Quiet the Critical Voice (and Write Fiction)
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About this ebook
You want to write a novel, but you feel overwhelmed.
But you can silence that feeling and start writing your novel TODAY.
Your critical mind is fear-based. It exists to protect you. It keeps you from putting your hand on a hot stove or from crossing the street without checking for oncoming traffic.
In the case of putting yourself "out there" in the form of short stories or novels, it strives to protect you from yourself.
It strives to protect you from rejection by editors and publishers, or from the possible embarrassment you might feel from a bad review.
Yet this fear is baseless. If you write fiction, your work will occasionally get a bad review. It will also get many good ones. It's all a matter of the reader's personal taste.
If your work is rejected by an editor, what happens? Nothing. You send that piece back out to another editor and you write the next story. Because you're a writer. It's what you do.
Quiet the Critical Voice (and Write Fiction) will show you in detail how to recognize the critical voice and how to silence it so you can get on with your life's work.
The book contains a section on Heinlein's Rules and a revolutionary, freeing technique called Writing Into the Dark.
As a bonus, writing will become the most fun you've ever had.
Harvey Stanbrough
Harvey Stanbrough is an award winning writer and poet who was born in New Mexico, seasoned in Texas, and baked in Arizona. Twenty-one years after graduating from high school in the metropolis of Tatum New Mexico, he matriculated again, this time from a Civilian-Life Appreciation Course (CLAC) in the US Marine Corps. He follows Heinlein’s Rules avidly and most often may be found Writing Off Into the Dark. Harvey has written and published 36 novels, 7 novellas. almost 200 short stories and the attendant collections. He's also written and published 16 nonfiction how-to books on writing. More than almost anything else, he hopes you will enjoy his stories.
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Quiet the Critical Voice (and Write Fiction) - Harvey Stanbrough
Quiet the Critical Voice
(and Write Fiction)
Introduction
Well, you can’t. Not entirely. There, I said it.
But writing should be fun. It should be an escape for you, just as your story will be an escape for your eventual readers. And nothing about listening to input from a negative Nellie is ever fun. The fun in writing begins when you stop allowing negative input into your writing process.
Yet practically everything we’ve learned over the years was either how to delay writing (prepare an outline, create a character sketch, world-build, etc.) or it’s negative (what you write will not be good so you must revise, rewrite and polish).
And in every case, we learned all of that from one of two sources:
* At first we learned it from professionals who by and large do not write fiction, like our English and Composition teachers in school at various levels.
* And later the same delays and negatives were reinforced by other would-be writers and writers who were taught exactly the same things by the same professionals who don’t write fiction.
For years, we took on board all of those delays and negatives. We trusted the advice of people who don’t write fiction for a living. And as a result, we created and fed a monster inside our own head: the critical voice.
We learned that criticism (both internal and external) was essential to telling a good story. And we learned that only endless revisions, rewrites and polishing
would result in writing that story well enough that others would buy it and read it and enjoy it.
Frankly, that’s all bovine excrement.
But take hope. We all started the same way, learning the same delays and the same negatives.
Those writers who eventually saw past the nonsense and learned to quiet the critical voice went on to have long and lucrative careers. Those who didn’t—well, the shelves at the library are full of novels by writers who penned one novel or a few and then gave up.
Why did they give up? Because the writing was work. It was drudgery, as you well might imagine. Those writers suffered over every word, every sentence and every paragraph.
Instead of simply writing what they were given by their subconscious, creative mind, they did as they were taught. They questioned the process. They didn’t trust their own unique voice. And instead of moving forward with their writing from story to story—that’s called practice,
by the way—they hovered over one work at a time, sometimes for years, striving for perfection.
They failed to realize that what is perfection to one reader (the writer) is not perfection to the next (the acquisitions editor) or the next (the member of the critique group) or the thousands of other nexts (the actual readers).
And they eventually took their place in the Hall of Whatever Happened to [Name of Writer] and found something fun to do instead of writing.
You never have to take your place in that hall. But the best thing you can do to avoid it is unlearn all the nonsense you were taught all those years by all those professionals who don’t write fiction.
You can learn to Let Go. You can learn to Trust Your Creative Subconscious. You can learn to Quiet the Critical Voice.
Quieting the critical voice is an ongoing process.
First you must learn to recognize it. That’s easy.
Anything that delays you from writing or is negative comes from the critical mind.
Second you must learn to make the critical voice shut up and leave you alone.
That isn’t as easy, but you can do it. The critical voice will visit less often as you become more experienced at telling it to shut up and leave you alone.
So as is the case with all things, recognizing and quieting the critical voice is a matter of time and a direct result of your desire to write. If you have a burning, passionate desire to tell stories, read on.
If you only want to write your memoir or your family history, that’s perfectly fine too. But you probably don’t need this book.
Still here?
Good. You can learn (quickly) to recognize the critical voice. And you can learn, with time and practice, to remand it to a cell in a back corner of your brain.
But first, what is the conscious, critical voice?
The conscious mind (where the critical voice resides) exists to protect you from yourself.
For example, when you’re about to lean your palm on a hot stove, the conscious mind is what feels the heat and causes you to jerk your hand away. It’s what causes you to look both ways before you cross the street. It keeps you (sometimes) from joining your bone-headed buddies in a hold my beer and watch this
moment. So the conscious mind has its good purposes.
It’s also what we use to learn new information and new techniques. You learned to dot every lowercase I and put a period at the end of a declarative sentence with your conscious mind. It’s critical, meaning it turns over decisions, weighs possible outcomes, then helps you decide what to do and what not to do.
But again, the conscious, critical mind exists to protect you. And the sole purpose of the critical voice in writing is to keep you from writing. And if you write, to keep you from finishing what you write. And if you finish what you write, to keep you from publishing what you write. It’s protecting you from rejection.
You know how you sweat a little and maybe even break out in hives when you think about actually writing or finishing or submitting or publishing what you’ve written? Or when you sit down to write, suddenly you think of a lot of other non-writing things that you have to do instead?
That’s the conscious, critical voice protecting you.
So the short course is this: the conscious, critical mind has no place in actual writing. Once you’re actively engaged in writing a story (of any length) you need to set that critical voice aside.
For just one example, you have to let go of the urge to critique (critical mind) what you’ve just written.
Read over it as a Reader for enjoyment, yes. You read for enjoyment with the subconscious mind, suspending the critical sense of disbelief. So do that