Mad Scientist at work, excuse the mess!

I stalk around my room, like a mad scientist, talking and grunting to myself in a gibberish that’s hard for anyone else to understand. I’m surrounded by a lab full of beakers and various half-started projects. When I sit down at my laptop, I type out two or three sentences, read what I’ve written and then promptly backspace, deleting everything I just wrote. My fingers are moving a mile-a-minute, never stopping for more than a second or two. I look like a cross between Albert Einstein and Doc (Dr. Emmett Brown) from the movie Back to the Future.

Image by Pixabay.

It’s right there, if I can just figure it out

Oh, I know the magic formula that I need to follow, but it’s challenging to actually recreate it. I can see it in my mind’s eye. It seems to be right on the tip of my tongue, but always out of reach. Here’s what I mean. I know that good writing is all about story telling and making connections with the reader. I know what a great connection feels like, but it’s oh so challenging to make it happen in real life.

I feel like I’m a great magician faced with the one lock I can’t pick and my hands tied behind my back. For every one step forward, I take two steps back. When I start to make real progress, I take a wrong step and fall halfway down the mountain. On the rare occasion when I’m lucky and somehow pluck a decent story out of thin air, I have no idea what worked or why. “Oh you liked what I wrote, oh how wonderful? Yes, yes, I would love to do this again, but I have no freaking idea how I landed here!” I’m like a lucky lottery player plucked out millions of other players, with no way of ever winning again.

Image by Pixabay.

Getting what’s up here in my head, down on paper

This is where the stalking and the head in the hands comes in, I’m trying to find a way to express what’s in my head and get it on paper. When I’m struggling, I remember Robert Frost’s great quote: “No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader. No surprise in the writer, no surprise in the reader.”

And of course, it makes me even more frustrated. I look down at my laptop and then back up at the ceiling and cry out out loud at Frost. “Damn you Frost,” I say. “Not everyone can write like you.”

Yes, writing is a challenge, an incredible challenge, but it’s in my soul. As crazy as it sounds, as frustrated as it makes me, I still can’t imagine ever quitting. I suspect I’ll keep at it until the day I die. What drives you to write?

Connecting the dots to tell a story

I write more about the challenges of building the foundation of a great story in my piece Connecting the Dots today on the Heart of the Matter. The story reminds me that sometimes I need to put aside my mad scientist lab coat, trust my gut, and take small steps one after another until I find my way home.

Let me know what you think. What works for you?


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44 thoughts on “Mad Scientist at work, excuse the mess!

  1. I totally get it – writing can be like trying to solve a puzzle blindfolded. I’m with you, it’s all about tapping into that creative spark and seeing where it takes us. Don’t give up, friend!

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    1. That’s awesome Beth. I love to write, but I still have my mad scientist moments when I see something in my head, but can’t find a way to get it down on paper. Those moments are rarer nowadays, but they still happen sometimes. The joy is still there though. Ha, ha.

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  2. Interesting post, especially the beginning when you write then delete. I took a writing class when I was younger and the Teacher, a published Author, told me he really like my writing – except it was like a horse that was “rode hard and put up wet.” He said I needed to stop going backwards to change things and move on…which is what I do now. Doesn’t mean I don’t change things a lot of it does keep me from obsessing over one sentence while the rest of the story goes unwritten!

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    1. I actually try to get everything out first . . . . and then go back and edit. You can’t edit if you don’t have something first. When I’m describing something in deep detail like the mad scientist setting . . . that’s where I need to watch the instant deletion. ha, ha.

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  3. Okay Mad Scientist…Dr. Strangelove…Dr. Nefario (Despicable Me)! 🤣😜😂 Do you…write you. I understand where you’re coming from. Been there, done that, and still sometimes do it. 😲 This is why it’s important to take a step away from your lab and experiments every now and then, 👨🏻‍🔬🔬🥼 clear your mind, and go back to mixing your chemicals of words, cobweb 😷 free. You are too doggone funny Brian! 🤒

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    1. Yes, always need to come with a fresh perspective. Thanks for the encouragement. I do try to bring a bit of humour to my writing. Life is too serious, too much of a struggle. I have a friend who is losing her parent. I try to write for people like that.

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      1. That’s where one of your gifts lie Brian, to connect others to an emotion that encourages them to be hopeful. You simply never know the magnitude of how far your writing reaches hearts unknown my friend. Hugs and smooches. 🤗💖😘🙏🏼🥰

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  4. You describe the highs and lows, joys and frustrations of writing so well! I suspect we all keep at it because the fruit of the labour can be so worth it when those words magically connect into something that just clicks.

    I wish I had a Time Machine like the doc to impart all the lessons to my younger self!

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  5. Great description of mad scientist/magician in the process of writing. Yep, it certainly can be a struggle. But when the words click together it’s wondrous. That feeling makes me coming back again and again 🌞

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  6. I can relate to this, Brian! So well written and entertaining. 🙂 Writing has been a part of me since I was a teenager. Journals have always found a place in my home. And as I got older and started writing for my blog (and books), inspiration has been the driver for my poetry and stories, which is why I don’t do the challenges that I see move around this community. I don’t have time with the poems and posts that come to mind naturally. But I’ve had a few ‘moments’ when inspiration was on vacation and I didn’t think I’d write ever again. And then the door opened again. 🙂 Keep on writing! I always enjoy what you have to say!

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  7. Sometimes writing just flows well, naturally. Then I learn more about the technical aspects of writing and the writing can become laboured.

    Some days I tire of it and other days sit down for hours and write and write. I know to go with the flow, and write from my heart, which means what is within and to just get it out and onto the page to begin with! Editing is the place for crafting better diction.

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