I know Stephen King wrote while under the influence. And my dad listed a lot of other names. My husband piped in with a few. Dr. Suess was thrown in there, something like Acid - which is believable for me - and said he used to write graphic porn.
Anyways. When I have two glasses of wine and turn my computer on, I get up the next morning and find my plot has a hang-over. It has to throw everything up. I can't be creative like that. But my husband and my father both swear ALLL of the greats wrote with some sort of substance muse. I'm just curious, this won't of course, help my writing, because even if a nice strawberry margurita didn't leave me trying to get the cat to fess up and admit she understand English or calling my best friend from the army and saying how we need to get together (at 2 in the morning)... I can't drink because I'm the only one with a driver's licence out here in the woods four nights a week.
I'm just asking out of curiosity.
If I have a pop in the afternoon, I'm hyped up by writing time...usually 2200 and my thoughts go so fast I can't keep up.
Next thing I know I'm correcting silly mistakes.
Does that count?
Pal...pondering what would happen if she did consume alcohol and dreading the thought...
quote:
How many people on here have served their country, anyway? I think there is a trend.
But that's a different topic. Go start it.
As for this topic, I don't drink, and I don't think that any substance helps me write. I've heard that while some authors may have felt that drinking (or whatever) helped them, studies have found that the "help" doesn't last very long and ends up suppressing instead, or requiring more and more to do what a small amount did at first.
I love chocolate, but I don't think it makes me a better writer or thinker. And I suspect that sugar highs just make people silly.
It's not the same as an addiction to a controlled substance or alcohol, but hey - it's what I've got. I certainly enjoy leaded beverages, but I rarely write afterwards. Too much sleeping that needs to be done.
Coffee, on the other hand, is like water to me.
Wouldn't being under the influence hinder thought? No thanks--my thoughts are hindered enough as it is. I remember seeing a special where people had one too many. They all insisted THEY could drive and then they put those people in a driving simulator. I'm sure the same thing would apply here to writing.
I am sure there are folks who say they smoke and write and it's no problem. Well, perhaps you would be writing better if you didn't smoke.
Desperately tryin' to quit,
Adam
[This message has been edited by skadder (edited August 28, 2008).]
That's what caffeine-infested cola is for.
When I abstain from sodas, my writing is more coherent. When I go on my Coke Classic benders, the action tends to be a bit more wired and the imagery a bit more surreal. Combine the two influences together in the same scene, and even I have no clue what I'll end up with.
Also...lack of sleep tends to influence my writing in surreal ways. Those are usually the passages that undergo the most severe overhauls; when I read them back the next day, they don't even make sense to me.
S!
S!...C!
As for me, I've found that in the day I am more objective, and a better writer--in a technical sense. But at night, particularly late at night, I am more creative and that is where a lot of the art comes from. But it's consequently harder for me to distinguish between good art and bad art at night.
Example: A BAL of .08 = too drunk to drive
(Stay in school! -end public service announcement)
quote:
I am sure there are folks who say they smoke and write and it's no problem. Well, perhaps you would be writing better if you didn't smoke.
I gave up smoking a couple of months back. Since then, I can't get into writing anything. Coincidence or factor? I don't know. I can't sit at my desk for more than a few minutes at a time. When I'd have a long writing session, couple of hours or so, and I needed to stand up, I couldn't. I have a back problem which is exacerbated by the possition I sit in to write, and the pain is disgusting. When I smoked, I would have half every hour or so, and git ave me reason to get up. I never smoked in the house so went outside. This also gave me a couple of minutes to think about the story, and I often couldn't wait to get back to the PC after I thought of the next great scene.
Nowadays. Nada. Go figure.
As to the question. So long as I'm stocked up with food, any food, I could usually write for ages. Also gave me another reason to get up, when I ran out. The moral of that story being I suppose, don't take too much food to the desk with me at one time.
[This message has been edited by darklight (edited August 28, 2008).]
I've kept journals from back in the days of my youthful indiscretions that continued into later adulthood. I can tell which substance influenced which entry. Some are illegibile, incoherent, too crisp yet numb, rambling, purply and flowery, jagged and jittery, or plain. Jack Keroac's On the Road was written in three weeks of nonstop binging on benzedrine and bourbon and nicotine. He died of thrombosis caused by his addictions and inactivity. Philip K. Dick, the drug anecdotes surrounding his writing are legion. I don't think it's substance abuse that necessarily improved anyone's writing; rather, it's what puts them in their comfort zone for writing. Perhaps some geniuses need toning down to access the muse and reach the audience.
I in no way encourage any substance abuse for any purpose. My own life is littered with friends, associates, and family who have been horribly impacted by substance abuse. Deaths, murders, suicides, commitments, imprisonments, broken families, broken promises, wayward driftings. I thank Providence that the worst that ever happened to me was one DUI. Although I've a host of life experience from skirting the periphery of society.
[This message has been edited by extrinsic (edited August 28, 2008).]
Writing Under the Influence
or as they might say in the UK, a DW - Drink Writing
I can't say that anything I know for an absolute fact to have been written under the influence was any better than it would've been if it hadn't. I've seen good things inspired by under-the-influence perceptions and visions, but written in cold reality after the experience. (Or at least while coming down.)
My hubby had a case where the defendant was alleged to have a BAL of 1.0 when the defendant was stopped for DUI. No that was not a typo - it was a 1.
No, I don't drink and write. The few times I've tried I either: (1) start at the computer and don't type; or (2) type furiously only to delete it all later.
