RPG Blog Carnival February 2015 – How and Where I Write
This month the Blog Carnival is being hosted by Leicester’s Ramble.
I’ve always loved to write and have done so every since I could pick up a pen and scribble down my thoughts; . growing up I ensured I kept a pen and paper in my possession in case an idea or inspiration strikes me and I can quickly capture these thoughts before they escape.
One thing I have always needed is a creative streak to get going and I find I’m at my most creative when I’m sick; something that has caused me to write about new campaign settings including the discussion on prisons as settings.
As I’ve got older and the technology has matured I’ve moved on from giving myself writers cramp and I remember getting the first typewriter to help me get things down on paper. From a typewriter I moved onto primitive word processing software on the computers I owned or had access to.
For a brief period I carried around a portable cassette recorder as I was convinced that this would help me become more productive; alas it didn’t but I did learn a valuable lesson about using tape, only record somewhere quiet and free from distractions, lest you get people trying to shout near you and ruin your recording.
These days I use my phone to jot notes down or compose blog posts while on the move and this method finally works for me since I now have something readily to hand to enable me to note stuff down.
At home I use a word processor to do my writing and my writing space is cluttered but mostly distraction free; I have a number of game books on my shelves I can reference if I need to and have pdf copies of other books for inspiration.
When it comes to writing I tend to note down a lot; during games as a player I always keep a journal and can be found updating it when the time comes. As a GM I still create but all the extra stuff I don’t need tends to get filed away until opportunity comes knocking at my door and I have something really special I can pull out and polish before using it. I tend to discover the gems while looking through notebooks and folders in a drawer but most of the time I seem to discover the same old stuff I had written and forgotten about.
A case in point was the Colony campaign idea which was a group of text files and I hated to let something that good go to waste.
I started this blog as a way of dealing with the death of a player, someone who was very dear to me and I wish we had had the chance to play more; he would have become one heck of a player if he had been given the chance to do so. Plus the act of writing has helped me deal with his loss, even though he won’t read what I write, I do this blog for my benefit and not his.
Time for me to go back to the word processor and think about the next blog article I want to tackle 🙂