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ARCHIVED
TOPIC:
[ Line of Sight ]
DATE:
July 25, 2002
A
Dime a Dozen Is Cheap!
I've
written in the past about where
I get my ideas and about the notion that ideas are a
dime a dozen. You've heard it all before: "Genius is
1 percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration,"
or "Ideas are a dime a dozen -- it's hard work that's
rare!"
While
I understand the point, it's far overstated. Good ideas
are valuable. They are tiny little treasures. When I think
of something cool and subsequently forget it, I feel a real
loss. That's why, if you were to go through my desk, you
would find it literally filled with tiny little pieces of
paper, each with a note to myself scrawled on it for some
new scene, a creature, or whatever. You'd find that I have
two whole file cabinets filled with notebooks and sketches.
You'd find old campaign notes and things I've written in
the past (often badly) that still contain good ideas. Lists
of character names. Lists of cool color combinations. Lists
of weird things to find in a medieval city. About six beginnings
to novels and short stories. All sorts of strange notes
and ideas.
You
never know when an idea will come. It's usually when you
least expect it. Often, it's sitting in the car, or in a
restaurant, or lying in bed. If you're like me, you've got
to be ready. That's why I often carry around a little notebook
that will fit in my pocket (although the notes I have scribbled
on Post-Its, receipts, and in the margins of other papers
show that I don't carry one around enough).
Of course,
the ideas sometimes -- but not always -- come when I'm seated
in front of my computer. I rarely suffer from writer's block,
but I do sometimes suffer from writer's malaise. I'll just
not be in the right mood to write. Rather than suffer --
since I'm not an employee chained to my desk -- I'll often
get up and go do something else. Paint a miniature, read
a book, or sometimes I'll stay at the computer and do something
else, like surf the Net or play a computer game. When I
do this, I'll occasionally feel Sue's eyes upon me, as if
she's wondering, "Shouldn't you be working?" (She
denies that she is thinking this, by the way.) [Hotly
deny! --Ed.]
One
thing I learned from science fiction author Greg Bear, however,
is that when I go off and do that, I am working.
He says that the mind has a lot of levels -- just because
I'm not consciously thinking about my work doesn't mean
that some level of my mind isn't coming up with ideas. Often,
after a "break" of doing something else, I'll
sit down at the computer and my fingers can't type fast
enough to keep up with all the ideas that spill out.
The
other factor is just simply the time of day. Only rarely
can I work in the morning. Usually, the morning is when
I'll check my email and look around on the Web (including
my own
message boards). I'll admit it, though, I'm not a morning
person. More conventional people just cannot understand
that Sue and I regularly sleep until 10 o'clock in the morning
or later. Then, we work most of the day and into the evening,
but often stay up until 2 or 3 a.m. I'm amazed, however,
at the number of people who assume that since we do this,
we are somehow lazy, or that it is for some reason wrong.
We don't sleep more than other people (in fact, we probably
sleep less than average). We just keep slightly different
hours. I've spoken with people who are astonished -- even
offended -- when I tell them not to call before 10 in the
morning, though. They certainly wouldn't want me to call
them at 1 a.m., I'll bet.
I simply
work better at night. By that time, my mind has had the
full day to get going, and I'm usually full of energy and
ideas. I don't really "get going" until 4 or 5
in the afternoon some days, at least as far as writing goes.
It's also cooler, quieter and more relaxing at night. The
phone rings less. There are no errands that need running,
and dinner doesn't need to be made. It really makes logical
sense, if you think about it.
So even
though I've created a lifestyle for myself centered around
the best time for me to create, and even though I try as
hard as I can to write down my ideas (sometime I'll do a
whole column just on how amazingly forgetful I am), I still
lose ideas and I still have periods where I get stuck on
whatever it is I'm working on. If I could pay a dime for
12 of the ideas that I've lost, I'd do it in a heartbeat.
Particularly if I can do it in one of my "stuck"
moments. As someone who comes up with ideas for a living,
who writes new ideas on a daily basis, I've got to tell
you: 10 cents for 12 good ideas is darn cheap. Inflation
should have raised that price considerably by now.
Attention
cynical people: From now on, the saying will go: "Ideas
are three for a dollar." Whattaya say?
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