Sep. 14th, 2004

edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (red flower)
It's interesting to read books while sick. For one thing, my concentration fades in and out, so on some parts I'm all, "Ooh, look at the stupid typo! That's badly phrased. Hey, if this, then that, and therefore the other thing, and I'll bet you ten dollars he's a lying skunk" and I'm right about all of it -- while on other parts, I'm like, "Huh? Waitaminute, I don't remember that. Um, where did the last twenty minutes go?"

Stupid medications.

Maybe I should switch to watching TV?
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
Am feeling moderately better after a nice nap, and I was together enough this afternoon to write more of "Secrets." The Dueling Club has been and gone, Ron and Hermione have dragged Harry out, and Ginny's left in a huff to talk to Tom. So I'm creeping up on 5,000 words in the chapter now.

I know for certain I'm getting better when I can think coherently enough to write fiction. Nonfiction is easier -- I've written long essays and papers while doped up pretty high on antihistamines or cold medicines -- but I have to be awake and clear-minded to write fiction.

My friend Cat used to do her best creative writing while half-asleep at 2am. While it did nothing for her spelling and grammar (and I used to edit these creations, so I know whereof I speak), it did apparently let her string together a decent plot. I can see getting useful ideas while half-asleep -- it lets the mind range free -- putting those ideas together in a useful order with functional dialogue and scene-description... that's another kettle of fish.

To this day, I have no idea how Cat managed that.

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edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
Elizabeth Culmer

January 2026

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