Like any set of rules, the rules of writing can be flexible.
A few that you may be familiar with are “write what you know,” “never end a
sentence with a preposition,” and “always use an outline.” These rules work
great for some, but aren’t as effective for others. Sometimes I follow them,
and sometimes I don’t.
In an argument about rules, I have some friends who believe
that rules should not be broken. One of their rules is “don’t steal from your
own writing.” That means I should not take a piece of writing that didn’t work
in one place, recycle it and use it somewhere else. My friends believe that this
writing can be stale, and forcing it into another piece won’t work.
What they call stale, I call recycling. I’m all about
making it easy on the writer. When I’m in the zone, I write. If the writing
doesn’t work for my current piece, I may use it somewhere else. I believe my
subconscious brain knows more about true writing/connections than my conscious
brain, because it’s about emotion or thought or language that cuts through
barriers and gets right to the heart of the matter. Some words or ideas may not
have anything to do with the topic, and making a connection later on is so much
fun that I will never stop doing it. It’s like making a discovery twice!
Another rule breaker is Francis Scott Key, who may or may
not have been aware of this rule when he wrote the Star Spangled Banner* on
Sept. 14, 1814, borrowing parts from a poem he had written nine years earlier.
Many people have many opinions about the Star Spangled Banner, but I’ve never
heard “stale” as one of them.
So, find a piece of writing that doesn’t work in its current
spot, and put it somewhere else. Maybe it’s a scene, a character trait, or the
most beautiful sentence you’ve ever written. Finding the right place for your
work is like discovering a piece of a puzzle that your conscious brain had
lost, but your subconscious brain knew was great enough to wait for the right
place to put it.
Write soon,
Mary
*The Star Spangled
Banner was set to the tune of an English drinking song “To Anacreon in Heaven.”