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- Path: sparky!uunet!ogicse!uwm.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.cso.uiuc.edu!NewsWatcher!user
- From: mtan@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (Maureen Tan)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: finding time to write
- Message-ID: <mtan-161092101351@128.174.137.61>
- Date: 16 Oct 92 15:54:00 GMT
- Article-I.D.: 128.mtan-161092101351
- References: <BvvHr0.7G2@unx.sas.com> <1992Oct15.141507.1@lure.latrobe.edu.au> <alberti.719179246@staff.tc.umn.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.cso.uiuc.edu (Net Noise owner)
- Followup-To: misc.writing
- Organization: UIUC
- Lines: 41
-
- In article <alberti.719179246@staff.tc.umn.edu>, alberti@ux.acs.umn.edu
- (Theresa J Alberti) wrote:
- >
- > In <1992Oct15.141507.1@lure.latrobe.edu.au> miuvdd@lure.latrobe.edu.au writes:
- >
- > >In article <BvvHr0.7G2@unx.sas.com>, 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 a stay at home mother of twin one-year olds.
- > You just have to make up your mind that writing is important and fit it into
- > your life.
-
- Wow! You've just put yourself on my "people I'm inspired by" list.
-
- I, too, began writing when my children were small (the eldest
- of that disruptive group is now 18) but my children were not,
- (thank God:-)) twins.
-
- One of the now useful things I learned to do during that time
- was to abandon the prescribed notebooks and tape recorders
- and instead compose and rearrange ideas in my head. Back in the
- old days, this technique enabled me to use the few precious minutes
- of peace between bottles and diapers to produce finished copy.
- First and second drafts and reviews of lengthy notes were luxuries
- I could rarely afford.
-
- The benefit of all this is a lack of dependence on time-consuming
- writers' " memory aides" such as extensive outlines, hours' worth of
- tape-recorded thoughts, and notes-files software. I can usually
- get my ideas/ scenes/ dialogue down on paper in a fairly finished form;
- reworking a scene is a semi-pleasurable experience. (No, that's a lie
- that I buy into when my writing is going well. Reworking a scene is
- still traumatic and time-consuming.)
-
- Of course, the problem with learning to write in this manner
- is that, as rampant middle age overwhelms me,
- I often have the sneaking suspicion that my best ideas
- get lost between putting on my right shoe and my left.
-
- Maureen (a.k.a. Jane)
-