Tag: writing process

Total 7 Posts

Music Sets the Mood for Writing

Strong coffee, herbal tea, and soft or hard rock music can help perk up ideas.

When writing, I sometimes prefer the quiet. It affords the opportunity to “hear” the characters as they speak to me or to imagine the setting for the story. However, sometimes, as I am doing now, I turn on YouTube, a channel from Sirius or an FM station, my playlist from Apple or Spotify, and allow the music to flow over me and inspire my writing. Depending on the story, the mood needed, or my own muse, I select the genre for the music.

I borrowed ideas from the lyrics of “Every Breath You Take” by The Police for the suspense in my paranormal book Angels Among Us where the antagonist, a wealthy scoundrel involved in the murder mystery, is stalking the protagonist, a stained glass artisan with psychic abilities who is guided by her guardian angel, someone who also is watching out for her.

Classical Spanish music including the piece Concierto de Aranjuez by JoaquĆ­n Rodrigo inspired a feeling for the steamy romance of reincarnated lovers in Mexico in my to be re-released Sacred Fires.

Of course, you have to take care not to plagiarize songs, but using phrases and giving credit to the artists is important.

Since my tastes in music run from classical to reggae, I can have fun with finding inspiration from a variety of sources. There is often music of some kind in the background for the story, be it a scene where characters are dining together or dancing, there is music.

So, if you are writing and looking for inspiration, try turning on and tuning into music.

Writers as Daydreamers

As a child, I enjoyed daydreaming, studying clouds, and thinking up ideas about their shapes. My imagination often took flight by glancing outside.

Daydreaming sometimes seems like a waste of time, but for a writer, it can be time well spent.

I used to think that you had to “sweat” out getting the words for a story down. Oddly, words and stories “appeared” in my mind when I was busy doing other things such as making the bed, creating a salad, or simply looking at clouds. So, when a case of writer’s block struck, a friend suggested daydreaming, and it helped.

To me daydreaming allows for the free flow of ideas which aid the imagination. Of course, you have to write something later on if you are writing a story, but a daydream might lead to it.

Dreams in general are open to interpretation, and I have longed kept a dream journal. Although I consulted dream dictionaries, I found that writing the dreams down and interpreting them on my own to be more reliable than a dictionary on dreams. Night time dreams can also inspire storytelling as your subconscious works things out, and also can provide a narrative which can be a source for a story. In Sacred Fires, my paranormal story, the prologue scene came from a dream I had of a young couple in ancient Aztec times who must escape from a ruthless high priest who wants to separate them. I connected the past to the present time in the story through the notion of reincarnation.

If you’re struggling on coming up with a story, try daydreaming or use your nocturnal dreams. Keep a notebook nearby.

Happy dreams!

Artsy in Other Ways

Maybe it was the influence of my childhood in Greenwhich Village where I attended a pottery school at age seven and enjoyed browsing the art exhibits at Washington Square Park  or maybe it was the times that I stayed home from school due to a serious bout with brochial asthma and spent hours sketching and coloring, but there has always been the artist in me. I did a lot more drawing and painting in my youth, and I minored in art in high school, but I veered away as I entered the work force. Instead I used my “leisure time” to write poety, short stories, and eventually novels. After time in the business world, I returned to college to pursue graduate studies in education. I became a teacher of language arts, but still I pursued the arts by creating stained glass objects, decorating, and writing.

When the local adult school offered art classes, I took up drawing and watercolor. There is much to be said for the connections I make with my writing and art. Both require observing one’s world and draw upon experiences. I believe that using that type of creativity with my art enriches my writing, and vice versa. Three of my novels, Angels Among Us, A Kiss Out of Time, and A Dance Out of Time feature artists as the protagonists, and I somehow work in artsy types in my stories. A recent trip to the Montclair Art Museum inspired a story which I plan to finish writing this summer. So, I will continue to dabble and to draw and to paint and to be “artsy” in other ways.