Confessions of an A.D.D. Writer

It took me years to discover that I am an A.D.D. writer. Though I don’t have a startling amount of Attention Deficit in my everyday life, the facts don’t lie and my A.D.D. shows up in my writing like a big ugly neon elephant, along with my fear of commitment.

For more than a decade I’ve gone from manuscript to manuscript, even jumping from one to another then back again. I wasn’t having a writing problem, I was having a finishing problem.

I’d crank out 100-150 pages and have a stellar story started but I wasn’t completing any novels. For a while, I’d simply write a short story whenever I was stuck on a book (and I have at least one chapbook of those piled up). Then I’d alternate between feeling great that at least I finished something and berating myself that I was batting zero at finishing my novels.

There are at least five unfinished books that came out of this ten year long learning process, which equals a lot of pages that spent years going nowhere.

I tried everything, going to workshop after workshop to learn what other people knew about finishing books that I didn’t. I’ve created outlines, which worked out fine for knowing what happened in the book but definitely stifled my creativity. I’ve tried seat of the pants writing, rushing through the first three chapters to find out what the book it about. Character studies, synopsis writing, praying to the creativity gods…really anything and everything I could do to get a book off the ground and enjoy the process.

The enjoyment was the biggest rub, along with the commitment. Typically, I’d get stuck on one of three things:

1. It was boring to do it this way, and my creative side isn’t very patient or structured.

2. Once I knew what happened, I didn’t want to write the book any more.

3. Transitions are pure hell for me and I’d get stuck on them.

The first two are just my own lovely personality flaws (back to the A.D.D.). The last one is something I hope I get better at over time. I can write emotional scenes or funny scenes all day long with complete focus and pretty good results. However, if you ask me to get the heroine out of her office and over to a restaurant for the next scene, I go blank and dither around, either writing too much or getting complete writer’s block.

Finally, in desperation, I asked my critique group if I could just ‘get a pass on transitions’ and they were sweet enough to say yes. We have a system worked out: I highlight a note like “Get heroine from point A to point B please” and they help me fill it in later, after the first draft is finished and in the bag. In return, I help them amp up their humor or their emotional scenes. Sharla Rae writes the steamiest sex scenes you’ve ever read so she weighs in on those (thank God!). I believe this is the magic of a great critique group – everyone has their talents and when you combine them all, everyone gets a fantastic book out of it.

What I really am is a scene writer. I can manage to stay sustained and interested in a single scene. Most of the time, I can even manage to write it from start to finish since I am lucky to write fairly quickly.

I work really hard to focus on nothing else besides that scene because the end of the book always feels like a big black scary hole to me. If I think about it, I get stuck. So I don’t even consider THE END OF THE BOOK until I’ve finished the first draft containing all the scenes I think need to be in the novel. I know I can put them together later, sort of like shooting a film out of order then sending it to the editing department.

My process has evolved into something pretty close to the following:

1. Like most writers, each book usually starts with an idea or a scene that comes into my head fully formed. I write that scene when it comes to me so that I have it out of my head and onto the page. This process seems to keep the gates open for more scenes to come crowding in.

2. I try to write at least five days a week as it keeps my brain open to receiving new scenes. When I let more than a weekend go by without keeping my work in progress on my mind, I start to lose focus.

3. I take some time out from the writing to bat some ‘what if’s’ around with the people I plot with, decide on the overriding theme or message for the book as well as the internal and external conflicts for the protagonist and antagonist.

4. If I’m really lucky, the turning points get decided in advance too. I’m not always lucky and sometimes I have to have a second plotting session over this one. At the very least, I take time with my critique group to discuss what I think the turning points are to see if I’m remotely on target and if it all sounds believable. For a great summary of turning points, read this breakdown of Jenny Crusie’s talk at the 2009 RWA conference

The good news is, now that I understand my process and the simple fact that I’m a scene writer, I can stop berating myself for what I’m not and just focus on the joy of being what I am. I finally understand why I’ve been able to finish short stories: they come to me as one long scene and I can hold my focus long enough for that.

Two writers I deeply respect – Diana Gabaldon (Outlander series) and Janet Fitch (White Oleander) – are both scene writers. For Outlander, Ms. Gabaldon wrote the scenes that came to her and stitched them together later, like a quilt. Janet Fitch published White Oleander originally as a series of short stories which she later realized were chapters in a larger story that she combined into a novel. Everything worked out well for them, right?

I remind myself of that whenever I feel myself losing focus and force myself to slow down, breathe, and take things one scene at a time.

About Jenny Hansen

Avid seeker of "more"...More words, more creativity, More Cowbell! An extrovert who's terribly fond of silliness. Founding blogger at Writers In The Storm (http://writersinthestormblog.com). Write on!
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5 Responses to Confessions of an A.D.D. Writer

  1. Theresa Montana says:

    Jen,
    I’m grateful for the insight on the writing process. Theresa

    Like

  2. I’m a scene writer, too! It’s nice to meet someone else who writes the same. It was a worry for me on how I was going to get all those scenes put together and I think I figured out a way. I don’t have a support group that can help with that. Does either D.G. or J.F. talk about their processes?

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    • Jenny Hansen says:

      Angela,

      There are many, many online writing groups but I find live editing with my critique group to be more beneficial.

      I love Lorna Landvik’s writing (Angry Housewives Eating Bon-Bons) and I read and interview with her that resonated. She is a scene writer too. She strings a clothesline down her hallway at eye level and clips her scenes on index cards to it. Then she walks down the clothesline. She says this makes the errors really jump out at her.

      You might also consider using a writing software like Scrivener that lets you move scenes around easily.

      I hope you’ll let me know how it goes. Us scene writers have to stick together!

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  3. Rebecca says:

    I always considered novel writing similar to a movie. You go on various locations and do principle shots, then in the editing stage – stitch the scenes together – then you have a book 😉 Sometimes I go get stuck on transitions – especially time lines – or scenes I’m not good with. Two areas in my novel clearly say “Insert sex scene here”. My nameless character are referred to as “Lord or Lady BooBoo” so I can find him/her on a quick spell check or find function and put a name to him/her. My reader friend thinks little comments like that are funny enough to stay in the book. Not! lol.

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    • Jenny Hansen says:

      Rebecca,

      I like Lord and Lady Boo-Boo too! You’ll seen some comments around this site from my girlfriend, Alicia…I call her Boo-Boo and she used it to sign on to comment.

      It’s been nice for me to discover that others write like I do – out of order, with sometimes tortured transitions. 🙂

      Thanks for commenting!

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