Hi Fellow writers,
I am writing to let you know that I now have a new writing blog. It is: irenesroth.wordpress.com. Please visit me there from now on as I won’t be using this blog any longer.
See you at the new blog,
Irene
Hi Fellow writers,
I am writing to let you know that I now have a new writing blog. It is: irenesroth.wordpress.com. Please visit me there from now on as I won’t be using this blog any longer.
See you at the new blog,
Irene
Writers find that after their initial burst of raw writing, much of the
final product is the result of revision. Most writers spend as much time
revising as they do writing. This goes for writers who write books and
articles and novels.
However, having said that, most writers spend some time at least in
the creation phase when they are trying to get as many words on the page
as possible. That is part of the fun of writing and it is the inspiration
stage of writing.
For myself, this is the best stage of writing. I just love to be able to sit
at my notebook computer and just type whatever comes into my mind.
There is nothing more liberating than that for a writer. However, this is
not the be all and the end all is it? After the writer has typed the words
on the page, then the arduous task of revision starts in earnest.
Some writers not only accept the importance of revision but accept it
with gusto. I will be honest I accept and know importance of revising in
my own work, but I don’t like to revise. I just know that it is a necessity. I
actually find revising boring, and did for a long time until I had a real
revelation a while ago.
Revision is like tidying a messy drawer or cleaning a cluttered room.
What you are really doing is getting rid of what you don’t need in your
manuscript as you would get rid of things you don’t need in a room such
as pop cans, water bottles, extra books that you will not be using right
away, and extraneous files. When I started seeing revision like a
cleansing process, I started viewing revision with the same kind of
necessity as keeping my study decluttered. And that is when I excelled at
the process of revising.
So, writer, declutter your manuscripts by taking the time to revise
them. Get rid of all of the extraneous material such as redundant words,
passive phrases, typos, grammatical errors, repetitions, and so on. Your
manuscript will feel much lighter and cleaner.
Irene
For myself, there is nothing harder than achieving some kind of balance
in my writing life. Last year, although I got a lot of writing done, I got
desperately ill a few times because I didn’t care for myself properly.
This year, I vowed to make sure that I don’t repeat my mistakes from
last year. And for the past week or so, I tried to make sense of what
‘balance’ really means. Then I read Kristi Holl’s entry for today on her blog
and I found it so useful that I have included it for my reflections today
about balance.
I think all of us need balance. But how do we achieve it? That is the
million dollar question. Below Kristi Holl has the answer. Now all we have
to do is follow her advice.
Thanks so much Kristi for your words of wisdom!
Irene
Critical Questions
By Kristi Holl
January 6th, 2010
www.institutechildrenslit.net/Writers-First-Aid-Blog
My biggest goal for 2010 is finding balance in my life.
Last year my health got out balance (no time for self-care) because my volunteer work grew beyond healthy proportions. There wasn’t enough time for my writing, and I found myself emotionally burned out too often.
This year I want to find the balance–and make changes that will support it.
One of things I’ve picked up and used from the Simple•ology course I’ve talked about was the importance of two basic questions. Before making each choice of activity–and we make hundreds of choices some days–we are to ask ourselves:
Every action has a reaction, or consequence, attached to it. Usually there is a positive consequence and a negative one. (Think long-term here.) Before making a choice, just ask yourself those two questions.
For example, let’s say your dream is to finish and sell your novel and your goal for today is to write the climax scene. You can choose between two Krispy Kreme donuts for breakfast or a high fiber cereal and fruit. (Think long-term.) A high sugar, low fiber diet will hurt you in many ways, and an important one is your ability to think clearly and have enough stamina to do your writing. One choice weakens you, and one makes you stronger.
Or let’s say your goal today is to send out five queries for the human interest Christmas story you finished. You can read writing blogs, you can research a current market guide for contact information, or you can see what all your Facebook friends did over the weekend. Only one choice will move you a concrete step toward your goal today.
Apply these questions everywhere throughout your day. Will taking time to stretch and do sit-ups before a writing session help you or hurt you? (Hint: you need strong core muscles and a supple neck to survive many hours at the computer.) But while exercise is good, taking three hours to drive downtown to a gym, work out, and go to Starbucks just keeps you from your goal.
Remember, you want to take actions that do at least one of two things: get you closer to your writing goal and/or make you stronger. If you only focus on behaviors that get you to your goal (but eat junk, never exercise, have a fight every morning with your spouse, and never have any solitude), you won’t be able to continue too long.
On the other hand, if you only focus on behaviors that make your body stronger and healthier (but spend your writing time forwarding emails, reading a hundred Tweets, and watching the latest YouTube offerings), you won’t get very close to your goal at all.
