This outline is adapted from a handout
I give to my lifewriting students. The
points made here apply to writing in general
as well as to writing our life stories
in particular.
I. Why should we write?
A. Frank McCourt in Writer's Digest,
Feb. '99, p. 19: "But now I realize that
everyone has a story. Nothing is significant
until you make it significant. It's not
what happens to you, but how you look
at it."
B. Frank P. Thomas, How to Write the
Story of Your Life: "God created people
because He loves stories." "Humans are
happiest when we are creating." There
is a revival of activity today in search
of our roots and family history.
C. Strunk & White, The Elements of Style:
Writing is a way to go about thinking.
D. Rick DeMarinis, The Art and Craft
of the Short Story: Storytelling is how
we make sense of the world.
E. Robin Hemley, Turning Life Into Fiction:
Writing is a discovery process. Part of
the fun is learning why you wrote what
you wrote.
F. Writer's Digest, Aug. '00, pp. 20-21:
You might find that the greatest rewards
of writing.evolve during the process of
bringing your ideas to the page. As you
reveal more of yourself on the page, you
might notice patterns in the way you think,
behave, react to people and situations.
This self-awareness can help you make
better decisions, understand difficult
situations, sort through feelings. It
is a powerful way to find answers to some
of your most difficult questions. And
it can remind you that there are no easy
answers-this is the root of wisdom. Life
becomes richer, observations and senses
sharper.
G. DeMarinis: Anyone will tell you his
or her life story, given a little encouragement.
It's the human thing to do.
II. Why should we write well?
A. DeMarinis: Poor writing can falsify
experience.
B. Various sources: Writing is rewriting.
Craft moves from the back of the mind
to the front during rewriting. Allow the
first draft to be crude and ill formed.
C. DeMarinis: Say everything that needs
to be said in as few words as possible.
D. Aristotle: "the proper and special
name of a thing."
E. Hemley: Words shape the way we view
an event.
F. DeMarinis: Be conscious of word selection.
Develop an ear for language. The sounds
in a sentence can produce three-dimensional
images in the mind.
III. Regarding truth, and the accuracy
of our memories
A. P.D. James, in Reader's Digest: "Memory
is a device for forgetting as well as
remembering. To that extent, every autobiography
is a work of fiction, and every work of
fiction is an autobiography."
B. Robert Olmstead, Elements of the Writing
Craft: Memoir is a narrative composed
from personal experience. It depends on
memory, which is somewhere between truth
and how the writer sees the truth. Setting
in a memoir is intensely personal and
emotional.
C. DeMarinis: Story is always biased.
Hidden in the fiction is need, and need
is always truthful. We need sympathy and
approval, and want to be understood.
D. The Write Stuff (a compilation): Memory
is what people are made of. What's remembered
is never the event. Memory is faulty.
E. Hemley: What you have chosen to tell,
and how, and what you have chosen not
to tell reveal what kind of writer you
are.
F. Hemley: Memory plays tricks. Never
let the truth get in the way of a good
story. It's more important for an event
to work than to be true.
G. Tom Chiarella, Writing Dialog: Stating
what literally happened is less important
than interpretation of those events.
H. Olmstead: What makes an experience
important?
I. Marcia Golub, I'd Rather Be Writing:
Old memories are mysterious. A lot of
what gives them narrative drive is trying
to figure them out. Of everything that
happened during childhood, why do we remember
these things?
J. Dwight V. Swain, Creating Characters:
How to Build Story People: It's not the
experience that creates the trauma, but
the way the character reacts to it. (If
you're writing your life story, that's
you.)
K. Hemley: What's most powerful is often
what you most want to hide.
L. Hemley: Dig deeper-try to understand
why a particular event stands out.
M. Hemley: Distance from a place enables
us to see it more clearly. What you remember
is what's most important to you.the feeling
it gave you. Description of a place should
be anchored in the character's consciousness;
it says as much about the character as
about the place.
N. Stephen Wilbers, Keys to Great Writing:
"Given that all writing is to a degree
fictitious-.it can only represent reality.use
the elements of artifice to your advantage."
O. Pablo Picasso: "Art is a lie that
makes us realize the truth."
IV. Getting started
A. William Zinsser, On Writing Well:
Believe in the validity of your life!
B. DeMarinis: The very act of writing
sentences produces more sentences. This
sometimes leads to inspiration.
C. Hemley: ordering real life takes a
lot of imagination and understanding.
D. Writer's Digest, Feb. '99: Avoid chronology
as an organizing principle. Instead, free-list
key images.
E. Opening should be "crisp and economical"
to grab the reader.
V. See my related article, "My Favorite
Errors to Correct (Don't make these mistakes,
and your writing will rise above most
other writing)." Happy writing!
| About The Author
Lisa J. Lehr is a freelance writer
and editor with a specialty in business
and marketing communications. She
holds a biology degree and has worked
in a variety of fields, including
the pharmaceutical industry and
teaching, and has a related interest
in personal history. She is also
a graduate of American Writers and
Artists Institute (AWAI), America's
leading course on copywriting. Contact
Lisa J. Lehr Copywriting www.ljlcopywriting.com,
Lisa@ljlcopywriting.com
for help with your writing needs.
This article ©Lisa J. Lehr
2005.
|
This article was posted on December
15, 2005