Date: 2015-04-12 06:24 pm (UTC)
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)
From: [personal profile] sholio
For me, it's all over the map.

I never used to outline at all. On the other hand, I've always written out of order -- so if, say, I had a great idea for a scene at the end of the fic, I'd just write it. I suppose this constitutes an outline of sorts -- it's just in the form of finished scenes (and occasionally a brief note for what goes between them). I never had the problem some people do that if you write the best scenes first, you'll lost interest in the rest. On the contrary, I found that for me it worked really well to write the "money shot" scenes first -- the emotional high points, the scenes that everyone was reading for -- and focus really heavily on those, then ... well, I'm not going to say "half ass" the rest of it, but I tended to spend my most energetic writing time on my favorite scenes, then fill in the other parts.

On the other hand, my "just start writing, and write as inspiration hits" approach is why I now have a trail of 30K, 50K, 70K unfinished WIPs in multiple fandoms.

So I started teaching myself to outline by way of making myself a more disciplined writer and not losing my path on long stories. In the beginning I was worried about having exactly the problem you're talking about, losing interest if I know where it's going, but in practice that hasn't happened to me so far. I DO know what you mean about stories planned in such detail that you don't really have the incentive to write them, but for me, the ones that are like that are the stories that I "write" in my head when I'm falling asleep, word by word in great detail. (And these are invariably the most hurt-comforty, self-indulgent ones. So, yeah, fandom - my most self-indulgent hurt/comfort stories never get written, because I tell them to myself over and over, but never write them down.)

I still don't tend to be a detailed plotter, and I still don't usually outline fanfic, but I've been finding that for me, having that rough framework to build my fiction house around is actually quite helpful -- I can write faster and better, and need less rewriting, when I know where I'm going, and I'm more likely to actually finish stuff. Mileage varies, though ...
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