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McAnally's (The Community Pub) => Author Craft => Topic started by: runawaywriter on January 18, 2013, 03:31:20 PM
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Every writer these days has a different method of recording their ideas. Most I've encountered prefer to type on a computer; they say it's a faster and simpler method of writing. As for me, I prefer to hand-write everything I do. Maybe I'm just old-fashioned, but I feel like it gives me a deeper connection to the things I write. I think more about the wording, the subject, the characters, everything. Any time I try to write straight from the keyboard, I find it turns out... flat. Lifeless. Empty.
I guess the reason why I'm rambling this nonsense is that I'd like to get other writers' opinions on the matter.
So what are you? Typer or writer?
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For many years I was a writer; not that I felt any more of a connection with the words, I was just convinced that I couldn't think in front of a keyboard. Not to mention, manual typewriters are bloody hard! Eventually I made the transition in the 1990's to first a daisy wheel word processor and then to a PC, and I gradually realized that the method didn't really matter. Now that I've fully transitioned to a laptop I wonder how I ever managed to write anything without it.
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Writing by hand is too slow; I type significantly faster than I talk, and that keeps up with how I think much better.
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I do both, depending what is available.
I sometimes only note take when I write then flesh it out at the keyboard later.
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I use a keyboard because it's faster and makes editing and sharing a breeze. Handwriting has a certain appeal to it, but that appeal isn't pronounced enough to overcome the pro's of a keyboard. For me, at least.
Full disclosure: I was raised in the digital age.
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I was raised in the digital age as well. I'm 18. You'd think I'd be living on my computer or cell phone. I don't really; it's all well and good of course, it just tends to bother me. I don't know why writing appeals to me more than typing, but it just does. Perhaps I'm strange, but that's me, I suppose.
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It's whatever works for you, RAW. (runawaywriter)
I used to be a writer - now, I'm slowly transitioning into a typer.
But I like to have a hard copy that I can mark up and make notes on
and if I don't have access to the computer then I'll hand write stuff.
It all works.
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Yeah, whatever works. Typing is far easier for me, and without Scrivener to make organization easy and efficient I'd give up and cry or something.
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A practicing psychologist I know has told me that writing by hand actually opens up different pathways in the brain. Because of this, thoughts are configured differently when writing through this method. I've experimented with it and found that, for me, it does work really well for stream of conscious type writing or brainstorming. But at the end of the day word processing is much easier and more efficient for me.
Do whatever works best for you. Write. Write lots. :)
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I used to write... when I first started, but now when I have time to right I normally am on the laptop typing. I can type faster then most people talk. (not as fast as I can talk, but I talk really fast sometimes)
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A practicing psychologist I know has told me that writing by hand actually opens up different pathways in the brain. Because of this, thoughts are configured differently when writing through this method. I've experimented with it and found that, for me, it does work really well for stream of conscious type writing or brainstorming. But at the end of the day word processing is much easier and more efficient for me.
Do whatever works best for you. Write. Write lots. :)
I have heard the same thing. I find a mixture works best for me. If I try to do it all by hand it takes too long and I'll never get done but there are sometimes that there is something that I need to write by hand to get the feel right and typing it out just won't get the job done.
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My handwriting is terribly slow and barely legible most of the time. So I type. But when editing I do prefer to have a hardcopy that I can hgihlight, circle, and generally scribble all over. So when I get the opportunity I print things out for that. But if I didnt have access to a relatively free laser printer I dont know that it would be worth it.
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I need a printer...
Typing up my notes is usually a good editing moment for me.
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When I write I try to do it on the computer, not because of how I grew up, or that I don't like hand writing my stuff (I do); I do my writing on the computer because that is the only way I keep up with my head. Its kind of like an explosion...all of my thoughts shooting out at once. Hand writing is great, and personally it is more reliable than the computer, I've lost tons of stuff over the years for various reason. I don't really lose anything hand written unless well someone messes with my stuff then its just gone heheh. Both methods are great, I just tend to miss thoughts here and there that could've added more flavor to the story.
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I used to be all, "Typing is the way to go!" but I found recently that with a full time job, my wife and our two toddlers that finding dedicated time to sit at a desk and write was far and few between. Add to that - when I write on the computer it's so darned easy to edit as you go I was essentially getting nowhere because I kept changing things.
So I began to handwrite on a notepad whenever I got the chance, while sitting watching the boys play, or in the car taking a long trip, or even during a lunch break at work. And to be honest I'm getting a lot more done now. Using a pen and notepad I'm able to allow myself to write messy, and then once it's time for me to type it up, not only am I more efficient at the computer, but I'm able to revise my hand written draft during the transfer, so it's almost like the handwritten draft is the first draft and the typed is the second.
So you say writing vs typing? I say let there be peace between the two!
