Permission to Write theTruth

Permission to Write Your Truth

What is the Truth of your story?

OK, you’ve outlined your story and you’re getting ready to write your first draft. But something doesn’t feel right. You tell yourself that you’re not ready, that you haven’t done enough research, that the story isn’t thoroughly outlined, or that you are somehow ill-equipped to complete this endeavor and that you are setting out to do something that is impossible.

You’re not wrong.

It is impossible to write a story from your pre-frontal cortex. Your conscious mind is not going to get you to the end of your story. It will tell you all sorts of things that are designed to protect you from pain.

You can listen to resistance all you want, but you don’t have to believe it. Resistance is out to stop you from telling your truth on the page, and there is only one way to battle it. You must be willing to shed your idea of the story for the truth of the story.

Have you ever had the experience of telling a story for years, some episode from your life, and then, one day, realizing that the story was not entirely accurate? The facts may be correct; however, the meaning you made out of them was built on a series of assumptions based on your perception of the world. As your perception shifted, you suddenly saw the entire story through a new lens.

Give yourself permission

As you work on your outline, do you see how your protagonist has begun the story with a false belief? Be curious about what this is and how it gets reframed at the end of the story. Give yourself permission to question this belief. Notice how invested you are in it. To some degree, you have built a life based on this belief, and, therefore, you need it to be true. To allow it to collapse would mean being in unfamiliar territory for a while.

But that is OK. It won’t kill you. If you have written a story before, you may be acquainted with the experience of walking out into the world upon completion with the sensation that everything is new and different. Being a storyteller is humbling work. It takes continued willingness to drop your assumptions of the world in order to find a greater freedom.

 

Learn more about marrying the wildness of your imagination to the rigor of structure in The 90-Day NovelThe 90-Day Memoir, or The 90-Day Screenplay workshops.

Alan Watt with L.A. hills behind

by Alan Watt

About the author

Alan Watt is the author of the international bestseller Diamond Dogs, winner of France’s Prix Printemps, and the founder of LA Writers’ Lab. A teacher for over two decades, Alan believes stories are not owned but discovered — and that every writer has a voice worth sharing. His workshops and 90-Day Novel method have guided thousands of writers to transform raw ideas into finished works, with humor, compassion, and a deep respect for the creative process.