Intuition
There's an expression: women's intuition. And I suppose a lot of people consider intuition a feminine trait. I've wondered why and decided it must go back to motherhood. Have you ever watched a mother feed a baby rice cereal for the first time? Mommy opens her mouth wide, as if encouraging the baby to open wide. Whenever I fed Demon Baby, even long after he mastered accepting food from a spoon, Oldest Daughter would say, "You're doing that weird thing with your mouth again."
Babies come into the world without a way to tell us--other than crying--what's wrong. We mothers intuit wet diapers, when they're cold, when they're warm, when they want to be held, when they want to be rocked, when they're hungry, and when they need a nap. I nursed four children a grand total of almost eight years. I nursed "on demand" (for those without babies, that means not on a schedule, but just when the baby wants to nurse). I had to intuit what that meant. I've been a mother for almost eighteen years now and four children. Sometimes I feel as if my entire life has been intuiting what four other people need.
Oldest Son's face looks a little down when I ask how school was. So I probe more. Baby Girl is biting her lip. Must mean she's worried about something. Oldest Daughter looks pale. Is she coming down with something? And Demon? Well, he's in a class all by himself.
But intuition really ISN'T a female trait. Men usually just call it gut instinct.
And I've decided, perhaps, that the reason so many people in my life say, "You're so intuitive" has less to do with being a woman, with being a mom, and more to do with being a writer.
I used to set all this stuff down on paper and worked with my prose. When I was newer at this game of publishing and writing, I hacked at it, I edited it. I tried to cross my t's and dot my i's. But after a while--and I mean years and years of writing--I somehow learned to discern when to leave the prose alone. When it wasn't "quite right" and needed work. I learned when a scene needed cutting, and when a line of dialogue needed a fresh angle.
I can't teach that. Writer's intuition comes the hard way. Just as being a mom is something you earn. Don't get me wrong, any jerk can donate sperm and any woman from puberty on can pop out a baby. But MOM . . . you earn that title. The hard way.
Same with writing. I recently read an online excerpt from a newbie writer. I think it was an e-pub, but no matter, I cringed. I saw problems so glaring I . . . felt pained for this writer. But I realized that's because I've honed this intuition thing. I've honed it from working the craft for years. I've honed it in the best damn critique group you can find. I've honed it because no matter how many books I've published, I'm willing to LISTEN to my critique partners and learn what they can teach me. And then I've honed it because I am not so arrogant to not absorb new lessons.
Gut instinct. Intution. Whatever you call it, I really think gaining it is when you see your writing evolve. Really change to something publishable. I can't teach it. You earn it.
Thoughts?
Babies come into the world without a way to tell us--other than crying--what's wrong. We mothers intuit wet diapers, when they're cold, when they're warm, when they want to be held, when they want to be rocked, when they're hungry, and when they need a nap. I nursed four children a grand total of almost eight years. I nursed "on demand" (for those without babies, that means not on a schedule, but just when the baby wants to nurse). I had to intuit what that meant. I've been a mother for almost eighteen years now and four children. Sometimes I feel as if my entire life has been intuiting what four other people need.
Oldest Son's face looks a little down when I ask how school was. So I probe more. Baby Girl is biting her lip. Must mean she's worried about something. Oldest Daughter looks pale. Is she coming down with something? And Demon? Well, he's in a class all by himself.
But intuition really ISN'T a female trait. Men usually just call it gut instinct.
And I've decided, perhaps, that the reason so many people in my life say, "You're so intuitive" has less to do with being a woman, with being a mom, and more to do with being a writer.
I used to set all this stuff down on paper and worked with my prose. When I was newer at this game of publishing and writing, I hacked at it, I edited it. I tried to cross my t's and dot my i's. But after a while--and I mean years and years of writing--I somehow learned to discern when to leave the prose alone. When it wasn't "quite right" and needed work. I learned when a scene needed cutting, and when a line of dialogue needed a fresh angle.
I can't teach that. Writer's intuition comes the hard way. Just as being a mom is something you earn. Don't get me wrong, any jerk can donate sperm and any woman from puberty on can pop out a baby. But MOM . . . you earn that title. The hard way.
Same with writing. I recently read an online excerpt from a newbie writer. I think it was an e-pub, but no matter, I cringed. I saw problems so glaring I . . . felt pained for this writer. But I realized that's because I've honed this intuition thing. I've honed it from working the craft for years. I've honed it in the best damn critique group you can find. I've honed it because no matter how many books I've published, I'm willing to LISTEN to my critique partners and learn what they can teach me. And then I've honed it because I am not so arrogant to not absorb new lessons.
Gut instinct. Intution. Whatever you call it, I really think gaining it is when you see your writing evolve. Really change to something publishable. I can't teach it. You earn it.
Thoughts?
Labels: critique partners, intuition


37 Comments:
I think, truly, the number one reason I want to sell to NY is to have an editor, a real one. God, what a luxury. I agreed to do another time-consuming essay mostly because the editor is awesome.
