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Beginnings, Middles and Ends

“Every day and in every way, I am becoming an artist.” — adapted from Al Franken’s Stewart Smalley on SNL

Awareness and Knowledge is Power

Knowing your creative process, and knowing what stage you’re in, helps you be a better artist, by adding more awareness and understanding to your life. By creative process I mean the first draft stage of your art.

Are you in the beginning: enthusiastic, hopeful, a burst of energy? Are you in the middle: challenged by the material, wondering what to do next? Or, are you at end: sad or glad to be finishing?

Instead of being the effect of the thinking and feelings at each stage, recognize that such thoughts and feelings are part of the process. So, what are they in more detail?

The Beginning

When I’m at the beginning of a novel, I often feel anxiety and nervousness. When I become aware of this, I realize the feelings stem from not knowing what the story will be, only that it wants to be told. Then I realize that the anxiety is more like an excited energy wanting to bubble up out of my subterranean mind. Once I’m past the uncertainty, I become excited and start right in on story’s creation, and the beginning sails past smoothly, until I hit the end of the beginning, and the start of the middle.

The Middle

Many novelists I know talk about the “dreaded middle.” This is where procrastination rears its head. This is often where I want to run screaming from the page because suddenly I’m knee deep in the story and all my worries come to the fore: is this story any good? What about this other character? Where do I go from here? I’ve deviated from my outline. What do I do? This is where I feel like I really don’t know how to write. And what am I doing being a writer anyway?
What I’ve learned is that this is a necessary part of the writing cycle. It’s messy, not pretty, and not fit to be shown except to the most forgiving of souls. My strategy? To allow it to be messy! That’s what it is. And then I sit down to write and create more mess, and have fun doing it. Because soon comes the end.

The End

Finishing a first draft for me makes me sad. I’ve so enjoyed discovering the story that I’m sad for this discovery process to end. It will never be this fresh again. I am also looking forward to the editing phase, which has its own beginning, middle and end. As I end a story, I linger, taking my time to write the final scenes, saying good-bye to my characters in their freshness. Then I acknowledge the ending, have a good cry, and give myself time to be done. That is, I let myself celebrate, and transition to the next phase.

Where Are You?

If you are not sure what stage you’re in, seek advice. Learn from others’ experience and wisdom . If they don’t know, it will be a learning process for all. Take what resonates with you and discard the rest–not as invalid, only not as applicable to you.
Take a moment to pinpoint where you are in your process. Now what?

Celebrate Your Success

Take the time to celebrate your finished piece and the journey you took to arrive at this moment. Not only are you a creative being, you acted upon a dream and brought your creation to life. You overcame the challenges, faced the demons of weak focus, lack of motivation, procrastination, nay sayers and time-sucks. You climbed the mountain of self-doubt, fear and inertia. You did it!

Congratulations! Now show your art. Bless humanity by sharing your unique vision.

Let your light shine. Enlighten us with your beauty, truth and masterful-ness.






Source by Beth Barany

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