Dealing with the First Editor


One of the biggest deterrents to creative writing is the presence of your internal editor. She—or he—loves to interfere with your thought process by pointing out mistakes, typos, missing commas, or errors in your thought process.

"But," you say, "surely this is important? I don't want to produce inferior work."

No, you don't. But the time for editing will come later, once you've finished writing the article or chapter. If you stop to listen to all the suggested corrections of your internal editor, your work will lack creativity and flow and may never get finished.

Sometimes it can be as simple as playing music or wearing headphones. Other times you need to be far more drastic. Acknowledge the presence of your inner editor, then deal with her/him.

Cecil Murphey, in his Writer to Writer blog, is polite when he deals with his inner editor. He admits that he talks aloud. “Be patient," he says. "Let me get on with this. When I finish, I’ll let you rip it apart.”

Karen Swim at Words for Hire banishes her inner critic by "physically kicking her out of the room and locking the door. I have found that acknowledging her presence and ordering her to leave is as effective as it would be on a “real” person. She is only allowed back in when I have written the first draft, and then and only then she gets to have her say."

For me, I admit it all depends on how persistent she is. Sometimes I can be firm. "Go away! I'm busy writing!" And no, I'm not polite like Cec. Other times I do what every parent knows you shouldn't do, and say, "Oh for goodness sake here!" and give in to her.

What about you? How do you deal with this nuisance who tries to correct you as you write? Please share with us by adding a comment below.


SHIRLEY CORDER lives in South Africa with her husband Rob, a hyperactive budgie called Sparky, and an ever expanding family of tropical fish. Hundreds of her inspirational and life-enrichment articles have been published internationally. She is contributing author to nine books to date and her book, Strength Renewed: Meditations for your Journey through Breast Cancer  is available now for pre-order at  Amazon.com or at Barnes & Noble (B&N.com). You can contact Shirley through her writing website, her Rise and Soar site for encouraging those on the cancer journey, or follow her on Twitter  

14 comments:

Donna McDine said...

Hi,

Terrific article. Yes, the internal critic can certainly wafted one's writing. I try my best to ignore and write my first drafts in long hand away from the computer, spell check, and Internet so I'm not tempted to edit with additional research or spell checking along the away.

All the best,
Donna

T. Forehand said...

Great post, I struggle with my inner critic every time I write. Thanks for sharing.

Shirley Corder said...

Thanks Donna and Terri. Donna, I'm impressed that you write longhand. If I did that I wouldn't be published, because I'd never be able to read it back! Well done!

widdershins said...

When I first started out as a writer I used to write everything longhand, but as my typing skills improved, I found I could type much faster than I wrote. Sign of the times I suspect.

I let my inner critic play with the spellchecked words on a first draft. That keeps her occupied while I get on with the rest of the story.

Shirley Corder said...

Okay.... that's different. And yes, I also type faster than I can write - with the added factor that I can read back what I've typed!

Magdalena Ball said...

Shirley, you're so right - that inner editor can be a best friend, later, but if she comes into play at the start or drafting part of a project, the result is often serious writers block. I like the polite approach though. Don't want to banish her altogether - just to put her on hold.

Heidiwriter said...

I tell my students I see that inner editor as an angel sitting on one shoulder and a little devil sitting on the other. The angel is saying "This is really good stuff! Way to go, girl!" The devil is saying, "Ha! What makes you think YOU can write--you can't even spell. That sentence isn't grammatical! Who is going to read such drivel?" So you need to kick the devil out and let the angel encourage you while you give yourself permission to write a crappy first draft! :)Good post, Shirley!

Mary Jo Guglielmo said...

Great Post. I love the idea of lock your inner critic out of the room until you are ready to edit. I believe the inner critic has no place in a first draft.

Shirley Corder said...

Hi Magdalena, Heidi and Mary Jo. Thanks for your comments. So we're all in agreement. One way or the other, the internal (should that be infernal?) editor has to be muzzled--until we need her. Then, yes, she has an important role to play. So we must be certain not to hurt her feelings as we tell her to "go play elsewhere". I love the idea of sending her to play with the spellcheck. Especially as I write in British English and usually have to convert to US before publication.

Karen Cioffi said...

My inner critic is a problem for me - I'm working on it though. I like the idea of actually kicking her out.

Karen Cioffi Writing and Marketing

Shirley Corder said...

I love the way Cec Murphey deals with her - guess it's a him in Cec's case. Politely but firmly. I guess then when she starts again you can say, "Are you back? I told you to go."

elysabeth said...

My problem is my internal editor is stuck in work mode and tends to do things by the work rules. Being a medical transcriptionist, we aren't supposed to type contractions except in direct quotes; we are supposed to transcribe verbatim on some accounts and on others we type what they say but we also make the doctors look good. This tends to show up in my writing unconsciously, so I rarely hear my internal editor. Thanks for posting this, Shirl. -- E :)

Elysabeth Eldering
Author of Finally Home, a middle grade/YA paranormal mystery
http://elysabethsstories.blogspot.com
http://eeldering.weebly.com

Anne Duguid Knol said...

Topical article as always, Shirley. My internal editor and I are for the moment (hope this is not tempting fate)working in tandem. She insists on editing spelling punctuation and typos and that gives me a breather before cracking on with the content.

Anne Duguid Knol said...

See she didn't do too well with the spacing and punctuation above though...

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