My First Dictated Steemit Post!

in #writing8 years ago (edited)


This is my first time dictating a Steemit post! Yay!

A few weeks ago I read a book by Kevin J Anderson entitled Million Dollar Productivity for Authors. In it, Mr. Anderson details how he is able to write so many books every year: he dictates his rough drafts. Now, I’ve heard of people dictating their writing before, but I never thought it would be something that I could do. For some reason I so closely associate writing with typing that I have trouble even imagining the process of speaking words onto the page.

But when I stop and think about it, I realize that human beings are hardwired to use all these teeth and tongue muscles we have to tell stories. In fact, the process of reading and writing is completely unnatural to our brains. But telling stories around the campfire? We’ve been doing it for millennia. And we’ve only been writing for a few hundred years. And we’ve only been typing for a little over a century. And we’ve only been using word processors for the past 30 years, give or take. So… with that in mind, I’ve decided that I can train my brain to dictate stories.

There are several reasons why I think that dictating my fiction will benefit me:

  1. I'm less likely to get distracted by email, Facebook and the rest of the lesser social media platforms, as well as the multitude of very interesting things that exist on the Internet.
  2. My hands will not get sore, and I will be able to better avoid repetitive motion injuries like carpal tunnel syndrome. I can walk around the room while I am dictating, and thereby avoid getting a sore neck or cramps in my lower back as I do when I'm writing at the computer.
  3. Even though I can type 70 words per minute, I can still speak faster than I can type. That's even with the mistakes that the dictation program invariably makes. For instance, I just said "70 words per minute", and the dictation program wrote "LXX words permanent." But it was fairly easy to go back and correct that.
  4. With dictation, I can write my books and stories and blog posts and pretty much anything else while I am away from the computer. I can take a digital recorder, or just my smart phone, with me wherever I go, speak into it, take it home, upload it into the dictation program, and have my rough draft ready to revise without ever having touched the keyboard. This means that I can go for a walk or hike and be writing my novel at the same time. I can write Steemit posts while I am driving (not in heavy traffic--at least until someone perfects the self-driving car.) I can work on a short story while I am washing dishes, waiting for my kid to get her shoes on, or while cooking dinner.
  5. I believe that dictating will go a long way towards silencing my internal editor while I'm making my rough draft. This is crucial, since revision and drafting are mutually exclusive activities, and in a perfect world, never the twain shall meet.
  6. It's also a good way to add redundancy to my writing career. If I ever break my hand (gods forfend), I will be able to dictate and still meet deadlines on time. If, on the other hand, I have a bout of laryngitis, I will still be able to type.

Therefore, I have determined that I must at least give it a shot. So I decided to practice my dictation daily for the course of a month. I figure it will probably take that long, if not longer, to become practiced enough to produce most of my drafts through dictation.

I started yesterday. With my smart phone in hand, I went to a lake near my mom's house for a walk. For 30 minutes, I spoke into the microphone, trying not to pause. It was extremely uncomfortable. Firstly, I just couldn't think of what to say. I wasn't trying to write a blog post or a story. I was just trying to get comfortable with speaking, stream-of-consciousness, into the microphone. So I blabbered awkwardly into the mic as I passed by strangers who mostly looked at me like I was crazy. Nonetheless, I kept with it for the full 30 minutes. I talked about what I was seeing as I walked. I talked about my reasons for wanting to learn to dictate. I talked about a story that I had been writing and tried to figure out where my plot had gone wrong. When I couldn't think of anything else to say, I recited the lyrics to "Hotel California" by the Eagles.

I don't think I got anything useful out of that session.

Today was a bit better. I went hiking on a trail off the Blue Ridge Parkway near my home. I dictated for a full two hours. For the first hour I did stream-of-consciousness again, and for the second hour I brainstormed for the second half of the plot of my novel that I will be working on during National Novel Writers Month in November.

I just tried to say "NaNoWriMo", but the dictation program wrote "bananarama".

Brainstorming by dictation felt really unnatural to me. I was using a lot of "ums" and "ahs", and I felt like I was going really slowly. But, at the end of the hour, I had a lot of material. I think that as I was trying to keep talking steadily without pausing for an hour, a lot of ideas were forced out of my head that would otherwise have been stifled by my internal editor, had I just been sitting at the keyboard.

I haven't bought any dictation software yet. This is because the program that I would need for my computer is a bit expensive. Luckily, if you have a PC, you can get a program like Dragon Naturally Speaking pretty cheaply. But Dragon Dictate for Mac costs a bit more, and the reviews tell me it isn't quite as reliable as the PC version. So I haven't decided yet if I'm going to spring for it. In the meantime, I'm using the dictation software that comes prepackaged with Mac's operating system. I can't upload my smartphone files into this program and have them transcribed automatically, but it's good enough to get started.

I'll keep practicing my dictation skills, and let you know how it goes.

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Lot's a great ideas, and inspiration here. Thankyou so much, loved your article.

Great idea. A lot of really different things happen when it's stream-of-consciousness I notice. You pay more attention to the aesthetic quality of the sound of words together, rather than how you think them. Nice post!

Thanks! I find it really gets ideas flowing, too.

Definitely a great idea. I used to dictate my uni assignments onto cassette tapes way back when and it helped to get my ideas recorded and thoughts sorted out.

I hadn't considered using my smartphone to dictate posts, but will have to try it now. Thanks for the tip!

The Mac's built in dictation feature works ok, but it isn't nearly as accurate as Dragon when you build up your user file. It learns well and can you super fast. I have it on Windows 10, which I dual boot on this iMac. I believe the term is Wacintonsh :)