Really short and sweet post today…
I just came across the following poster from copyblogger. It’s quite pertinent for me at the moment as I try to finish-the-hell-out-of-this cursed, er, fantastically wonderful novel. Yeah.
Stuff to remember…
Like this infographic? Get more content marketing tips from Copyblogger.
You can also download as a PDF from their site here.
Sooo… What do you think, fellow wordslingers? My favourite is rule number 6.
Do you need to print this out and pin it on your wall? I sure do! And I’m gonna. Right now.
(Although not sure about the ink and the paper… would web-disabled computer work instead?)
***
This post is in response to this week’s wanafriday theme of A New Discovery. (Not that I didn’t already suspect all this, but, you know…)
Check out the other exciting new discoveries (coming in all shapes and sizes) this week from
Pretty good rules, although I think #2 is going to be a bit difficult while I’m taking a physics class. I’ll probably have to settle for writing when I don’t feel like it if I want to get anything done.
LikeLike
They do say that is the difference between a pro and an amateur… I suppose the trick is to discover methods of finding the right frame of mind when you need it.
LikeLike
I think I like #4 the best – let your imagination go to weird places. I tend to decide quickly on a plot, when maybe I should play with things more, just to see what will happen.
LikeLike
Yeah, I hear you. I’m the same, always wanting to control things too much.
LikeLike
The rules are great. Thanks for sharing! I would really love to get to #9 and #10 π
LikeLike
Wouldn’t we all, Kim!
LikeLike
I adhere to rule #4, but it’s later and my mess is yet to be cleaned up.
LikeLike
That’s the great thing about ‘later’; it can come at any time. π
I need to work on rule 4 probably…
LikeLike
Awesome rules!!!
My favorite is #4, something I do anyway, which means I get a lot of rewriting and figuring after the draft is written. But that’s how my brain works.
I also love #6. LOL.
LikeLike
Rule #4 is something I aspire to. I really need to work at ‘letting go’ and not worrying so much about whether it’s going to work. I second-guess myself a lot.
Rule #6 is awesome, because right now my first draft WIP looks like it was written by a lunatic! π
LikeLike
I hear you. My first drafts are the same.
LikeLike
The one that jumped out at me right away? #6 You know how I love a good letter. π
LikeLike
Certainly we do, Tami! Not that we’ve seen any letters from B recently… I also like the alliteration in this rule ~ heh.
LikeLike
I like these rules…especially # 3 and 6.
LikeLike
Because if you write yourself silly it will end up looking like a letter from a lunatic? Of course!
LikeLike
#6 and #7 are near and dear to me in the First Draft stage. But that’s where revisions come in. I loved Anne Lamont’s chapter on Shitty First Drafts in her book Bird by Bird.
LikeLike
Sounds like I need to read that book. I do struggle with allowing the first draft to be crap – even though it invariably is whether I ‘let’ it or not!
LikeLike
Also, on stealing stylistically, I find myself doing this unwittingly sometimes if I’ve been reading something I admire! Funny.
LikeLike
It’s the same for me. I don’t intentionally “steal”, something “similar” to something I’ve read pours out in the flow. I totally revised those sections later, but at first I was horrified. Especially when I realized I’d even used the “same names” as were in the book I’d read.
LikeLike
That just shows you were tapping your subconscious! I need to embrace that more.
LikeLike