WFMAD Days Eleven & Twelve

Once again, I find myself needing to combine two days into one. Yesterday, I really had no time. I was in jury duty, but instead of sending me to the courthouse downtown that’s three train stops away, I was sent to the courthouse in a suburb that’s about 40 miles away. I had to get to it in rush hour traffic. It took me 90 minutes to get there. When I got there, I was expecting some time to write while I was in the assembly room–but we were all immediately sent to the courtroom, and then I got selected for a jury.

After the trial, Adam and I stayed out in the burbs to avoid rush hour traffic going the other way, and I didn’t get home until after 10pm. Straight to bed with me!

So, here is the prompt from yesterday that I missed:

What kinds of things on the Internet make you a better writer? Be specific—how do they help? What kinds of things make you anxious and fretful about your work or your position in the Universe of Creative People? Do you have the courage to take a three-month hiatus from social media and devote all of that time to reading and writing? What are the steps you’d need to take to make that happen?

There are SO MANY tips and tricks online about being a better writer. There are agents and editors who offer so many great ways to build my worlds, to plot, to create characters. I will skim the blogs and then save the pages I really find valuable in Evernote. If it’s something that I can apply to my current writings, into Scrivener they go.

Sometimes they help. Other times they overwhelm me. Honestly. Because I feel like I will NEVER live up to the things they are prescribing. Obviously I can do it—I’ve done it before. But it’s easy to see all the tips and tricks or whatnot, and to get completely pysched out. That’s BAD because I think to myself: What’s the use? I’ll never get there, so why bother trying?

I am trying to keep from comparing myself to other authors and writers. Back in 2005, a bunch of us started off on the same level. Now? I am way behind while most of them have published, some multiple times, some are NYT Bestsellers. If I think of myself in relation to them, I feel like a big failure. But if I focus on my own path, then I’m OK.

I have to say that no, I do not have the courage to take a three-month hiatus from social media. Part of the reason is that I use some of it for networking. I DO, however, have the courage to cut down my social media time, especially tumblr and facebook. I’ve already cut out the facebook games, something I thought I’d never be able to do, and I have cut down my time on facebook in general. I think, if I severely limit myself, I can still achieve some goals.

If I were to do such a thing, I’d have to tell people not to contact me through social media. I’d have to tell them to email me or text me. I’d also have to fill up my tumblr queue so that my blog wouldn’t go inactive. Maybe I can make that happen, but I don’t really WANT to! But I definitely do want to cut my social media time down. There are many reasons why that would be a good thing, not all of them having to do with writing.

Here’s today’s prompt:

Freewrite about a book you’ve read or a movie you watched that had a rotten ending. How would you have changed it? Did the author or screenplay writer screw up a plot choice or a character choice?

OH MY GOD. I can go on about this. I recently watched Breaking Dawn Part 2. Now, I am pretty tolerant of bad movies because I like to make fun of them. And I was watching this particular movie with RiffTrax turned on. Thank goodness. The movie itself really was pretty bad. A whole lot of nothing happened, so when the epic battle scene took place at the end, I got all excited. FINALLY some action! Finally… SHIT WAS GETTING REAL!

And then…and then… it turned out to be a vision. A VISION. The screenwriters had finally seriously raised the stakes, had me excited and like WOW, then it turned out to be fake?

I felt cheated and betrayed. I mean, first of all, they’d strayed from the book a LOT. Which was fine–lots of movies do that. Whatever. But to stray from the book so much only to turn around and trick us like that? It was terrible!

It was a plot choice that was screwed up. I would have left it as is, as devastating and things were. As unexpected as they were…because that’s REAL. The whole “it was a vision” thing is such a copout, and ONLY WORKS IF YOUR MOVIE IS CALLED THE WIZARD OF OZ. It was like “Heeheeheee, just kidding!”

I’m sure some people felt relieved. Good for them. But I felt angry and annoyed. I thought the ending was terrible and I didn’t even want to see the resolution at the end after that.