References & Parallels to River Song’s Past in Silence in the Library & Forest of the Dead [2/7] [For Moffat Appreciation Day 2018]
“The trouble is, it’s all back to front. My past is his future. We’re travelling in opposite directions. Every time we meet, I know him more, he knows me less. I live for the days when I see him, but I know that every time I do, he’ll be one step further away.”
I liked how single minded the Doctor was about getting back to the TARDIS and how she needed the sense to be knocked back into her, because no, maybe she didn’t need the medical attention of a hospital (though that’s rather debatable) but there were other patients aboard.
She might finally have moved past the Time War but she’s definitely dealing with other personal demons.
The Doctor… well they’ve always been very protective of the TARDIS. The Thief and their ship.
You remember when the TARDIS spent a whole season exploding and the Doctor was certainly worried and scared but not this absolutely blinded by fear that it eclipsed everything else? I think if that was happening now, it’d be a lot worse?
The Doctor has lost so much, given so much. I don’t think they can lose the TARDIS too, especially because that’s the one friend/home they never have lost (well, the one thing they always got back at least).
It says a lot about her state of mind that she didn’t stop to think about what she was doing until she was bluntly told that she’s selfishly trying to stop people from getting medical help.
But I also think it says a lot about her that once this finally went through she immediately stopped.
reminder that rp isn’t an obligation. take your time. be selective and private if you want to be. breathe. take it one day at a time, one draft at a time. roleplaying isn’t a race. your threads will still be there when you’re ready.
Writing is often promoted as a very artsy, abstract process. Therefore, it can be difficult to get concrete, practical advice on how to manage your writing career/hobby daily. Here are some tips:
1. Back up your work
This may seem like a very simple statement, but it can save your life. Imagine working on a novel for years only to have it disappear into thin air when your PC crashes/someone steals it. If you’re writing your novel by hand, you could lose your notebook, drop it in water or have it become ash in a fire. And it will be devastating.
So, if you are typing your work, an external hard drive is your friend. However, this can also end up destroyed/stolen. Therefore, I suggest also backing up your work by e-mailing it to your own account or saving it on OneDrive/Cloud. That way, even if something happens to your device, you can access your work. Here’s a simple tutorial on using OneDrive on Windows 10
If you are writing on paper, a good idea might be to scan your work and save it as a pdf on your computer. You can even take pictures and save those. Then, you can use the same steps as above to back it up.
2. Type rather than write by hand
This is just my personal opinion on how to streamline the process. That doesn’t mean that it’ll work for you.
I used to write all my novels by hand and then only type them over once the first draft was done. Writing on paper is great and it can be easier to get the ideas flowing. However, if you plan on having anyone outside your immediate circle reading your work someday, it’ll have to be typed. Writing everything and then typing it is extremely time-consuming.
Furthermore, when you’re typing on your PC, you have access to immediate spellcheck, a thesaurus and online resources for research. The world’s information is at your fingertips and that can really help inspire you and speed up the process. (Of course, it can also lead to hours of procrastination. So, discipline is key.)
Therefore, I would suggest getting a small, mobile laptop that is just as easy to carry around as a physical notebook. It doesn’t have to cost you an arm and a leg either. MacBook 10″ is always an option. There are great mini laptops by ASUS. But these can be expensive. The one I have recently purchased is the Lenovo MIIX 320 10.1″ Tablet/Notebook. It’s very light and has gotten great reviews. AND it only cost me around $400 (I think in the US you can get it for $200). Here’s a good YouTube review
3. Format your work for easy reading
These tips aren’t about creating a book that’s ready for distribution or anything like that. This is about making your document easy to work on, edit and get read by betas.
Use a standard font like Times New Roman/Arial. No one likes creative fonts more than I do, but they can make your work difficult to read and appear unprofessional.
Use 1.5 line spacing or double spacing. Single spacing will make your text look squished together and slow down the reader. It can also be more difficult to spot errors or find a specific sentence while writing if your lines aren’t nicely spaced out.
A 0.5 cm first line indent will distinguish your paragraphs from one another and make for an easier read. (Indents are also great for flashbacks/letters)
JUSTIFY your text. Please. This goes such a long way in terms of making your manuscript look professional.
4. Use placeholders
As people, we tend to prefer doing something in a linear, chronological way. But this can actually slow down your writing process quite a lot. It might be difficult at first, but your writing process really becomes streamlined once you realise that you don’t have to write this way. You can skip something and move on.
Don’t know how to describe something? Put in a placeholder and move on to the rest of the scene. Still need to do more research about an aspect? Move on to what you have figured out. Can’t seem to make a certain scene work today? Write the one you’re really excited for.
You can really use anything you want as a placeholder – brackets, asterix, pictures – you name it. You can even use a specific word in another language so that it’s easy to search later on. I would also suggest highlighting these gaps in the manuscript so that they are easy to spot when you do get around to writing them.
This may sound somewhat similar to the previous point, but this refers to things you’ve already written and need to tweak later.
Writers around the world have warned against editing while you write (though I don’t think that this is a hard rule). With colour-coded highlighting, you can get the best of both.
Do you know that this sentence bothers you? It could read better, but you don’t want to slow down your writing process by staring at it for hours… Highlight it in green. Is it pretty clear that this scene needs more information, but you don’t know how to convey that (or what that information is)? Make it yellow. Could something become a plot hole later? Mark it with red.
Find a system that works for you. When you notice something you might have to change, highlight it and move on. Then, when you get to the editing phase, you can correct all of those errors. It can also help to tackle them by colour i.e. starting with the plot holes and moving your way up to sentence-structure and style.
Alright, that’s it for today. I hope that these practical tips could be of help to you. Remember, these aren’t rules; they’re just tricks that have worked for me and that you can try to make your life a little easier.
If you have any questions on these points or on creative writing in general, please feel free to ask 🙂
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