Write Nonfiction With Passion:
Four Steps To Emotionally Charge Your Article
By
Catherine Franz,
The Syndicated Columnist, Radio Producer,
International Speaker, and Author
Alexandria,
Virginia,
U.S.A.
catherine@abundancecenter.com
http://www.AbundanceCenter.com
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You
have completed the draft of an article, but it seems
flat and lifeless, even to you. It needs to have the
spark that ignites that all important emotional connection
to your readers but you are at a loss as to how to
spruce it up.
Breathing
life into a nonfiction article is tough Especially
if it doesn't include a character or an emotional
storyline.
If
you have written an article from your own personal
experience, perhaps you have already included emotionally
charged language. Then all you need to do is ask,
"Does the article have enough emotionally charged
language to touch my readers, to pull them in, to
keep them reading, to move them to action or possibly
a conclusion?"
Why
would you even want to add emotion to a nonfiction
article? Adding emotion to your writing, any type
of writing, fuels the reader’s attention, helps them
connect with the action. It gives the reader an experience.
Experience is why people go to the movies or watch
TV. More importantly, it keeps them reading.
What
does emotionally charged mean exactly? Emotionally
charged means using language that stirs the reader
in some form. When and how frequently emotions need
to occur depends on your article’s subject, tone,
and angle. Yes, even tone matters in a nonfiction
article. Is it to be terse, confident, or are you
talking as an expert? Maybe it’s a learning tone?
From a previous student-now-teacher. An informing
tone, usually overused in nonfiction, turns off readers
if used consistently, like in a column, or multiple
articles, on your web site, or in a newsletter.
Step
1: Find the Emotion
Begin
by defining what main emotion you want the reader
to feel or to understand. Were you peeved about something
and it set off the writing of an article? Maybe you
saw a wrong and want to set the record straight, or
to convey a different truth, one from your perspective.
Is it compassion-oriented or spiritually based? Maybe
you want to convey an inspirational or motivating
tone. Is it love that you want to convey? Love for
a topic. Love for a hobby or something you're passionate
about. Your love, someone else’s, the world’s, how
much love do you want to send out?
You
can limit the number of emotions according to the
word count. Here’s a common calculation: under 600,
one emotion. Under 1200, two. Over 1800, three or
four.
You
can choose the emotion you want before the first draft.
Yet, many writers, including this writer, prefer to
add emotion during the second draft or first edit.
Close
your eyes and feel your own inner self on your topic.
Find the emotion, the tone, give it one or two words,
and then write it in the article’s margin for easy
access. If it’s a personal experience, think back
to that time, reconnect with that emotion. Did you
feel numb, affection, anguish, excitement, shame,
guilt, remorse, violent? How about confused?
One
of the many reasons I love writing marketing articles
is because I see so much misinformation on the topic
and it riles my feathers. When this occurs, I write
from this emotion and that language naturally flows
into the article. Since this isn't the emotion I want
to convey to my readers, I rewrite a second draft
in the emotion that I truly want to convey. Usually,
from a more loving and patient perspective.
What
did you hear, smell, touch, see or even taste during
the experience? If you personally didn't experience
what you are writing about, do you know someone who
did? Ask them to share their emotions with you. Put
words to those feelings. The taste language doesn't
necessarily have to be food related either. Your lips
could be dry. Your tongue can taste like you just licked a stamp. Relate the taste to something that
the readers can understand because they have experienced
it as well. We've all licked a stamp sometime in our
life and remember the icky dull bad breath feeling
it leaves on our tongue. My face is curling up just
thinking about that taste.
Another
way to find the emotion is to relate the article,
topic, to music. Does it remind you of a fox trot,
waltz, rock and roll, jazz, R&B, what? It could
even remind you of a particular song. Can you access
the song, or remember the lyrics? Musically, lyrics
are great places to find emotional words and language.
Step
2: Connecting
Close
your eyes, sit quietly with the article. Sense yourself
reading the article in your mind. No, not the identical
words but the idea, the vision, the thoughts. If that’s
a challenge, read the article out loud, very softly,
as if reading it to an angel. Even notice where you
take breaths. These are places where new paragraphs
begin, commas or periods needs to occur. If you run
out of breath, maybe the sentence needs dividing,
eliminating, or even combining.
You
can even tape record your reading. Listen with your
eyes closed. This is also a great way to hear the
flat places in the article. Identify the emotion from
what you hear. Record all the emotional words you
hear or feel in the margins. Every word is right,
so don't miss any. Place all judgment in a shoe box
for now.
Step
3: Adding In The Emotion
Review
your words. Brainstorm with a thesaurus, synonym finder,
or dictionary. Online resources you can use: http://thesaurus.reference.com/,
or
http://www.acronymfinder.com/, http://m-w.com/netdict.htm.
Continue
your list in the margins. Now its time, before the
editing process to add in the emotion. If the first
draft is very dry, this is a good time to realize
that it’s not uncommon for writers to rewrite the
article completely because the emotion conveyed was
too far off at the beginning. If this is the case,
consider the first draft a brain dump, a warm up session.
And now you're ready to roll. You're hot, the feelings
are sizzling.
Step
4: Editing
Usually,
editing is to help clarity and tighten. Caution though,
it is easy to remove the emotionally charged elements
that you painstakingly added. Sometimes, when using
an outside editor, someone who doesn't hold the same
emotions as you, they remove the emotions. And sometimes
too, there are too many emotions. There is a delicate
balance. However, many editors walk this tightrope
carefully and with honor.
Most
writing needs energy and emotion that conveys the
story, the information, so as not to put the reader
to sleep. Or even worse, stop them from reading. And
your passion is what needs to be conveyed from you
to them. Watch the magic when you read someone else’s
material that conveys emotions. See how they use the
words.
When
I'm in the flow, I feel the emotion pushing the pen
as fast it can across the paper. I know, through experience,
when this is occurring and I'm writing so fast, I
have a tendency to leave words out. I used to stop
at the end of every paragraph and reread and add them.
Don't, let the flow occur. Trust that whatever is
needed will again be there for you to fill-in any
missing blanks. Let the magic come through. Your readers
desire it.
Special
Note: An accompanying list of emotionally-charged
words is available in the Abundance Center’s Forms
Section.
About
the Author: Catherine Franz, is a syndicated
columnist, author, radio talk show host on marketing,
International speaker, and master business coach.
http://www.abundancecenter.com
http://www.LetsTalkMarketingShow.com
Source:
www.isnare.com
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