Thursday, December 31, 2009

I resolve to do less

I haven't done much writing in the past week. At the beginning of my holidays, I was organised. I created a daily schedule of the tasks I needed to complete. I promised myself that I would sit down at my computer and commit to my writing.

True, it was Christmastime, and I had distractions. But today, I went back to my schedule, and noted why I didn't even attempt any of the items on my list: each day had at least six things on it. Even Christmas Day!

Not only was I attempting to keep myself busy, I was also cramming every single writing task I had into my two week holiday. I felt like I was expecting myself to race through each task. If I did that, although everything would be completed, the level of quality would be sub-standard.

And it is the idea of producing sub-standard writing (and not making enough time to edit and rewrite) that makes me develop "writer's block".

Therefore, in the coming year I resolve to de-stress myself and produce writing of a higher quality by giving myself ample time to complete and polish all projects that I undertake. I will forget about thinking ahead to the novels, competition entries, and Writing School projects awaiting my attention, and focus on the task at hand, as if it was the only thing I need to accomplish.

I wish you well in all of the writing plans you make for 2010!

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009: Day Twenty-Four: Donation Drive

Hi everyone!

I'm in the NaNoWriMo slump at the moment - where you hit 50,000 words, celebrate that you've won, and then feel absolutely exhausted. So no more writing until tomorrow night, when I have to get cracking on my next EuroFiction submission.

I donated to NaNoWriMo today as part of their challenge to raise $100,000 in 24 hours. I also bought a hoodie from their Merchandise store. Too hot here to wear it now, but exciting nonetheless!

It's the first year I've donated to NaNoWriMo. I kept saying to myself that I'd donate once I'd made money from something I had written for NaNoWriMo, but until that happens they still need funds to keep putting NaNoWriMo on each year, so I decided to donate. Especially because I finished so early this year, and they're holding a special donation drive day.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009: Day Twenty-Two: And The Winner Is ...

Today has been so hard!

I started at 3am this morning, had a few breaks in there (caught up on sleep for an hour, did dance for an hour, and watched The Boat That Rocked), but finally, after typing more than eleven thousand words today, my blue NaNoWriMo wordcount bar finally changed to green.

I've won! 50015 words, at present.

Hopefully I'll do more over the next week. There's still seven days left of novel writing, after all.

I am amazed that I have actually finished before the verification process starts on Wednesday, which was my main aim.

Now, I am going to sleep. Sweet dreams!

Friday, November 20, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009: Day Twenty: Stop Being Tired And Write!

I was so far ahead! But this week ... this week ... I don't know what happened.

Yes I do.

Between heatwaves, busy work, and my packed November social schedule, I haven't written much or blogged much. Here's the run-down (must stop with run-downs. Must start writing every day!):

  • Friday, 13th November
    Actually ended up having 718 words written (Grand total: 23,740 words)
  • Saturday, 14th November
    Wrote 2911 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 26,651 words). Also went to a Tupperware party and watched the Christmas pagaent.
  • Sunday, 15th November
    Wrote 866 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 27,517 words). Had friends around.
  • Monday, 16th November
    Wrote 2487 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 30,004 words)
  • Tuesday, 17th November
    Wrote 2011 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 32,015 words)
  • Wednesday, 18th November
    Wrote 515 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 32,530 words)
  • Thursday, 19th November <- hottest day here in November on record! Ever!
    Wrote 515 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 33,045 words)

I'd like to go back to sleep now, but must go and get ready to go to work. Write lots!

Saturday, November 14, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009: Day Fourteen: 25,000 words!

I've made it to 25,029 words! Awesome!

Friday, November 13, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009: Day Thirteen: MIA

Hi guys!

Wow, it's been a whole week since I wrote about what was happening with my NaNoWriMo novel. How did that happen?

Just to keep you updated, here's a brief summary of my last week:

  • Friday, 6th November:
    Didn't do any writing, of any sort. Way too tired. Think I went to sleep at 8pm?
  • Saturday, 7th November:
    Wrote 1,505 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 14,523 words). Also went to a thirtieth birthday party.
  • Sunday, 8th November:
    Wrote 1,480 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 16,003 words). Spent most of the day at a Craft Fair.
  • Monday, 9th November:
    Wrote 2,018 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 18,021 words)
  • Tuesday, 10th November:
    Wrote 2,023 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 20,044 words)
  • Wednesday, 11th November:
    Wrote 2,978 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 23,022 words)
  • Thursday, 12th November:
    No words written. EuroFiction Task Five was due, and I hadn't even starting writing it. Not terribly happy with what I submitted, but as long as I submitted something, I'm in with a chance, right? A very slim, hazy chance.
  • Friday, 13th November:
    Wrote 484 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 23,506 words). And it's only 6am in the morning. Don't worry! After work, I plan to write loads more! :)

Thursday, November 5, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009: Day Five: All Caught Up

Yay! At this moment in time, I have written 13,018 words of my NaNoWriMo novel over the last five days.

