when to write
Every day, of course.
Yeah, all right. But when?
I am having an absolute REVOLUTION around when I write. It is ridiculously, painfully obvious. Only, you know, I’ve never thought of it before.
But before I tell you what it is, a tiny bit of backstory.
Before I had kids, I got up, I made a perfect latte in my fantabulous espresso machine, leisurely checked my email, surfed a bit, and eased into writing around 9am. I wrote until lunch, then went to my paying job in the afternoon. Let’s all take a moment now to appreciate the ease and grace of that long dead schedule.
Ahhhhh.
Once I had kids, everything changed. Constantly. With one baby, I could write when she took a nap. Then I had two babies, and their nap times somehow never synchronized—of course not. And although I was able to get an hour of childcare here or there over the course of a week, it was nothing like the daily progress I made pre-mommyhood.
But I knew I absolutely couldn’t write while I was On Duty. Wherever my mind has to go to write is far away from here, and it functions VERY poorly when interrupted. So, I had to write when they were asleep. What did I do? I ditched the naps—comically keeping these poor children awake at times when they really wanted to sleep. How they have suffered for my art! But keeping them awake and playing and happy during the day (and hey, no more battles over nap time, hooray!) meant they slept near to twelve hours a night! Together! Woo hoo! So I started writing at night. Late at night. After everyone was asleep.
Fast forward several years.
They are staying up later and later. I’m sitting down to work later and later. Now I’m comically trying to remember my name, much less my character’s names, and not getting much done. Time to do the shuffle again.
The other day I read this lovely guest blog post by Jeff Abbott, wherein he mentions getting up at 4 am to write before work.
Now, duh, I’ve given thought to the whole get up early and write thing before. But also duh, have you seen me in the morning? I’m a zombie, I’m worse than a zombie, my children make fun of how disoriented I am, how grumpy, how stupid I am when I first wake up. Whenever they see a funny looking one-eyed monster stumbling around on some tv show, they laugh and point and say, “Hey, Mom, it’s you when you first wake up! I bet he hasn’t had his coffee yet!”
Oh, har har.
So I always pretty much dismissed the get-up-early tactic as impossible for my particular constitution.
But the late night thing has really not been working either. Something has got to give. And then I read that post and somehow it just… clicked.
The next morning, around 5am, when one of the kids kicked me awake, as they are wont to do, instead of rolling back over into sleep, as any sane person would do, I got up. I snuck out of the yurt and over to the Noah House with my laptop. And I got a 1000 words down before heading back to the yurt to make breakfast.
I don’t know why it worked. My brain was able to slip into the story and get the job done. It was fun even. No one interrupted. It was quiet. Surprise! I LOVED IT.
And then this: all day that day I had the oddest sensation—I felt FREE. I would habitually think the loop of thoughts I have thought a hundred times a day for years, when will I write today, how will I make it happen, I have to get this or that done, I have to manage my family so that I will be able to slip away for a bit before I collapse from exhaustion—but WAIT. I’ve already written today!!! I can do whatever the hell I want!!!! I don’t have to manage anybody!!
The next day, a repeat.
And the next day.
Holy shite! I had NO IDEA how much stress I had been carrying about when I was going to get to write each day! And how much GUILT when I didn’t manage to pull it off. Writing first thing in the morning, I’m free to play, stress-free all the rest of the day, knowing I’ve gotten that Very Important Thing done already.
I can’t TELL you how relieving this is!
And yeah, see how incredibly obvious this is? Sorry about that. But really, my whole life feels shaken and stirred, invigorated with new fun and freedom, liberated from a thousand pounds of stress I hadn’t even known I was carrying. It’s so incredibly simple. Write every day, yeah. BUt do the writing FIRST THING. Before breakfast.
Trust me. It’s FANTASTIC.
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today's yoga practice
- friday
May 11, 2012 | 10:09 am…and now we come to lady’s holiday. the weakest week of yoga that ever barely happened.
- thursday
May 11, 2012 | 9:09 amprimary to navasana. can’t seem to get past freaking navasana this week. at least I’m on the mat.
- wednesday
May 11, 2012 | 9:08 amprimary to navasana with Maria’s vid.
- tuesday
May 11, 2012 | 9:08 amSKIP. Shame.
- monday
May 11, 2012 | 9:07 amprimary to navasana. am I back in the saddle?
-
Archive for today's yoga practice »
- friday
upcoming book releases
a few greatest hits
- living the tie-dyed life
- happy birthday, sophie!
- flying kids
- the emotional insanity of writing
- the source of my power
- go, go, godzilla!
- the incredible hulk invades the yurt
- recycling other people's junk
- butterfly house
- the solstice from inside a sundial
- going all erin brockovich on your ass
- 2 stories, 1 joke, and a song
- diggers watch tv, too
- the amazing emu
- triple chocolate pudding goop, or, this way lies madness
- crafts for karma
- the TOOL shed
- lucille ball moment
- writing without pencil sharpening
- yurts: the downside
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I know where you get the “hard to get up” from. I do get up but I’m not really there. Around 10 a.m. I begin to think and come out of the fog. As I seriously enter this “I’m going to retire” thing, I know the first thing I am going to do is throw away the alarm clock. Just the sound of it gets me in a bad mood. I hope your plan continues to work well. Kiss the kids for me. I love you.
I totally hear you on the load of guilt for not writing. I crave that freedom of “it’s done already” but have been unsuccessful getting over the hurdle thus far. Sigh.
Thanks for your blog, by the way. I have much to learn, story and writing-wise, from just about any author, but some of my most beloved are just not able to speak to my everyday-writing-life directly (many of them being older males without small children at home).
Hello Falwyn,
Nice to meet you! Yes, the older-men-who-write scene is COMPLETELY DIFFERENT from the moms-who-write scene. The best thing I can figure out for moms (and probably older men, too, haha) is Suck It Up. Oh, and You Really Can Get By On Less Sleep Than You Think, because, hey, I was going to feel tired anyway, might as well feel tired AND get the writing in.
Besides, I can pack for a weekend trip in my under-eye bags, these days. How convenient!