Ah, the dreaded cliché! The worst feedback a writer can get is, "Well, it sounds sort of cliché, doesn't it?"
All authors want to be original. If someone even mentions that a writer's work reminds them of someone else's, the writer tenses up. "No, no, no, I'm nothing like him," he says swiftly. "I've never even read him."
"Yeah, but it's kinda like him," the reader persists, believing she is giving a compliment rather than an insult. "He's incredible, tu should read him!"
The thing is-- it should be a compliment when a reader compares your work to a published writer. We all have our influences. It is important to know that there is no new idea. If you've considered something, odds are there was someone before tu who considered that very same idea. It doesn't make tu unoriginal o a copy-cat. It just makes tu human.
tu as an individual are very unique. Our experiences, family, friends, and personality combine to make a fingerprint that no other can replicate exactly. And even if tu came up with the idea of a scientist and his alter-ego without ever even hearing of Robert Louis Stevenson, tu can still write that story and add your own personal perspective on it. T.S. Eliot once dicho that "Mediocre Writers Borrow; Great Writers Steal."
And who do we consider to be great writers? Shakespeare. Steinbeck. Dante. Poe. Do tu really believe their ideas were completely their own? Shakespeare, for example, wrote numerous plays with creative plots that he borrowed either from history o from stories much older than he was. Romeo and Juliet was a retelling of the old Roman Romance, Pyramus and Thisbe, with smatterings of history. He does not try to hide the roots of his plays. In fact, he often celebrates them. In A Midsummer Night's Dream for example, the Mechanicals parody this tale por putting on a poor performance of it. If tu think that it ends with that, Twelfth Night is based on an old Italian story, Gl’ Ingannati. Othello's tale comes from Cinthio's Desdemona.
If Shakespeare's escritura was not original, why is he celebrated? For the way he tells these classic tales and makes them his own. His language, his characters, and the way he strings together history and fiction into beautiful pieces of theater. To say nothing of Steinbeck and Dante who used the Bible más often than once, o Poe who used classic poetic patterns to make his prose más interesting. Every good writer steals from one another.
This includes what we call the "cliché." All a cliché is, in the end, is an old idea. Now tu have two choices when it comes to clichés: embrace them o reject them. Do not dilly-dally between the two. Because if tu write something and believe it's a cliché, and tu didn't want it to be a cliché but tu leave it as it is, it will come off as poorly executed. No one will be interested in it. They'll say, "It's been done before, and I don't care." This isn't to say that clichés don't have their uses! In fact, embracing a cliché and remodeling it can make a very interesting work. These can come off as a critical text, a parody, o even a complete reevaluation of the original cliché.
Let us take for example the classic tale of The Stinky Cheese Man, which completely deconstructs the old fairy tale, The Gingerbread Man. Fairy tales are often remodeled because they are the oldest and most familiar cliché of them all. Gregory Maguire has created a career out of transforming old, two-dimensional fairy tales into political commentaries. The appeal of clichés is that they are so familiar to us, when we find them in unfamiliar territory, it startles us. Another example of remolding the cliché in televisión and film is the work of Joss Whedon's Buffy, the Vampire Slayer. Not only does he change the meaning of the word "vampire," but he changes our idea of a "slayer," not only por making her female, but making her a blonde cheerleader.
Certain schools of literature and theater have made a whole genre out of parodying clichés. Existentialism challenges things that the world takes for granted (Camus, Calvino) and Beckett and Ives drafted Theater of the Absurd out of cliché concepts.
So the cliché is not something that we necessarily need to avoid at all costs. Every cliché can be retold and remodeled into something new. If tu find that tu have (accidentally) written a cliché, don't just abandon it! Embrace it! Take for example, the following short, short story.
Once upon a time there was a princess. She had beautiful long blond hair and loved skipping out in the woods on the weekends looking for adorable woodland creatures to call her pets. Then one día she stumbled upon a frog. She found it to be so cute that she kissed it and it turned into a prince!
