Three Ways to Energize Your Writing

In my creative nonfiction writing classes, I conduct workshops in which students read and provide feedback on their classmates’ first drafts of writing assignments. The writers then use the feedback they receive to plan and write revisions of their work.

In these workshops, I prompt my students to look for the “hot spot” in a piece of writing. Where in the writing does the energy level rise? Where does the intensity of the message increase? Where do they as readers get caught up in the story? If readers make writers aware of the hot spots, then writers can focus on them as they revise, making sure to take advantage of those high-energy points to make their message more engaging.  

Readers become bored easily. Unless our writing is energized, we are likely to lose their attention. Energy gives our writing vitality. It creates for readers a sense of movement or progress as they read. It lends urgency to our message.

To increase energy in our creative nonfiction, we can consider three elements of our writing.

1.  Our Subject

In crafting a memoir or a personal essay, we should set aside safe subjects and choose to write about what confounds, perplexes, fascinates, troubles, or confuses us. We should tackle the questions for which we have no concrete answers.  Take on the topics that cause us some discomfort.  Instead of writing about our proudest moments, for instance, those topics that produce a happy story, we might write about our most embarrassing, conflicted, or disappointing moments.  A time when we felt that we were treated unfairly, or were overlooked or misunderstood.  The tensions inherent in those subjects create energy in our writing.

2. Our Words

From the broad decision about our writing subject to a focus on the individual words we choose to convey our message, we should consider the level of energy we are creating in our writing.  The more concise we are—the more we focus on conveying our message in as few words as possible—the more impact our words will have.  The more precise we are—the more we focus on choosing exactly the right words to most clearly and accurately express our thoughts—the greater the impression we will make on our readers.  We should opt for the concrete over the abstract; for truly descriptive over merely colorful language.

3. Leaps and Gaps

Readers like a sense of movement in what they read. They enjoy leaps from one time, place, or event to another.  They feel engaged by narrative gaps that require them to fill in details for themselves. We should be careful not to over-tell our message. We don’t have to say everything. We should allow readers to participate in making meaning from our text by assuming, inferring, speculating, or imagining as they read. Instead of explaining the meanings of our experiences when we write memoirs or personal essays, we should allow readers to discover them.

If we think of the energy level of our writing as a continuum, from low to high, we might envision how our decisions about our subject, our word choices, and our determination to take leaps and leave gaps affect the energy of our writing.

 Increases EnergyDecreases EnergyEliminates Energy
    Subject    The unanswerable question; the seemingly unsolvable problem; the ambiguous or conflicted    The challenge handily met; the obstacle neatly overcome; the experience that casts the writer in the best light    The topic devoid of conflict, question, or tension—the happy story
  Word Choices    Concrete nouns and precise action verbs  Adjectives and adverbs  Abstract language
    Leaps/Gaps    Movement from one intriguing tidbit of information to another    Movement from question to answer; problem to solution  Detailed explanations and announcements of the moral of the story

What impact will our writing have on readers?  Will we engage them and keep them reading to the end? One way to appeal to readers is by focusing on the potential to gain and maintain their attention.

We can energize our writing!   



6 responses to “Three Ways to Energize Your Writing”

  1. Georgia, that’s a great matrix and worth reviewing periodically. I think at times, I rely on muscle memory, and I don’t think enough about whether I’ve done my best to select the right words or tell my best story. After reading your post, I now want to write a happy story without conflict just to see if I can. Someone, somewhere must have done this successfully at some point. I wish I had a class like yours as an undergrad. We didn’t have anything remotely like this at my college.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I teach at a church-owned university where some students feel obligated, because of their faith, to tell a happy story. Or at least to supply a happy ending. I’ve seen many happy endings, but I haven’t seen any done well.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Thank you, Georgia, for your love of words and for so generously sharing it with the world.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you for reading my words, Frank. Having readers makes the writing wholly worthwhile.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Thank you for this!! This is so useful.
    And it explains why so many novels and stories are sad or uncomfortable.
    It also puts into chart form all those days where I write something and scrap it because it just doesn’t *feel* right. Objective analysis to explain why! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you so much! Keep writing until you get into that zone where it feels right. Recently, I heard Steve Almond speak, and he said, “Keep writing long enough to outlast your doubts.” That may be the key.

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