How authors can resume writing without losing time or momentum
When I started writing, it always took me several writing sessions to finish anything.
I fell into a bad habit. When I would resume writing (even after taking a short break) I would re-read everything I had written so far, editing along the way. Then I felt ready to write more.
The problem was this warm-up ritual could take thirty minutes to an hour. That didn’t leave much time to add more words.
Here are six ideas to keep us from wasting time when we resume writing:
1. Stop in the Middle
Though it seems tidy to finish a section and then stop writing, this makes it harder to pick up the flow later. Instead, stop in the middle of the action or thought, such as “Smoke billowed from the window.” or “I fell into a bad habit.”
In both cases, the next sentence will proceed with ease. Although it takes discipline, sometimes I even stop mid-sentence, as in “Jeffy’s eyes grew…” or “The second point is…” This leaves no doubt what words come next.
2. Get a Running Start
When not knowing the next words, back up a sentence or two (a paragraph at the most) and re-read it. This provides a running start to jump back into our writing.
Even if the words that come next aren’t good ones, at least we are writing and moving forward. This beats staring at the monitor with growing frustration as each second ticks by.
3. Talk it Through
Another tip when we’re stuck is to write “What I want to say is…” and then finish the sentence. This often gives immediate clarity and helps words flow.
4. Begin the Next Part
Though we psychologically want to stop at the end of a section or chapter, resist that impulse, no matter how satisfying. Start the next part, even if it’s just a sentence or two. Bonus points if you stop in midsentence.
5. End with a Transition
In fiction, we call this a cliffhanger, and in nonfiction, it is preselling the next point. In either case, ending with a transitional sentence prepares us to write the next one.
6. Plan What to Write Next
Before we end our writing session, we can outline the next section, jot down talking points, or even write a key sentence. In fiction, we can write one line of punchy dialogue or note a plot twist. In nonfiction, we can lay down a pithy soundbite or profound callout.
Sometimes I write the last line of the next section. Then when I resume working, I merely write towards that ending.
Conclusion
These six tips help me to pick up my writing where I left off without wasting time or losing momentum. I hope they help you to do the same.
Learn more about writing and publishing in Peter’s book: Successful Author FAQs: Discover the Art of Writing, the Business of Publishing, and the Joy of Wielding Words. Get your copy today.
Peter Lyle DeHaan is an author, blogger, and publisher with over 30 years of writing and publishing experience. Check out his book Successful Author FAQs for insider tips and insights.
2 replies on “6 Writing Tips to Quickly Pick-up Where You Left Off and Not Waste Time”
Good morning Peter,
Interesting points, most of which I follow, often unconsciously!
I can never Stop in the Middle. If I have to, I will end with a string of words that will later get me back into the flow. I always use the second tip, rereading the last paragraph but never the third tip.
If I have time but I am stuck in what I work on, then I go to the next part, or plan that part and put down a few key words. Beginning a new paragraph is easier when I connect it in some way to the last point of the previous paragraph,
When busy otherwise, keeping in mind the idea I was working on, or a new one that I want to begin, I write notes even with single words or strings of words upon which I can build later,
Have a great weekend!
Yes, Katina, stopping it the middle is hard to do. But it does make it easy to pick up again.