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MVM's avatar

This wonderful post echoes an excellent Paul Grealish quote/meme: "Describing your writing as trash while you're still drafting is like looking at a bag of flour and an egg and saying 'My cake tastes like crap.'"

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Ron Jackson's avatar

Love this! My way of thinking about the wonderfully endless drafts is in harmony with what George says. I've been studying archeology and evolution informally for a few years, reading books and watching YouTube lectures and documentaries. At some point, noting how carefully the workers remove a layer of sediment, sifting it, sorting it, examining the intriguing pieces, testing them, developing working hypotheses, etc., it came clear to me that each new layer is available for examination ONLY because the previous layer has been removed. And making sense of the under-layers was ONLY possible within the framework of what was thought before, even when the hypotheses are reworked. It came to me also that my revision process is the same. Early revisions (1 through 10 or 20?) give me a start with surface changes, maybe a few obvious reworks--the low-hanging fruit. Only then does my mind clear of these and get down successively to the under-layers. When I have removed many layers of sediment, I see the root artifacts in the text, the early developmental vectors that tell me what the story wants to be fundamentally. Much like the archeologists discover in the deep sediment what the human family was trying to be way back when. This process has also taught me that those people exploring our root stories and we writers exploring our root humanity are working hand in hand. My key learning is that you can't get to all revisions in single sweeps. They only open up to you in layers, or as George says, in waves. The obvious analogy is that the unconscious, the psycho-history of it for one piece of writing, is like the sediment of a dig.

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