I spent this afternoon making up for yesterday's dismal attempt at reaching a target, and ended up writing 3,382 words today. I thought that was a good effort, until I was looking at some of the other WriMos word counts from my region. Some have written more than 20,000 words. Some have even written more than 40,000. Then I went over to the Germany/Austria forum (got to keep up my German language skills somehow!) and they were talking about how someone had written 50,000 words on Sunday alone, and was aiming for a million by the end of November. I don't know whether to believe they'll honestly make it or not.

In other good news, I got my score for EuroFiction Task Four back. I was awarded seven points, which meant my story placed eighth out of 21 stories. Considering the amount of time spent on it, I'm pretty happy. Overall, on the Great EuroFiction Leader Board, I'm ranked 19/30. Not great, but I'm glad that I'm not on the bottom (though perhaps I shouldn't speak too soon?)!

Writerly activities for today:
  • Wrote 3,382 words of my NaNoWriMo novel, while wishing I could have written more to keep up with the people who have a higher word count than me. (Grand total: 13,018 words)
  • Spent at least an hour reading the feedback from my EuroFiction entry, and basking in the glory that being awarded seven out of a possible fifteen points can give you (In case you're wondering, that's a lot of glory!)

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009: Day Four: The Day I Fell Behind

I aimed to have 11,000 words written by the end of tonight.

I managed 9,636.

500 of those words were written between 4:00 am and 4:30 am.

The other 136 were written at 8pm.

Why? Because when I was not at work (between 6am - 6pm) I was sleeping! Why am I so tired lately? Obviously have not been drinking enough caffeine!

I'll try and catch up tomorrow!

Writerly activities for today:
  • Wrote 626 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total: 9,636 words)

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009: Day Three: Note for NaNoWriMos

To all who participate in the craziness of NaNoWriMo:

How do you achieve your word count and turn up for work the next day as if you've actually had eight hours of sleep?

The past two days I didn't get to sleep until after midnight, and then was up again way too early so I could get ready for work.

Today it showed. I spent all morning yawning, and not getting any actual work done. Hopefully nobody at work noticed (though I think they did). After Melbourne Cup was over though, I managed to stay awake, so I got at least two hours in without looking like I was dropping off to sleep every ten seconds.

Best of all, it's now 10:30pm and I have written my 1971 words for today! Early night!

Sleep well!

Writerly activities for today:
  • Wrote 1971 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Grand total is now 9010 words)

Monday, November 2, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009: Day Two: I've kept my promise!

For anyone who's ever read any of this blog, you'll know I love to procrastinate even more than I love to write.

Even during NaNoWriMo, days have often gone by with no words written, the novel falling by the wayside as other things (most likely TV) gets prioritised at the top of my To Do list.

But this year I promised myself I'd start on the first day of NaNoWriMo - done. I promised myself I'd write 5,000 words on each Saturday and Sunday - done (well, there's only been one Sunday). I promised myself I'd stay awake each weeknight until I wrote 2,000 words - done.

This may very well be a world first for me!

I hope everyone else who is doing NaNoWriMo is having the same success with their plans of attack.

Writerly activities for today:
  • Wrote 2,020 words of my NaNoWriMo novel (Total is now 7039 words).

Sunday, November 1, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009: Day One: Where My MC Isn't 'All There'

It's the end of Day One of NaNoWriMo. I've written 5109 words - the most I've ever written on the first day of NaNoWriMo (or even the first week of NaNoWriMo), and it's right on target for where I want to be.

It was pretty tough, though. I'm telling my story from three different viewpoints, and yesterday I began writing from the first character's viewpoint. Before November, she was all ready to go. She kept floating into my head and starting to narrate her story, and I had to tell her to go away and wait for November when I can write down what she's saying. Perhaps she got angry with me, because she was fairly hazy today. Bits of dialogue here. Bits of setting there.

Obviously I should have done more NaNo planning last week.

