writing advice

Guest Post: Why did I start to write?

There’s no better authority on a subject like autism than someone who has first-hand experience. Paddy-Joe Moran has loved writing and reading practically since he was born; he published his first book when he was twelve. His latest book, Communicating Better with People on the Autism Spectrum, helps others understand how to communicate verbally and nonverbally with those who have autism. Today, Paddy-Joe shares his story with us – and it’s really very inspirational.

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Why did I start to write?

To understand why I write you need to understand a bit about who I am.

When I was young, hardly more than a baby, all I wanted to do was read. Even before I could read or understand the words myself I would have my mum read to me all day. It got to the point that even as a one-year-old I knew the names of every animal and dinosaur in my books and just what page to turn to in order to find them. As I grew older, perhaps from four or five onwards, I was never out of the library. I would read the same books over and over as well as finding new ones to read and enjoy almost every day. It was around that time that I did my first bit of writing.

I think at that age it never occurred to me that writing might be hard. Words just came into your head and you wrote them down. What’s so hard about that? So I started writing…well, let’s call them poems. I can’t say looking back now that they were very good. But I was young and I was having fun writing them and reading them back over, so that’s what mattered. For a few years my writing carried on in this vein, moving on to short horror stories at around the age of ten.

But the tone and scale of what I wanted to write soon changed. At the age of nine I was Communicating Better with People on the Autism Spectrum coverdiagnosed with autism. For me this is by no means a bad thing; I don’t mind having autism at all. In fact I quite like it. But when I was younger there were a lot of issues with it for which I needed help. Instead of looking to outside help for everything my mum came up with a lot of ideas herself, including plans and techniques to help me cope better with my autism. After a few years of using them we had made progress that we never would have thought possible.

I don’t know quite when the idea of a book came to me, but I do recall the first time I talked about it. I was sitting on my mum’s bed and brought the idea up, thinking that if all these things had worked for us, why not write them down in a  book and put it out there to help other people? Only to find out my mum had the same idea! And so we began writing about autism. To cut a long story short we wrote the book and it was published when I was twelve. A second came out when I was sixteen and now I have written one by myself and had it published at the age of twenty-one.

It’s a bit odd for me as writing and being published has been a part of my life for the last ten years, so it’s hard for me to take a step back and see what a big deal it is getting a book published at this age. Like everything writing can be scary if you come to it later in life, but there is no right or wrong age to write your first book. Some people don’t even think about writing until after they have worked for a lifetime and retired. Some people like myself start writing as a child and don’t stop. My advice – and I think it’s more important than any advice on how to write – is to start writing. Don’t worry that you’re too young, too old, have not seen enough of the world or don’t have anything to say. If you want to write go for it – you never know what might happen if you do.

If you would like to check out my latest book you can do so here. http://www.jkp.com/uk/communicating-better-with-people-on-the-autism-spectrum-34251.html

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Author Bio

headshotPaddy-Joe Moran is a twenty year old autistic writer from the UK. He has published three books and numerous articles.

Do your words serve your story – or do they serve you?

by Anita Stratos, Proof Positive editor

Picture this: you’re craving apple pie – one of those “just gotta have it” days – so you go to your favorite café and order up a slice.

Your mouth waters when the server puts your pie in front of you, but when you look closer, you see cranberries, blueberries and pecans mixed with a few apples inside a coconut crust.

“What’s this?” you ask your server with disappointment. “I just wanted a simple apple apple piepie.”

“That’s our pastry chef’s version of apple pie,” she answers. “He likes to stretch his creative culinary muscle.”

Do you think you got what you ordered? Or did you get a more complex dessert, a berry-apple-nut pie with a unique crust? The chef promised apple pie on the menu, but he loaded it up with lots of other things and topped it off in a nontraditional way.

While that gourmet pie might be delicious and welcome on any other night, this time you wanted apple pie and trusted what was written on the menu. So even though the recipe might win a James Beard award, it’s most unwelcome and unappreciated by you at this moment.

Two things went wrong here, and the same things can go wrong with your writing, too.

First, don’t promise something in your title, cover image, or book blurb that you don’t deliver in your story. A book blurb that describes a fantasy novel but delivers a romance is bound to get bad reviews. Your writing may be superb, but you attracted the wrong audience.

The first takeaway: Don’t write “apple pie” on the menu when you’re crafting a multi-berry-apple-nut coconut-crusted pie.

Second, write your prose in a way that best serves your story, not in a complex way that doesn’t match the story or reflect something within the book or character(s). Unnecessarily complex writing gets very tiresome very quickly, slows readers down, and could sound pretentious.

The second takeaway: Serve apple pie to people who love apple pie, and save the gourmet blends for a different audience.

5 Simple New Year’s Resolutions Every Writer Needs to Keep

Not sure what goals to set for yourself as a writer in 2015? Proof Positive has some ideas for you that will help keep your writing career on track whether you’re a first-time author or a highly published author.

  1. Write every day. Stop rolling your eyes. We don’t mean you necessarily have to write some of your novel every day. You could write a poem about how difficult it was to get your kids to bed that night; a haiku about the horrible/perfect/head cold-inducing/makeup-ruining weather; a dialogue between you and your character about why he or she does or doesn’t like the direction the story is going and what you could do differently in his or her favor. In other words, ANYTHING to keep your creative juices flowing and your sense of writing accomplishment high. Remember, you don’t just write, you are a writer, and writers are always writing, no matter the subject or the format.
  1. Read wisely. Of course you should read whatever books interest you, but some strategy to forward your knowledge in your field of writing is a good idea. Whether you make sure to read more books in your genre, more lit theory books, or more bestsellers, you will improve your craft by understanding it through others’ eyes. That perspective is priceless. That perspective gains you wisdom you can’t gain just by writing.
  1. Make an investment to force yourself to publish. There was a blog post in 2014 by a writer who bought himself a laptop just to force himself to write to make sure he didn’t waste the money he’d spent. It worked, and he wrote every single day at lunchtime and found that he wrote far more often because of it. You may not want to spend quite that much money, but a smaller investment, like buying a really beautiful, inspiring notebook for yourself, can force you to prove the money wasn’t a waste; it was a means to secure your writing career. And that is worth every penny.
  1. Enable yourself. Whatever inspires you, whatever gives you the jumpstart you need, don’t deny yourself, and don’t feel silly about it. Your confidence in allowing yourself to draw, take karate, eat out by yourself, take on DIY projects that are achievable, etc. will improve your confidence when it comes to writing. Even small things like making sure you have your favorite kind of pen in every desk, coat, and notebook you use will boost your belief in yourself and your investment in your writing career. Nothing is too small and nothing is ever silly.
  1. Get your name out there. You can do this in so many ways, including keeping your blog updated at least once a week, even if it’s just with your struggles as a writer; interacting with other writers via social media; starting a YouTube channel on…anything; submitting works to various publishing houses and literary journals no matter how small or large; reviewing books on Goodreads; joining a writing group in person or online. Your author platform starts by putting yourself out there, and the Internet has made that the easiest thing in the world. You’d be surprised how easy it is to get involved in your author platform once you get started.

How many of these goals are on your New Year’s resolution list? Let us know in the comments below how you plan to make 2015 your best writing year yet.

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