• Welcome to Autism Forums, a friendly forum to discuss Aspergers Syndrome, Autism, High Functioning Autism and related conditions.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Private Member only forums for more serious discussions that you may wish to not have guests or search engines access to.
    • Your very own blog. Write about anything you like on your own individual blog.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon! Please also check us out @ https://www.twitter.com/aspiescentral

Writing Tips for Those on the Spectrum?

granolaturtle

Well-Known Member
It's so, so frustrating. I get told that my writing is good and I really want to do something with it, but I just can't seem to write an actual story that takes up more than a page. I've written things that are more than one page before, but it starts meandering and generally being terrible and I have no idea where to go with the plot.

I want to make a plot and keep on track, but even the few times I've made an outline, I can't seem to figure out how much I should put in the outline, and when writing, I can't figure out how to get to point A to point B.

So basically, I can set a dramatic scene, write characters, etc... but when it comes to the discipline of making and sticking to a plot and producing enough content I just fail miserably.

Writing is my passion and I don't want to give it up, but sometimes I feel like my brain wasn't built for it even if I have a talent for it. I know that doesn't make sense.

I've looked it up and all literature on the subject is focused on teaching kids to write in classroom settings. Nothing about independently creating fiction.
 
There is an entire sub-specialty in fiction which is the short story. You could write a book composed of short stories. Stephen King did that himself. :)
 
You have to be an established writer before anyone wants to read your short stories. And even then, I've never even managed a short story. Unless you count three paragraph blurbs short stories.
 
Well, every writer needs to get a start somewhere so do some research on publishers and publications that accept first time authors. I wish I knew of some. You could also try looking for author's groups in your area and network a bit?
 
I used to totally have this problem. Okay, so let me explain. The writing process is a delicate one. The genre should be the first thing to be established. Then the possible characters and possible scenarios. Imagine various scenes in your mind. Experiment over and over again until you get it right. It took me at LEAST fifteen tries to get my second book I ever wrote good enough where I was happy with it. But it took around seven years, give or take a couple months. You have to be patient with yourself and give yourself lots of time, room for improvement, and it's good that you're asking for advice because every writer - even professional ones - have room for improvement. Just write your heart out as long as you can until the imagination runs out. There are going to be a lot of errors, probably, punctually or otherwise. But afterwards and after a break or two - maybe a couple days - re-read it. Fix the errors and make sure it makes sense. Sometimes in order to make writing believable you have to write about ordinary things. Writing a story is like connecting the dots or putting together a puzzle - your puzzle. Your dots. But if two pieces of the puzzle don't fit, cut out the part that doesn't fit and use the rest. Always keep generating ideas. That's always important. But try not to go overboard with it because even though that is the fun part, restraint and knowing when to cut loose is one of the best quality of writers. You may not be able to get from point A to point B. . . yet. But maybe you can go from point A.05 and work your way up to A 1 and half.

For example: "John Doe woke up early on a Monday morning and groggily made his coffee. His face still sagging and dark circles under his eyes, he sipped the coffee, not minding it without sugar or coffee. . . again. 'Time to take the kids to works again', he thinks to himself and 'I still gotta go to work'. It was a typical Monday and well, he was not exactly a morning person. John Doe looks up at the clock. Five forty one it reads. Strangely, the last time John Doe looked at the clock it was also the same exact time. Thinking nothing of it, he goes to the kids' rooms to check to see if they are awake. John Doe opens one of the doors down the hallway only to realize something is off. The door where the kids' room should have been was actually no more than a custodian's room complete with sanitizers, mops, and containers bleach. Odd. The coffee mug slips out of his hand. He doesn't even react to the ear-splitting sound of the porcelain making contact with the floors. 'Good evening, Mr. Doe', a man in a surgeon's uniform says to him. 'I'm not Mr. Doe.', John Doe says slowly."

Is this the most creative story ever? No. Does it have errors? Yes. But I kind of came up with it just now and I'll tell you why. Think of each sentence as a stepping stone. Keep feeding little bits of information but withholding just enough to keep a reader interested until you reveal the answer to the last question. By then, you have already come up with another question that the reader has to consider until you've written an entire book. Now in an entire novel, one chapter is Point A. Chapter two is point B. Little by little, the character interacts and reacts with his/her environment like a sim. Almost like you are a photographer or journalist documenting every step of the way. As a writer, you're not always expressing your understanding of what is happening but if something can go wrong in a story, make it go wrong. Did you notice how quickly I set up a conflict in the plot? With more conflict, you have more to work with. Like throwing trash all over the ground and coming up with new ways to clean it up. Your reader is with you on it but you have to be in on the secret too of what you're planning and setting up for them. But that's part of the fun. So when this John Doe is drinking his coffee, I didn't say he was in a hospital. But then again, a reader should be able to determine by now that a unicorn isn't going to pop out of the closet. I could do a lot of things with that short paragraph alone: maybe John Doe is dreaming. Maybe John Doe has high anxiety levels. Maybe he time-traveled. Maybe he's in a nursing home. Maybe he's seeing things. I don't know. But as a writer, you have to be able to choose the best next thing to happen and continue on with it both imaginatively and logically. But you couldn't just pick all of them. I couldn't say he's a robot who lost his kids to a bet with Medusa. It's too random and the reader can't expect anything to happen. Really, it's a matter of what you want in a sty. Remember too that in the middle of the big, awesome scenes are going to sleep and eating and going about daily lives and having normal conversations and always have something for the reader to chew on and relate to. A little food for thought. I hope this is helpful. If not, I apologise.
 
You could write something besides fiction. Or maybe write historical fiction, so you can base the story on an actual series of events and characters, then take artistic license with it.
 
Unfortunately, I'm 17 and don't have a drivers license. It simply wouldn't be an option. And networkings
You could write something besides fiction. Or maybe write historical fiction, so you can base the story on an actual series of events and characters, then take artistic license with it.
I definitely am not interested in writing nonfiction. I don't even know what I'd write about. And it's not creating characters or ideas I have problems with, it's sticking with a plot structure and going somewhere with the story.
 
You have to be an established writer before anyone wants to read your short stories. And even then, I've never even managed a short story. Unless you count three paragraph blurbs short stories.

Actually, short stories is the way people get started. You have to submit to magazines that publish short stories; there's a lot of them out there. They accept a range of lengths, from very short (mere hundreds of words) up to near-novella (10k or more). Google literary magazine/journal/short story publishing. There's a surprising amount of stuff out there.

You can write stories that last only a few paragraphs. Try taking a look at "flash fiction." Very short.

I definitely am not interested in writing nonfiction. I don't even know what I'd write about. And it's not creating characters or ideas I have problems with, it's sticking with a plot structure and going somewhere with the story.

Plot is not something you want to ignore, but don't worry about it too much. My first "story" was twelve pages long with no plot at all. But there was a brief synopsis that was kinda plot-like, so I expanded it into an actual story and I got a decent grade on it. Over a year of practice I've been able to generate a handful of simple plots. Just keep writing and see what comes up. Don't worry too much about the end state. Just keep going until you have something or until you get bored. It all takes practice.
 
I started out writing fan fiction, and the odd short story myself, but when it came to writing a novel, I wrote an epistolatory novel, writing in the form of the main character's personal journal... There's a basic storyline, but I don't have to worry about having to carry a plot over the whole thing(that's a problem of mine, too...)
 
I went to absolutewrite.com/forums It helped me a lot getting started. When I write, I just have a very, very thin outline of the plot. I just let my characters live their lifes.
 

New Threads

Top Bottom