Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Prepare to be amazed: What your process of writing can reveal


“What is your journey,” Rebecca S. Ramsey asks memoir-writers, “the big change you experienced that you want to share with the world?”

Rebecca’s question is important because memoir is about change, transformation. Your memoir needs to include your transformation.

Jon Franklin can help better understand what we call “the story arc.” He writes that a quality story “will consist of a real person who is confronted with a significant problem, who struggles diligently to solve that problem, and who ultimately succeeds—and in doing so becomes a different character.”

In other words, “A story consists of a sequence of actions that occur when a sympathetic character encounters a complicating situation that he confronts and solves.” (Writing for Story, Jon Franklin, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and a well-known pioneer in creative nonfiction)

So, the big question for you is:
What new person did you become
because of your experience?

Rebecca Ramsey asks it this way: “What were the little struggles and big struggles that got you from the beginning to end?

You’ll need to articulate that in writing before your memoir will be ready to publish. But that’s easier said than donemany people struggle to identify those turning points and defining moments.


How did she figure out that transformation in her life?

After much work (writing The Holy Éclair took her ten years), she discovered this: Writing helped her answer those questions. Something about the process helped her recognize the ways her life changed.

You don’t need to have all the answers
before you start writing.

Give yourself time to discover your story and write it—
even if it takes ten years like it did for Rebecca.

Within the process of writing,
ask yourself Rebecca’s questions
and search for the answers.

They are there.

Don’t give up. You’ll find them!






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