Anne Lamotte wrote a chapter in one of her books on writing about first drafts. Those of you who have read the book know why I can't include the name of the chapter in a CF thread. The gist is that we need to disable the editors in our heads when we write first drafts. We need to write without erasers, so to speak. We need to put pen to paper and get the draft out without editing; editing comes later.
I am terrible about this! I never write without editing as I go. I have no idea why I picked up this habit, but even in school, I went straight from head to final draft. All the editing took place before I began typing. There are times when that can be a great gift, but I know I need to learn to simply write.
Does anyone else struggle with this? Do those of you who have struggled with this have any tips for turning off the editor-within, shutting down that part of the brain? How do you tune-out a voice in your head that won't shut up?
I am terrible about this! I never write without editing as I go. I have no idea why I picked up this habit, but even in school, I went straight from head to final draft. All the editing took place before I began typing. There are times when that can be a great gift, but I know I need to learn to simply write.
Does anyone else struggle with this? Do those of you who have struggled with this have any tips for turning off the editor-within, shutting down that part of the brain? How do you tune-out a voice in your head that won't shut up?