PattyGolden:
I ask because I've tried writing and I find this process very difficult. Trying to put myself into a situation that I have never been in seems impossible. It's part of why I read the stories here, to try, if briefly, to live inside the minds of people that I don't really understand. I'd like to be able to what the authors do myself, but seem to lack the talent. The kind of writing on this site is sometimes more honest than what I might read in a novel in that this site is an exploration of a very specific branch of a lot of the authors' fantasy lives. I find it fascinating and exciting, though sometimes also off putting or frightening, when I identify an emotion in common with character in a frankly imaginary and usually taboo situation.
There are (at least) two very interesting questions here, and I'll make an attempt at both.
The first is how to get started writing. I know how impossible it may seem. As many others, I dreamed vaguely about writing when I was young, but soon got involved in other things and more or less forgot about it. The few times I looked back, I was glad to have escaped - I just didn't seem to have anything to write about! Then seven or eight years ago I wrote a spanking story to amuse and distract myself in a dire situation. I looked at it, found it reasonably good, and went back to my ordinary life. Soon I started thinking about another old fantasy that seemed to be story material, and suddenly I had two stories. Then I thought my first story deserved a sequel, and off I was. What had happened? I suddenly seemed to see story material everywhere - not necessarily full stories, but small things I could use to get them started or give them depth. I guess the moral is that you only see what you are looking for - as long as I wasn't thinking about stories, I didn't get any ideas, but once I started thinking about writing, there were ideas everywhere. So the advice is: Get started! Take an old favorite fantasy and see what you can do with it. Look for things that can give it depth and substance. Imagine how it would feel to be in the situation you have put your characters in. Just by having started writing, you have put your mind in a state were ideas are much more likely to arrive. But don't push too hard. Take breaks when you don't make any progress - your unconscious often works much better when you think of something else.
The second question is how to get into the minds of your characters. There must be many ways, but personally I seem to rely on two main strategies according to what kind of story I am writing. One kind of story is what one might call a pure spanking story where the phenomenon of spanking itself is in the center. I have started such stories from questions like: "What does it feel like to be sent to bed in the middle of the day after a spanking?" "What does it feel like to see your sister getting spanked when you are next in line?" "What does it feel like to be spanked at another house?" The plots and the characters in such stories are not very original, but I think that is part of the game - such stories are about the TYPICAL, and they should be recognizable rather than surprising. The author's prime concern in such stories is to make the reader feel the experience - to make the small observations and remarks that make the reader think: "That must be how it is!"
A harder kind of story to write are those which start with a character and/or a setting, and where to begin with there is no spanking in sight. In this kind of story much more depends on the plot and the character development - these stories are not about the typical but about the unique. I often take the characters in these stories from people I have met, often combining several persons in one character and adding a dash of imagination. Often it is a kind of "what would have happened if.."-game that gets the imagination started.
There are, of course, many other kinds of stories, e.g. stories defined by a clever twist at the end. As I don't write that kind of stories, I'll leave them to the specialists
