I just glanced at the clock. 7:35 am. That leaves
me ten, maybe fifteen minutes to write before it's time for me to head
for my day job. What can I possibly accomplish in so little time?
A lot, as it turns out. My current schedule only
permits me to devote snippets of time to my passion, my true vocation.
On some days, despairingly, I spend those precious moments staring
helplessly at a blinking cursor, or with pen in frozen hand; on others,
my fingers fly across the keyboard and words appear almost effortlessly
across the screen. What makes the difference between writer's block and
productivity?
The difference lies in how I spend my time away
from the keyboard. At work, while driving, or when taking a shower.
Sitting in the waiting room of a doctor's office, standing in a grocery
store check out line, working out. When I spend all of this non-writing
time thinking about non-writing stuff--my bills, my to-do list, a
misunderstanding with a co-worker or whatever--I find that I am not
prepared to write when those brief, precious time slots for writing
become available.
But when I use non-writing time to think about
writing--to brainstorm ideas, actively listen to conversations around
me, consciously notice the details of the room I'm in, the person I'm
with or how I am truly feeling at any given moment--I come to my tiny
slivers of writing time equipped use them well.
Take this morning, for example. Rather than
daydream or worry or fret during my shower, I decided to ask myself the
question, "What can I write about today?" I had just polished and
submitted two short articles to a trade magazine the day before, and
was faced with the ugly prospect of staring at a blank screen. What
would I put there when the moment came? Ah, I thought, I haven't
written an article about writing in a while, and have nearly two weeks
before my next issue--could I start a new one today? About what? What
would motivate, inspire and/or inform my readers? Perhaps many of them
also face full days that leave only short, scattered opportunities to
write. What can I tell them?
Hence, the first several paragraphs of this very
article. And the satisfaction of knowing that, later in the day or
early the next, I can pick up where I left off--no blank screen staring
back at me.
Believe me, these 10-to-15 minute time slots for
writing add up. In three to four days, you can have the first draft of
a 500-800 word article, one or two query letters, a book outline, a
scene for your novel, or several greeting card sentiments. Over the
following few days, you can polish them. Submit them to appropriate
markets when they're ready to go. Grin with a sense of accomplishment.
Then start the whole process all over again.
I am completing this article during a 30-minute
stint on a Saturday morning, a week before my next issue goes out. I'll
have plenty of time to edit and improve it over the next few days, by
which time I'll have other projects started as well.
I urge you not to use "being too busy" as an
excuse not to write, and not to get published. Certainly you may have
only precious moments to spend at your keyboard. Come to those moments
consistently prepared, watch those moments add up and those projects
take shape, and your writing dream will come true.
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About The Author
Mary Anne Hahn publishes WriteSuccess, the
free biweekly ezine that helps writers pursue *successful* writing
careers. Subscribe today by visiting http://writesuccess.com.
hahnmah@aol.com
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This article was posted on February 14,
2005