Sunday, April 21, 2013

My Writing Metaphor


I am a creative writer. I am not a painter, although the process is quite similar. Every painting starts out with an idea or inspiration: A beautiful landscape, an intriguing exchange on the street, a glamorous lady, or just a simple thought that burrows into your head. Writing in this way is very similar: it starts with an inspiration, an exchange, a thought of “how would something like this go?” that sticks with you until you get it out on paper. My ideas usually spawn from other inspirations; people, images, costumes, or just the want to combine several interests. I think and think and think on it until it begins to come together and demands to be laid out in front of me. 
This is the next step, the outline, or in the painter’s case, the sketch. The beginning of a creation. The painter lays out the scene, begins to create the outline of her vision just as the writer lays out the points of her story, the ups and downs and paths her story will take. After the outline is done comes the base. This is usually the most intensive process when you really get everything out. The painter puts the paint to canvas, shaping everything out, creating the mix of colors and lines that are most pleasing to the eye. The writer sits down and fleshes out the story with characters, dialog, and plot. 
After the base is finished, for the painter comes the details: perfecting the shading, working with the background, making sure her vision is complete and dynamic. To a writer, this is the editing process. The writer scours over their work, reading, re-reading, and re-reading again, making sure that there’s no plot holes, mistakes, and making sure that the product is exactly as imagined. This is when they each take a step back and admire their work. Sometimes the process takes hours, sometimes days, and sometimes longer. They admire the time they’ve spent on it and the passion they’ve put into it. When I finish a piece of writing that I love, I really do feel like I’ve created something as beautiful as a painting. It’s just beautiful in a different way.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Games are good for the brain... right?

Games have always been held as an important part of children on the path to learning, increasing their brain function and skills. Within the past decade or so, though, Video Games have been targeted as harmful to children, creating violence and hostility within them. I believe that video games can do more good than the harm that people spew out. Most researchers proclaim that the content of video games is increasingly harmful to children, while other disagree and claim that video games are actually beneficial to children, increasing their critical thinking skills among other things. I believe that as long as a child is playing the correct video games (i.e. a 9 year old playing E rated games as opposed to M rated games) they can be incredibly beneficial to children.

The research I'd like to read about is more about the benefits of video games because I've read enough about the detrimental effects of video games on children thanks to the media.