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- Path: sparky!uunet!sun-barr!ames!agate!rsoft!mindlink!a710
- From: Crawford_Kilian@mindlink.bc.ca (Crawford Kilian)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: finding time to write
- Message-ID: <16189@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Date: 10 Oct 92 04:16:18 GMT
- Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada
- Distribution: world
- Lines: 23
-
- Christopher Conn asks how much time we spend writing, and wisely compares it
- to an exercise program. It is indeed a matter of habit.
-
- Except in those cases where the writer possesses an extraordinary metabolism
- and no family or friends, a couple of hours a day ought to be plenty. If you
- know what you're doing, you can use that time constructively, without
- spinning your wheels and wasting your efforts.
-
- Ideally, you pick a regular time of day and build it into a routine. Your
- family gets used to your absence (or doesn't even notice it, if you pick the
- early morning or a time when you're not normally underfoot at home). You use
- chore time for "controlled daydreaming" about your writing, instead of the
- usual futile fantasies of unlimited sex and wealth.
-
- You also exploit "dead time," when you're trapped somewhere with nothing
- better to do than read an old newsmagazine in some dentist's waiting room;
- you bring along a "bible" of notes and outline and blank paper, in which you
- can jot down a few lines or even pages of rough draft. (A lot of my first few
- novels emerged in a looseleaf binder during faculty meetings--now that's
- *really* dead time!)
-
- If you produce as little as 500 words in 2 daily hours, you'll have a novel
- of 100,000 words in 200 days.
-