A/N: Hmmm...what the heck is this story? I dunno. I actually wanted to write something like for a whileโa short nโ sweet, simple little list of writing steps but with some fictional meat on its bones to make it a storyโand when the right prompt popped up, I jumped on the chance and wrote it in two days :) So yeah, this is a bit weird and another attempt at 2nd person, enjoy!
๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐: ๐๐๐๐ ๐ ๐๐๐๐๐ & ๐๐๐๐ ๐ข๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐
You sit on the rusty bench outside the library. The sky is dimming by now, the last trickles of people walking out of the closing building. Itโs nearly 6 pm, but youโve got all day. Or rather, all night, because writers love avoiding the sun and staying up late typingโor getting up early if theyโre that determined. (Which you arenโt, duh.)
So youโre in no rush. You sit there, watching, listening, like introverts tend to do. Your locks of gold-brown hair fall in front of your thick round glasses, escaping from your messy bun.
The air gets cooler and cooler until almost everyone is gone, the dark, chilly evening sky clouding over. You pick up your thermos of steaming chamomile tea and sneak behind the library, taking out the key the librarian has gifted youโscrawled with your name, Cellani Brightโand slipping into the library after-hours.
Once in, you take a deep breath, inhaling the musty scent of thousands of words of literature. But you have work to do. You weave between the shelves of books until you reach the back of your second home, a cozy carpet in front of a crackling fire left up just for you. You pull a desk out of a closet and position it in front of the fire, drawing the blinds shut and grabbing a fluffy spinny chair too.
You plop down in the seat, pulling out your slim silver laptop and opening it on the table. You open a Doc and take another deep breath, laying a blanket from your backpack across your lap. Itโs dim except for the warm fire, shadows painting the shelves of other writersโ works. You have peace in your favorite setting. Which means itโs time to start writing.ย
๐๐๐๐ ๐๐ ๐: ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐, ๐๐. ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐ย
All-about-writing articles always underestimate the thought and heart and restless commitment (not to mention sleepless nights) that goes into every short story, every poem, every novel. You giggle, thinking of that Buzzfeed post a few weeks back, which the author mistakenly titled โThe Steps of Writing a Story Storyโ. More like a staircase instead of just steps, you smirk to yourself.
The white of the blank Doc almost taunts you to write, but you have absolutely no ideas. Obviously.
Restless, you stand up and start pacing, seedlings of ideas in your mind not good enough to grow into plants. You run your fingers across the spines of classics, thinking how though youโve done this so many times before, itโs always hard to think of a brand-new plot. You try to draw inspiration from your own life: a 19-year-old demigirl named Cellani taking a gap year after high school, perfectly content with a dog and a laptop.
Hmm. Maybe your main character could be around your age. What kind of story would it be? Your favorite genre is realistic fiction, but you like mixing it up and doing different types of realistic fiction. You keep pacing, back and forth, through the dark shelves, and you decide this short story will be romance.
So whatโs it about? Could it be a fantasy romance? Maybe this girl is a princess of some other world and has an arranged marriage with someone, except obviously she doesnโt want to be with them, so when her new prince declares war she plays both sides and still meets up with her real boyfriend in another kingdom. Nah, thatโs totally clichรฉ. But sometimes clichรฉ plots with a twist are goodโฆ
Ugh. Writing is fun, but itโs hard when you have no ideas. You donโt feel writerโs block, exactly, more like a writerโs pebbles. You want to write, and you feel all inspired in the light of the fire, but you have zero idea what to write about.
So you turn to your go-to writerโs block cure: get the genre you want to write, infuse it with a controversial topic you love to show your support to, and create a handful of characters each having a few of your traits so you can write them well. Then a smile spreads across your face...
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So once you have an idea, youโre still not ready to type. If youโre a planner, at least. Smirking, you slide back into your chair, adjusting the flannel blanket across your lap and breathing in the heat of the crispy fire. You hover your fingers over the keys of your laptop, and write the premise of this short story: Itโs an LGBTQ+ romance, with that clichรฉ love triangle with two boys and a girl, except that the girl realizes sheโs asexual and adopts and gets a dog and cat instead and the two boys fall for each other, all while the three of them are struggling to find what college they want to go to and what major or minor during their gap year before college.ย
You grin wider, pushing a strand of hair behind your ear and taking a slow slurp of your double-tea-bagged thermos. YOU HAVE AN IDEA, VICTORY!!!!
