5 Things to Do With a Shiny New Idea (#TBT)
5 Things to Do With a Shiny New Idea
So you’re working on your latest project, just humming
along… until suddenly, out of nowhere, lightning strikes.
It’s a SHINY NEW IDEA. And it’s the BEST IDEA EVER. But you
have something you’re working on right now, and you need to get it done… but
you don’t want this idea to disappear forever. I’d venture a guess that if it’s
an idea you really love, it’ll stay with you even if you try to forget it, but
if you don’t want to risk it but want to stay on track with your current
project, what are you supposed to do?
First, find a blank piece or paper. Or a fresh page in your
idea journal. Or a new, clean document in your Word processor. Grab a pen. And
maybe a cookie (I find cookies definitely help with creativity).
Set a timer for 20-30 minutes — you don’t have a lot of time
to spend on this, because you’re supposed to be working on your other project!
Now, bring that Shiny New Idea to the forefront of your brain, and start the timer.
5 Things to Write Down So That Shiny New Idea Sticks Around
for Later
1. Where does this idea take place, and when?
You probably can envision something about the time or place
of this new idea, so jot that down. A quick date or a location will work to
bring it back to memory later. If you see something specific in your mind, like
a lake or a road leading into a city, write that down. Don’t know what city it
is? Then it’s not important right now, because it won’t help you recall the
idea later. Write down what you see in your mind, and move on.
2. Who are your characters?
Maybe only one person came to mind. Write down who she is,
what she looks like to you right now, and everything that matters about her at
this very moment, according to your new idea. Don’t develop new things about
her, all you want are the key points that will help you recall this particular
figure. If several characters came to mind, write down what you know about them
too.
Remember: You don’t want to build them right now, just write
down what’s in your idea. You have another project that needs all your focus
and attention, and getting caught up in new characters could take you away from
the current ones. We’re using key points here.
3. What are the stakes?
This is your conflict. Your idea. The thing that makes the
Shiny New Idea wonderful.
If you’re the kind of person who starts with a character and
then develops a plot, no problem — here’s where you’d make a quick observation
about a conflict that your character could get into. If your New Idea MC is a
dragon-hunting feminist priestess from the Order of Voluminous Tomes, she might
get into physical conflict (dragons), social conflict (feminism), or
religious/political conflict (priestess). You probably have some sort of very
basic inkling of conflict for your characters, even if you’re not 100% there
yet. That’s okay. That’s why you’re just writing this down now, so you’ll be
able to recall and develop things later.
If you’re the kind of person who starts with an idea and
develops characters around it, this will be the easiest step for you. Write a
very, very basic & bare-bones outline of the idea that came to you. Do it
in point form, so you won’t be tempted to sit there and elaborate on things.
4. Pick a genre.
This is quick. Just jot it down, somewhere on your page. If
you’re not certain of the genre, pick a few and write them down.
5. Walk away, and allow your brain to get back to the task
at hand… your current project.
Once you’ve written the Shiny New Idea down, you should feel
a sense of relief. You’ve purged the idea from your head, and your brain no
longer has to hold all these details close to the front of your mind out of
fear that you’ll forget something. You can focus on your current project
without worry.
You’ll probably find that something amazing happens now.
Even though you’ve written your S.N.I. down, your Muse still flits back to it
now and again, without you even trying to think about it. Your brain takes the
idea and lets it heat up — like a slow cooker — making it better and better
without even trying. Connections will be made. Conflict details will arise.
Characters will start whispering to you about their favorite sweater, or what
they always wanted to be when they grew up, or who they have a serious thing
for.
And you didn’t even have to try. Write these things down if
you want to, as they come to you, but set a timer each time. Stay focused. You
don’t want to be the person that flits from idea to idea and never finishes
everything! Which, admittedly, I often struggle with as well. (What writer
doesn’t, at some point?
Now you’re free to come back to the Shiny New Idea when
you’re ready for it. And, for that matter, when your current project’s
characters tell you it’s alright!
"Waiting on" Wednesday (on a Monday)
Friday Flash: "Trying to Bowl"
At sixteen years old, she’d lined them up like pins. Get a
boyfriend, fall in love, get married, become a marine biologist, have a baby,
read all of Shakespeare’s plays, see the Eiffel Tower, own a dog and a house
and a yellow VW Beetle. Not one of the ugly, too-sleek modern ones either. An
original, restored and only-modified-to-drive-on-North-American-roads Bug.
She got pregnant at nineteen, but it didn’t matter. One pin
down, nine to go. She fell in love with the baby’s father, if only momentarily,
but it didn’t matter either. It counted. Two pins down, eight to go.
The boyfriend came two years later, met during on-campus
registration for the distance ed. courses she’d need to start working on a
science degree. She pulled her arm back and released, ready to knock two pins
in one stroke. She knocked one, clipped the other. Marine biology didn’t happen
overnight.
Halfway through Shakespeare’s plays, she got bored and
admitted she’d skimmed Titus Andronicusanyway and didn’t have a clue what was going on ninety-percent of the time.
Gutter ball.
She bought a puppy and it bit the baby, so she gave it away.
Accidental backward release. That same night, A View to a Kill came on TV. She watched James Bond chase a villain
off the Eiffel Tower, and sighed.
Three years later, she met someone while standing at the
edge of the mall parking lot. She held her daughter’s hand and, from afar,
admired the antique cars from the local car club’s monthly get-togethers. He
asked her if she’d like to see them up close, and he let her daughter sit in
the front seat of his restored yellow VW Bug.
Eight months later, they were married in a tiny chapel,
where her daughter played flower girl and ring-bearer. He had a house. They
moved in. Three pins down, the rest called foul or illegal pinstrike.
Almost there. But marine biology was a process, and her
guilt over Shakespeare’s plays urged a fresh start. Her new husband talked of
travel to Europe, adopting a dog, and moving to another house where they’d have
a spare room… just in case.
Her twenty-five-year-old self smiled, tasks complete, and tore
up the list.
And after nine years and six points, she took charge and reset the frame.