Rather than ending this tale with a "Happily Ever After," try to think of a few más interesting endings other than that.
Examples: The princess dragged the prince to the castillo to be married immediately. The prince, still dazed and confused por the fact that he was suddenly human, went back to his usual ways of lounging about and eating flies until the princess began to nag him incessantly. Furious, he decides he loathes the whiny beast and marches back inicial to his swamp, where he lives still, sitting on a rock and eating flies, doing as he pleases.
The princess screamed and began beating this stranger with her bolso, monedero before pulling out her mace and threatening to call the police and running back to her castle.
It is not difficult to put a new spin on an old idea. Those examples were just off the parte superior, arriba of my head, but if tu put más thought in it, just imagine the ways tu can twist an old cliché for your own devices!
Just a recap: It is not a bad thing if something tu write reminds someone of something else. "Mediocre Writers Borrow; Great Writers Steal." And embrace o reject a cliché. If tu waver in the middle of each, then it will come off poorly. It is a perfectly fine thing to embrace a cliché, and plenty of good works of literature have come out of such a practice.
All authors want to be original. If someone even mentions that a writer's work reminds them of someone else's, the writer tenses up. "No, no, no, I'm nothing like him," he says swiftly. "I've never even read him."
"Yeah, but it's kinda like him," the reader persists, believing she is giving a compliment rather than an insult. "He's incredible, tu should read him!"
The thing is-- it should be a compliment when a reader compares your work to a published writer. We all have our influences. It is important to know that there is no new idea. If you've considered something, odds are there was someone before tu who considered that very same idea. It doesn't make tu unoriginal o a copy-cat. It just makes tu human.
tu as an individual are very unique. Our experiences, family, friends, and personality combine to make a fingerprint that no other can replicate exactly. And even if tu came up with the idea of a scientist and his alter-ego without ever even hearing of Robert Louis Stevenson, tu can still write that story and add your own personal perspective on it. T.S. Eliot once dicho that "Mediocre Writers Borrow; Great Writers Steal."
And who do we consider to be great writers? Shakespeare. Steinbeck. Dante. Poe. Do tu really believe their ideas were completely their own? Shakespeare, for example, wrote numerous plays with creative plots that he borrowed either from history o from stories much older than he was. Romeo and Juliet was a retelling of the old Roman Romance, Pyramus and Thisbe, with smatterings of history. He does not try to hide the roots of his plays. In fact, he often celebrates them. In A Midsummer Night's Dream for example, the Mechanicals parody this tale por putting on a poor performance of it. If tu think that it ends with that, Twelfth Night is based on an old Italian story, Gl’ Ingannati. Othello's tale comes from Cinthio's Desdemona.
If Shakespeare's escritura was not original, why is he celebrated? For the way he tells these classic tales and makes them his own. His language, his characters, and the way he strings together history and fiction into beautiful pieces of theater. To say nothing of Steinbeck and Dante who used the Bible más often than once, o Poe who used classic poetic patterns to make his prose más interesting. Every good writer steals from one another.
This includes what we call the "cliché." All a cliché is, in the end, is an old idea. Now tu have two choices when it comes to clichés: embrace them o reject them. Do not dilly-dally between the two. Because if tu write something and believe it's a cliché, and tu didn't want it to be a cliché but tu leave it as it is, it will come off as poorly executed. No one will be interested in it. They'll say, "It's been done before, and I don't care." This isn't to say that clichés don't have their uses! In fact, embracing a cliché and remodeling it can make a very interesting work. These can come off as a critical text, a parody, o even a complete reevaluation of the original cliché.
Let us take for example the classic tale of The Stinky Cheese Man, which completely deconstructs the old fairy tale, The Gingerbread Man. Fairy tales are often remodeled because they are the oldest and most familiar cliché of them all. Gregory Maguire has created a career out of transforming old, two-dimensional fairy tales into political commentaries. The appeal of clichés is that they are so familiar to us, when we find them in unfamiliar territory, it startles us. Another example of remolding the cliché in televisión and film is the work of Joss Whedon's Buffy, the Vampire Slayer. Not only does he change the meaning of the word "vampire," but he changes our idea of a "slayer," not only por making her female, but making her a blonde cheerleader.
