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- From: jerryn@glnserv.UUCP (Jerry Norris)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: finding time to write
- Message-ID: <ccTLsB1w164w@glnserv.UUCP>
- Date: Tue, 13 Oct 92 17:22:35 CDT
- References: <1992Oct12.185233.25577@odin.corp.sgi.com>
- Organization: Vermi-net, Houston, Tx. 77098
- Lines: 64
-
- rmr@sgi.com (Robert M. Reimann) writes:
-
- > sascmc@pecos.unx.sas.com (Christopher Mark Conn) writes:
- >
- > >How much time do you spend writing per week?
- > >How do you find the time? I'm trying to approach
- > >it the way I would an exercise program, finding a
- > >time and committing to it. I'd be interested in
- > >your ideas.
- >
- > If you're going to approach it that way, try starting
- > out by writing a hundred words a day (and more, if the
- > mood strikes you). Once you're able to do that on a
- > regular basis, expand from there. A friend of mine
- > ensures that she will write every day by promising
- > to write a $100 check (to her favorite charity) every
- > time she misses a day. She maintains that this
- > method works very well for her.
- >
- >
-
- I use the "treat it as a second job" method. I have to log in at least
- two hours per day of writing, a total of ten hours per week, in order to
- meet the goal I've set for my production schedule. Since it _is_ my
- second job (one that is infinitely less profitable but much more
- satisfying than what I _really_ get paid for), I try to handle such things
- as production schedules and such in moments when I just can't think of
- anything to write about.
-
- Since I usually have several projects in progress, I usually don't have to
- worry too much about writer's block (something I have only had to deal
- with _very_ infrequently), since I can skip from one project to another,
- and in fact can load up to seven projects at a time on my worderator (I
- _like_ MS Word 5.0. I keep one window open for various and sundry notes)
- and just flip from one to the other until I get an idea.
-
- I've also got a micro-recorder that I keep
- around all the time that I'm not in front of either of my terminals (we've
- got two computers in the house; one sits in a heavy traffic area in the
- house and is used by the entire family, the other sits in the bedroom and
- is a cobbled together monstrosity fondly known as Frankenstein (the other
- is Boopsie)). I update my files on both systems so that I'm always working
- on the newest versions, and when traffic gets too heavy around Boopsie, I
- retire to the bedroom and finish working in there. Combine this with a
- program I put together that keeps track of when I start and finish a job
- (much of this automated through batch files), and I've got an acurate
- accounting of how much time I spend writing as well as a reasonable
- assurance that my time writing will be productive vs. sitting in front of
- the screen, banging my head against the desk as I try to figure out where
- to take the story from a certain point.
-
- On a normal week I can get pretty close to my goal. This week I'm on
- vacation and I've already exceeded the ten hour work week for my second
- job. Does this mean I'm going to take a rest? Are you kidding? It's
- nice being able to work the amount of hours I'd _like_ to work on my
- second job and getting paid from my primary job to do it!
-
- later,
- jerry.
-
- email address: xcluud!glnserv!jerryn
-
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