The Icicle Theory of Creativity
Although it is March and the sap is rising, it is still winter here in the Northeast. A few days ago we woke to a temperature of minus 6 degrees, while at least ten inches of snow blanketed our yard—and our roof.
As I sit here going through email and scanning for freelance writing jobs, my eyes stray to the icicles hanging from our roof.
We live in an old Greek Revival farmhouse built sometime in the 1840’s and although
my husband has re-insulated most of the walls and roofs of our home, this roof is not steep enough, so snow builds up. Heat escaping through the roof from the bedroom melts the snow from underneath. The snowmelt runs down to the eave to drip, drip, drip and then freezes, creating icicles of varying length and thickness, from the delicately beautiful to the monolithic.
Watching this process teaches me an effective way to create—the drip, drip, drip approach to creating—slowly and steadily. I call it the icicle theory of creativity.
This theory chips away at the daily worry about creating enough, the guilt when we don’t, the procrastination that can then ensue, and the depletion of energy from dealing with the guilt and worry and procrastination. And, this theory also melts that chilling excuse of not enough time.
Here’s how it works. Instead of committing to writing, for instance, for two hours or one hour or even a half of an hour, arriving at the end of the time having done nothing more than watch the cursor blink at us while the clock ticks, what if we made a commitment to write one page a day? Too much? What if we wrote one paragraph a day?
Just like the drops of melting snow sliding inexorably down the icicle to freeze at its tip until finally the icicle is so heavy, so large, so…complete that it breaks free and falls to earth, one word, one sentence sliding past another and freezing there can create a poem, a short story, an essay, or a novel. One brush stroke sliding over another can create a painting. One note sliding past another can create a sonata.
In fact, Jack M. Bickham in his book, Writing Novels That Sell, advises writers to commit to writing not for a length of time every day, but for an amount of writing. “But if you promise to yourself that you’re going to do five pages a day (or ten!), and stick with that decision, then you won’t just sit there very long. You’ll get productive in self-defense.”
But if five pages are too much, then try the icicle theory. A page a day will net you 365 pages in a year—or even 200 pages if you take the weekends off along with a few holidays. 200 pages is a short novel or half of a longer one.
The point is not to let the idea of the end result—that huge monolithic icicle of a novel—keep you from starting or from writing a paragraph or page a day.
Try it. Drip by drip. Inexorably writing, painting, or composing. The icicle theory of creativity!
July 14th, 2008 at 7:40 am
Thats so good. I always struggle to sit down and write, but I guess writing half a page everyday might kick me off, and that might increase to 10 pages a day. Who knows? Thanks.
July 15th, 2008 at 9:42 am
Even two sentences a day can add up, Will. Two sentences, then five, then ten, then a whole page until the day when the momentum of our story catches us up and rushes us forward…
To leave us breathless and needing to slow down once again. Writing is like the seasons- it goes in cycles.