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		<title>&#8220;Morning Pages&#8221; with a Twist for Fiction Writers</title>
		<link>http://elizabethstark.com/2009/12/17/morning-pages-with-a-twist-for-fiction-writers/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Dec 2009 05:41:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Julia Cameron's popular idea (featured in her book The Artist's Way) of writing three pages each morning--just dumping on the page--developed for the fiction writer. CLICK HERE]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://elizabethstark.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/journal.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-1449" title="journal" src="http://elizabethstark.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/journal.jpg" alt="journal" width="296" height="221" /></a>Julia Cameron&#8217;s popular idea (featured in her book <em>The Artist&#8217;s Way</em>) of writing three pages each morning&#8211;just dumping on the page&#8211;can teach a lot of things about writing. <br />
 <strong>1) </strong>The habit can teach you that <strong>the world will not end</strong>, your vacation companions will not abandon you, your children will not starve, if you write three pages before you get out of bed.<br />
 2) You will learn that <strong>you have an endless stream of words </strong>running through your head and that any &#8220;block&#8221; is about the arrangement and worth of those words (not to be belittled, those things, but good to shelve at certain times).<br />
 3) True for me at least: <strong>whatever you do first thing in the morning is the one thing that always gets done each day.</strong><br />
 So, what <strong>if you want to write more </strong>than a fragment of last night&#8217;s dream, a harried &#8220;to do&#8221; list in narrative form, and grousing about your date last Friday? <strong>You need &#8220;Morning Pages with a Twist.&#8221;</strong> Give yourself a little loosening up room&#8211;a page, say, to moan, rant, angst, mumble . . . and then switch gears: <strong>Focus the rest of your morning pages on the project you are actually supposed to be writing. </strong>Start by writing about it. <strong>If you wrote two or three pages about your book every morning, you&#8217;d get farther than you can imagine. </strong>Then move on, as you feel moved, to sketching particular scenes, capturing images that arise, and so forth.<br />
 <strong>What to consider writing about your project:</strong><br />
 <strong>1) Ideas </strong>you have for plot, character, setting, etc.<br />
 <strong>2) Concerns </strong>or stumbling blocks: what about . . .? what if . . . ? (Write: Maybe . . . and then list various ideas. Have a conversation/ brainstorm with yourself.<br />
 <strong>3)</strong> A specific breakdown of<strong> your goals</strong>&#8211;page counts, planning, daily chunks that will rise to weekly sections that will lead to monthly achievements that will contribute to successful completion.<br />
 <strong>In sum: start by writing about whatever&#8217;s on your mind. Then write about writing. Then write about the fictional world you are developing: about the people and what they do. Voila&#8211;you&#8217;re writing scenes!</strong></p>
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