But last week I concentrated on getting my EuroFiction done, and I think I'm getting better at it. I was even awarded one point for my story for Task Three, so my score doesn't look so bad anymore.

Writerly Activities for Today:
  • Wrote 5019 words of my NaNoWriMo novel

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Finishing Things

I've been subscribed to UK writing magazine Writers' Forum since April, and every month I look forward to flicking through its pages. It contains tips for improving your writing, interviews with agents, editors, and publishers, and competitions. (Though you have to double-check whether the competitions are for UK residents only. Some are, most aren't.) It's sometimes a surreal read, since many of the people whose blogs I read also write for or are mentioned in its pages!

It often has submission guidelines for publications – I did an Internet search once to try and find short story submission guidelines for the Australian Woman's Day magazine, only to find it in the magazine (I have since found the guidelines online).

A column in the November issue suggested that writers could spend the remainder of 2009 focusing on finishing their current projects.

I like this idea. I have two Writing School assignments, and eight submissions that I'd like to complete before December 31. But then I also have four stories to write for EuroFiction, I'm sure someone would like me to write Chapter Five of my current FanFiction novella, and I have this tiny thing called NaNoWriMo that's going to keep me busy for just a little bit of November!

We'll see how we go. I'll be positive and say I will get this all done by the end of this year.

I just have to work out how! :)

Writerly Activities for today:
  • Did some research for the re-writing process of my 2007 NaNoWriMo novel. (Yes, I know this wasn't listed on my tasks to finish by the end of this year, but it was what I felt like doing today.)

Friday, October 23, 2009

Being Social

No more weekends free in November - I've just pencilled in the last free day to hold my belated birthday party. Every single other day is filled with birthday parties (other people's!), quiz nights, work things, craft fairs, meet-ups with friends, and potential NaNoWriMo write-ins.

This isn't bad. It's good. Doing social things is healthy - it balances out all of the time I spend at work and at home when it's just me and the computer. It's just that it's November.

My brother (who, through an agreement reached in 1996 when I was thirteen and he was eleven, is my “manager” (And has so far earned $25 from my writing. I argue that if he was a better manager, he'd have earned more!)) said I should give up NaNoWriMo this year. I was horrified (so was Mum, who lost no time in pointing out the error of his ways)! I'll just have to be ultra-organised. No procrastination for me next month!

Writerly Activities for today
  • None. Needed to sleep, especially seeing how sleep will be limited in November!

Thursday, October 22, 2009

The New Year

26 today. This means I've wanted to be a writer for half of my life. I guess I sort of am – I write, I'm just too afraid to spend time making my stories perfect and so I end up sending them out without a good chance of them getting published. It's one of the things I have to work on.

Plans for the next year? I'd really like to finish making the edits on my 2007 NaNoWriMo novel. Back in September, I received feedback for my novel from the Chick Lit Writers of the World Get Your Stiletto In The Door competition, and amongst the things that were painful to read (like how my MC was surrounded with abusive characters, who I didn't think were all that mean), there were some really good and (most importantly) constructive comments which have bolstered my determination to complete the novel. And it was really interesting to see how someone from a different country (USA, I think) responded to my chick lit character's Australian point-of-view.

And then, of course, the matter of finishing off Writing School. I know, promises, promises!

Writerly Activities for today
  • None! It's my birthday - I went out for tea instead!

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

I Can't Write Without: Milo Coffees


It started out as something to keep me calm and awake. Beginning to study for an Introduction to Database Systems exam at two o'clock in the afternoon, when the final exam was four hours later, was a really bad idea. But you know me – everything I don't want to do I leave as late as possible. So I crammed for four hours, sat in the exam room for three hours, and at nine pm walked out, listening dejectedly to everyone else discussing the answers that they had put down, realising that they were all different to my answers, and knowing I had failed. Miraculously, I ended up with a High Distinction (I don't know if they have the same scoring system in other countries – that's over 85%). Ever since then, Milo Coffees have been my addiction.

What is it? Usually it's two teaspoons of Milo plus a teaspoon of coffee (originally Nescafe, but now most likely Moccona – and I'm sorry in advance to those people who detest instant coffee and don't understand how people like me can drink it) in a mug, fill it up with milk (I don't like making my Milos or coffees with water), and then zap it in the microwave on high for one and a half minutes.

It's not to everyone's taste. When I lived with my brother, he couldn't cope with the smell, though I don't think it smells much at all (Maybe he was just fulfilling his mission in life of being annoying?). And because it's packed full of energy and caffeine, I can't physically drink too much of it. Because of this, I only drink it when I'm writing – it's one of those signals to the people who live with me: when there's an empty mug on the sink containing the remains of a Milo Coffee, I've been working on a story.

