Staring at a blank page is not very fun. Starting out with one can be the beginning of the most lush adventure to undertake, the empty canvas being nothing but a playground for possibilities and exploration. However, when the writing slows down and the looming blankness of a page overtakes the feeling of accomplishment of how you got there, it loses the fun. The excitement is gone. Exploration becomes a long forgotten promise, and all that comes is frustration.
Currently I am sitting in neutral in the third act of a book that I started last spring. Sixty six thousand words, an assortment of characters, the lines of morality being blurred, decisions and instinct leading to misdeeds and conflict... and now I am stuck. What do they do next? I know what the tension of the story is, but how do they move towards any kind of resolution.
I will admit that I don't necessarily have an ending in mind when I sit down and begin a story. That comes later as I get to know the characters. 'Trust the characters,' that's what I believe. As the plot, to use the over applied cliche, thickens, I get to know what the characters would do and the story writes itself. I feel like a spectator who gets to watch it all unfold first hand as it plays out and the words form together into something coherent. At least I hope it's coherent.
This story is different. I know who the main players are, I know how they would respond to situations, and I know what those situations need to be. Getting them there, though, is turning out to be extremely tricky. I am a blindfolded bus driver that is trying to let people off at the correct stops. Instead of being able to just go ahead and do the task, I have done the safe thing and pulled over to the side of the road until I can see again.
But the safe thing to do is not always the best. What if it turns out that I am just waiting for an idea that I will try and force and pry my characters into? Then my story turns into the worst kind of schlock, when the people involved only exist to advance the plot. Really, I would rather ingest the kitchen cleaning products that I just used (a perfect method and excuse for procrastination) than ruin my characters. I would rather walk away from the story completely than destroy what has developed naturally throughout the tale.
As it is, the page I am working on is two paragraphs long and has been that way for a while. I know that soon I am going to just have to roll the dice and try something, knowing that I will be able to go back and alter it later. Until I take a gamble with what I have started, it will never be anything more than an incomplete dream.
Taking a leap of faith can be a very scary thing. Just ask Indiana Jones in The Last Crusade. Follow his example, walk up to the precipice and step out to see what lies ahead. Dad
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