Spring Break pt.2: Writing and Life. Help.

Mar 21, 2012 16:48

Geez, how could I forget this part (continued from late-last-night's Spring Break postI've also been working on my next book some more, working out plot points and developing characters and scenes. Almost have it all in place! Which leads me to an insight ( Read more... )

teaching, life, the self, writing

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Comments 17

sartorias March 21 2012, 22:48:46 UTC
The only solution I found what with full time teaching, kids, house, etc, was to get up every morning at four. Never later than five. From seven on I belonged to everyone else, but from four to seven I belonged to me, and I got a lot of books done that way. (Of course I staggered around in a haze of exhaustion if anything broke my sleep, and almost burned the house down ones in my fugue, but it worked.)

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mckitterick March 28 2012, 20:11:53 UTC
I wonder if I could manage such a thing. I tend to go to sleep between midnight and 3am... could I train myself to sleep earlier? My circadian rhythm is good for astronomy, not so good for morning activities.

Or perhaps my 4-7am might be 8-noon....

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sartorias March 28 2012, 20:33:52 UTC
Yeah. I know writers who use eight to midnight. The important thing is about four hours a day, or three, that is for nothing but writing. Mornings were good for me because I am a morning person, and because there were no familial interruptions (and few temptations): the world was asleep so I could work. That could go for night, too.

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bogwitch64 March 22 2012, 02:32:49 UTC
I'm lucky--I get to do the writing/editing gig full time. It really IS a full-time job, especially if you want to publish fairly regularly.

Something's got to give, Chris. I ended up giving up Girl Scouts to concentrate on my writing, because BOTH were full-time jobs--not to mention the whole MOM thing. If you know you will start to resent work because it keeps you from writing you need to make the time, somehow. In the schedule of stuff you have listed up there? I don't see how!

Prioritize, and give up something that's going to allow you to concentrate the time you need for writing.

So says the bogwitch.
(I'll see you in May!)

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clevermanka March 22 2012, 15:34:29 UTC
Prioritize, and give up something that's going to allow you to concentrate the time you need for writing.


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mckitterick March 28 2012, 20:16:48 UTC
See my response, below.

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mckitterick March 28 2012, 20:16:24 UTC
I've actually considered going full-time, myself, but I like not being broke! Did it a while when I first moved to Seattle.

Watching my mother's mind go has made me think a lot about things. I often wonder, these days, how much longer I'll have - just 20 years? How much can I finish in that time? Will medical science have a cure for Alzheimer's, and will I have to face that devil?

The big things I do that don't earn an income, like work for the Center for the Study of Science Fiction, are why I moved to Lawrence in the first place. How do I give that up? And things like working on cars and the house - those are breaks from the intellectual, when I get in a lot of good thinking time for my writing.

Hm.

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jimvanpelt March 22 2012, 02:38:53 UTC
I teach high school English full time, with all the grading and prep work that requires, workout an hour or so a day (running), and am a father of three boys, two who are teenagers, and I haven't missed a day of writing since November of 1999.

The secret for me has been in lowering my writing expectations bar. I used to want to do 1,000 words a day, but that turned into too big of a burden. If I saw that 1,000 was unlikely, I'd say, "Oh, screw it," and not write at all. Non-writing days would pile up on me. It sucked. So, I lowered the bar. All that I require of myself is 200 new words a day. Many days I do more, including over 1,000 on some days, but I never do less.

I can do 200 words in fifteen minutes, if that's all the time I have.

That's how I do it.

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mckitterick March 28 2012, 20:19:13 UTC
I sure wish I could write long projects in short chunks - I'm so jealous of those who can! Experience suggests that I can do that only once well underway, and then I tend to neglect the rest of my life until I reach a milestone (finish a story or chapter). Then it's back to needing a big chunk of time (six hours is my magic number) after a few days of mental break.

How did you get into the habit? How do you block out the rest of the world's commotion?

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jimvanpelt March 28 2012, 20:31:48 UTC
Mostly by having a short attention span, I think :).

I don't know how I got started on the habit. It was mostly desperation probably, and it took getting used to to write in a short period of time. I'm pretty good now at seeing a fifteen minute window and using it. What this means for me--and I think this is a positive--is that I'm always on some level thinking about my story. That way I'm not going from zero to 60 in my fifteen minutes. The engine is always at least idling.

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paulwoodlin March 22 2012, 06:13:18 UTC
Last semester I was so depressed about the evolution of the publishing industry that I didn't write at all, by far my longest stretch of writer's block in the last 12 years. I could only force myself to write again by telling my creative writing students that their "journal" assignment was to read (and critique) my other LJ blog where I'm posting my new stuff, which means every week I have to post a new chapter from each of four novels for them to read.

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mckitterick March 28 2012, 20:19:53 UTC
Having deadlines really helps me, too. This is why all my recent pub's have been responding to requests.

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dotar_sojat March 23 2012, 00:27:43 UTC
Dude, I don't have much advice for you, but I completely hear you on your need for several days to gear up on a writing project.

In my own case I take about 45 minutes to two hours to "warm up" to writing- and nothing is more frustrating than warming up and then having to stop and do something else! So I end up wanting 4-8 hours of time- and that's pretty damn hard to come by.

I can do it, the two-hours a day thing, but it's really not very satisfying.

As for prioritizing, it sounds so easy but in practice it can be pretty difficult. Oh, it'd be simple enough if one were wealthy. One could just get a cabin or a hotel room for a week, but one's own house is full of distractions.

I had a lot of success with getting up early and putting two hours of study into the PE test, and I had hoped that it would translate into writing but... apples and oranges, I'm afraid.

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mckitterick March 28 2012, 20:21:12 UTC
I totally hear you about the frustration when, just about to get started, one gets distracted. Sometimes I wonder if I should do a retreat once in a while - but you're right, that requires money or connections. Perhaps someone I know has a place I could borrow....

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