Do you have a food or drink you can't live without while writing?

Writerly Activities for today:
  • Finished reading No Plot, No Problem! by Chris Baty. Am now all ready for NaNoWriMo?!

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Twelve Days Until NaNoWriMo

Can you believe that there's only twelve days to go until the craziness of NaNoWriMo begins? I can't!

And it's getting more widespread. I've done it for the past two years, but this year my friends (who can't understand how I make time to write 50,000 words in one month (I don't tell them that I spend the first week and a half procrastinating about what I want to write!)) know other people who are also doing NaNoWriMo.

The more people who do NaNoWriMo, the better. It's a great challenge, and I like it because it has this magical way of forcing me to write. Special writing magic that seems to disappear on me for the other eleven months of the year!


Writerly Activities for today

Sunday, October 18, 2009

The Question is: “Why?”

I have been thinking about how I write, when I write, what inspires me to sit down and write, and what blocks me from writing. For instance, why can I discipline myself to write 50,000 words of a NaNoWriMo novel in two and a half weeks, but I take eight months to finish a short story? It's made me stop and think why I am like this – and how can I go about improving myself?

As a form of self-therapy, I think I'll highlight one of my writing problems (or some other random writing-related thing) in a blog post each day. I might not be able to provide the answers to my questions, but perhaps that's where you come in?

And if nothing else, I'll be spending twenty minutes a day writing!



Writerly Activities for today:


  • Wrote a synopsis of a short story in order to get the plot straightened out

  • Began a pseudo-outline for my 2009 NaNoWriMo novel

  • Spent a lot of time reminding myself why I want to be a writer

  • Made a list of my current writing projects and wrote a timeline on how I'm going to complete them. (It always makes me feel good once I've organised my projects like this. Now I just have to work out how to make myself stick to my self-inflicted deadlines, and I'll feel even better!)

Friday, October 2, 2009

I'm oh-so-tired!

I'm participating in SlingInk's EuroFiction competition this year. The method behind my madness is that it will force me to make time to write stories, and because it's a competition, there'd be no point in sending just anything off, would there? (And I can't give up - a waste of an entry fee if I did!)

What's annoyed me most is that I have this idea of how I want the story to go in my head, but when I sit down to write it, the quality that's in my head isn't exactly the same as what I'm reading on the screen.

I'm putting it down to the fact I'm leaving it too late to do the writing. We're given two weeks per task, and so far I've done the first draft the Tuesday before it's been due, and then edited on the Wednesday and Thursday nights, whilst being stressed about the looming deadline and the fact that my story, which I can't change now due to lack of time, doesn't have a plot or any decent characterisation.

In other words, it's my own fault! Back to Time Management 101 for me! :)



Hopefully this post makes some sense. It's past midnight, work's been really busy, and I think by stressing myself out so much I'm making myself feel sick. That's not good! I'd better get some sleep... Goodnight everyone!

Sunday, July 26, 2009

How to Achieve Great Things?

I was lurking around on the NaNoWriMo website last night in an attempt to become competent with social networking (by posting on forums), when I came across the following quote on one of their flyers:

"To achieve great things, two things are needed:
a plan, and not quite enough time."
- Leonard Bernstein


My first thought was: 'Yes! All I need is a writing plan and a few self-imposed deadlines and I'll be fine!'

Then a second thought slammed its way into my head: 'You plan all of the time. All you do is plan what you're going to write and when you're going to write it. And you do give yourself deadlines. Deadlines that are impossible to achieve!'

My issue is sitting down and writing. Well, no, I'm fine with sitting at my computer. I can do that all day - I'm very good at looking like I'm working on some great epic when I'm really re-reading stories written many years ago.

No, my issue isn't with writing. I think the real issue is with finishing. I never think anything is good enough. Lots of it gets sent out not because it is finished, but because I can't see how to make it better, and who knows? Maybe whoever it gets sent to will think it's the best story they've ever read? Though, they haven't yet.

The saga that is my attempt to finish my correspondence course is three assignments, eight submissions away from me receiving a certificate that will be the result of six years of procrastination.

I gave myself a new deadline of August 22. I've already worked out I can't meet that.

I want to send two things off per week. Wanting and doing are two very different things ...

Saturday, July 11, 2009

I Do What the Voices Tell Me ...

