Rewiring

We shook things up at Casa Wortham this week. We’ve lived here for about seven years in what we call the new house, and felt the kitchen needed a change not long after the Bride’s oven sparked, gagged, and filled the house with the heady aroma of burned chemicals.

But this isn’t about major appliances. Remember when you first moved into your place and beheld empty drawers in the kitchen?

One question always comes up. Where does the silverware go? (In Texas, daily eating utensils are silverware, even though the real silver ((plate)) is in a wooden case stuffed back in a cabinet or under a bed and only comes out on Thanksgiving or when someone dies).

Then there are wooden spoons, cup towels, oversize forks and spoons, tongs, measuring cups and spoons, vegetable peelers, graters, garlic presses, thermometers, kitchen scales, bottle openers, corn cob holders.

They need a home in the shallow drawers.

What’s the proper dispersal method?

And while we’re at it, there’s the (ominous music) junk drawer. Where will that one be, because we know for certain that a drawer will devolve into one of these chaotic black holes that scientists with pocket protectors in their shirts discuss in hushed tones.

I’m sure you have one of these sacred disorganized repositories of migratory odds and ends nestled in a bed of bread ties, old rubber bands, thick blue rubber bands off celery stalks, nuts, bolts, mysterious batters that might or might not be dead (but you can’t throw them out until you know), and mysterious keys you’ve never seen before in your life. Wait. How the hell did my razor get in there? Was someone shaving carrots?

On moving day in the new house, we unloaded boxes marked KITCHEN into random drawers that were probably open and waiting, and have lived with those spur of the moment decisions since.

But there have been problems. The silverware drawer is between the oven and stove. That’s our serving area when we don’t have sit-down meals, which is 95% of the time. And there are usually a lot of people in line.

If someone is filling a plate, they’re in the way of spoons, forks, and knives, which we usually forget. Then we go back and excuse ourselves to open the drawer, or cut in line, which can be deadly with sons-in-law and hungry teens.

On Wednesday of this week, the Bride came home with a couple of classy bamboo dividers to help separate some of the more aggressive utensils. I was between writing projects, and the next thing I knew, we’d emptied all the drawers onto the countertops and forced significant changes in implement and gadget placement.

Now it all makes sense, to a small degree, but here’s the problem. We keep returning to the wrong places for wooden spoons, measuring cups, and the scissors which reside in the junk drawer. We’re on a learning curve, and I sent our daughters and sons-in-law a thirty-second video preparing them the new organization.

They were aghast.

The Redhead, mother of two, sent an eye-rolling emoji, and Taz, the youngest and mother of three kids, was verbally displeased. But then again, she even hates it when the Bride replaces accent pillows with new, fresh additions.

But I explained. “Change is good. Remembering where everything is in their new locations is exercise for the brain.”

With that, I needed proof to counter verbal attacks when the all come over Sunday night for out weekly get together.

An exhausting thirty second search on medical databases provided this agreement. “Positive change and new experiences are excellent for the brain, promoting neuroplasticity (the brain’s ability to form new connections), boosting cognitive function, improving mood (via dopamine, that’s why it’s called dope, according to my dad) and building mental resilience, even though the brain’s amygdala might initially perceive change as a threat. Varying routines, learning new skills, exploring new places, and engaging in diverse activities build cognitive reserve, helping you adapt and maintain long-term brain health.” 

Now I have to make this relevant to my writing blog post.

With that in mind, I looked up “neuroplasticity and amygdala” before diving into another search to find that it’s beneficial for authors to change genres, or write short stories, or nonfiction articles or books. In other words, shake it up.

While reading those confusing medical evaluations and articles for another fifteen minutes, I learned that changing genres or writing styles introduces new narrative tools, breaks writer’s block (which I don’t believe in), fosters artistic growth, and offers fresh perspectives, though it requires extra time.

Switching genres challenges an individual to think differently, find new solutions, and prevents creative stagnation, leading to broader skills and more diverse ideas that can even enrich their primary genre. 

But wait! Getting out of your writing lane is commonly considered a bad idea in literary circles. One article I read explored and supported Stephen Kings change from his traditional horror novels to write an alternate history with 11/22/63, or Cormac McCarthy’s shift to his post-apocalyptic The Road. I’ve been told only bestselling authors should take those chances.

