I have great plans. Write in the morning, write after work, go into my home office, aim for a page count, and on and on...
I heard a quote in a meeting; It's still a goal until you quit.
Good words. My goal is to become a prolific writer.
Sometimes we have to reset the goal. Life changes, work changes, we change. Enough that maybe the old ideas of how we hope to get things done, don't really fit anymore. In the past three years I've held four different positions at work. Each one another rung on the ladder so that's a good thing, but each change brought on more studying, more challenges to conquer. A learning journey. It's been fun and educational. I knew when I took the first job, it was below my skill level, but I liked the place and the people and knew I could figure the rest out as I learned about the business.
Then there's my writing. The stories that need editing and stories to tell. Sometimes I'd pull that word doc up and put a few paragraphs in, but then spend time rereading what I wrote last since it's been a while since I wrote it. Going nowhere fast...
I have Stephen King's book, On Writing, on my nightstand. I sometimes reread parts of it for inspiration. One of the things that stands out about his whole writing journey is that he always wrote. Even when working in other places, he found a way and wrote. He set goals.
So, how to set goals when working a full time job, coming home with your brain fried, and head spinning? What do you? Sadly, I turn to Facebook or Pinterest. Evil little time suckers.
After a while my mind screams; ENOUGH! LET'S GET IT DONE!
It's time to set new goals. Here's the plan;
Weekends; 20 pages. That's only 10 pages a day. How hard can that be? When I'm into a story, 10 pages are easy. Aside from the occasional family thing or adoption days for my foster dog, weekends are pretty much open.
Weekdays; 10 pages for the whole week. (This goal is frightening) That would be 2 pages a day or about there. Depending on what's going on at work, sometimes I wake up thinking about what I have to get done that day. My mind starts scheduling things, lining up the day as I sip coffee. After work? Facebook calls. When there's nothing exciting there, it's on to Pinterest! Bad habits that need to go. Writing during the week is hardest.
Question? How do you clear your mind to write?
Foster Dog, Lexie. On the day she saved from a North Carolina kill shelter. |