That was actually one of the big reasons why I weaned myself off in the end, and just worked on developing a bit more mental discipline. At this point, I find that caffeine has much the same effect (being the same class of drug and all) though it's a bit harsher and less reliable. As with the Ritalin, I'm not especially creative on caffeine, but I'm a fair bit more focused. (though not to the extent of when I was on the Ritalin) And, honestly I think most of my interesting stuff comes when my brain's free to wander and make a lot of free-associations. But I find that once I've got the ideas, I have a really hard time getting them down on paper unless I'm a bit more focused.
And actually, if I can get into a writing mood OFF of the caffeine, I write much better . . . sort of the hyper-attention side of the A.D.D. kicking in. I'll just start cranking and can't stop myself until I'm quite literally too weary to see the screen anymore. For me, the substance is more about focus and the discipline of actually writing, rather than inspiration or a muse. And incidentally, revising is SUPER easy for me, even when it involves throwing out huge swathes of story. Not sure why, but it's never been a problem, on or off the substances.
I kinda suspect that MOST writers who say a drink or two helps are simply feeling the effects of the lowered inhibition. That inner editor stops talking and they just start writing, which is almost always a good thing. I would guess that any substances writers rely on are mostly about getting into a comfort zone where your brain just runs without having to put a lot of energy into it. The moment you take that step further into the realm of needing a 'buzz' or a 'high', I think it's probably detrimental.
$.02 worth . . . take it or leave it.
-Falken (posing as Corin)
A great drunk writer is still a drunk. Whether he thinks more deeply when drunk than an mechanic who is a drunk, is unlikely. Bu they both look the same puking in the gutter.
I would have quoted King, but I loaned the book out.
I drink coffee in the morning before I work, but I wonder if that adversely affects my writing. I think it makes my mind skip around too much so my writing is disjointed and illogical. Same with sugary drinks.
Alas, nothing but an ascetic life will do.
And where the heck are you that a DUI just ends up with a night in the drunk tank? 'Round here - VA - you're looking at a conviction and time even for a first offense.
Any before anyone over 30 asks - Po-Po is police. I only know because one of my friend's kids told me. Sigh.
[This message has been edited by kings_falcon (edited August 28, 2008).]
quote:
Example: A BAL of .08 = too drunk to drive
not 8, not .8, I think if you had a 80% alcohol content, you'd better be a robot. And an 800% alcohol level... well, unless you're a hive queen and are able to do anything more than 100%, that seems somewhat impossible.
I did some work at a treatment center, hours and hours of schooling. Plus, we get all sorts of public service things through the kids school.
And hey --- I'm almost thirty! We used po-po back when I first got my driver's license. At least I don't speak text. (BOTOH, W/E WFU!)
[This message has been edited by Reagansgame (edited August 28, 2008).]
Writing goes into category "2" for me. A little scotch won't necessarily help me write better--but it won't hurt, either.
Plug some sugar in there, and it zips along faster, but makes many mistakes, and the story I am writing can get a little nutty and lost.
Add just one drink of alcohol, and the brain slows down, and doesn't work as much.
" I took Ritalin for a while for my A.D.D. and what *I* found was that when I was ON the Ritalin, all the ideas I came up with during my off-time came spewing out quite freely, but I had a REALLY hard time being creative at all in any way, shape or form when I was on it. "
This reminds me of a "Mother Goose and Grim" comic strip I keep in my planner. (I'm a mother and it helps me keep things in perspective.)
A mother in Elizabethan dress holds her quill-equipped tot on her lap, as she talks to the doctor, saying "I'm worried, doctor, all he does is WRITE!"
The doctor responds, "No problem, Mrs. Shakespeare. I'll just give him RITALIN and he'll be like every other normal, average kid."
*hee*
~LL
Alice W. Flaherty, a neurologist and teacher, addressed drug use and addiction several times in The Midnight Disease: The Drive to Write, Writer's Block, and the Creative Brain. On her chapter on Literary Creativity and Drive, she wrote, "Drugs give the feeling of creativity more easily than they yield products judged creative by others--at least by others not on drugs.... In fact, the equivocal ability of drugs to produce revelations for writers lends support to the theory that writers do not take drugs to help their writing, they take drugs because of their tendency to mood disorders, and mood disorders often trigger drug addiction."
My experience with alcohol: a couple shots of the liqueur my husband made for our wedding, a few sips of the drinks he thought I would somehow like, and two or three Olive Garden dessert drinks. On none of those occasions did I write afterwards. I do, however, rely on coffee from time to time to help focus my mind. Like Falken, I am easily distracted without help. (For example, I was trying to finish writing a scene when I decided I needed to draw a map of the location of the scene, though I then wanted to compare my possible map with maps of similar existing places, which took me online. Yet, instead of researching, I am posting on Hatrack. In addition, this single post took me half an hour, because my mind kept jumping to other topics. This is me not on drugs.)
I rarely drink and can't stand to be drunk, so I heavily defended the fact that you don't need some sort of substance key to turn to unlock your creativity.
But now, I realize that there are things I can't live without -- diet coke for one, phenalyanine and caffiene, oh, I'm so addicted. I drink about a 6 pack a day. I couldn't see myself giving those up, not without a big fat hissy and headache. And that would definately effect my writing.
If drugs contributed to this, I wouldn't be the least surprised.
(I don't know why I brought this up. It made me laugh, though. The Gunslinger is one of my all time favs.)
As for stimulants, I get by with a little help from my friends, particularly one Earl Grey...
I enjoy beer, not to mention whisky. I don't trust my judgment after imbibing an inebriant, so while I don't write under the influence I might do some research and write backstory.
Rock and jazz musicians are notorious for using various stimulants in search of renewed or heightened creativity. Their milage varies enormously, and sometimes it's tragically curtailed.
Cheers (hic)
Pat
RFW2nd
I have the same condition. I have scars from when it was at its worst.