“Write what you know.” It’s one of those things we’re told to do, along with “show, don’t tell,” and a bunch of other guidelines we’re given as writers, that will apparently give us the tools we need to make us better writers and bring home our first million. It’s the “write what you know” thing I want to focus on today though, and I’ll tell you why.
I almost got hit by a bus today.
Don’t panic, I’m okay, but it was a close call. I’m talking inches. Millimeters even. It got me to thinking about my NaNo project, as does everything in my life – when I decide to write a novel, I live and breathe it, almost literally. Having something as dramatic as a real-life near-death experience happen to me (okay, okay, the mirror of a bus moving half a mile an hour nearly clipped my ear as I walked along the edge of a sidewalk) being worth mentioning, could happen to one of my characters, right? You can bet it will.
So back to writing what you know. I don’t think they really mean it in the strict sense of writing what you do for a living outside of writing, for instance. Or even writing about characters who write, though many writers do (I’m looking at you, Stephen King). If we did that, everything we wrote would be autobiographical. And what would the fantasy writers do? I’m thinking an elf accountant would be rather boring.
I think writing what you know can be taken in a more broad sense of feelings, emotions, and yes, little experiences like almost getting hit by a small, slow-moving school bus that’s coming to a stop beside the curb.
So my challenge, for all my fellow NaNoers who are reading this, is simple. Write into your story the next time you write, about something you’ve experienced in the last week. If your characters are in space it can be a sensation, or a sentence you remember hearing or saying.
And if you’re writing an autobiography – oh what the hell. Lie! I dare you!
P.S. Let me know how it goes!
November 5, 2013 at 5:35 pm
I like that you focused , in part, on the emotions we all experience, as they are universal. Your job, what you do for a living (besides write) is what dozens do, maybe hundreds, but those emotions are what millions feel. I heard it once said, “Give your tears a voice.” So many write about their grief as therapy, yet each of us has grieved a loss, gone through denial, anger bargaining, depression and acceptance…even if it was over the loss of a pet or a moment in time.
LikeLike
November 5, 2013 at 6:23 pm
It’s so true. To some extent I think I try to stay away from the feelings I felt the most deeply when I write, and I know I shouldn’t. …actually, it’s not that I stay away from them, I just don’t make them public. It’s almost like a confession, don’t you agree?
LikeLike
November 5, 2013 at 6:41 pm
In my writing, I feel almost naked, in that I know my own personal feelings come through. It can be too self disclosing, true.
LikeLike
November 5, 2013 at 6:44 pm
You’re braver than I am.
LikeLike
November 5, 2013 at 5:26 pm
Tell them lies, tell them the truth, tell them anything but tell them!!
LikeLike
November 5, 2013 at 6:20 pm
Right!
LikeLike