Certain schools of literature and theater have made a whole genre out of parodying clichés. Existentialism challenges things that the world takes for granted (Camus, Calvino) and Beckett and Ives drafted Theater of the Absurd out of cliché concepts.
So the cliché is not something that we necessarily need to avoid at all costs. Every cliché can be retold and remodeled into something new. If tu find that tu have (accidentally) written a cliché, don't just abandon it! Embrace it! Take for example, the following short, short story.
Once upon a time there was a princess. She had beautiful long blond hair and loved skipping out in the woods on the weekends looking for adorable woodland creatures to call her pets. Then one día she stumbled upon a frog. She found it to be so cute that she kissed it and it turned into a prince!
Rather than ending this tale with a "Happily Ever After," try to think of a few más interesting endings other than that.
Examples: The princess dragged the prince to the castillo to be married immediately. The prince, still dazed and confused por the fact that he was suddenly human, went back to his usual ways of lounging about and eating flies until the princess began to nag him incessantly. Furious, he decides he loathes the whiny beast and marches back inicial to his swamp, where he lives still, sitting on a rock and eating flies, doing as he pleases.
The princess screamed and began beating this stranger with her bolso, monedero before pulling out her mace and threatening to call the police and running back to her castle.
It is not difficult to put a new spin on an old idea. Those examples were just off the parte superior, arriba of my head, but if tu put más thought in it, just imagine the ways tu can twist an old cliché for your own devices!
Just a recap: It is not a bad thing if something tu write reminds someone of something else. "Mediocre Writers Borrow; Great Writers Steal." And embrace o reject a cliché. If tu waver in the middle of each, then it will come off poorly. It is a perfectly fine thing to embrace a cliché, and plenty of good works of literature have come out of such a practice.
she unloads his gun
She and he waits for this
he releases his love
In blue and green orbs
she gives him más and more
A million miles away
A million years girl
In a black woven chest
he digs his nails deep
She trusts in him for what he does
live in a house in the suburbs
He kisses the pain with blood and light
sleeping it off in the morning
A million miles away
A million years girl
In her world of his
she unloads his gun
In a world of his
she covers the sun
A million miles away
A million years
A million years girl
Well tu see
I'm not myself anymore
Well tu can see
What I've done
Blinded myself
lost my direction
In this times
That are getting cold
In this moment
To behold
And shine
Here's a poem
For all the loved ones
Here's a grave
For all the dead
Here's the oxygen
For all the living
Here's a tissue
For tears that are shed
I'm lost now
I'm here now
I'm lost here
por Myself
I'm gone now
I'm lost again
I'm lost
por myself
Well take your houses
Take your money
Take the things tu don't need
Live the life
You've always wanted
And then burn the memories
Take the good times and the bad
Take the happy maybe the sad
And turn, turn yourself around
I'm lost in my own fairytale
Where I'm the winner
All over again
in my daydreams I've lost all hope
All ambition
Looking and losing an only friend
I'm lost now
I'm here now
I'm lost here
por Myself
I'm gone now
I'm lost again
I'm lost
por myself
I'm lost
I'm here
I'm lost here
por myself
I'm lost now
I'm here now
I'm lost here
por myself
por myself
I'm not myself anymore
Well tu can see
What I've done
Blinded myself
lost my direction
In this times
That are getting cold
In this moment
To behold
And shine
Here's a poem
For all the loved ones
Here's a grave
For all the dead
Here's the oxygen
For all the living
Here's a tissue
For tears that are shed
I'm lost now
I'm here now
I'm lost here
por Myself
I'm gone now
I'm lost again
I'm lost
por myself
Well take your houses
Take your money
Take the things tu don't need
Live the life
You've always wanted
And then burn the memories
Take the good times and the bad
Take the happy maybe the sad
