Skip to main content

This is how it started.



            Writing didn’t just happen. My skills had to grow. I had to practice things over and over before I got them right. But before any of this, there was a starting place. That starting place was the vertical, half lined/half blank paper in the picture above.
            That piece of paper was a common homeschool tool my mom used as incentive for me. If I did the work I needed to get done, we could write a story and I could illustrate. My mom taught me the beginning, middle, and end of a story. She would write each sentence on a piece of paper and leave the top blank for me to color. As I got older, I wrote the stories myself and got graded on spelling, grammar, and neatness. At that point in my life I was more excited about coloring, but that is where my stories began.
It wasn’t until I was thirteen that I began to pick up the writing again. I had done a lot of working in my life to get me to the point where I felt like I had a story to tell. So I buckled down and wrote it. It was absolutely dreadful. I reread it a few weeks ago and I was horrified. Meanwhile, I was learning a lot through Go Teen Writers which was at the beginning of its life. I was a part of the NextGen Conference that summer and won a critique by Stephanie Morrill, the founder of Go Teen Writers. I honestly don’t know how she made it through that story. I took her notes and comments and learned from them, and I turned my horrendously long short story into a novelette. Then I wrote another, and then another. I realized that they worked better combined, so I put the three into one story and called it a novella. I have also realized that I had no idea what I was doing.
Last summer, I began brainstorming a novel about a little girl who had a book that she wrote down all her questions to Jesus and her mom would find the book and be impacted by it. After months of planning, I had an intertwining story of a young mother and a dying teenager that would have to learn to look for God’s work and be willing to be a part of that work in order to see other people changed. Honestly, I was insane. I don’t know what I was thinking. The plot is so intricate and intentional that it took hours to make sure there weren’t any holes. I’m still editing, but next week, I head to a writers conference with hopes of getting requests for my manuscript.
I have grown a lot as a writer, but more importantly I have grown in my faith. As my faith grows, I can write in such an impacting way. When I asked God to help me write this story, I never expected him to put me through the same emotions that my characters would. He did, and now my story is better than ever before. It all started with that piece of paper.

Comments

  1. Wow. That's all I can say. We do have a wonderful God, don't we?

    And GoTeenWriters is absolutely great! You're not the only one who learned a lot from it. Me too, and I still do, actually.

    Thanks for sharing your story! I hope things will turn out well at the conference next week.

    arendedewit.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Let me know what you think : )

Popular posts from this blog

How to Create a Fact Manual for a Book Series {Peek into My Next Story}

    I started my current story, Ideal Lies, last year, and this time, I decided to make it a trilogy. This story is a mix between dystopian and utopian. Living in the idealistic northern Ideal States of America, two teenagers are caught believing in an imperfect religion and go on the run as criminals to rescue their stolen family.     How I managed to keep this to myself until now, I'm not sure : )     Writing a series of any kind was something I'd never done before. I quickly found out that I needed a way to keep track of all the facts. I tried memory. My memory failed.  I tried little notes. I lost them. I tried computer files. It took me too long to find what I needed. So, with nothing else to do ... I created a fact manual. I spent hours gleaning the information from my memory, notes, and files. I created new documents and organized facts so I could put it all together in one cohesive notebook. I documented everything that had happened so far in my boo

Interview with Stephanie Morrill and Jill Williamson {and a giveaway}

     I would like to welcome Stephanie Morrill and Jill Williamson to my blog today! I am so excited that they took the time to do an interview with me. Here is a little bit about them:       Stephanie Morrill and  Jill   Williamson  have written a combined two dozen speculative and contemporary novels for teens. They also blog obsessively at  www.goteenwriters.com . When not writing or blogging, they can be found at the teen table at writer's conferences or wherever chocolate is being given away. Come hang out with Stephanie at  www.stephaniemorrill.com  and  Jill  at  www.jillwilliamson.com . Why did you choose the genre that you did? Stephanie: I feel like “contemporary young adult” chose me, honestly. I wanted to write deep, serious books that might get studied in English classes … but I never had any ideas for deep, serious books, so that flopped. My ideas, even after high school, were always for stories about girls and the boys they liked and the complica

10 Weird Things Writers Do ... And Are Perfectly Okay

No writer will ever claim to be a normal human being. We process information differently, we observe life differently, and we feel emotions differently. If you're a writer reading this, be encouraged. Yes, you are weird, and there is no avoiding it. But, there are many writers that can relate to a smidgen of what your life is like as a writer. If you are not a writer reading this, be understanding. We know we're weird, and it would be so awesome if you could just nod, smile, and say, "I'm glad you enjoy writing." It's okay to be weird. Personally, I think it's even cooler if you're weird and a writer at the same time.  1.      We may stare at you without realizing it. Sometimes, we see something that reminds us of characters and zone out for a bit. 2.      We may also stare blankly at flowers or rainbows, also thinking of something entirely different. (this was to counteract the slight creepiness of that first point.) 3.      We may