I think I was more intuitive at the beginning, when I knew nothing. I feel more analytical now, like I see and understand so much more. I do things and don't do things for solid reasons: every word I write has a reason for being there.
But I see your point, too, because I usually write in a flow with the knowledge of analytical mind working in my subconscious, where what I've learned about writing is stuff I've practiced to the extent that I know it so well, I don't need to remember it. I can feel the path because I know it.
(You make me want to take my old, free samples off ms. p's website, even though you weren't there. But what can you do? Once it's out there, it's out there. And old stuff isn't really fixable, anyway. That's the hardest thing for me. Ugh.)
Intuition is a powerful tool in all areas of life. As far as raising my son is concerned I have always ignored all those voices out there telling what to do or not do and have listened hard to myself. The decisions I have made seem to have been the right ones because he is turning out just fine with an independence of spirit and a vision of life which is always outside the box.
As far as my writing is concerned, I haven't been writing for as long as you but it has been about 6 years now and my intuition is always right. If I let something slide through out of laziness, my cp's always pick me up on exactly that thing. So I try to never ignore that little voice in my ear.
I love your examples about motherhood, because you're right--it is earned over time. And it's not always easy to focus and pay attention.
Good analogy when it comes to writing. I am trying much harder now to pay attention to facial expressions and body language.
Hi Spy:
I think that I am so busy, I often don't have time to overanalyze and do rely on my intuition more--I just need to get in the zone and write and not fret. That said, some works flow so easily and others I do find myself second-guessing. I find with my fantasy book, maybe because of the world building, I agonize over stuff much more.
E
Hi Suzanne:
I am a gut instinct mother, too.
E
Hi Christine . . .
Demon Baby makes me second-guess everything I ever thought I knew about being a mother. And so in a Buddhist sense, I am starting to accept that . . . well, that's one reason his little soul got matched to mind. He is my teacher in many ways.
As for writing . . . I work with my gut a lot. Sometimes I think that because I was a journalism major--where "hunches" were encouraged--that . . . maybe that's part of it, too.
E
I agree with you. One of the things I suspect newbie writers need to do or at least do better, is listen to that soft, quiet little voice in their head that says, "That doesn't quite work."
Too often I think they'll think that, re-read the work and convince themselves it's fine, they've just got the heebie-jeebies, when in fact, their intuition is right, it's not fine, they need to fix it.
More experienced writers either have louder voices or they've just learned to listen to them. (And, of course, sometimes that little voice is wrong, based on insecurity).
After the editing I've been doing I have to say I'm almost happy my manuscript didn't sell the first time out. With no contract and no deadline I now have the luxury of tackling it a year after "completion" with more of an objective eye.
I'm not working with a CP or group, but my gut instinct is to cut everything that isn't Story. I'm trimming fat like you wouldn't believe, and what I'm left with is what I would like to see in more published books: the leanest prose possible to move the story along.
I've heard there is a trend toward shorter manuscripts, and I hope that's true. Regardless, I'm going with my gut. If they say it's too short...well, Quentin Tarantino says there is no "they," i.e. nobody can control your art but you, and I tend to agree with him.
So, if the manuscript never sells, at least it will be something I'm proud of, and at least I can say I did it my way.
Hi Mark:
When I was new, my voice told me EVERYTHING was crap--so there's THAT voice, too. But I don't know . . . now sometimes a scene just sits well with me.
E
Hi Jude:
The Altar of Story.
E
Hi Erica:
I'm intrigued, but I'm not sure I understand what you mean by The Alter of Story.
Sounds like a good title for a future blog post. :)
Altar. Typo. Sorry.
Oh yes, Mark! Why, dear God, why do I not listen to that voice? Those little twinges, even the tiniest ones, are SO big and obvious, later.
Erica, I hope I get to that point. The fact that my stuff is out there frightens me silly sometimes. I seem to be getting more neurotic the more I write, not less so.
There is instinct that you are born with and then there is ability that you can hone. But even people with instinct have to hone it to perfection. And then I do think there are those who might not have the instinct but work so hard at it that they become very capable.
Good post, made me think of my own abilities. I think I have the instinct for writing, but my abilities, at least at fiction, needs to be further honed!
I definitely have more intuition. Yesterday I cut three pages that seemed perfectly fine and that two years ago I would have expanded on -- and it would have been wrong for my book.
I love what Mark Terry says about paying attention to the "soft, quiet little voice." I listen to that quiet voice now.
Hmm, in most areas I have better than average instinct. People, my kids, business. (Gas thinks I have a crystal ball ;-)
Writing...I dunno. When I look back at older stuff, I can see mistakes I'm no longer making, which leads me to believe when the stuff I write now becomes older stuff there will be mistakes I haven't yet identified. Like Spy, sometimes I think I'm becoming more self critical and neurotic.
Like Spy, sometimes I think I'm becoming more self critical and neurotic.
Me too Lainey. The voice in my head isn't soft and little and quiet. It's hard and huge and billigerent. It's the college roommate from hell.
