Just a little housekeeping…

I have a new article up on “Do You Know Where YOUR Story Is?”. It’s titled Admitting You Were Wrong and has to do with being able to face up to mistakes and fix them– in writing and other places as well.

Also, I’ll be working on a couple new INKAS to post. One post on Vignette, and another on Personal Narrative. These can be closely related. You can use the vignette style to create a personal narrative. But, check back soon or follow to get notifications to see what these two forms of writing are all about.

Meantime, Wendell says, “Write on!”

Latest article up on my Substack

Thoughts on developing what you want to write about, and judging whether or not it is good enough. Plus a small tool to help you out. (click image).

You can follow me here at “Finding Robin’s Story” to learn more about the noveling process and other writing things, and subscribe to my substack, “Do You Know Where YOUR Story Is?” at robinjminnick.substack.com to hear more about Story:where it begins, where it goes, and how it gets there. It’s all still free!

An Analogy of Sorts

This is the second of three posts dealing with approaching the problem of sizeable revisions. The first post offered some straightforward methods to help you tackle the problem. This post takes a more whimsical approach. And for the professional’s opinion on handling developmental problems, please check out the post after this one. All three posts will go up on the same day.

This material also appears, with a slightly different introduction, on my substack: “Do you know where YOUR story is?”


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So, we’ve discussed some steps to take to get to work on making big revisions.

“But, what,” you say, “if this is a really big, extensive revision with tentacles of related material all over the place? Where do I start?”

Okay, this may seem weird, but it’s the analogy that occurred to me. Bear with me.

When I houseclean, it tends to be in giant gulps. Things being in the wrong place seems to be my biggest–and to be honest, easiest to solve–problem. But the idea of sorting out the belongings of seven rooms and getting them to their rightful places is daunting. For me, the general process goes like this.

1.   I start with one room, and I remove everything from it that doesn’t belong. Some items, the easy ones, I immediately put away. But others are not so easy. For those, I have to answer some questions.

These items usually end up at a neutral location, waiting to be sorted as these questions are answered. Some of them I already know are my responsibility, but I also know that more items like them await me in other rooms, So I hold off putting them away until I have them all together.

   2.   I go to the next room and repeat.

   3.  As I accumulate what I believe are all the items in a category (let’s go with socks) that go to one room, I take those socks to the room where they belong and either put them away or leave them there for the owner.   (Re #1.e, items like socks I might put away myself.) The items collected for someone else at the neutral location that I don’t handle remain in a pile for the owner to deal with upon notice.

   4.   Items that I know I’m putting away are piled until I need more sorting space, or until I am pretty sure they are all the things in that category. Or some other reason. This sounds a little capricious, but changing up how I work occasionally makes it easier.

  5. At last all items have been dealt with and put away, and all that is left for me to do is to nag someone else to take care of their stuff.

Tackling any big chore is tough. And of course, we were discussing changing and sorting story segments, not socks. The processes can be similar—start with the easy stuff, where you know what to do. Make decisions about where the words belong and which characters are responsible for them. Keep putting things where they belong until you are done.

The key is to organize a large task in a fashion that suits your mental/emotional needs and then go at it.

Apply the cliches if you want:

“Rome wasn’t built in a day.” 

“The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.” 

“There is only one way to eat an elephant: a bite at a time.”

And how long did it take to build the pyramids anyway? Don’t despair, revision won’t take you that long. You can conquer it, and it actually does get easier. I have even heard writers say that revision is their favorite part of writing, because the words are already there and simply need to be fixed.  Good luck!


Be sure to read the previous post and the following one for more on dealing with Major revisions.