Études de Plume: No. 1

You need to understand how you get words on the page.

Materials Needed:

Pen and paper (you can also print a copy of this PDF – see below – and write on the printed page or use your own writing notebook)

or

Computer and keyboard

and

Stopwatch/timer

Directions: Read the following quote and complete the activities that follow:

“Now, when my mother got to be eighty-five years old her memory failed her.  She forgot little threads that hold life’s patches of meaning together.”

Mark Twain, from his speech Morals and Memory

 

1. Choose which tool you will use to write down your thoughts (pen and paper or computer/keyboard).

2. Set the stopwatch to zero as you prepare to start writing.

3. I want you to think about your own memories and people that give meaning to your life.  Choose one person and one important memory about him or her.  It should be one of “life’s patches of meaning”.  Start the timer and begin writing about this memory/patch of meaning.  Stop writing when you are finished.  Record the time spent writing. (Note: there is no specific amount of time that I want you to write.  I want you to write until you are done writing…in one sitting.  Do not start and stop and start up again.)

Reflection

So what is the point of this exercise?

Don’t talk about being a writer.  Don’t think about being a writer.  Be a writer.

Write.

Hopefully, you picked up a pen and paper and wrote something.  If you did, then there are additional benefits to this exercise.

First and foremost, you should have a better understanding of how you write – how you get words on the page.  When given the choice between pen and paper or computer and keyboard which did you choose?

You have to know how you get words on the page.  I once read a book about the craft of writing and the author stated that he wrote everything out by hand – pen and paper.  Old school.  Someone wrote a review of the book and stated unequivocally that this was ridiculous nonsense.  In this modern age of computer and keyboard, there was never a reason for anyone to ever use pen and paper to write.

Unless, of course, that is how you get words on the page.  Everyone is different.

You may use pen and paper because that was how you were raised.  You may use pen and paper because the brain works differently when using pen and paper.  And you may use pen and paper because the act of transferring what you’ve written on paper to the computer adds a step to the editing process.

Does this mean that you should always use one tool or the other?  Of course not.  How do I write?

Pen and paper – hence the name of this course.

Lastly, you should now have a better idea of how many words you can get on the page in however long it took you to finish the writing exercise.   Also, it is worth noting that you should pay close attention to how long you can write before the need arises to take a break.  How long can you sustain your concentration on the page?  This will impact how many words you can write in a day.

What do you have at the end of this lesson?

An understanding of how you write.  How do you best get your thoughts on the page?

An understanding of how much you can write.  If you wrote 75 words in 5 minutes, then you could conceivably write close to 1,000 words in an hour.

Something to use later on in your own writing.  Keep what you have written and save it for later.  Chances are you have written something worth reading.  So use it.  The very best writers have a deep understanding of humanity and a capacity to express this understanding through their writing.

Thank You

Thank you for visiting this page.  I hope you found this lesson in writing useful.

There are three ways to learn here at Pen & Paper: continue learning from these études as they are posted to the site, register for the online course, and/or take a private lesson in writing.

If you have any questions, please send an email to contact@penandpapercourse.com.