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Using a Writing Journal in a New Way

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

I am a world class procrastinator. I can usually find something else to occupy my time when I have a mounting list of things that need to get done. Even as I write, this I realize that my to do list has no possible end in sight.

It has been weeks since the last time I worked on my story. I simply cannot find time to fit it into my schedule.  I have toyed with the idea of making myself write for at LEAST 5 minutes a day and no more than 45 minutes.

However, as I stare at my mounting list of things that simply must be done, I cannot force myself to do that.  So the problem continues to exist on how I am ever going to complete at least one of my three or four story lines I have been working on for several years.

I sit here and ponder my choices on these multiple story lines. Do I put them aside and hope that in the near future I will have more time, which is doubtful when I look at my schedule for the upcoming months.

I think what I am going to do is start keeping a writing journal at night. I can write how long I have worked on a story and any new ideas that I might want to introduce to the plot. Usually as I sit in bed and try to relax, I read a few chapters in a novel.  As I read, I usually think about ideas in the novel and how those ideas can be used in my stories.  However, I do not keep a journal (as of yet).

A journal can be a powerful tool though. A few years ago, I had the chance to briefly skim through three of the numerous journals my great grandmother, Margaret, kept during her marriage to my great grandfather, George.  Margaret could have been a wonderful novelist. The letters she frequently wrote to me and the letters she wrote in her journal reflect her values, traditions, her views on raising five children in the middle of the Great Depression and World War II, while living on a small but profitable dairy farm in West Michigan.  She writes as though she is carrying on a conversation with the reader, which is how I inspire to be as a writer.

Her insights can be compared to an author’s thoughts as they try to relax for the night.  An author’s work is often time consuming and not without its toll on the life of the author.  So it is hard for an author to divorce his or her works during the time when they are not working on a novel.  I know that many authors get so many brilliant ideas when they are trying to get a good night’s sleep. I think that those nightly insights make wonderful material. So take a few minutes each night and write those ideas in a notebook along with how many total minutes you got actually work done on your story. Set a weekly goal and use the journal to help yourself keep track.

I plan to do this starting tonight and see how far it gets me to working on my novel each week.

How to Write When You Don’t Have Time

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Have you ever felt like you’d love to write, but just don’t have the time?

I certainly have.

For a writer, one of the most frustrating things in the world is having dozens (or hundreds) of ideas, but no time to actually write them.  How can you find the time to get ideas down?

I have dozens of half-started ideas, but feel like I have no time to build on them and turn them into the stories I’d like.  However, recently, I’ve been trying a different technique.  I’m starting to concern myself less with having to find the time to finish an idea, merely find some time to make progress on them.

When creating something new, I can generally write 250 words in about 10 minutes.  Since I always seem to find 10 minutes to use the rest room, eat something, or browse one of the various news sites I follow, I’ve started scheduling 10 minutes each evening to try to make progress on one of three ideas.  I allow myself just a moment to choose which idea to focus on, and take those 10 minutes to try and get as far as I can.

If I keep this up for a year, and I’m able to keep most of what I write, I could potentially have a novel-length work after a year (over 90,000 words).

Now that’s an exciting thought.

How do you find time to write?  What other ideas would you suggest?


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