There comes
a time for every writer when they learn how to let go. Sometimes it’s ideas we
need to let go of, or characters, other times it’s habits. But we writers tend
to be sentimental and it’s hard to let go of ideas we’ve clung to for a long
time.
For me,
this time came when I started to take a good hard look at my fantasy world,
wondering what made it stand apart from others. There’s really quite a lot that
makes it unique, but all the key surface elements are familiar. I have humans,
elves, dwarves, goblins – and they’re all about what you’d expect them to be,
with a few twists of my own added in. Yet, on the surface, very familiar.
There are
three reasons for this: the first is that I started developing this world when
I was twelve or so and, at that age, it’s really difficult to not borrow
heavily from what you know. The second is that I wanted that familiarity there
to help people acclimatise to my world. The third was because you have two
choices when creating creatures in a fantasy world: go with the common ones, or
make up new ones that serve the functions of the old ones (such as the Urgals in
the Eragon series which take the place of goblin/orc creatures, as do the Trollocs
in the Wheel of Time series where there are also Ogiers that function as a
combination of elves and dwarves).
So, have I
decided to drastically change my writing to replace elves and dwarves? No,
although I did strongly consider it. I realized that, if I eliminated them, I
would just replace them with something else. I did, however, decide to
personalize them more – make them more unique to my world.
All of this made me take a closer
look at my world and what I’ve been clinging to. That’s when I discovered the
biggest thing that was holding my writing back: my world. It’s too big. You’d
think that a big world would offer more freedom for writing in, but that’s
before you have to coordinate events across an entire globe with a timeline
spanning hundreds or thousands of years. It’s a bit much for one mind to hold
all at once.
So, I’ve
had to step back. Rather than forcing my stories to fit my world, I’m now
allowing my world to for my stories. It has opened up endless possibilities and
has made writing life much easier.
That’s my
latest tip to all you writers out there. Look to yourself and your own writing
to figure out how you’re holding yourself back. Then push back your self-made
restrictions and broaden your horizons.
If there's any subject you'd like to see me ramble on about, feel free to leave a comment asking me to do so.
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