Archive for July, 2012

Writing life vs. “real life”

Friday, July 27th, 2012

Yesterday my friend Megan Bostic wrote a post on her blog about whether writers market too much on social media. She mentioned a formula, which I’ve encountered before, that says you should share 25 percent about your books and writing on social media and 75 percent about “real life.”

I understand the principle, but I also started wondering if it’s really possible for most writers to separate their writing and their personal lives. I find that writing permeates every aspect of my existence. I adore my family, my pets, and my friends; I’m dedicated to my work as a dance and Pilates instructor; and there are plenty of activities besides writing that I enjoy doing in my spare time. But if I’m being really honest with myself, I’d have to say that when I wake up in the morning, my first thought isn’t about my family or my work or my hobbies – it’s about my plot or my characters.

I feel guilty saying that. Does the fact that I think more about the people I’ve created in my head than the actual human beings around me make me some kind of sociopath? Does it mean that I don’t care about the people in my life? I don’t think so. I think that, like many writers, I’m just hard-wired to make my creative work my top priority.

I try to share about my personal life on social media, I really do. Take this blog for instance. I’ve posted about cancer survival (and how it affects my writing), about my husband (and what he’s taught me about book promotion), and about trips we’ve taken together (and how I managed to write during said travels.) You see, writing is so interwoven with the rest of my life that I can’t simply set it aside or separate it out.

So I apologize if I’m talking to much about my writing process and too little about what I did on my weekend. That’s probably because I spent most of it writing.

What do you think? Do you wish writers would share more about their personal lives and less about their writing processes?

 

How to write anywhere

Wednesday, July 25th, 2012

Last spring, I blogged about writing in Hawaii, but that was a piece of cake compared to this past weekend, when I worked on my novel revision smack in the middle of a gathering of hundreds of amateur astronomers at the Table Mountain Star Party.

Imagine this scene: Hundreds of cars and RVs parked inches from each other. A line of tents pitched around the periphery of the “telescope field,” where everyone has set up their equipment. People, people everywhere – talking astronomy, laughing, making music, constantly walking the well-worn path between the parking area and the food stand. Add thunder, lightning, rain, hail, and wind to this scenario, and you don’t exactly have the ingredients for an idyllic writing retreat.

But I turned it into one anyway.

In the three days we were on Table Mountain, I managed to write for several hours every day and completely revised two chapters, including writing some new scenes from scratch. How did I do it? Here are a few tips for writing just about anywhere.

1. Make a commitment. Promise yourself you’re going to write, and then just do it. Don’t let anything stop you. No excuses.

2. Prepare before you go. I wasn’t sure that there would be anyplace to plug in my laptop, so I made sure it was fully charged before we left home. I also brought along a notebook and some pens for when the battery ran out. (As it turned out, the nice people at the food stand let me charge my laptop in one of their electrical outlets, but that was just good luck.) Be ready to write even in a worst case scenario.

3. Create a structure. For me, trying to write all day just isn’t realistic. Putting a concrete boundary on my writing time, like, “I’m going to write from the time I finish breakfast until noon” helps to give me a sense of accomplishment.

4. Reward yourself. Once you’ve completed the day’s goal, whether it be a page or word count or a specified amount of time, reward yourself with an enjoyable activity in your environment. For me, it was a 1-mile hike to Lion’s Rock.

5. Seek support. Tell people about your commitment to write and ask them to support you by making an effort to give you space. My husband supported me on our trip by bringing along his journal so we could write together.

What’s the most interesting or challenging place you’ve ever written in? How did you keep yourself on task?

Barnes and Noble Northgate Teen Author Panel

Wednesday, July 18th, 2012

If you live in Seattle or environs, I hope you’ll stop by the Northgate Barnes and Noble on Friday, July 27th, at 6:30 p.m. for a Teen Author Panel. Check out the fabulous lineup:

Megan Bostic (NEVER EIGHTEEN)

Jennifer Shaw Wolf (BREAKING BEAUTIFUL)

J. Anderson Coats (THE WICKED AND THE JUST)

Carole Estby Dagg (THE YEAR WE WERE FAMOUS)

Kendare Blake (ANNA DRESSED IN BLOOD)

Marissa Burt (STORYBOUND)

Diana Renn (TOKYO HEIST)

And, of course, I’ll be there to represent FLYAWAY. The panel will be moderated by Megan Fouch with Chicken Soup for the Soul’s “Tough Times for Teens.”  Should be a fun and thought-provoking event!

In other news, I won’t be blogging on Friday because I’ll be at the top of Table Mountain, star-gazing with the Seattle Astronomical Society. Wish us clear skies!

Free image courtesy of FreeDigitalPhotos.net

 

The Happiness Experiment

Friday, July 13th, 2012

Not everyone knows this about me, but I can be a bit angsty. Not out-and-out negative or depressed, by any means. Let’s just say that, sometimes, I find contentment a challenge.

A friend of mine told me about a daily ritual that she’s practicing based on this Ted Talk by Shawn Achor. She’s doing these three simple things every day:

1. Write down three things that you’re grateful for. You have to think of three new ones every day – no repeats.

2. At the end of the day, write about one thing that happened that made you happy.

3. Do one random act of kindness. This could be a simple as giving someone a sincere compliment or sending an email to one of your contacts to thank them for something they’ve done.

That’s it! The idea behind the ritual is that it forces you to constantly focus on the positive things in your life as you search for things to be grateful for, notice the events that make you happy, and think of an act of kindness to perform each day. She swears that she’s been happier since she started, so I’ve decided to try it with her. It certainly can’t hurt.

Anyone else game?

Muse with a Whip

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

I’ve been invited to speak about writing to a group of high school students next fall, and this morning in the shower (where I do all of my best thinking), I was pondering what I might say to them. I thought it might be fun to talk to them about inspiration – what it is, where it comes from – and, most importantly, what it’s not.

I think a lot of people imagine that writers spend much of their time feeling inspired, that they sit at their desks with fairylike muses perched on their shoulders. Whenever inspiration flags, these benevolent creatures wave their magic wands and shower the writers with sparkly creativity-dust.

If you’re a writer, you know it’s not like that. Certainly, we all have our moments of white hot inspiration, those times when the words flow out of us in a flaming gush. But most of the time, writing is a job. We sit at our computers every day and do our work, whether we feel like it or not. Over time, we’ve learned that it matters less whether we’re inspired than if we show up and meet our word-quota for the day. Because putting one word in front of the other is how our stories get told. And amazingly, though it often seems like we’re simply plodding along, when we go back and read what we’ve written, we realize that, somehow, inspiration has managed to creep in.

Because I consider myself a real writer, in it for the long haul, I’ve decided to trade in my sparkly-fairy-dust muse for the slavedriver model. I need a muse who rousts me out of bed when I’d rather sleep in, who sits me at the computer when I’d rather go out and play, and who, when I’m ready to quit for the day, tells me I need to accomplish a little more. Because that’s how my books will get written.

I need a muse with a whip. It’s up to me to create the sparkles.