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Am I The Only Writer Who Doesn’t Like Poetry?

Posted on June 28, 2012 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Chicken Poetry
Not to contradict my own title or anything, but I actually enjoyed this “joke” on poetry. Apparently I do enjoy poetry humor or funny poetry.

I have never heard from another writer that he/she doesn’t like poetry. Frankly, I haven’t met that many people who openly admit that they don’t like poetry either. This may make me look bad, but it is OK. I’ve always been honest with you. Here it is: I don’t enjoy poetry. And I really tried to like it.

Right from elementary school, my teachers pushed poetry as the noblest medium. From middle school and onwards, I had the chance to read many, many poems by a diversity of poets, in very different styles and I just couldn’t enjoy it. They just didn’t resonate with me.

For some reason, poetry never sounded natural to me. I always sensed a touch of pretense, the desire to show life more painful than it had to be, the desire to sound profound and educated and charismatic rather than sincere and heartfelt.

I am not saying the poets who wrote those poems weren’t sincere. I’m however saying that they did feel artificial to me, and after all, whether or not you like something mostly (if not entirely) depends on how it makes you feel.

I have never been a fan of short stories either. For me, a story just doesn’t end in a couple of pages. I know there are a lot of different kinds and word counts and styles, but the effect for me is the same. I don’t get to know the characters enough, I don’t have the time or the opportunity to get to care about them. As a result, I end up forgetting all about it. Best case scenario, I remember how powerful the idea was. But I still have a million questions in my head about characters, the backgrounds, the motives. Not that all questions should be answered, but I’d like to have at least a couple answered.

I’m in no way looking down on these genres or lacking respect towards them. I am just saying that with so many flavors the tea comes in, I just don’t enjoy them all.

How do you feel? And it is completely OK if you always felt close to some or all types of writing. Feel free to share what kind of writing you feel the closest to and why.

Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: novels, poems, poetry, poets, reading poetry, reading short stories, short stories, writers, writing, writing poetry

How to Handle a Big Boost in Ideas, Projects and Needs

Posted on June 16, 2012 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Busy Writer cartoon  via weblogcartoons.com
Does it seem familiar? Busy Writer cartoon via weblogcartoons.com.

Freelancers often worry about creativity blocks, lack of time, unsatisfactory levels of productivity and lack of promising projects. But what happens when you find yourself bursting with ideas, enthusiasm for promising projects, inspiration for your own marketing efforts, combined with the expectations of your day job/part-time job if you have one?

My “juggling” need started in late May when I had to deal with multiple competitions I wanted to enter, lots of ideas to pitch to different kinds of clients, upcoming deadlines for existing clients and the much-needed updates to my own web presence and marketing plans. With only 2 to 4 weeks to pull it all off, I came with an efficient plan to manage everything – without losing any valuable ideas in the process. I’m progressing at an effective speed.

Oh, yes – this can happen. Maybe it is the summer bringing out extra creativity in me or the upcoming deadlines of writing competitions, but I never had so many ideas and deadlines at the same time. The competitions want the type of stories I’m interested in, I have a lot of cool ideas both for my own and other people’s publications, potential new clients…and did I mention that the deadlines are relatively close and I also have a part-time job?

No, I’m not complaining. I’ve been quite thrilled and motivated actually. OK, I did panic a bit in the beginning. But once I sat down and came up with a followable plan (which is a plan that doesn’t push my limits more than it has to.) Everything fell into place.

So how do you start taking steps to enable yourself to juggle everything at once while performing satisfactorily at all of them without missing deadlines? Beware that you’ll need to do most (if not) all steps simultaneously.

1)      Take a deep breath, and start researching.

What are your options? The deadlines? The costs? Conditions?

Prioritize according to your needs, expectations and the potential rewards. Then get to work, starting from number 1 on your to-do list.

 

2)      Note down all the ideas- no matter how big or small, good or mediocre, detailed or precise.

Note who they might be for, and don’t limit yourself to one market/client. If this is a perfect fit for more than one market, write that down too.

 

3)      Take this rush “period” to quickly but efficiently digest the extra information you need on the markets and how-tos.

I know there are a lot of great resources lying around waiting to be studied- and there is no time like the immediate need to devour the urgently-needed tips. This might even give you more ideas, which you will include in action number 2. Nobody is 100% creative or productive all the time, so take full advantage of this period.

 

4)      Do the actual work – whether it is marketing, designing, writing, editing or else.

 

 

5)       Switch between projects, without missing deadlines, when you get stuck or less productive.

 

6)      Check, polish and deliver to the final destinations – but don’t forget to keep track of what you did for whom and when.

 

7)      Cross “the done” off from your list of priorities – and make a new list of priorities if you have discovered more of those.

 

8)      Review, refresh and edit your list of ideas- note their desired destinations and make a plan for the next couple of months.

