Every time you start a project, or even start a day's writing, you will be faced with a blank page and usually an overwhelming urge to crawl back into bed. It is at times like these you need to pull out your secret weapon. Used for millennia before we become too smart for it, your best friend in getting over that initial fear is your muse.
A muse, in its most basic form, is someone else to blame. Most of the time, that is enough.
On this subject, Elizabeth Gilbert, the author of Pray, Eat, Love, gave an incredible TED talk. She used the word 'genius', the term taking from the Romans. However, going back a bit earlier, there is a Greek term called 'muse' which is described as follows.
Muses in the ancient Greek were often portrayed as scantily clad women, inspiring through the arousal of sexual desire. But that wasn't their primary purpose. They were both the embodiment and the sponsors of the arts. If the muses chose to grant you the necessary skill and inspiration, you could produce great art.
The purpose of the muse was not to arouse inspiration within you, but rather to bestow inspiration and passion upon you. This is a very important distinction of roles. It was your responsibility to be open and willing to work when the inspiration was given, but it was her/his/its responsibility to give you that inspiration. If you sat down and worked, and yet nothing good came out, well that was not your fault. The muse was not with you that day. You are, of course, responsible for doing everything you can to win the fair muse over, but no more.
Your muse is the external part that assures you that there is some higher meaning to your work. She is necessary to a writer's development but she is not the only element you require. Having found your muse, it is time to look inside yourself at the three aspects of you that make up the writer: your Genius, Creative Youth and Critical Elder.
GENIUS
For a fully coherent structure and a set of creative relationships, it is best to separate different concepts about the term genius. Elizabeth Gilbert used the term in reference to a muse, while it can also be crossed-over with elements of what can be called the creative youth. Even a lot more people use these concepts in different ways.
The genius is part of your subconscious that sits away in a room you cannot enter, playing its secret games. So like the muse, it is not really under your control and can be a bit fickle. However, it can be said that unlike the muse, the genius is completely your own.
Your genius can be fed with little scraps from your activities. It likes to work on problems, whittling away at them until something beautiful has been created. However, you can never force it. You cannot pull up the hatch and just grab at anything. You will offend your genius by doing so.
Your muse can take a lot of the pressure off from you, even if it seems silly to have two such figures in your life. Separate out the two from your conscious self, and you will never have to beat yourself up about your work ever again.
CREATIVE YOUTH AND CRITICAL ELDER
Dorothea Brande developed the terms Creative Youth and Critical Elder in her book On Becoming A Writer back in the 1930s. In pop-psychology terms, these are your left brain and your right brain at work. You can learn to control these dual natures of your conscious creative process. However, they are not at the level of the subconscious, and can be trained to be under your control.
Your creative youth is like the 'inner child' people suggest getting in touch with. If you train him properly, he will give you entire first drafts. In order for you to be able to sit down, write on demand, and actually have a continuous stream of words come out, then you need to get to know the two dual natures. Remember that your creative youth doesn't care much for grammar and spelling, preferring to run and jump, sprint along and tell wild stories.
Beside his lack of grammar, the problem with youth is inconsistency. He's not consistent unless you train him to be. You can't just rely on him to make you a writer. If you wait for him, wait for 'feeling like writing', then you could be waiting a very long time, and in the end will have a thousand pieces of different stories.
That is where your critical elder comes in. The elder is the rational part of your mind that can be self-disciplined, loves structure and clarity and wants everything to be ordered. He is wonderful in two, and only two, situations. They consist of controlling his little brother to get him to sit down and start, and then editing. He is a wonderful editor.
The elder can, if you let him, become bossy and overriding, trying to correct the youth at he goes along, which, as you can imagine if you have elder brothers, causes the youth to not want to help at all. It will make your creative youth sit on a chair and talk. You must learn to make him step back, though. Make him not interrupt you until the end of the first draft.
Don't allow your elder to bully your youth so much that he sulks in the corner. If this happens, sharply rap your elder over the knuckles and set about coaxing your youth back with promises of adventure and freedom. You cannot let the flow stop from coming for any reason. It may be easy to ask someone else to edit and proof-read your work, but getting the creative ideas down on paper in the first place is what makes you a writer.
The elder comes into his own in the second draft. By now the creative youth has run off again, and might be called upon to answer a few questions about what he meant by this and that, but on the whole is not interested in rehashing old material. The critical elder, fortunately, is more than happy to sit down and go through each paragraph sentence by sentence, making sure it is all correct and in order.
You will get the most out of your writing when you train the two to work together. Your genius will be throwing in ideas that you never even considered before, your muse will bless you and all will be right in your world. Your work will become faster and freer.
