Where do you get your
ideas from?
It’s that
question. The one that writers detest and interviewers love.
But why do we dislike answering that one so much? Or do we?
Perhaps, now, it’s a self-fulfilling prophecy; we’re told that we should hate
it, that’s it’s anathema to our creativity. And therefore, when we hear it, we do hate it, it does feel like giving away too much. Even if we have an interesting
response. Even if we’re quite sure that our readers would like to know the
answer.
I don’t mind it. If I’m honest, I quite like it. As a
question it’s much better than being asked why I started writing (umm… I just
did… I just gave it a go and quite liked it… er… something about school and an
English project…) or why I write horror (I enjoy reading it, I enjoy writing
it) because I never have proper answers for those ones. I always feel a bit of
a fraud, a bit like I’m grasping for something – anything – to say just to
sound interesting and intellectual.
At least with that
question I can answer with either a piece of pure fabrication, or complete
honesty. It simply depends on whether I can remember where the idea came from,
and if I can whether it was an interesting occasion. Although, admittedly, even
when telling the absolute truth my answer will vary from day to day, story to
story to novel to flash fiction to poetry… Because that’s the beauty of it.
Ideas come from everywhere and nowhere. They are incredible, intangible things
that appear in a dream or a cloud or are gleaned from an overheard word or a
misunderstood laugh. They are magical, existing in nothing, invisible and
incomplete until they are written down and given form and meaning.
Say anything. When asked that
question, say what you like. Because who is to say what is right and what is
wrong when answering, when telling the person who put the question what they
want to know?
Equally, who can describe an idea? Not me. They aren’t
there, are they? They aren’t real. Except that they are, utterly and
incontrovertibly real. Without them we’d be nothing. And not just writers, but
scientists, artists, doctors, teachers, lawyers, children, adults, anyone and
everyone. Think about it… There, you’ve just had an idea. Just like that.
Now what are you going to do with it?
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