The clock reads 7 pm, and now you have a solid start to build on. Time to plan a little further: Creating your characters, adding all the traits and hobbies that make them 3D. Youโll learn more about them as you write them, of course, but you need a start to expand on.
So whoโs the girl? All the characters are 18 or 19 as well, but youโll be able to write her more fluently. You love names ending in โiโ like your own, so maybe...Emmi? Nah, a bit boring. How about...Ammi? Ammi Jimenez?
Yeah. Thatโs it. Sheโll be a writer and reader just like you, but also a runner. Sheโs kind of a tame, chill character, responsible and determined but also a bit feisty.ย
You smile. Time for the boys. But picking names for boys is always hard, so you open up Safari and type in Unique male name lists. Of course you browse for way too longโeven after you find the right namesโand finally decide on the names Tanix and Kayden for your characters, one bookish and outgoing, one sporty and feminine.
You type all this down and over the next ten minutes, you expand their characters further and plan important events in your plot. Soon youโve got everyone written: whatโs happening, whoโs there, and what style.
Time for the best part of any short story:
The writing.
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Click click click, the sound of fingers on a keyboard echoes through the library. The moon comes out, silvery light sneaking through the blinds, the eerie peace of silence at night music to your ears. No little sisters bothering you, no parents saying go to bed, just a plan, fingers, and a Doc.
So you keep writing as the hours tick by. Itโs hard to get going at the start; you keep checking texts or Wattpad or Reedsy or reading a bit more of that awesome eBook you purchased last week. But then the story takes off and you find your eyes unable to look away from the screen.
Writing is magical because the world revolves around you, but not around you. You create these other people and control them, yet in a sense they are their own people. At some point in every short story or novel you turn from the controller of this world to the scribe, from the outside looking in, just writing down what happens on its own. You feel yourself immersed in your own words, the rest of the world stopping as you pass between galaxies. You are the characters like the characters are you: each carries a little piece of yourself, whether your beliefs or your ideas, your dreams or your traits.
You become alive at night, fueled by two bags of caffeine and your fingers moving without your input. You reach that point where youโre literally thinking faster than you can type, so your ideas just hang there, on the edge of your mind, waiting patiently for your fingers to catch up.
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Sadly, while you feel like a goddess typing, a writer with the power of creating worlds and people, your body needs sleep. (You can only run on caffeine and literature for so long, alas *dramatic sigh.*) Stupid body. And your laptop needs energy tooโitโs about to die, and then youโll be left alone, your ideas bursting out of your brain but with nowhere to put them. (*Double dramatic sigh.*)
Itโs almost 12 am. Youโve written for hours straight. You grab your warm flannel blanket, extinguish the last dregs of fire, plug in your laptop, and collapse on a beanbag, trying to calm your racing mind. Taking a break in the middle of a short story is basically impossible, after all, but finally your eyes flutter shut and you drift into oblivionโฆ.
๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ก: ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐ ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐: ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ย ย
You wake up, groggy and tired, but hey, what more could you want than a fully charged computer and a half-finished short story, if one a quarter energy? You roll out of the beanbag with a moan, and basically stay in that half-lidded state as you visit the librarian's desk until your thermos is full again with hot water and three tea bags. (Almost-all-nighters are tough, even for the most experienced and irresponsible authors.)
You relight the fire, do a few jumping jacks, and open your laptop. Itโs 1 am. Youโve got six hours to finishโmore than enough (maybe). You read a chapter of the eBook to get back in the ~CrEaTiVe SpIrIt~, and once youโre done, you feel inspired and are roaring to go.
So you open the doc, skim the 5k+ words youโd written before, and jump write (HEHEHEHE BAD PUN) in.ย
That magical feeling sparks again, the outside world fading away as you sit grinning in the dimly lit library, and you keep typing until sunlight streams in through the windows. The plot arc rises and falls, characters growing away from yourself and becoming their own people, everything tying together until you finally write the last line through your half-lidded eyesโฆ.
