By Connie Suttle
I never could get the hang of
it—putting a Rubik's Cube to rights. I watched in envy as youngsters solved the
thing in a matter of seconds. For me, there were always those pesky little
squares of the wrong color stuck in the middle of all the squares of the right
color. Eventually, I just gave up the idea that I'd ever get it right and gave
away the cube I'd bought. I may have invested in a pet rock; after that I can't
remember.
That was years ago. Yeah, I'm
old. And young. At the same time. My body has tossed up its hands with a
chuckle and given up. My mind, on the other hand, is infinitely young. Now,
when I sit down to write, I sometimes stare at the screen while multiple plot
lines, numerous characters and ideas for what happens next swirl through my
brain.
Those screen-staring times make
me realize that I didn't need to solve the Rubik's cube. I have my own version
of it—in my head. Ultimately, it is more colorful, more interesting and ever changing.
I like it so much better than I ever did that little cube. Settling each plot
point or character into a specific slot gives me a great deal of pleasure. I go
to bed with story-lines flowing through my mind. I wake up the same
way. The cube never did that for me—it never obsessed me. It was merely a
distraction—and eventually—a frustration.
What is the point of this, you
ask?
I've already said the word—obsessed.
What obsesses you? When whatever you're writing obsesses you, then you get it.
The real reason any author writes. When you find yourself at dinner with
friends, your eyes surely glazed over while the conversation between fictitious
characters in your head drowns out the conversation at the table, you know
you're obsessed. When you catch yourself staring at a movie screen, no longer
seeing what is in front of you but the locales in your head where your plot
takes a turn, you know you're obsessed.
I guess you could call it the
Author Zone. Maybe the Writing Zone. It doesn't matter, it just is. The more
you write, the easier it is to fall into it; to slip past that two dimensional
plane of letters on a screen or on paper, and fall into the rich,
color-and-character filled alternate reality that is the story. There, fiction
becomes real. After all, the more real the characters are to the author, the
more real they'll be to the
reader.
See words for what they are—a
gateway.
Find the Author Zone.
Give into the obsession.
______________________________________________________________
Connie Suttle, author of the Blood DestinySeries, the High Demon Series, Legend of the Ir'Indicti Series, the God WarsSeries and a woman of indeterminate years, has lived in Oklahoma all her life.
She and her husband recently celebrated their fortieth wedding anniversary, and
together they have one son and three cats. Should the cats be consulted, they
will inform you (haughtily) that these humans exist to serve their every whim. Sadly,
the humans in question are compelled to agree with that assessment. http://subtledemon.com/index.html http://subtledemon.blogspot.com/
https://twitter.com/subtledemon https://www.facebook.com/pages/Connie-Suttle-Author/220330094696864
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