Some say we should stick to our writing lanes and do what our fans come to expect.

Fine, wait a while after you write something different before submitting it, but there’s nothing wrong with taking a break from your WIP and writing a science fiction or post-apocalyptic short story if only for personal satisfaction.

This mental exercise is a great way to get out of a rut.

When you do that, find a different place to write for a day or two. Such a change just might inspire something different. Many authors write in one location, and edit in another.

You don’t have to sell those new works today, or tomorrow. You can put them in a figurative junk drawer (see the unplanned connection here? I love the subconscious author.) and dust it off sometime in the future when you need it.

I did that way back in 2012, when my first novel was published and my editors wanted the next book. I’d written a three-thousand-word short story in 1986 that sat in my file all that time, but when I needed an idea, I re-read that old experiment and found the foundation of the second novel in my Red River series, Burrows, which was truly a horror story.

Or maybe you’ve read a non-fiction article in a magazine and thought, “I know that much.” Give it a try.

For several years I wrote “hook and bullet” stories for several outdoor magazines. More than one took awards from the Outdoor Writers of America and the Texas Outdoor Writers Association. I’m proud of those stories and the framed acknowledgments from my peers.

One was an informative history of the longbow, and with liberal applications of scotch, the article was quirky and funny.

I’d exercised my creativity and different writing skills, because I like to try different things.

Like moving the silverware drawer.

In Science Explores News, an article about Dr. Nathan Spreng, a neuroscientist at Cornell University, explored how the brain changes as we learn. Much of the article concentrates on new physical tasks, such as hitting a baseball, but a deeper idea comes from pianists who can play complicated musical scores without thinking about where their fingers go. Their minds can wander, and that opens up even more neural pathways.

So if we get out of our writing lane and try something different, can authors open new creative paths to follow?

Some doctors think it does.

Try a short story, or an article, or start a new chapter in a different kind of novel just to see if that old excitement is there, or if a different way of thinking helps your writing. No one has to see it but you.

 

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About Reavis Wortham

NYT Bestselling Author and two-time Spur Award winner Reavis Z. Wortham pens the Texas Red River historical mystery series, and the high-octane Sonny Hawke contemporary western thrillers. His new Tucker Snow series begins in 2022. The Red River books are set in rural Northeast Texas in the 1960s. Kirkus Reviews listed his first novel in a Starred Review, The Rock Hole, as one of the “Top 12 Mysteries of 2011.” His Sonny Hawke series from Kensington Publishing features Texas Ranger Sonny Hawke and debuted in 2018 with Hawke’s Prey. Hawke’s War, the second in this series won the Spur Award from the Western Writers Association of America as the Best Mass Market Paperback of 2019. He also garnered a second Spur for Hawke’s Target in 2020. A frequent speaker at literary events across the country. Reavis also teaches seminars on mystery and thriller writing techniques at a wide variety of venues, from local libraries to writing conventions, to the Pat Conroy Literary Center in Beaufort, SC. He frequently speaks to smaller groups, encouraging future authors, and offers dozens of tips for them to avoid the writing pitfalls and hazards he has survived. His most popular talk is entitled, My Road to Publication, and Other Great Disasters. He has been a newspaper columnist and magazine writer since 1988, penning over 2,000 columns and articles, and has been the Humor Editor for Texas Fish and Game Magazine for the past 25 years. He and his wife, Shana, live in Northeast Texas. All his works are available at your favorite online bookstore or outlet, in all formats. Check out his website at www.reaviszwortham.com. “Burrows, Wortham’s outstanding sequel to The Rock Hole combines the gonzo sensibility of Joe R. Lansdale and the elegiac mood of To Kill a Mockingbird to strike just the right balance between childhood innocence and adult horror.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review) “The cinematic characters have substance and a pulse. They walk off the page and talk Texas.” —The Dallas Morning News On his most recent Red River novel, Laying Bones: “Captivating. Wortham adroitly balances richly nuanced human drama with two-fisted action, and displays a knack for the striking phrase (‘R.B. was the best drunk driver in the county, and I don’t believe he run off in here on his own’). This entry is sure to win the author new fans.” —Publishers Weekly “Well-drawn characters and clever blending of light and dark kept this reader thinking of Ray Bradbury’s Something Wicked This Way Comes, and Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird.” —Mystery Scene Magazine

9 thoughts on “Rewiring

  1. Rev, I switch around among short stories and novels, fiction and nonfiction. If i’m stuck on one project, I switch to another. As a freelancer I wrote about a guy who ocean-kayaked from Russia to Japan, the opioid crisis, how to make money with garage sales, rat rods, historic brothels, and more different subjects than I can count. I learned something new from each assignment.