And thatโs it.
Itโs done.
You lift your fingers up and smile at the screen, reading that satisfying last paragraph over and over. A glimpse at the time says itโs 6 am, meaning youโve got an hour until the library opens. After a whole night of writing with only a few hours of sleep, the 52-page novelette, your beautiful creation grown from the ink of your mind, is done.
You shut your raging-hot laptop and curl up on the beanbag again, falling asleep to sweet silence and shafts of sunlight just starting to emerge over the horizon.
๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐๐: ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ & ๐๐๐๐
You come back to the library the next day, the librarian greeting you with a smile. You were on first-name terms with her by now, except for the fact that you never remembered names. โHave a fun time yesterday...morning? You were gone before sunrise, but you left your tea.โ
You gratefully accept the thermos. โAh, yeah, sorry, I was totally pooped and barely made it out before the library opened. Mustโve forgotten this. And, oh, yes, of course, it was awesome. Just peace and quiet and caffeine and ideas.โ
She chuckles. โYouโd better remember me when youโre a famous author, Cellani.โ
You laugh too. โOf course.โ
โWhat did you write?โ
โAn LGBTQ+ romance-type thing,โ you say. โIt was intended to be a short story but yโknow, the plot kinda blossomed into a novelette.โ
โAnd you wrote it all in one night?โ
You grin at her, holding up your slim silver laptop and tapping it. โA gazillion hours of writing from sunset to sunrise, yup. Iโm totally burned out now, but hey, it was fun. But this story ainโt gonna edit itself.โย
That was another annoying step in the staircase of a short story. Once you got the idea and finished the words, you had to skim the story and edit it further. Which wasnโt the best thing in the world.
The librarian gives you a pitiful gaze and ushers you towards the beanbag-chair-ringed fireplace area towards the back. โBetter get to it. Tell me when you post it!โ
โOf course!โ you yip back, making your way to the desk left out just for you.
You open the Google Doc and reread your story with fresh eyes after 24 hours ignoring it. You fix plot holes, correct typos, switch lines and cut enough words to bully the word count under 10k. Since you barely remember anything from yesterdayโs blurry-eyed caffeine sesh, you find yourself immersed in the story all over again, this time as a reader instead of the writer.
You run a final spell-check with Grammarly and finally, you declare the story done. You found the time and place and calm to write a story, coaxed the idea out of your half hour of pacing, and spent basically a whole night writing on an hour of sleep and a lot of tea. Youโre tired, ignored a bunch of responsibilities, and messed up your sleep schedule for about a week (#writerโsdonโtneednosleep), but youโve done it. And now, as you open Wattpad with a smile, youโre ready to release your little literature baby into the world. :D
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584 comments
B-A-N-A-N-A ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐!!!!!
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Thanks lol!
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^^
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I can relate to every part of this story. Every single one. Especially the writer's pebbles and the early-process distractions. But believe me, there's nothing quite like the feeling you get when you go on a writing sprint and the plot basically unfolds by itself, like it doesn't even need any help from you. Editing isn't always fun, either, but the satisfaction you get when you post it somewhere makes it all feel worth it. The only error I noticed was that this sentence -- "The librarian gave you a pitiful gaze and ushered you towards the b...
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Ackk thank you so much for the thoughtful response! Ooh, thanks for catching that!! Aww thank you!
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No problem. I can't get enough of that picture, though!
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Eeep lol thank you, but admitting time, neither can I, I keep looking at it and alternating between 2 thoughts: -Woah did I draw that?! It actually looks like me! *awkward silence* Oh...wait...I traced a photo...WELL ANYWHOO- -Frick I look so pretty in that...HEHEHEHE *rubs hands dramatically* NOBODY ONLINE WILL EVER SUSPECT A THING XD
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Haha, well, you still did a good job on it!
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Tyyy <33
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Wow!. I totally, absolutely enjoyed reading this. I can relate with this. I felt like I was the one in the story. So beautifully written, your choice of words were spot on.
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You did so well, your work literally makes me as if I am also inside your story
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Did I do this already? ๐
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Hey Aerin!! What's up?
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