... and right now, they aren't saying the nicest things.

So I'm taking a break from my desk, in an attempt to get away from the voice inside my head/internal editor (call it what you will) that is insisting that I cannot write anything anybody would want to read.

And my week had been going so well!

On Sunday, I finally bought a new laptop (my old one died just over a year ago). No more having to schedule in time to type up my stories on the desktop I share! Yay!

For most of this week (after I had spent a considerable amount of time setting up my laptop so it had all of the software, files etc. I'd need on it) I've been working on an entry for the Salisbury Writers' Festival Competition. I felt productive. I submitted my entry on Wednesday morning, in time for it to arrive at its destination by the Friday deadline. It wasn't exactly the story I saw in my head, but it was fairly close, and I am fairly happy with what I ended up submitting.

I also wanted to enter the Adelaide Review Short Fiction Writing Competition, but I didn't have enough time to write the story (and it was a fairly 'out there' story, especially for a literary competition).

But today, as I'm trying again to write a novel synopsis for a Writing School assignment, something's stopping me. The 'voices' tell me that the novel plot isn't strong enough, the characters are stereotypes, you see where I'm going!

I've filled in the last two hours by catching up on blog-reading, watching TV, and even baking Jubilee cake (Note: I never bake!).

I think it's time to go back to my desk. Here's hoping the voices have gone to prey on someone else!

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

2008/2009 End of Financial Year Round-Up

Happy End of Financial Year!

I thought I'd list my (slightly embarrassing) writing achievements of the past year:

  • Writing School Assignments Submitted: 4

  • Short Stories Submitted: 8

  • Short Stories Accepted/Published: 2

  • Writing Competitions Entered: 3 (1 flash fiction, 1 novel writing, 1 NaNoWriMo)

  • Chapters of Fan Fiction Posted: 4


What can you tell from the above? That I've been slack in doing any writing?
What you don't see are the half-written stories, the rough outlines that are just looking for that magic part to pull the whole thing together, and the ideas that are floating around in my head.

I look foward to a more productive 2009/2010!

Monday, June 15, 2009

In The Door

Blurry eyes. Painful head. An unproductive day at work. But at least I managed to send off my novel to the Get Your Stiletto in the Door competition last night.

Now, I'm worrying. Have I sent it to the wrong e-mail address? Did they get it in time? I guess I won't know.

I've noticed that they've extended the competition's closing date from June 15 to June 20. They must have changed it yesterday, because I only saw it just before I was about to submit my entry (and I'd visited the site that morning to double-check the submission guidelines).

Five more days, I told myself. In five days, you could make your novel actually read like a novel's supposed to. You could actually make it not 'crap'!

But I had to submit it. I'd spent too much time editing and re-writing over the weekend, and lost too many hours of sleep (I was asleep from 11pm - 4am on Friday night, and then had a wonderfully invigorating sleep on Saturday night from 11:30pm - 1:45am), to continue in the same way this week.

So I had to submit it. At 11:00pm last night, only an hour and a half after I'd planned.

Now all I have to do is work on my other stories and wait for August to read my feedback!

Monday, June 8, 2009

Novel meltdown

I have one week. One week left to edit the first thirty pages of my novel (formerly known as NaNoWriMo Novel #1, now called by its acronym, TBW) so I can submit it to The 2009 Get Your Stiletto In The Door Contest. I had every intention of entering it into the competition this time last year, but I looked at the state of my novel and said 'There is no way it will be ready in time.'

At the moment, it's pretty much there. I cut a lot of the ideas that were purely NaNoWriMo padding, and re-structured the whole book. And I also had to divide the whole thing up into chapters. I think it's more balanced. I'm just line editing now, making sure that the scenes flow easily from one to the next, and that my characterisation and description isn't too over/underdone.

It would be nice for my novel to do well in the competition - I'd be ecstatic for months if it did - but realistically I'm more interested in the feedback the judges are offering. Hopefully they will give me pointers on things I can improve, so that I can make my novel better.

P.S. Happy Queen's Birthday to all of the states who celebrate it today! I hope you enjoy the day off! I know I will :)

P.P.S. I've noticed lately that I use the word 'just' a lot. I'm trying to stop! Is there any word that always seems to just pop up in your writing?

Monday, June 1, 2009

The Writer's Retreat

It is just after eight o'clock, and I am just about ready to begin writing. All around me is quiet, save for the chirping of some unidentifiable birds outside and the hum of the computer fan.

