Discussed: In the dismantling analysis that might precede a revision (what are its elements, how do I want to put them back together?), fear of opening it up and not being able to put it back together again.
(This tension between opening/asking new questions and trusting something about the originating impulses shows up all over the place, a polarity that won’t resolve.)
The feeling of something missing: sense that a piece needs something else (something terrifying, for example). Noticing if we’ve gotten comfortable with what we think we know about what the thing is, in a way that’s occluded perception of what else it is.
Back to the question from earlier: what does my first draft show me about what I might have negated in the process of revision.
Is reconciliation (of the new and the original) or restoration (the pruned, abandoned, or negated) possible? Useful?
The possibility that revision takes us off track instead of onto it. How to make a judgment call about those directions? Layering old and new impulses.
Framework for thinking more about methodology from a design-thinking perspective. What problem does my method need to address? What does my method need to make available or workable?
Possibilities of time travel – in old notes, old drafts. Did you leave yourself a note about what matters or can happen here? Going back and listening to the you of then.
Material ways to get a new perspective or a clearing-away of assumptions: typography, font, how it exists on the page. Literally rewriting every sentence in a fresh document. Only carrying forward what you choose to carry forward.
Preparing in a way that makes the revision experience special. Like when people used to get dressed for dinner even if dinner was happening in the same house everyone had been in all day and with the same people. Get dressed for dinner!
Other people: when to show work to other people and how to invite them in? Asking people to be different kinds of readers. Also inviting yourself in via something like recording yourself reading your work and then listening to it – trusting the other of your ear. The judge of your ear.