By Shannon Baker
I went for a bike ride this
morning and nearly died. Okay, that might be an exaggeration, but only slight.
We just moved from Arizona to Colorado, in the Boulder area. I’ve lived around
here before but in a different part of the community. I know of a few trusty
bike trails and have scoped out a sweet course to work that involves all bike
lanes. Boulder is a super biking city.
I haven’t found nice recreational
routes from my new home yet. There’s a wonderful trail along a creek but it’s
not paved and I have road tires on my bike, a little too narrow for a dirt
road. So I’ve been exploring early in the morning, before traffic heats up.
One morning I followed a bike
lane that took me into an old-town area and petered out. It was 6 AM so no
traffic. But in the middle of the day it would be hairy riding. I crossed that
off my list of possibilities.
This morning I took a turn,
expecting it would take me under the Interstate and around to a quiet road to
complete a loop. Logic told me it would work that way and I looked forward to
climbing a hill, scooting through a quaint downtown, angling back across a busy
highway and sliding into my garage.
That’s not exactly how it turned
out.
I ended up on what, in effect,
was an off ramp of the Interstate with cars barreling down and the shoulder
strewn with rocks. Whoosh! Aghghgh! Talk about getting my heart rate up! I
escaped with my life and my bike intact, but it seemed touch and go for a
while.
Sadly, this search and find
process is how my writing often progresses. I start going down one way and by
the time I’m in the middle of the road, I find it strewn with potholes, traffic
and danger. I have to get out quickly and make a new plan. I read books on
craft and attend workshops and seek out better ways to plot a book. I also read
maps to find the best road, path, or trail. But, as with writing, I’m never
really sure how it goes until I’m on the ground, pedaling it out.
Sometimes I set out on a certain
mission only to find an interesting path I hadn’t intended to take. I don’t
know where it goes but I’ll follow it anyway. Even if it doesn’t get me to my
destination, it’s rarely a wasted trip. You know that Zen saying, “Wherever you
go, there you are.”
I often wish my writing,
route-finding, and life in general was less messy. Then again, by not always
having a plan, or not always following the plan I lay out, I’ve done, seen,
written better things than my pea brain thought of in the first place.
This morning, I discovered a
route I should never take again. It won’t stop me from exploring another unknown
next time. There’s got to be a nice morning ride somewhere close and I intend
to find it.
If anyone out there has a
foolproof plotting method, I’d love to hear from you. Currently, I’m using
Story Engineering, by Larry Brooks. I find it extremely useful.
4 comments:
Shannon, I've found what works for one person, doesn't for another. There's no one right way to write. It's a meandering process, always changing. If it didn't, we'd be machines. There's that other Zen saying, "Go with the floe." ;-)
Interesting analogy, Shannon, comparing finding a story plot line to finding a good bike route in an urban neighborhood fraught with peril!
Shannon, my writing style is much like yours, so I have absolutely no words of wisdom.
My exploration style is also similar, except I'm usually on foot. I walk until I'm tired, then realize I should have turned around much, much sooner. We creative types can be forgiven for such things, right?
Kathleen, related to your comment... I was thinking about a new plot line this morning while walking along a path by a creek and got to going so far, walking so fast, that by the time I came back to reality, I was much further than intended and had to run back to make it to work on time! We're crazy.
Post a Comment