Milepost or Millstone?

Filed in: Blog   

FEB

4

2008

5:27 pm

How are those resolutions doing?  Is February a milestone in the keeping of them or a millstone dragging you down from where you’d hoped to be?

 My resolutions (though I prefer to call them plans since resolve doesn’t always play a role) could be doing better.  I haven’t made it back to the gym–that’s the bad part.  I’m not as far along with my writing as I’d hoped to be, which is a not–wonderful part.  On the other hand, I’m producing–a good part.  So I guess I’ll call February a milestone.  One month down, 11 more to go.

A lot of things can keep us from writing.  Sometimes we actually want them to, whether or not we admit it.  Got a child whose school needs volunteers?  A spouse or significant other whose job requires a social commitment?  How about a bathroom that needs cleaning?  All those things can take us away from our writing.  When we choose to do one of those instead of sitting in front of the keyboard, we’re choosing not to make progress on the “work in progress.”  Why?

The child’s school or the spouse/significant other’s social obligations do matter, and we may have to make a choice about time allocation.   Occasional such choices aren’t really the issues.  Trends in such choices are.

Sometimes we’re delaying the moment when we must send this manuscript into the world, possibly (the odds favor “probably”) to face rejection.  Sometimes we don’t know what comes next.  Sometimes we’re just sick of working on the darned thing.  As a friend of mine once reminded me, though, we can’t sell part of a manuscript.  Those of us just starting out can’t, anyway.  So anyone who really wants that elusive prize, a book with her (or his) name on the cover, has to stay in the chair and work on it.  In How to Write Fantasy and Science Fiction, Orson Scott Card says something along the lines of “ideas are more likely to come to the writer hunched over the keyboard than the one playing video games in the basement.”  The wording probably isn’t exact, but the point rings true for those of us who’re addicted to Space Invaders (or Tetris, in my case.)

 So I’m working on progressing faster and getting back to the gym.  How’re you doing?

9 Comments

Comments

Pat Rice says:

Cool, I hadn’t realized you could blog off your website! Took me a moment to figure out but that makes for lovely one-stop shopping.
I forgot to tell you I got a new Macbook, so I’m still learning how to cruise around with it. For some reason, your photo on the home page isn’t showing. There’s just a square where it ought to be. Guess I need to figure out what I need to download. But I do love that castle/city banner!

Eilis Flynn says:

After years of avoiding resolutions, I decided to make one this year — to learn how to plot! I’m working on it. Those of us who are pantsers by nature find it not easy. But with a little study and a little “saving the cat” (by Blake Snyder, great book), it’s starting to make sense. Good luck!

Amy says:

Ah, those resolutions again. I started out strong in January, but February finds me slowing down. Thanks for the reminder, Nancy. And Tetris — evil game — I bought a game boy to play it on, then my hubbie gave me the computer version. It’s sitting on my desk as I’m afraid to load it, sigh.

Keep up the good work. I know you’re one of those souls hunched over the keyboard while I’m one of those gazing out the window.

Nancy says:

Pat, welcome to the world of Mac! I’m sorry the photo isn’t showing up. Isn’t it weird how computers sometimes are compatible and sometime aren’t? I can’t use Explorer with a lot of sites because the site tells me javascript isn’t enabled. But Explorer tells me it is. Go figure!

Glad you like the site. Thanks so much! I love that banner, too, and I give all credit to Liz, who created it.

Eilis, I heard someone recommend that book at a program this weekend. It sounds interesting, but I thought you already knew how to plot! I’m trying to learn to use the brand-new storyboard a couple of my friends made for me. Good luck with your plotting!

Amy, load the game anyway! Sometimes you need a break. I sometimes find things flitting through my brain that actually turn out to be usable, with all due respect to Mr. Card. I think his advice usually holds true, and especially so if you’re playing a more intense sort of game. I’ve heard Minesweeper kills a lot of time, too.

The only reason I can’t gaze out the window is that I keep the shade drawn because we’re so close to the street. I substitute email. *sigh*

I like the blog, Nancy.

I’m struggling this very minute with procrastination. I find a million things that need doing to avoid writing. In my case, I must build up confidence in what ends up on the page, and I’ll be more likely to write the next sentence.

Thanks for reminding me to stay on track.

Gwen Veazey says:

Nancy, Kudos on your website and blog. I started out great guns with my 500 words a day resolution (among others) and have really hit a wall. First it was a church project, then the daughter came home for a visit, then blah, blah, blah. Thanks for your words of wisdom.

I was once a big Columns fan (Sega version of Tetris) but now stick to Freecell. I must say, the flashy new video games look interesting; maybe I’ll visit some nieces or nephews who’ll let me play.

Your writing pal,
Gwen

Nancy says:

Thanks, Suzanne! Procastination is just easier than writing. Nora Roberts is famous for saying she can fix a bad page but not a blank one. I try to remember that, but it’s still a struggle sometimes. Good luck!

Thanks, Gwen! I’ve never played Freecell, though I hear it can be addictive. Let me know what the nieces and nephews say about the new games. A lot of them seem to be quest games, which require longer than I want to devote. Good luck getting back in the swing.

Eilis Flynn says:

I think I know how to plot too, until I hit a wall and I figure I’d better make sure! Just finished the first draft of the latest last night — that second draft is going to be a doozy to clean up!~

Nancy says:

It never hurts to try something new. Good luck with that draft, Eilis!

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