Every time you’re tempted to waste time online or eat a pint of ice cream for lunch or chat with every instant messenger who pops up, you are facing a choice. One choice will weaken you–one will make you stronger. One will help you reach your goal–one will push you back even farther.
It’s your choice. And with every good choice you make, it’s easier to make a positive choice the next time. Each choice you face is a potential step toward your writing goals. Take it!
Working with a writing buddy or two has many advantages for writers.
Many writers believe that writing is a lonely life and that having another
person in your corner really helps a lot when the times get tough as a writer.
I know that I would be lost without my writing buddies.They help me in
so many countless ways. I sat down and reflected on a few of those ways this
morning. And here are at least three benefits that I discovered that I
enjoyed from my writing buddies.
First, my writing buddies help me not to feel as alone in the unknown
territory of writing. Feeling connected, especially when things go wrong,
such as when you get a rejection letter or if you had an unproductive week,
is really helpful to smooth out some of the rough edges of the writing life.
Second, my writing buddy knows exactly what I am going through when
I am having an unproductive day at my desk. I don’t have to take a lot of
time explaining any of my hardships or difficulties. And that means a lot to
me since endlessly explaining negative things about my writing frustrates
me to no living end. Most of my writing buddies share the same frustrations
that I do.
Third, I could share and celebrate my successes with my writing buddies.
This really helps me to feel better about what I have accomplished during
the day or week. I could also set my sights on my future goals that give me
even more reason for celebration.
Lastly, I report on my progress to my writing buddy. This makes me feel
accountable and helps me to continue progressing with my goals. This can
be just as beneficial for short term goals as for long term goals. Feeling
accountable usually really helps me to focus on my goals with much more
clarity.
You don’t need to necessarily meet with your writing buddy in person. I
communicate with all of my writing buddies via cyberspace on a daily or
weekly basis. The important thing is that we communicate with one another
and have access to one another for support.
So, if you don’t have a writing buddy, I would suggest that you find one
or two buddies that you could share your writing experiences with. You
won’t feel as alone and you will accomplish so much more.
Irene
Many writers work so hard and yet produce very little that is conducive to bring about
their writing goals. I know I have struggled with that this past year myself. I found an
article on the Kristi Holl blog today that is so helpful that I thought I would include it
as part of my blog. It is at: http://institutechildrenslit.net/Writers-First-Aid-blog.
I encourage to visit Kristi Holl for more information on this blog and others as well.
She is such a wealth of information.
After reading this piece, decide whether you are an efficient or an effective writer or
both.
Irene
Effective or Efficient
By Kristi Holl
January 4th, 2010
Before making my list of writing goals for 2010, I did some serious evaluating last
month to try to discover why I had accomplished so much less than I”d hoped in
2009. I had worked harder and longer hours, doing my best to be efficient.
Even so, I wasn’t effective in many areas where I had set goals. I either failed totally
or accomplished just a fraction of what I had intended. Why hadn’t I been effective? I
was practically the most efficient person I knew!
They Aren’t the Same!
Effectiveness is doing the things that get you closer to your goals.
Efficiency is performing a given task (whether important or not) in the most
economical manner possible.
Most of us work hard to be efficient in our lives just to stay on top of ever-
lengthening To Do lists. And efficiency is good when it’s applied to the right
things, the important things. It’s absolutely useless if it’s not.
Important vs. Unimportant
How do you decide which tasks are important to moving toward your writing goals?
It all depends on what your ultimate goals are. Is your main goal to write books,
perhaps even make a living at it? Is your writing goal to land a staff position on a big
city newspaper? Do you want to bring your writing skills up several notches in 2010?
Once you know your over-all dreams, then look at your To Do list with a more
critical eye. Which things on the list support your goal? Those are the important jobs.
Which things if done later, done quickly, or (gasp!) left undone wouldn’t affect
your goals at all? Those are the unimportant tasks.
Take a Step Back
Sometimes we are so close to our To Do lists that we can’t see the forest for the trees.
We don”t see that doing something unimportant really well doesn’t make it
important. (I’m an excellent email organizer, for example, with all kinds of folders
and tags and categories. I have the most organized unnecessary and unwanted email
you ever saw.)
Also, just because a task would require a lot of time to accomplish doesn’t make it
important either. (The email query to the editor might take you an hour. Reorganizing
your writing closet will take four hours. Only querying will get you that coveted
assignment making it the most important task nine times out of ten.)