    Has that helped my brain? I dunno cuz I can’t remember where I left my glasses. But I’m never bored and always learning.

    • Change is really good, in my opinion. Writing in different genres makes us use neural pathways to create a mystery, or thriller. Mysteries require a little more planning for most, though as I’ve said, I don’t outline. However, moving to western horror for three volumes allowed me to think differently.

      Truth is, I don’t know if there’s any way for me to determine how this brain of mine has improved, or devolved.

  2. When we moved into a new house and were faced with the walls of cardboard boxes to unpack, my mom said, “Don’t put things away until you know where they should go, because you’ll never move them.”
    I’m using my Substack platform to play around with new things. It’s fun and refreshing.

    • I have to admit, it was kinda fun. I always enjoyed moving to a new place, hooking up the stereo, turntalble, and two speakers, and unpacking. As the decades passed, that also meant adding the 8-track, then a cd player, and now, bluetooth. When we re-arranged the kitchen, I dug out old vinyl and we felt like kids again, starting over.

      It was a great experience.

  3. I do see the value of switching it up from regular length fiction to writing short story and that’s definitely something I want to do — short stories are a whole other creature–and to me much harder to write. I have an anthology in mind that I’d like to do but haven’t yet started on the shorts to go in it.

    Switching genres? Much more resistant. I love historical fiction. The only way I could see myself switching genres is if I ever came up with a story idea re: Star Trek TOS featuring Kirk, Spock, McCoy & the gang that would rival the great mass market paperback stories pubbed for Star Trek in the ’70’s and ’80’s.

    Though technically I *can* say I’ve tried switching genres. I pulled myself out of the beloved mid-late 1800’s and all the way up into the early 1900’s to write historical mystery, so that counts. LOL!

    And every once in a great while I’ll take a notion to write some poetry.

    Reavis — I think your post brought up a great way to challenge people (and surprise them!) when teaching classes at a writer’s conference. Have them pick their least favorite genre and depending on time they have, write a few paragraphs or page in that genre & just see what happens. You never know. It could spark a whole new set of ideas. Might try that myself in the next few weeks.

  4. Switching genres and going from fantasy to mystery definitely worked my brain, Rev. I thought writing urban fantasy was challenging with all the world building, but mystery was several levels more of challenging. The hardest thing I’d ever written.

    Now that I’ve returned to fantasy for the current project, I feel that I’ve broadened my fiction writing toolset and also broadened my thinking.

    Short stories are also an excellent challenge–I’ve written many and they definitely work my writer brain differently than novels do. I tend to think long, so going short puts a lot of constraints on what you can do, but also leads to opportunities to be creative and look at narrative differently.

    • It goes again the zeitgeist of staying in our lanes, though. Most authors want to be know for their particular characters and locations. And nine books into my Red River series, I understand that. But I wanted to be more creative, and explore other genres. I had to be pigeonholed, and in my opinion, folks should accept those changes and embrace the art itself, and enjoy how the author has expanded everyone’s horizons.

  5. My siblings and I used to be able to walk into each other’s new kitchen and find things without asking. We all followed the sacred Mom Plan from the home place. With five kids to feed, she had the whole organization plan down pat. My sister’s kids were really confused about why a top drawer was called the Middle Drawer, keeper of junk that didn’t belong elsewhere. We’ve all changed it a bit over the years. Even I, the keeper of the home place, have changed the sacred Mom Plan a little.

    My publishing career trajectory involved shifts in genre and subgenres through the series of events, and I do not recommend it. Sure, it’s fun to play in genres you like to read, but every change means all those loyal readers you have may not be so loyal, and you have to keep having to rebuild your fan base.

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