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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!usc!news.bbn.com!think.com!linus!linus.mitre.org!mitre.org!cgates
- From: cgates@mitre.org (Curt Gates)
- Subject: Re: Jobs that (can help) your writing
- Message-ID: <1992Jul21.130753.28110@linus.mitre.org>
- Sender: news@linus.mitre.org (News Service)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: cgates.mitre.org
- Organization: The MITRE Corporation
- Date: Tue, 21 Jul 1992 13:07:53 GMT
- Lines: 42
-
- In article <1992Jul20.193032.11491@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>
- kmrobert@nyx.cs.du.edu (Kevin Roberts) writes:
- > I see your point but even if
- > a job leaves your mind alone, it doesn't mean that you can use your mind
- > for too active an activity without interfering with your work.
- >
- > I am able to think about ideas and maybe come up with one or two
- > but there is no way I could avually plot out a story.
-
- Exactly. Your observation helps me clarify the process. You only want to
- leave *part* of your mind alone. Let s say you are doing a simple,
- repetitive task that lets you daydream, or go into a light trance. (This
- is no big deal; we all do it every day.) A hypnotherepist would call
- this an altered state of consciousness, in which you can visualize scenes
- and let material emerge from your unconscious (tap into creativity).
- Basically, what you do is keep your rational left hemisphere tied up with
- busy work, so it doesn t interefere with (edit) the flow from your
- creative right hemisphere.
-
- This is a lot different from plotting out a story. That type of mental
- activity requires a different type of brainwork, one that definitely does
- compete with the task that your are doing, no matter how simple it is.
- And a job that requires your full attention, of course, is one where you
- can t daydream. For what it s worth, you might find that you might not
- have to work at developing a plot. A part of your brain may have already
- created a plot off line -- and is waiting for the opportunity to give you
- a copy.
-
- When I referred to a job that leaves your mind alone, I meant a job that
- lets you access the material that your mind creates off line. When I was
- a kid, I could never understand why my parents never minded shelling a
- bushel of peas or topping and tailing a row of beans. It was so boring! I
- hated it and wanted to get the chore done as soon as possible. Never
- suspected there might have been something else going on.
-
- ************************************
- I worked as a technical writer ... editing manuals ... on how to dispose
- of sewage in permafrost; we all had to wear white shirts -- that was
- mandatory -- and I was fired at the end of two weeks for spending too much
- time staring out the window.
- (Edward Abbey)
- ************************************
-