 

9)      Relax a little, do the social stuff you might have missed to recharge for the next round of rush period.

 

10)   Reap the rewards and lessons of this insanely busy period.

 

 

Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: busy times for a writer, how to handle busy times, inspiration, motivation, writing, writing information, writing jobs, writing motivation

Inspiration Caught This Freelance Writer Big Time

Posted on June 7, 2012 Written by Pinar Tarhan

inspiration-moment, writing inspiration, inspiration for writers
Image via copyblogger.com

I can’t believe my last post was a month ago.  I’m so sorry about that. But I have a valid excuse: I was listening to my own advice (I’m a big fan of practicing what I preach.) Inspiration and motivation were chasing me at record speed so I willingly surrendered. I’m not saying that I didn’t get any valuable ideas to share here. I did. But I wanted to keep a really good record of every idea and goal so I jotted down a lot, changed my mind a couple of times about which contests to enter, wrote my drafts and I’m back. And I promise not to stay away for so long again.

Inspiration-struck Me:

–          I have had these two fun screenplay ideas (actually I’d written the first drafts a long time ago) for ages but there was no way I’d be able to format them in time for the Big Break Contest organized by *Final Draft (a screenwriting software I’ve been happily using whose review I’ll post soon).

 

But Big Break’s *extended deadline is 15th June, they want the full script and the awards are nothing short of amazing. But my two scripts need adjustments in many areas, and there is no way they will be fit for a contest until the deadline.

 

Then I realized that I could enter the Script Pipeline’s Great Idea contest, where you are allowed to write anything from a logline to a treatment of 3-5 pages.

 

So guess what? Currently I’m writing 2 treatments and editing them. I’ll then submit & keep my fingers crossed. And even though I don’t get to be a finalist, I’ll have two very clear ideas on how I want to outline the story, and relive the events and my characters. Of course I won’t be sitting on these screenplays afterwards.

 

–          I have some upcoming fun and useful writing posts.

 

–          I have some wonderful movie post (for my entertainment blog) ideas, based on the romantic in me. It’s all Forget Me Not’s fault really. I can no longer delay those posts, such as the most romantic & original marriage proposal in a movie.

 

 

–          My favorite TV shows are either over or on a seasonal break- which incidentally is on its way to be another post here. Oh yes, it is perfectly writing-relevant, trust me.

 

–          I’m planning a two week trip to Norway and Sweden which motivated me further to pitch and research more efficiently.

 

Not only is it a specific deadline challenge, but also its blows to the budget will provide more incentive to increase my freelance income. Not just because I will spend a lot, but I’ll want to go on a travelling spree again very soon.

Yes, I confess, I am addicted to traveling, nearly as much as I’m addicted to writing and entertainment.

 

There’s more, but let that be another post.

 

How has your writing been going?

 

  • Please note that extended deadlines typically mean increased entrance fees.
  • The links in these posts aren’t affiliate links, just the direct links to the contest information pages.

Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: blogging, final draft, final draft big break contest, inspiration, inspiration for writers, motivation, movie idea contest, screenplay competitions, screenwriting competitions, screenwriting contests, script pipeline, script pipeline great movie idea contest, writing, writing contests, writing inspiration

When Inspiration Is Chasing You, Get Caught!

Posted on May 6, 2012 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Image via classic-car-history.com

 

I have a deadline for 2 travel posts. I have a more pressing deadline for a writing contest whose early bird deadline I ignored because I wanted the manuscript to be flawless (not that “flawless” really exists for a writer or an editor.) Of course there is the novel I have been trying to finish for months (which was originally intended to finish in line with Writer’s Digest’s 90 Days to Your Novel), and two contests that I found about much too late, but I’m dying to enter (or at least brainstorm a good idea for later use) anyway.

And guess what I’m inspired to write instead? Blog posts for my own blogs. Yes, I love my blogs and writing for them. It is always great to present good new content to your audience, and it definitely helps your blogs’ ranking and traffic if you publish new and interesting content more often. But whenever I make a schedule for my blog posts, I am inspired to write anything but.

When I want to concentrate on my novel, I find myself writing blog posts or working on a story that was written before but will be reformatted.

So I decided to run with the flow.

But if you have to write one thing before the other, and that pressure (of the deadlines) is making you not write at all, it is better to write what you are inspired to than write nothing at all.

I’m a big fan of chasing inspiration, but sometimes inspiration has other ideas, and it wants to reach you for different ideas and stories than the one you need to work on. Don’t let it go. Write it down, and even if you don’t have the time to write all of it, write the most crucial part so that you can make it work when you come back to it.

If you ignore inspiration because you are waiting for another kind, there is a chance it will ignore you for a longer time-even when you are trying to chase it.

So I’m off to writing that TV series post now. What do you feel like writing at this very moment?

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Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: chasing inspiration, inspiration, inspiration for writers, waiting for inspiration, writing, writing competitions

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