Usually when I visit the bookstore I look at the writing magazines and skim a few articles. Usually I'm looking for ideas for marketing and promotion but often I stumble on pieces that inspire ideas for my blog posts. A few days ago I read a short article with two authors debating the pros and cons of writing everyday.
Many experts recommend writing every day. They contend you must develop the habit and treat writing like a job you must work at each day. If you combine inspiration and habit together, chances are you're going to write a lot of words each day.
The other opinion in the article I read believes in taking a day off per week. Instead of setting aside some time every day for writing, set a word count goal and get it done. Taking a day off recharges the drive and enthusiasm to write.
We all develop our own writing habits including frequency and duration of time at the keyboard. Like many people I tend to fall somewhere in between the two extremes of the above options. I don't always write new stuff every day, but I almost always work on something having to do with my career. I visit blogs, edit some work and do other general promotion things. Unless it's a special day like my recent anniversary a day seldom goes by when I don't turn on my computer.
Nearly every interview I read about really successful authors quotes them as saying they write every day. They highly recommend it.
What do you do? Write every day? Set goals and then take time off when you reach the goal? Do you feel guilty if you miss days writing?
Showing posts with label Writing habits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing habits. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Background Noise
If you speak with twenty writers you'll hear twenty different versions of how, when and where they write. Some need total quiet and peace, some write in snippets of time, some spend solitary, uninterrupted hours at the keyboard. Others can write anywhere, minutes or hours at a time and somehow make it work. Some people love to work in a public coffee house or a quieter setting like a library. A few fortunate writers can escape to a serene B&B or something similar and have near solitude, protected from the distractions of family and the noisy world.I grew up on a farm with a full house. Seven children, a dog and lots of family chores to fill most hours of the day. Free time could be measured in minutes not hours. I did my homework in front of the TV because the only hours I had to watch it and were the same few hours I had to spend on my homework. Even with the distractions of my favorite western shows, the buzz of family conversation and usually my father snoring away, I managed to complete assignments and study for tests. Perhaps that early training with all the background noise is why I write best when I have a movie or the TV playing nearby. It has to be a rerun, of course, and usually I select it by theme.
Currently I have Firefly playing on the desktop computer while I work on my laptop. I'm not going to go into what my WIP is about but the movie gets me in the correct mood. Later I might slap in something like Sense and Sensibility though I might have the dialogue memorized already.
So what do you need keep the writing flowing, quiet or noise? Public venues or your office with the door barred and locked? Does what you're working on influence how and where you work?
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)