Writing your memoir’s first draft is an experiment. Even your second and third and fourth drafts are experiments.
It’s like trying on for size—like taking five yellow dresses off the rack and heading toward the dressing room. When you slip into them and look in the mirror, you discover only one yellow is the right shade; you look washed out in the other four.
So, you keep only the one yellow dress that’s the right shade—
and in writing,
you keep only the sentences
and words
and paragraphs
and openings
and endings
that fit—those that work best.
You can also compare writing and rewriting and polishing to arranging flowers in a vase. You do your best to create beauty but when you stand back, you see the bouquet is lopsided, or you didn’t distribute the colors well, or you’ve left a gap, so you rearrange it, tweaking it here and there until it’s just right.
With dresses and with flowers and with writing, we need to stand back, take another look, and adjust accordingly.
We can view rewriting and editing and polishing as a pain in the neck, or maybe even punishment—OR we can consider it an enjoyable process of enhancement.
Amber Lea Starfire writes, “As a teacher, it always surprises me when beginning writers resist the revision process, because that’s often when the best writing takes place.
“I think of the first draft as a kind of rough sketch—the bones of the piece,” she continues. “It’s during the revision process that the skeleton acquires muscles and flesh and features. And I often have to do major surgery, restructuring the skeleton, before I can write what needs to be said.” (You’ll enjoy Amber’s post, Writing is Revision is Re-Writing is Craft.)
Good writers revise and rewrite, often many times.
Dinty Moore says, “The difference. . . between writers who are successful in finding an audience and those who struggle, is when and where in the revision process a writer throws in the towel and settles for 'good enough.’” (Read his How to Revise a Draft Without Going Crazy.)
Don't settle for just “good enough.”
Tell yourself rewriting is not punishment—
instead, rewriting is beautification.
So, beautify! And have fun!
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