I’ve often been asked if “writing fast” is genuinely effective, or if it’s just a gimmick. As I explain in Writing FAST: How to Write Anything with Lightning Speed, writing faster is the better way to write, because you’re tapping into the source of your ideas itself.
The human brain moves at lightning speed. It’s extremely quick. You’ve got one thought, but halfway through it — BANG! — there’s another thought. You’re off on a tangent very quickly. And another tangent is just around the corner.
Because your mind moves so fast, the writing process gets quickly and easily stifled.
That’s because your hands don’t move as fast as your brain. So by the time you get something onto paper (or the computer screen), your mind has already moved onto the next thought, or a stray thought, or a whole new level of the thought.
What you need to do to truly write quickly, is 1) capture your idea and organize it into a writing plan (and this only takes a matter of minutes using the FAST System), and 2) when you blast the words onto the page, get your hands moving at the same speed as your brain.
Those are the first two parts of what Writing FAST is all about. Tapping into your thought stream can be done using a technique I’ve developed called Talktation. It’s much like dictation (speaking into a microphone), except that instead of speaking your thoughts, you’re letting them pour through your fingers at the same speed as your thought stream. You’re letting your fingers “speak” the thoughts in your head. It’s a fantastic technique, and combined with your organizational plan, one that will get that novel or screenplay (or whatever you need to write) done faster than you’d imagine.
If you can successfully get your hands moving as quickly as your brain, your writing will directly reflect the purity of your thought.
It’s pretty simple, really. It just takes a little practice.
Keep on writing, and you’ll get there in no time.