A muse, in its most basic form, is someone else to blame. Most of the time, that is enough.
On this subject, Elizabeth Gilbert, the author of Pray, Eat, Love, gave an incredible TED talk. She used the word 'genius', the term taking from the Romans. However, going back a bit earlier, there is a Greek term called 'muse' which is described as follows.
Muses in the ancient Greek were often portrayed as scantily clad women, inspiring through the arousal of sexual desire. But that wasn't their primary purpose. They were both the embodiment and the sponsors of the arts. If the muses chose to grant you the necessary skill and inspiration, you could produce great art.
The purpose of the muse was not to arouse inspiration within you, but rather to bestow inspiration and passion upon you. This is a very important distinction of roles. It was your responsibility to be open and willing to work when the inspiration was given, but it was her/his/its responsibility to give you that inspiration. If you sat down and worked, and yet nothing good came out, well that was not your fault. The muse was not with you that day. You are, of course, responsible for doing everything you can to win the fair muse over, but no more.
Your muse is the external part that assures you that there is some higher meaning to your work. She is necessary to a writer's development but she is not the only element you require. Having found your muse, it is time to look inside yourself at the three aspects of you that make up the writer: your Genius, Creative Youth and Critical Elder.
GENIUS
For a fully coherent structure and a set of creative relationships, it is best to separate different concepts about the term genius. Elizabeth Gilbert used the term in reference to a muse, while it can also be crossed-over with elements of what can be called the creative youth. Even a lot more people use these concepts in different ways.
The genius is part of your subconscious that sits away in a room you cannot enter, playing its secret games. So like the muse, it is not really under your control and can be a bit fickle. However, it can be said that unlike the muse, the genius is completely your own.
Your genius can be fed with little scraps from your activities. It likes to work on problems, whittling away at them until something beautiful has been created. However, you can never force it. You cannot pull up the hatch and just grab at anything. You will offend your genius by doing so.
Your muse can take a lot of the pressure off from you, even if it seems silly to have two such figures in your life. Separate out the two from your conscious self, and you will never have to beat yourself up about your work ever again.
CREATIVE YOUTH AND CRITICAL ELDER
Dorothea Brande developed the terms Creative Youth and Critical Elder in her book On Becoming A Writer back in the 1930s. In pop-psychology terms, these are your left brain and your right brain at work. You can learn to control these dual natures of your conscious creative process. However, they are not at the level of the subconscious, and can be trained to be under your control.
Your creative youth is like the 'inner child' people suggest getting in touch with. If you train him properly, he will give you entire first drafts. In order for you to be able to sit down, write on demand, and actually have a continuous stream of words come out, then you need to get to know the two dual natures. Remember that your creative youth doesn't care much for grammar and spelling, preferring to run and jump, sprint along and tell wild stories.
Beside his lack of grammar, the problem with youth is inconsistency. He's not consistent unless you train him to be. You can't just rely on him to make you a writer. If you wait for him, wait for 'feeling like writing', then you could be waiting a very long time, and in the end will have a thousand pieces of different stories.
That is where your critical elder comes in. The elder is the rational part of your mind that can be self-disciplined, loves structure and clarity and wants everything to be ordered. He is wonderful in two, and only two, situations. They consist of controlling his little brother to get him to sit down and start, and then editing. He is a wonderful editor.
The elder can, if you let him, become bossy and overriding, trying to correct the youth at he goes along, which, as you can imagine if you have elder brothers, causes the youth to not want to help at all. It will make your creative youth sit on a chair and talk. You must learn to make him step back, though. Make him not interrupt you until the end of the first draft.
Don't allow your elder to bully your youth so much that he sulks in the corner. If this happens, sharply rap your elder over the knuckles and set about coaxing your youth back with promises of adventure and freedom. You cannot let the flow stop from coming for any reason. It may be easy to ask someone else to edit and proof-read your work, but getting the creative ideas down on paper in the first place is what makes you a writer.
The elder comes into his own in the second draft. By now the creative youth has run off again, and might be called upon to answer a few questions about what he meant by this and that, but on the whole is not interested in rehashing old material. The critical elder, fortunately, is more than happy to sit down and go through each paragraph sentence by sentence, making sure it is all correct and in order.
You will get the most out of your writing when you train the two to work together. Your genius will be throwing in ideas that you never even considered before, your muse will bless you and all will be right in your world. Your work will become faster and freer.
About the Author:
Relevant information about writing tips is discussed in Buffy Greentree's blog site. More about overcoming your writing fears is discussed in another article.
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