: Re: How do you 'keep writing whatever happens'? I've heard the same thing from almost every writer whenever I ask a question or read an answer, and that thing is : "Just keep writing. It
This is going to sound very odd, but I've found it surprisingly effective: Figure out whatever time of day you're most alert and then write at the OPPOSITE end of the day. So, if you're a morning person, stay up and write. If you're a night owl, get up early. Your internal editor goes to sleep, and you just write and write in a kind of half dream state. (This is from the book Rest: Why You Get More Done When You Work Less, Alex Soojung-Kim Pang)
Also, if you're not making progress with your outline, shift to a different approach, or just dive in. The only right writing process is the one that works for you. I'm a big outliner myself, but sometimes you need to do a little discovery writing first, and then go back and outline.
The big key is --if the writing is flowing, let it flow. Don't judge it, and don't expect it to conform to certain rules or processes. Editing is a whole different step, and must come AFTER the writing.
More posts by @Sarah872
: Those who mock are bullies. The opinions of bullies are irrelevant. They mock to cause pain, not to improve you. Their mockery isn't valid criticism. Valid criticism won't be sheathed in mockery.
: What are the advantages and disadvantages of using 'third person POV' for historical fiction? I am starting to write my second book which is historical fiction. I had written my first book in
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