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I am trying to get into the habit of doing both. Handwriting for brainstorming/prewriting/outlining (whatever you want to call it), then typing what I've learned from that pen-and-paper exploration. That doesn't mean, to any degree, that what I type is the final version. I'm still discovering as I type, but I have a much better feel for what I'm trying to do. It's sort of like looking at a map before you visit a new place.
I also learned from my counselor that the physical act of handwriting activates the part of the brain that controls the ability to express thoughts via written word. So today's lack of pen-and-paper writing is allegedly causing people to struggle with writing in general. I have not done my own research into this, but I thought that was interesting. I tend to believe her, too. Just look at any thread of comments on Youtube...
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I also learned from my counselor that the physical act of handwriting activates the part of the brain that controls the ability to express thoughts via written word. So today's lack of pen-and-paper writing is allegedly causing people to struggle with writing in general. I have not done my own research into this, but I thought that was interesting. I tend to believe her, too. Just look at any thread of comments on Youtube...
That's too funny - I was just discussing with a good friend, who is also aspiring to be a writer, about this very thing. I had heard about it a week or two ago, though I forget where. I don't know if it's true or not, but I will admit I write a lot more smoothly on paper, whereas typing I find myself staring blankly at the screen every few moments or so.
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That's too funny - I was just discussing with a good friend, who is also aspiring to be a writer, about this very thing. I had heard about it a week or two ago, though I forget where. I don't know if it's true or not, but I will admit I write a lot more smoothly on paper, whereas typing I find myself staring blankly at the screen every few moments or so.
I imagine it depends on how you started, and thus how your brain developed its wiring. Im the complete opposite. With a pen in my hand I end up staring at the blank page. But Ive never put much time into handwriting (as my illegible scrawl demonstrates). By contrast I can pour out thoughts a whole lot better while typing. I think it has a lot to do with the presence of a backspace key. Im not a natural speller, but bad spelling often derails my thought process. So when I can immediately fix my errors with a few twitches and move on I can keep my mental momentum
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I'd like to throw a stick in here that is semi-related to the discussion at hand. It's mostly semantics, sure, but it is a point my friends and I have argued.
If you — in the sense of fairness I'll not use any of the discussed words — put words down on a smartphone or tablet, or any other interface with a touchscreen... Do you write, or do you type?
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I'd like to throw a stick in here that is semi-related to the discussion at hand. It's mostly semantics, sure, but it is a point my friends and I have argued.
If you — in the sense of fairness I'll not use any of the discussed words — put words down on a smartphone or tablet, or any other interface with a touchscreen... Do you write, or do you type?
Using the terms as this thread does, it would depend on if you are using a stylus or free hand drawing finger, or a keyboard interface. With tablets and such you can do both.
Though in another sense of the word, writing is the act of ordering words, regardless of how it is accomplished. You could technically write a poem with Alphabet Soup if you so chose.
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I'd like to throw a stick in here that is semi-related to the discussion at hand. It's mostly semantics, sure, but it is a point my friends and I have argued.
If you — in the sense of fairness I'll not use any of the discussed words — put words down on a smartphone or tablet, or any other interface with a touchscreen... Do you write, or do you type?
I would say it's typing. On a related note, the author Peter V. Brett supposedly wrote The Warded Man on a blackberry during his daily commute. I find that pretty impressive.
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I like to hand write things first just to get a sense of the tone and basics of the story then I add in the things I feel I missed the first time while typing it up.
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I think it has a lot to do with the presence of a backspace key. Im not a natural speller, but bad spelling often derails my thought process. So when I can immediately fix my errors with a few twitches and move on I can keep my mental momentum
The backspace key is my worst enemy. When I sit at a computer to write, I have easily wound up stuck on one-two page/s simply due to the fact that it's way too easy to delete or edit things. I'll second guess words, phrases or even scenes then start changing it up and then I get stuck.
Personally for me, as I've said before, for whatever reason I can allow myself to be messy with handwritten documents. Then I feel more satisfied with the typed up version since I was able to change things as I transfered the story.
I envy people who can sit and type up an entire first draft of a book without going back and trying to fix things immediately.
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I envy people who can sit and type up an entire first draft of a book without going back and trying to fix things immediately.
Not a vital skill for a professional career, sfaict; so far as that goes, being able to produce a good novel a year is primary and the method is secondary.
I have always favoured correcting a sentence that comes out wrong immediately, and reading through and correcting my last week's output as the first thing I do before starting into the next bit. A couple of years ago I had a bit of a phase shift in how I do larger-scale edits, though, which is more about seeing structural things earlier than anything else; the kind of major pacing shift that I would previously have needed to complete a draft and let it sit for six months to be able to see, I am now often able to see two-thirds of the way through, and fixing it before continuing appears to be a better mode for me.