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If I don't give Isabelle her time at least every couple of weeks, she gets super pouty and annoying though. This is why I don't do romance...




I should invest in one of those! My plot bunnies always come out in the shower and more than once I've had to hop out to scribble something down on a piece of paper.

They're really great! A friend of mine bought them for me for my birthday a couple of years ago after she and I discussed the perils of shower-linked creative bursts. I used them up pretty quickly.

I have been trying to do the day job this week, which h..."
How funny, and that sounds like a plot to me! Is the guy working on the software psychic? Did someone send it to his computer? And does the woman know someone is on to her plot?
I like the term dust bunnies. And yes, I have quite a few, too!
Happens all the time. I don't write any new ideas down. I already have many projects going so any brand new ideas can certainly wait. If I forget about it months later, it was probably not a great idea anyway. But, if I am still thinking of it months later and it's developing with characters fleshing out, plot lines forming, and especially if it's merging with some other simmering idea, I will write a quick rough draft and let that simmer a while.

I have a somewhat similar problem. I'm all ready for bed, about to go to sleep, when my brain decides that now is a good time to start working on that new story idea. I'm generally a night owl, but my plot bunnies, it seems, are insomniacs :P.

They started following me on Twitter few years ago and I was like, OMG! That's brilliant! But then I realized the reason my best inspiration happens in the car or shower is *because* I'm without the tools to properly capture my "brilliance."


I listen to those who find queuing hard to bear and I scribble down what they say and stick it in a file.
But I haven't had one quite like you, R.

Also more of it is about sex now. Oh dear...

I listen to those who find queuing hard to bear and I scribble down what they say and stick it in a file.
But I haven't had one quite like you..."
That's the way mine happen. Years ago I was walking through Ocean Park in Hong Kong. When I looked into the sturgeon tank for a moment I saw a blonde woman wearing pyjamas, with her hands tied. By the time I got to the sea lions I had a complete novel plot, which I typed out from memory as that year's Nano.

Yeah... Inspiration... I got tons of it...
For a whole different book. -_-

Yeah... Inspiration... I got tons of it...
For a whole differe..."
The Muse works in mysterious ways.
(My phone wanted that to be murderous ways... Which can be true as well. Lol)
I too got an idea for a brand new story today! It must be in the air!

Yeah... Inspiration... I got tons of it...
For a whole differe..."
I am in the same boat right now. I released the first novel in the three-book arc I've been working on in February, and when I was about six chapters into earnest writing on the sequel, my brain went "Wait, buddy. Do this first..." and now I've nearly completed a second, full-length novel, but it isn't the sequel. It's a prequel.
Brains are jerks is I guess what I'm getting at.

Being an author can be dangerous!

Brains are jerks.
Being an author is dangerous.
These all need to be on motivational posters.

..."
I suffer from the regiment of monstrous women. Over the years I've created a lot of female lead characters for whom feistiness can run to firearms, and in extreme cases nuclear weapons. The trouble is what happens when they get together. There's Jane herself (two spaceships written off in half an hour), Naomi (carries potassium cyanide in her pocket), Jojo (use someone else's gun, then they get executed for the murder) and Regina (if you can't stop a spaceship any other way then ram it with the shuttle.)
Get that lot holding a union meeting in your brain and there is trouble.

*beats head against wall*



I have a lovely character waiting very patiently for his turn to show me his world.
Janet, sympathies to you. I have characters who sit on the sofa behind me.

It's the lengthy simmering that gives it flavor.




Of course, I may slip my favorite bunnies a chainsaw so they can take out the weaker ones.

"In the end, there can be only one."
(Yes, yes, the famous quote from "Highlander"...)


One is telling me that he (yes this one is definitely a he) is perfectly formed and ready to roll. (I think he's a hare, with thumping great feet.)
Another is telling me that, commercially, I should know it makes sense to run with that one first.
Another is saying, come on, come on, you know this one has to be written.
Sigh.

Like other, I have multiple works started and on hold until I can get a book or two out and the second for the one I just published. Dang it rabbits...go and sit down and behave!


Happy to help with writers' blocks in other ways though.

The most important notebooks are the ones next to the bed for when I wake up with inspiration and can't sleep until I have written it down





I always right ideas down on scrap paper, then transfer them to a computer file. Some ideas are simple and will be there for years. Others are destined to be written soon. I definitely know my next WIP.
It makes me wonder if any of you have had ideas, perhaps even significantly developed, that still haven't had a single word earnestly typed in your preferred format? They lay forgotten in an old spiral bound notebook.

On the other hand, i also compose music, and while I have quite a biut of completed stuff, I also have a file of scraps of tunes and things awaiting action. Not sure why I do this.
I will never, ever be able to get all my plot bunnies worked into full blown rabbits. And I'm okay with that. Some ideas just aren't good enough to be fully realized.
At the time this was posted, my current work in progress was kind of an abandoned project I'd started years ago and couldn't make it work. I dusted it off and started over from scratch a couple of years ago. I think it's going well.
Meanwhile, when I feel like writing and have only a short time, I have about six other things I'm dinking with. Not all of them will be complete, I'm sure. There is one I'm liking, though... kind of a thriller about a pastor who becomes obsessed with a young woman.
At the time this was posted, my current work in progress was kind of an abandoned project I'd started years ago and couldn't make it work. I dusted it off and started over from scratch a couple of years ago. I think it's going well.
Meanwhile, when I feel like writing and have only a short time, I have about six other things I'm dinking with. Not all of them will be complete, I'm sure. There is one I'm liking, though... kind of a thriller about a pastor who becomes obsessed with a young woman.
I have been trying to do the day job this week, which has involved concentrating hard on some complex software.
So what happens? My mind is full of images of this young woman, dressed in brown, making her way across central Asia to find a building which is part monastery, part fort. There she is determined to offer herself as a sacrifice in exchange for the freedom of a great spiritual leader.
Why? Who the seven bells is she? How did she get into my brain when I wasn't looking? All I know is that if I don't tell her story she'll be very cross with me.
So am I alone? Or does anyone else suddenly find they have been struck down with a story that they simply must tell?