By Cynthia
Ruchti
Tonight,
I heard the haunting warble of a loon. Would I have caught it if I’d been engrossed
in emails or social media? If I’d filled the silence with my own noise? I heard
because it was a stark, bare sound against a quiet backdrop in this lodge
setting where I’m sequestered for the week, the construction zone at home
exchanged for serenity.
Can our
writing suffer from sensory overload? From noisy words?
Jackhammer words pound at the readers’
subconscious reading experience. Their repetition draws attention to the
construction zone rather than the story in which the reader is supposed to be
immersed.
Sarah made a cup of coffee. The
coffee burned her tongue, but she let it. Coffee or tea? Maybe she should have chosen something other
than coffee today, given the way coffee always
raked her stomach.
Or:
Sarah pulled the mug of French Dark
Roast from her Keurig. The first sip scorched her tongue. She deserved it. Was coffee the right choice? How long
had it been since she’d made anything other than a wrong decision? Too long. Her second sip
stripped the lining of her soul.
Humming words can mark passages of dialogue as
amateurish, like radio static rather than a clear signal.
“So,” he said, “do you…uh…do you
come here…often?”
“Ah, well, um, yes,” she said.
Or:
He cracked a roasted peanut shell
between his thumb and forefinger and dislodged
the single peanut kernel inside. There
should have been two. The empty cavity reminded
him why conversation hadn’t gotten past his, “Do you come here often?”
The woman with the disarming smile
leaned toward him. “Yes. I do. Every Thursday night.”
She brushed the peanut casing onto the floor where it joined its friends. “And
I like to dance. If you come
next Thursday”—she slipped her purse strap over her shoulder—“make sure your heart knows if it’s ready for dancing.”
Buzz saw words are the literary equivalent of gnats,
mosquitoes, or June bugs flapping against a screen door—unpleasant and arguably
unnecessary. Buzz saw words are noisy neighbors. The real conversation is in
there somewhere, but drowned out by the noise.
The sun rose, of course, on the day
she’d dreaded. And as a matter of fact, she’d dreaded
it for weeks now. But the sun acted all proud and gutsy, as if it didn’t care
one whit that in a few hours, in
fact, less than a few hours, she’d sign away her right to be what every woman she knew wanted to
be, except for the few who didn’t—a mom.
Consider
this adjustment:
Proud and gutsy, the sun rose on the
day she’d dreaded. Where were the heavy gray clouds,
sullen and foreboding, that should have marked this morning when she’d sign away her right to be a mom?
Listen to your current work in
progress. Is it suffering from sensory overload, from a too noisy environment?
Does the core of your story have to shout to be heard?
_________________________________________________________________________
Cynthia Ruchti tells stories hemmed-in-Hope through award-winning
novels, nonfiction, devotions, and speaking events for women and writers. She
serves as the professional relations liaison for American Christian Fiction Writers. She is the author of over 16 books. Her recent release is A Fragile Hope from Abingdon Press Fiction. You can
connect with her through http://www.cynthiaruchti.com, http://www.hemmedinhope.com,or through facebook.com/CynthiaRuchtiReaderPage or twitter.com/cynthiaruchti.