life novels

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life novels

The truth about the writer's life

When you are a writer, you can not separate his letter of his life. writers can not not write, so that you writing is like breathing. It is so natural that even thinking about it. I think it's a shame that so many writers treat your writing as something "special time" to the last thing on your to-do list. The writing is life. And so the beginnings of life, or the truth about life, are also the principles of, or the truth about writing life.

I recently reread a favorite spiritual book, and I found a quote from school master playwright. This drama teacher must have been a wise man, because he always taught his drama students the following:

The Truth About Life

1. Leave your personal problems at the stage door.
2. Treat the material with honesty, dignity and unadorned.
3. Express the full regardless of how many people are in the audience.

I was struck suddenly with a simple thought: The Truth About Life is exactly the same as The Truth About the writing life, and many of us we forget these simple truths, as so often in our daily lives as we do in the lives of our writing.

Just as a reminder to all writers out there, here's my version of the truth about (writing) life

1. Leave your personal problems at the stage door.

When you are writing is not for you! What? Not about me? Well then who is? It's about their world view, his opinion on things, how the world appears through its single lens, and yes, you have to write their own emotional experience, or at least need to write about something that interest. But that's where it ends. While you are writing from a place within you, or you're channeling something from the depths of his unconscious, yet are making a very important condition. You are releasing your ego, and written from the deep inner truth, or an emotional place. Leave your ego and soul or spirit of its characters. You are a writer. You are there to serve the story. It is there to serve.

A good idea is to have a coat rack imaginary rack or a cardboard box outside the door of the room in which to write. Each time you enter the room to write something, particularly mental decline baggage, problems, issues of ego and any other personal matters in the box or hanging on the racks and walk in the room is not compromised. So while you are writing, imagine that someone or something comes and takes all your luggage, problems and issues of distance, so that when you are finished, the door is empty.

2. Treat the material with honesty, dignity and unadorned.

I firmly believe that when you are writing, you are co-creation with a force greater than you. Whether you call that power of God, the Universe, the collective unconscious, the spirit of his dearly departed grandmother, Allah or simply your Higher Self, when you really get into the creative imagination that are just one element of many that will make its entire history. So when the material comes through of (when you write) the need to treat it with honesty, dignity and without frills. Let it flow through you honestly. Do not try to change it as it flows. Just let it flow, I get down on the page, and if there are changes that need to be done, the direction that the new drafting and editing processes. Dignify the material with their time and skills, and for God's sake, do not embellish. There is nothing worse than a wonderful story and good writing is asphyxiated by the attempts of the literature high-mindedness. If the character is beaten on the head, we say he is beaten on the head. They tell us that a large object was projected into his skull. Be honest and use language simple. You will find the greatest writers do. At the risk of sounding like another American guru of self-help, you're the best served to "Tell it like it is." Thanks Dr. Phil!

Review some of his own writing and see where it may have been guilty of embellishment. The beauty and complexity of the great novels from history, narrative, drawing rich characters and their relationships among themselves, not using a lot of difficult words.

3. To express the whole, no matter how many people are in the audience.

Writing for the sheer pleasure of it, pleasure, beauty, peace and satisfaction that stirs in you. Write because you have do, because you can not stop writing. I write because there is a story that's bursting out of you. Do not write to please the editors, publishers, readers, her mother, Professor or partner. Write to the sense of abundance that brings in your life. Climb the blank page or screen and write just for the sake of it. Whether you're the only who will read his words or if you have a circulation of one million books ready to roll when his manuscript. What matters is that you show in full on the page, all days. Since the writing itself, is all that matters, right?

So the next time you're sitting at your page thinking "what am I doing here? "take a look at these three simple truths about (writing) of life and remember how easy it really is. You write because you can not write. So leave your personal problems at the door, treating the material with honesty, dignity and unadorned and completely displayed on the page, no matter how many people are in the audience.

And see your writing improve.

About the author

Suzanne Harrison is the author of four e-books and courses on creative writing, short story and novel writing. She is also the Director and Principal of Writers Central, the innovative online creative writing school and community. Discover more at
http://www.writerscentral.com.au


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