There’s no denying the random fortune that may strike, for good or for ill. But catching the lightning in a bottle requires you to already have a bottle, if not a hundred, in place, and having researched and experimented on the best bottle size, shape, placement, composition…

Thus, “Fortune favours the prepared”, also known as the adage “You make your own luck.”

Or, if you prefer something more modern, “The harder I work, the luckier I get.”

This works even on the smallest scale, all the way down to having words to write. Where do I get my ideas? Same place I get my words.

First, I tame the chaos and stress around me – from making sure that we have all the medical forms lined up in triplicate for yet another round of battling to get a procedure covered, to folding the laundry so I’m not seeing the peaks of Mt. Clean Laundry rising like the Himalayas from the continent of the guest bed every time I walk past the room.

Second, I engage in the world around me, from conversations with friends to listening to podcasts on people doing things I would never do, in places I have never gone. (These usually play as I’m folding the laundry or loading the dishwasher, since that leaves me in one spot long enough to listen. I know other friends don’t mind earbuds and can expand that across the house.) I’ll read books outside my comfortable and familiar, during downtime.

When I look back across books I’ve written, I can remember various conversations with my husband and friends that sparked this paragraph or that mention, from the hilarious double-entendre to the plot point that tied everything together. The last happens often enough that I occasionally wonder if getting stuck merely means the well of ideas is dry and I need to go live in the world and engage more… because the solution usually ties together a recent conversation at a diner with friends, a random aside in an interview I was listening to, a bit of research from years ago, and a meme a friend threw at me to make me laugh, or a chance encounter with strangers in queue at the hardware store.

Third, I make an effort to write down good lines and bits. Not because I ever go back to that notepad to pull things out, but because it makes me think about it, and remember it, with a bit of muscle memory in the act of writing to anchor it. So much of life we go through on autopilot, and you can forget the good bits that make great texture for stories as easily as you forgot what make and model car that was that was slow in the right lane, so you passed on the left, three hundred miles of driving back on Wednesday last week.

Fourth, I show up at the page. I have a notebook that I sometimes jokingly call my handbrain, because it keep observations, notes, reminders to put things on the grocery list, tasks that need to get done but are so minor I’d forget them unless I’m staring at the thing that needs it… and just about every day, after dumping out the assorted pocket litter of the busy mind, it turns to story, and I start writing down notes and blocking out the next chapter or three, in bits and pieces. (That I do go back to, because if I have a chapter roughed out, even if it’s as rough as the stage directions, not e’en the full script, it’s an easy touchstone to get the brain to unpack and the fingers to fly through writing the full scene.)

Do I always get it right? Ah, no, not at all! Given the ever-changing nature of life and the fickle finger of fate, that’s like being able to walk on a curb. When it keeps changing height and direction, and my arms are full. With the occasional passing car too close, and earthquake. But when I do, I can reliably average a thousand words a day!

And that is how I make my own luck when it comes to having words to write.

3 responses to “Luck”

  1. I have mill . . . well, probably only hundreds, but it feels like millions of “Ideas, story starts, horrible jokes and puns” and such stashed, never to be finished, but sometimes stolen from.

    In fact when I was starting I wrote one good “horses and swords fight” that I’ve cribbed from at least twice with minor tweaks, and hard to say how often my back brain pulled out a bit of it here and there.

    Littler scenes, descriptions of a space station, a cutting stub at a ball . . .

    They aren’t really unwritten stories so much as orphans needing a better home.

  2. Yeah, same, except that Mt. Clean Laundry often ends up on the couch at my place, and some story ideas insist on something closer to longhand proto drafts, at least for scene openings, than the basic brainstorming I mostly do. At least the advances in dictation make it easier to turn those proto drafts into pixels.

  3. “Luck be a lady tonight!” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6W9QJe4BgPo&list=RD6W9QJe4BgPo&start_radio=1

    Once, I’ve had luck strike and strike hard. But I’d written the book, and published it, and done the work that raised the lightning rod for luck to find. Other times, I was in the right place and time due to hard work, or knowing someone who knew someone, or being careful with my pfennigs. Reading anything that fell into my hands, being willing to take inspiration from songs and photos, and having friends to bat ideas back and forth with also helps.

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