Effectiveness Trumps Efficiency
Yes, it’s great to be efficient, but to repeat myself, it’s only helpful when you are
being effective. For example, if you want to lose the holiday pounds you added,
which supports your goal the best efficiently organizing your recipe files or going
for a power walk?
If you want to finish your first novel, which action supports your goal tearing
articles from your writing magazines to file, or sweating over that first chapter?
Are You Effective or Just Busy?
You want to make the most of your time available. I don’t know what your ‘efficient
time wasters’ are, but you probably do. I’ll be talking more about this in the weeks
and months to come as I cast a cold, unrelenting eye on each item on my list and
weed out some activities that look good or that “everyone” says you have to do.
What’s the deciding factor? It’s this: Will it take me closer to my goals in some
measurable way? Good! If not, it gets pushed to the bottom of the list. I may get to it
later or never!
Each of us has times of the day when we are much more productive than
others. These are the times when we are at our peak performance levels and
we should schedule to do most of our writing during these times without
interruption. Of course, interruptions are all around us. But it is important
for serious writers to limit such interruptions to after they are finished their
important writing tasks for the day.
Many writers find that it is easier to write first thing in the morning
when they are fresh. They usually refrain from checking email, opening
their snail mail, or answering the telephone. They set a one to two hour
block of time to do their writing consistently. Such writers are most
successful in maintaining their writing regiment.
I am such a writer. As some of you know, I wake up each morning an hour
earlier than any of my family members and just sit and write for at least an
hour. I find these times really quiet and I can concentrate most during such
times. I have been writing in the mornings for over twenty years and it has
become so ingrained in me that if I don’t write, I feel like something
important is missing in my life.
Some writers find that it is easier for them to write later in the evening
once dinner is done and over with and the kids and husband are watching
television. All you have to do is skip one or two regular shows on television
that you could do without and you have a writing schedule in place.
Consistency is the key when you are setting up a writing schedule. And
there is nothing more consistent than a daily television program.
If you don’t yet know when you write best, you could discover your peak
performance times by writing at different times. You could start by writing
in the morning for a while. Set your alarm for a half an hour earlier and sit
down and write for a few weeks and see how things go. Then try writing in
the evening, and see if that is a better time for you. Then once you have
determined what your peak writing time is, schedule to write during those
times at least four times a week, and see your confidence as a writer soar.
Once you discover your peak writing times, it will be much easier for you
to get your writing done.
To discovering your peak writing times!
Irene
There is one important thing that writers should do every week before a
brand new writing week starts writers should write down their writing and
marketing plans for the next week.
I usually determine my writing goals on Sunday afternoons. I write down
all my writing goals for the week. Then I write all of my marketing goals.
Once I have done that, I type it up and paste it up on the wall in front of me
so that I could follow it each day. That way when I sit down to write, I know
what project I should tackle and when I plan to complete a particular
project.
I think this is very important for writers. I know that the weeks that I
don’t take the time to plan out my week aren’t productive weeks. They are
weeks that are quite disorganized and in which I sort of float from activity
to another without any kind of intentionality or goal in mind. And that
usually makes for a lot of wasted time.
So, I would suggest that all of you create a template for yourselves. It
doesn’t have to contain the same divisions. You may have to create a few
templates before deciding which one will work best for you. If you create it
on your computer, you could print it off each week and fill it in with the
activities that you plan to do each week.
My template has five main headings: First, I list all the contacts that I
will make each day. Second, I list all the job boards, Ezines or newspapers
that I will read and visit during the week. Third, I list all the promotional
activities that I need to do during the week to promote myself. Fourth, I list
all the networking activities that I will be pursuing. And lastly, I write out
my writing schedule and goals for the week.
You could use how I plan my week to create your own template. But
whatever you do writers please take the time to do this. You will be very
glad that you did.
And let me know how you make out. I would love to hear from you!
Irene
Today, I would like to reflect on the difference between ‘motivation’ and
‘inspiration’. I think that the two concepts are quite different despite the fact
that inspiration can propel motivation and help us bring about our writing
goals.
Motivation is the reason behind one’s actions or behaviors. So, for
instance, if you intend to write a book in a year, you should be motivated to
perform the regular writing tasks in order to produce the manuscript.
Inspiration, on the other hand, is the ability to feel something behind the
activity. Its like a coloured landscape instead of a grey and white one..
Thus, it is not enough for a writer to be motivated to write; (s)he must
also be inspired to write in order for the project to get completed. I believe
that reasons alone are not sufficient for a writer to bring about his/her
writing projects over the long-term. The writer must also be inspired and
have a passion to write. Passion is very necessary in that it flavours the
writers motivations and gives them significance. Let me explain.
