ljwrites: A typewriter with multicolored butterflies on it. (dance_muzi)
L.J. Lee ([personal profile] ljwrites) wrote in [community profile] go_write2016-05-04 12:21 am

[PUBLIC POST] What's a non-writing skill useful for writing?

A lot of us spend time working on the practice and theory of fiction-writing. But are there skills that don't have to do directly with fiction writing that are nontheless helpful? I've heard of art being useful to writers, for instance, and a musician I know is guided by her musical skills and inspirations when writing. I know another writer who's also an actor, and have heard anecdotally of actors making good writers. Andrew Robinson, who played Garak in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, wrote the novel A Stitch in Time about his character's background that I found wonderfully moving and evocative, not to mention great world-building of Cardassia. I can see a direct connection there between the two skillsets since acting is about expressing characters, like much of writing is.

While I am not an actor, I found my experience playing and running roleplaying games highly useful for understanding characters and keeping track of storylines in my writing projects. Roleplaying has also given me a perspective of stories not as something that comes from me but from the characters' own motivations and interests. When it comes down to it I have to inhabit these characters and play them, an ethos that I apply to writing as well.

Are there non-writing skills or experiences that you find useful for writing? Have you observed others using different skillsets when writing?
inkdust: (Default)

[personal profile] inkdust 2016-05-09 02:33 am (UTC)(link)
"Characters acting on the situation," that's a good way of putting it. And probably one reason I'm finding the experience helpful - I think it's more difficult for me to plot for acting in addition to reacting. My game has become more character-focused as we've developed them, but that process has also been unusual for me in the extent to which my development of the character has been prompted by plot events, rather than the other way around. And unusual tends to lead to good things in writing.