It is Monday morning, I have this week off from work, and I intend to write.

The next eight days (Monday June 8 is a public holiday) will be spent slowly striking things off of my long list of writing projects. And not before time - some of them have been hanging around for a year.

My first task is to finish three chapters of Retribution, my Ever After Fan Fiction story. From there comes the more difficult work: sequencing my novel and starting rewrites to get it ready for a novel competition I plan on entering it into, polishing another submission I want to make to an online journal, and trying to find a publication that matches another story I've written (I know, I know, I should find the publication first, and then tailor my stories for them. I must get my head around that concept!)

Wish me luck!

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Why I'll always love Fan Fiction

I received a rejection letter on Monday. Even though it was a standard letter, the Fiction Editor had taken the time to not only sign her name but write mine - much friendlier than the "Dear Writer" other magazines have been sending my way. I even liked the letterhead on the rejection letter - shiny silver and purple - and, although it is plain professionalism that sees every one of the magazine's letters go out with this expensive-looking letterhead, I couldn't help but think they could save money in this global financial crisis by sending out the hundreds of rejection letters they mail each week with less gloss. Or maybe that's just me?

I'm not sure if it was the handwriting of the editor, or the shiny letterhead, or the fact that I've just become used to them, but this rejection didn't leave me with the hollow realisation that I'll never ever be a 'real' writer.

Then again, I had posted Chapter Three of Retribution, my Ever After Fan Fiction story, the night before and it's hard to tell yourself your writing is a mess when reviewers are telling you that you write well and are asking to read more. It gives me random thoughts, like: maybe I could write movie novelisations, or perhaps I should concentrate on historical novels! Yes! Mind you, jumping on the Internet whenever I can to see if there's a new review is probably not doing much for my productivity!

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Happy Easter

I wish everyone a happy and safe Easter!

I envisage spending the next two days eating my way through the left over hot cross buns, gorging on Cadbury chocolate with my family, revelling in the knowledge that I have submitted Submission 11, and making a good start on writing a novel synopsis for Writing School Assignment Eighteen!

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Halfway there...

I am halfway through the amount of submissions I need to make for Writing School!

Even better, I am one more edit away from submitting Submission #11, and I even have a few ideas about queries to non-fiction publications.

This is all very exciting for me, after all of these (years) of procrastination. Maybe my writing brain is finally kicking in?

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Looking for inspiration

Today I got back in to writing mode (was I ever really there?) by completing my tenth submission for Writing School. It took me five weeks of typing and re-typing the story before I convinced myself I just had to let it be. Hopefully, I don't take as long to finish off the accompanying cover letter - I plan to have it all done and in the mail by tomorrow night.

In other news, we've finally foregone our old dial-up connection and have ADSL2 - great for accessing the Internet when the need to check a submission guideline arises, but very, very bad for getting stuck on the Internet reading blogs or looking for houses!

My list of potential projects is getting larger. I have three assignments left to complete for my Writing School course, two of which I have outlined. I also have some idea fragments for short stories to write, and with the four-day Easter long weekend coming up, I'll have some time off to sit down and write them - as long as the inspiration that makes the fragments gel together into a story turns up in the next week...

I wrote for six hours (read: sat in front of the computer with my story up on the screen, singing along to my music, thinking about projects that are way down the line in terms of priority, and then every now and then editing my story) today, and so am very pleased with myself!

Now I can go to sleep and enjoy the extra hour as we turn our clocks backward. Sweet dreams!

Monday, January 26, 2009

Australia Day and Heatwaves

First thing I'd like to say is Happy Australia Day to everyone! I hope you're enjoying the long weekend and the requisite backyard BBQ - I know I am!

Second is I am not looking forward to the next few days. The forecast for the next few days is forty degrees Celsius, or around abouts. That's bad for several reasons:
1. It's very hot, even at nighttime.
2. Now that I'm catching the bus to work instead of driving, I have to find ways of keeping cool while walking between work, the bus stop, and home.
3. It gets too hot to go house-hunting, although the bonus is you can work out which houses don't have adequate cooling in them.
4. I don't tend to write much in hot weather. When it's hot, I tend to do things that don't require much energy, or thought. Things like lying on the floor ... in front of the air conditioner.

Enough of the complaining. I actually did manage to motivate myself to submit a story to a magazine today. This is a short story that I actually outlined last June, wrote in September, sent as an assignment to my writing tutor and despite the good feedback am only now submitting it.

My resolution for this year? To stop procrastinating! :)