Consider the following scenario. Say you prepare a wonderful stew but
you forget to put salt, pepper and some spices in your stew. Although you
love stew, it tastes bland. You eat it the first day but it doesn’t give you any
real enjoyment. The next day, you have some leftover stew but you don’t
want to eat it. So, you decide to order Pizza instead and try to eat it the next
day. However, the next day you can’t face the stew either. Ultimately, you
throw the stew away because you can’t bear the thought of eating it.
We can say similar things about writing with inspiration. When you write
merely from a motive to do so, your writing may be bland. And although you
may be able to stick to a writing schedule for a few days, you won’t be able
to stick to it for longer than that because you are not inspired to write. It
just becomes a bland activity that isn’t seasoned that you perform without
much passion.
So fellow writers, why not season your writing goals with inspiration.
Your daily practice will be much more meaningful and consistent when it
isn’t bland and you will look forward to it as you would look forward to a
nice warm, salty and spicy slice of Pizza.
Happy New Year, and may you find not only the motive to write but also
the inspiration in 2010!
Irene
I love the optimism that is so much part of New Year’s Day
celebrations. We are encouraged to make realistic resolutions that we
think that we’ll keep and that will make our lives much better in the
new year.
I am not one for resolutions usually, but this year I am really going
to make a few resolutions mostly because this past year has had a lot
of negativity and toxicity. And I’m sure we could all relate to that state
of affairs. Some years are far more productive and far less cumbersome
than others.
So, this year I am going to try and make heathy, and positive
intentions to do certain things that will make my life much more
conducive to taking better care of myself and less cumbersome and
toxic.
I encourage everyone to take the time to evaluate last year. Do you
like everything that was part of last year? Is there stuff that you want to
change? Are there friendships which are too toxic to tolerate because
they are really hindering your well-being and health? Are there habits
that you should re-evaluate in order to be the best possible person that
you are capable of?
Once you determine what you want to change, make a positive
intention to change it in the new year. Write down your new habits and
goals and as the clock stricks midnight tomorrow night resolve to
bringing them about every day.
And may you have a year that is blessed with good intentions,
productive goals, and well-being in 2010. May it be your best year yet!
Happy New Year all!
Irene
During this time of year, I usually become very reflective of how my
life is going and how I can improve and be the best possible person that
I can be the next year.
Yes, it is resolution time again, and although I don’t like to call my
new intentions for the year ‘resolutions’ because they may be difficult to
maintain one or two months from now, I think this year I will call them
that and see what happens.
In many ways, last year was characterized by many toxic situations,
habits and individuals for me. I have learned a lot as a result of my
experiences though. But I don’t want to repeat them this year if at all
possible. So, I have resolved to minimize and/or eliminate some of them
in the new year.
For me, toxic situations and habits can come between me and my
writing time, if I’m not careful. A toxic situation may be an unresolved
argument with a spouse or co-worker. It may be a stressor in the
environment, such as background noise from a television set or
anything that disturbs your concentration. So, I always make sure that
I talk to my spouse if I have any kind of grievance with him and make
sure that I am on the same page with him before I start my writing for
the day. I usually avoid many environmental stressors by waking up
early and writing before anyone wakes up.
Toxic individuals are people who make me feel bad about myself all
the time and therefore deter me from being the best that I can be. Such
individuals seem to really upset me and I tend to get very little done that
is not also intoxicated by their attitude of hatred and overall tension. So,
I had to decide to minimize contact with such individuals as much as
possible.
So, if you are like me and you are negatively affected by different
external toxicities, it may be time for you to take steps to avoid such
instances because they could really put a damper on the quality, and
possibly quantity, of your writing. Here are a few tips that I have found
to be very helpful.
1. Try to write first thing in the morning, if at all possible, to
minimize distractions.
2. If you’re not a morning person, try writing before you go to bed
when everyone in the house is asleep. If you have something rummaging
around in your mind from the day, you may want to meditate or just
close your eyes and tell yourself that this is your time to write and that
for the next half hour to an hour, you will write. Then set a timer for
that time and stick to it. Then you could deal with what is troubling you
later.
3. As much as possible, deal with toxic situations and individuals
right away. Don’t wait until you get so angry that your emotions are all
festered up because that can really affect your overall writing
productivity.
4. When your writing time is upon you don’t do anything else that
will waste time, such as check your email, cruise the Internet, or answer
the phone. Instead, decide to devote one hundred percent of your
attention to writing.
I hope that these tips help you as much as they help me. Have a
happy and productive 2010!
Irene
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