my life with Rowan, Felicity, Ben, Constance, and all the others becomes a bittersweet memory, underscored by a longing for my next foray into their world.

    And… There you have it.

    I’m relatively certain some – if not all – of you will probably think I am insane now that you have read this, and to be honest, I wouldn’t blame you. E K did the first time I confided all this to her, but thankfully she didn’t have me committed. A year or so later she was reading a book by another author (she does that a lot) and discovered in the afterword that I was not alone. That other authors develop these deep seated relationships with their characters, and see them as very real – even if the “real” only lasts for a very short time.

    Even so, I know it sounds nuts. I actually think all fiction writers – myself included – are by definition just a little bit insane. But, you know what? I think maybe I like it that way.

    More to come…

    Murv

    • Edgar Allen Poe said, โ€œI became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity.โ€ I guess you’re in good company, Murv, so I wouldn’t worry too much.

    • Sugar, the quality of work you produce by going through such phases is so strong, I hope you never change. Somehow I think phase eight might be a bit quick this go round; you seem REALLY hesitant to leave them alone after this one.

      Wonder if I could ever crash that party; Felicity would be a hoot to hang with…

    • I don’t get spend every day at the keyboard (yet!), but when I do find time to devote to a project, it is very much like this. : ) I forget to eat, the dogs have to beg to be let out, dust rhinos take over the corners.

      Thanks for letting me know I’m not alone. . . : )

    • David Gerrald and Harlan Ellison both said that writing consists of directly connecting your gonads to the typewriter. you confirm that to me.

    • while I’m not a writer, i am a reader and an artist.

      when I’m reading a really good book, i BECOME part of the book. i forget to eat and sleep because I’m stuck between the pages. my thoughts start to mirror the narrative. slang used in the story becomes a natural part of my everyday thoughts. i can’t wait to get home to find out what the characters are doing now, like the story might’ve continued without me. when i finish the book, I’m more than a little sad that i can’t visit that world anymore.

      that’s why, i rarely read books right after they come out. parts of series, especially. i like to know that i can pick up the next book and find out what happens next. waiting means my brain has time to leave that world and become immersed in another.

      creating art is much the same. i look forward to working on it the entire time I’m away from it. every free moment, and many that aren’t free, is spent planning and solving and anticipating and adjusting. the time i actually get to devote to it, is almost single-minded in it’s devotion. i lose track of time. i don’t eat or sleep. the room gets almost completely dark before i realize i should turn on a light. people find it nearly impossible to hold a conversation with me. i probably wouldn’t notice a tornado taking out the room behind me.

      i think that depth of immersion is a gift. it’s a way to escape a world that isn’t always what we would like it to be, and to become part of a world that is better and worse and different and the same, all at once. it’s something that those who don’t create (no matter if their chosen medium is words, or paint, or clay, or wood, or music, or dance, or theater, or numbers) just can’t understand. it’s a gift. one that very few understand, even those who possess it.

    • Murv,

      A friend of mine sent me a link to your blog here. She said she had found someone who was “right up (my) alley” and crazier than me. I agree and I’m grateful.

      You’ve just made my world and vindicated my devotion to writing. You’re not the only one who is this level of “insane”. Not even close. You’re simply very blessed to have such caring and understanding people in your life. People who don’t frown on you or put you down for creating, and thus living in, the world you’re writing about. Thank you, thank you. Because of that “crazy” that comes about while writing, I never finished the last book I worked on. The people around me literally sucked all the reason and conviction out of me by telling me how crazy I was becoming and eventually threatening to alter my lilfe for me if I didn’t do it for myself. I bet you know that book has haunted me ever since. The world of my characters has always been somewhere in my peripheral, just out of sight, yet always there to remind me of their existence. I was beginning to believe I actually am bonkers. Thank you again. I’m going to finish that story now.

      Be well.

      • Rock on!

        Best of luck… And yeah, I know exactly what you mean. I still have a few ghosts haunting me. If I’m ever able to take a breather from the RGI series, I just might resurrect them. ๐Ÿ™‚

    • I think most writers have those ghosts. Those stories they meant to write, that character that doesn’t fit into anything you write. I’d just exercised a few of my inner ghosts.

      Murv, don’t worry. We’re all a little insane down here. I know I am. Even Stephen King mentions this phenomenon in “On Writing”.

      I love when it happens. You’re suddenly transformed into the world of your characters and it seems that the real world is the one that doesn’t exist. I know that all too well. It’s when the writing is good and you’re just along for the ride. Sure, you’ll have to fix some of it later because this scene doesn’t work right in this section or what have you, but that moment is golden.

    • On the rare occasion these days that I write, I see a lot of my own process in what you have just described. So I’m in good company, or perhaps you are, or maybe we are all just our own fun sort of insane. ๐Ÿ˜‰

    • i wouldn’t be me if i weren’t insane!

    • thanks for describing that.
      The non-verbal arts process is different, but I think you might understand that Lucien Freud’s daughter said that her father ate, drank, and dreamed in paint….yes, Lucien is the grandson of Sigmund. I know its art when time stops and I forget to eat or sleep. they simply arent necessary when I am there.

    • Thanks for the glimpse, Murv. If you are a little crazy, it’s not a bad thing, because we get a prize at the end – another M.R. Sellars novel. And that, my friend, is worth all kinds of crazy.

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