Yora
Maester
I've been noticing for a while that all my notes are not very good. I come across a lot of stuff that I think is cool and inspiring and write it down, and sometimes I get a great idea for a concept and start working on an outline. But after a couple of day those outlines always start feeling boring, and when I look back at my various notes, the things I wrote down still seem cool, but I'm not really sure what stories to make with them. And then I'm back again to looking over my worldbuilding and character notes and can't really think of any good story I want to write.
I think the problem might actually be that I am taking the wrong notes. When I make a note for something, I write a creature, an environment, or a magical phenomenon from a scene that I found amazing. And when I look at those notes later, they sound cool, but they don't inspire me. I've been taking structural notes about concepts that I find intellectually interesting, but that's not really what I find inspiring when first encounter these things. The thing that gets me exited and inspired is the emotional content of the scene. Not the props, nor even the plot developments.
If I were writing spy thrillers or police procedurals, then plot and structure related notes might be useful. But what I am interested in creating for myself are wondrous and emotional journeys and into incomprehensible otherworlds. Of course some kind of internal consistency is required in these to be able to follow what is going on. But the notes I've been taking don't remind me of the things that would be useful and important for my writing.
Not quite sure how I would take notes for inspiring emotional situations. It probably can't be done with half sentences and might require more like a paragraph to capture the relevant information. But it really is something I've never been thinking about before. Just "taking notes" as regularly advised isn't enough. Your notes need to actually capture the inspiration of something, not just describe its surface appearance.
I think the problem might actually be that I am taking the wrong notes. When I make a note for something, I write a creature, an environment, or a magical phenomenon from a scene that I found amazing. And when I look at those notes later, they sound cool, but they don't inspire me. I've been taking structural notes about concepts that I find intellectually interesting, but that's not really what I find inspiring when first encounter these things. The thing that gets me exited and inspired is the emotional content of the scene. Not the props, nor even the plot developments.
If I were writing spy thrillers or police procedurals, then plot and structure related notes might be useful. But what I am interested in creating for myself are wondrous and emotional journeys and into incomprehensible otherworlds. Of course some kind of internal consistency is required in these to be able to follow what is going on. But the notes I've been taking don't remind me of the things that would be useful and important for my writing.
Not quite sure how I would take notes for inspiring emotional situations. It probably can't be done with half sentences and might require more like a paragraph to capture the relevant information. But it really is something I've never been thinking about before. Just "taking notes" as regularly advised isn't enough. Your notes need to actually capture the inspiration of something, not just describe its surface appearance.