Jude:
Just that, I think, the more you learn about writing a novel, the more you get that the most sacred thing is Story.
E
ello:
The craft can be learned. Instinct . . . that's an intangible and that you have it is wonderful.
E
edie:
As a prayerful person myself . . . I've spent years listening to the still, small voice that is, I hope, the universe, God, spirit . . . so writing is another aspect of that.
E
Just that, I think, the more you learn about writing a novel, the more you get that the most sacred thing is Story.
Thank you. Yes. That's it, exactly.
Hi Lainey:
Sometimes you just have to tell that voice to shut the hell up. ;-)
E
I agree! I've had very few critique partners, though when I do get a crit I always learn something. I also always get caught at anything I thought "nobody will notice." It my instinct tells me it's wrong, I'm probably not just trying to poke at it more.
This has happened to me twice now. Once with a crit, and once with something I submitted.
While I haven't had a lot of crit partners, which I consider a handicap definitely, I have honed my writer's intuition some on my own. And I think each new piece I approach and work and rework it gets a little better.
Reading a lot of fiction helps to. Whether it's good fiction or bad fiction because you start to get an eye for it. Of course this means that sometimes it's hard to fully enjoy other people's fiction without critiquing it. But I think this happens with most people who read a lot, like it happens to movie buffs.
Erica, working with an editor and line-editor for the very first time this year, I experienced many "Ah" moments. Working on one of the final edits, it was like standing inside music. A distinct rhythm as I worked in a flow that I felt, and truly understood on a deeper level. It was...lovely.
Wanted to mention the mama intuition thing, what a beautiful mystery! Seriously, I could hear my baby girls in the night, whenever they moved their hand across the crib. Their nighttime search for a pacifier. The nursery was down the hall...of course, hubby never awoke. LOL. Not having babies for quite awhile now, I heard the grandkids in much the same way.
zoe:
I am a huge movie buff, and I hadn't thought of the comparison until you said it, but definitely!
E
Hi Ladonna:
This morning, Oldest got up at 4:30a.m. and tiptoed in my room to go to the master bath and get towels to take a shower. I bolted upright the second she set foot in my room with a "What's wrong?" (Insomnia on her part.) It's like this cosmic umbilical cord.
E
Hi Erica --
I've heard parenthood described as a condition where your heart leaves your body and walks around in the world with your kids -- you become open, exposed, and vulnerable. All great traits for a writer! :)
I always say my kids taught me everything I need to know about writing. Be gentle, patient, persistent, and honorable. Show up, and even if you do a crummy job it's much better than not trying at all. If you are tired, take a nap. Keep your focus outside yourself, and learn to listen.
Kids made me humble, slowed me down. That helped my writing more than any writing class I've ever taken.
Also, I say a big YES to how important intuition is to a writer. In the craft, certainly, but also in knowing which story to pursue in the first place -- when to go after it with everything you've got, and when to step back, take time to breathe and recharge.
Thanks so much for this thoughtful post...I loved it.
MicheleL
When I started my class, posting my assignments and the teacher's critiques and hearing the critiques of other readers was tremendously helpful. I knew it needed lots of work and appreciated the feedback. Then last week lightning struck and I sat down and completely reworked the beginning.
I wanted the old version to work but knew it wouldn't. The new one is much better. It still needs lots of work because I'm a bumpkin and have much to learn. But at least I listened to that voice in my head that kept yelling, "This sucks!"
MicheleL:
So much of who I am as a person, I learned from motherhood.
E
P.S. I got the book. THANK YOU!!!
anti-wife:
I have learned--getting rid of whole scenes is often PROGRESS! And it's been a hard-learned lesson, too.
E
Gee, and all this time I thought I was just psychic! lol
Sometimes I look back at when I was a new mother and think, if I knew then, what I know now. But the kids turned out alright so I guess I did something right somewhere along the line.
I've always written stories but when I first thought of publishing something I realized I had a lot to learn. I don't think we ever really stop learning. Thats why God gave us editors and good critique groups.
When painting. I often prop the canvas up where I can see it and just keep staring at it through the day. Suddenly, something goes click and I just know what it needs. Same with the WIP.
I think any writer who wants to make it needs to listen to all the critiques. Some may not "fit" but all should be considered.
Hi Aimless:
All writers, I think, wait for that "click"--that "Ah-ha" moment with our works in progress.
I always love hearing your perspective because you're a painter, too.
E
Men's intuition: I recall when son number one was a baby. One night he would not settle down. His mother and I tried the bottle, the pacifier, reading to him (which he loved even as an infant), walking him around, bouncing him, toys...all to no avail. Then that moment of Zen hit: I remember saying, "Let me try something." Reluctantly his mom gave him up to me. I sat down with my squirming son and sang to him. He settled immediately and was soon fast asleep. Call it what you will: intuition is as good as anything. There are moments in life when you just know what to do without knowing why.
P.C.
Like I said, always looking for that still, small voice that guides us.
E
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