And turn, turn yourself around
I'm lost in my own fairytale
Where I'm the winner
All over again
in my daydreams I've lost all hope
All ambition
Looking and losing an only friend
I'm lost now
I'm here now
I'm lost here
por Myself
I'm gone now
I'm lost again
I'm lost
por myself
I'm lost
I'm here
I'm lost here
por myself
I'm lost now
I'm here now
I'm lost here
por myself
por myself
An ángel
A Demon
A battle
Raging in
The night sky
Asphyxiation
A sweet sensation
No one knows the
Beckoning thought
In the bounds of your
Mind
The ángel knelt down
On the cold winters ground
Spoke a soft prayer
Looked into the empty night air
Saw an image of himself
Asphyxiation
A sweet sensation
No one knows the
Beckoning thought
In the bounds of your
Mind
The demon summoned all his courage
And broke through the cage
He found no reason
He drew back his army
And walked to the ángel in harmony
With a fanged smile
From the demon
A wicked gleam
From the angel
They made their truths
Asphyxiation
A sweet sensation
No one knows the
Beckoning thought
In the bounds of your
Mind
No battle
No challenge
Peace
Amongst two forces
Now bonded
Inseparable
A Demon
A battle
Raging in
The night sky
Asphyxiation
A sweet sensation
No one knows the
Beckoning thought
In the bounds of your
Mind
The ángel knelt down
On the cold winters ground
Spoke a soft prayer
Looked into the empty night air
Saw an image of himself
Asphyxiation
A sweet sensation
No one knows the
Beckoning thought
In the bounds of your
Mind
The demon summoned all his courage
And broke through the cage
He found no reason
He drew back his army
And walked to the ángel in harmony
With a fanged smile
From the demon
A wicked gleam
From the angel
They made their truths
Asphyxiation
A sweet sensation
No one knows the
Beckoning thought
In the bounds of your
Mind
No battle
No challenge
Peace
Amongst two forces
Now bonded
Inseparable
I need you
from the first moment i saw you
I need you
because you're the air i breathe
I need you
because you're the water i drink
I need you
because just the thought of seeing tu makes me want to get out of bed
I need you
because tu can with just one smile make my whole world starts to turning again
I need you
because tu make me wake up from my the most horrible nightmare without fear
I need you
because tu can give me hope when i don't have one
I need you
because even if I'm at the bottom,you're always there to help me stand up
I need you
because in this cruel world tu keep me alive
I need you
because i know that you'll never give up from me
I need you
because when no one believed in me tu were there to stand up for me
I need you
because you're everything for me
But the most important thing why i need tu is
because I'll always amor you!
This was in my head so i just thought to write it
from the first moment i saw you
I need you
because you're the air i breathe
I need you
because you're the water i drink
I need you
because just the thought of seeing tu makes me want to get out of bed
I need you
because tu can with just one smile make my whole world starts to turning again
I need you
because tu make me wake up from my the most horrible nightmare without fear
I need you
because tu can give me hope when i don't have one
I need you
because even if I'm at the bottom,you're always there to help me stand up
I need you
because in this cruel world tu keep me alive
I need you
because i know that you'll never give up from me
I need you
because when no one believed in me tu were there to stand up for me
I need you
because you're everything for me
But the most important thing why i need tu is
because I'll always amor you!
This was in my head so i just thought to write it
priceless and important,
gives tu the roads
and leaves tu choices
of which your luck depends on.
This is your life
and tu live it
wrapped por sadness
o happiness.
Who cares?
This is your life,
invisible for others.
tu pick the road
and pray that the choice
is right,
but life loves tu not,
that's tu who amor
the joy of life.
Life,
priceless and important,
gives tu choices,
unpredictable events,
grays and hope,
and life is all yours.
But, the pregunta is
will tu remain sane
even though your life
is cruel to your dreams,
will tu remain sane
even when your life
is dying in your eyes.