Keeping on with keeping on, Ali Bacon pushes and pants her way through January
Long nights - good for the writing soul? |
Apologies for some writerly introspection today, but in
these darker months when there should be more time to sit down and write, it’s somehow just
as hard – or even harder - to keep at
it.
When I gave up full-time work and looked forward to ‘being a
writer’ I envisaged a nice daily routine of, say, writing in the mornings and
editing or dealing with submissions etc in the afternoons, with a reasonable
number of days off /trips out for good behaviour.
I suppose for some periods of
time this has worked, but somewhere along the line I discovered that creativity
and routine are not happy cohabitees, at least not in my brain, and at various
points my ingrained Protestant Work Ethic has driven me not to new summits of achievement but to a
grinding halt. I often wonder how I have managed to write two novels and more
than enough words for a third when my ‘average daily wordcount’ (not that I
often think of it that way) is ridiculously small.
Last week I felt a bit better when at our writers' group New
Year celebration it turned out that even though our work/life circumstances are
all very different, most of us have a similar problems: one member has twice
thrown herself at nanowrimo but never done anything with the resulting word
mountain; although we’ve all had families, only one of our number has ever
risen at dawn in order to get writing in before family time; and everybody admitted
to problems in converting the desire to write into sustained action.
Getting out and about |
It’s occurred to me that I’m a ‘push and pant’ writer, at least with bigger
projects. Having completed one chunk of narrative – in first draft at least, I
have to take myself a way for a while before I can get a handle on the next bit and push it out. So in a sense the writing floods and droughts
always even themselves out and my productivity isn’t going to change too much,
even when, as now, I have set myself a clear long-term target.
I know there are tricks that help. Having more than one
project on the go means there is somewhere else to go when one well runs dry and
it’s usually when we’re not thinking about something that inspiration strikes. But
it’s still a difficult balancing act between keeping at it and keeping sane,
between having sufficient distraction from writing without becoming completely
distracted.
I think I need to be more flexible in my approach to everything (will the world fall in if I miss my Zumba Gold?) but I suspect at the end of the day I'm just a writing
light-weight. Or maybe I'm in the wrong 'job'! On the other hand there is the matter of a story to be told.
So let me know if anyone has any advice on keeping on with keeping on.
So let me know if anyone has any advice on keeping on with keeping on.
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