Best
Site in Writer's Digest magazine for:2002,
2003,
2005,
2006,
2007,
2008
&2009
#3 of The Writer magazine's "25 Best Writer Websites"
Site Sponsored by...
Publishing
A Book?
Purchase a publishing package, submit a manuscript or request a free
publishing guide at iUniverse.
Have
A Book To Publish? Self publish your book and market it with world-wide distribution. Click
here to have your ad seen by writers today! Writing
Services:
Publish Your Own Book! Instantpublisher.com offers POD, (print on demand) software that will take your manuscript over the Internet from any Microsoft Windows-based program and publish a book in trade quality from 25 to 5,000 copies in less than 7-10 working days. There's no need to wait to get published!
Here's
a horrible truth: no one has time to write.
This includes fulltime writers. Ask any fulltime writer, and he'll moan
that he'd love to write a novel, or a screenplay, or a book of essays,
but he doesn?t have the time, he's too busy with his bread and butter
writing.
The good news is that you can write whatever you've set your heart on
writing, even if you have NO time.
Here's how:
=> One: Commit
Start by deciding what you want to write. Do you want to write magazine
articles? A novel?
Grab a piece of paper and a pen. Look at your watch. Complete this sentence
in ONE minute: "I would love to write ---"
Done? Please don?t read on until you've done the exercise. :-)
OK. Now, before your left brain kicks in with a huge pile of negativity,
commit to this thing that you have your heart set on writing.
I'll count down, from three to one, and at the count of one, please take
a deep breath and say: "I commit to writing (whatever it was that you
wrote in the exercise above)."
Three,
two, one ? say aloud: "I commit to writing ----"
=> Two: Write for five minutes
How much can you write in five minutes?
Let's find out. You may not have time to do this exercise immediately,
but do it in the next couple of hours. You can even do it in your lunch
hour, or in the car before you set off for home this evening.
Write for five minutes about the writing project you've committed yourself
to.
"Writing about" is just talking to yourself on paper. It's free-writing,
that is --- writing in stream-of-consciousness style, without lifting
your pen from the page. Just keep on writing. If you can't think of what
you want to write, then just write that: "I can?t think of what to write
next, look at that little boy over there with an ice-cream cone, I can't"
etc.
How much did you manage to write in five minutes? A page? A page and a
half?
If you write a page a day for a year, you've written a book.
If you've honestly got NO time, you still have five minutes here and there.
Snatch five minutes from your lunch hour or get to a meeting ten minutes
early and use five minutes to write. If all else fails, lock yourself
in the bathroom and write for five minutes.
=> Three: Get a writing buddy
Share your writing with someone. This keeps you accountable. Find someone
(if you don?t know anyone, try the online world), who wants to do the
same kind of writing you want to do. To keep yourselves writing, you'll
swap pages each day. Simply send whatever you've written that day to your
writing buddy.
This work can be completely unrevised, and unedited. Just send it. Your
writing buddy can read it, or delete it immediately after she's checked
how much you wrote.
Or you may decide that you'll swap pages once a week. Or never. Maybe
you'll just ring up your buddy and you'll exchange word counts.
How you manage the relationship is up to you. You'll find that simply
knowing that you have someone to report to will help you to keep your
commitment.
=> Four: Take a course --- find a mentor
Taking a course ensures that you'll write. It will also provide you with
a writing mentor. Many online venues (like Digital-e) provide courses.
Or you may want to take a college course locally.
=> Five: Make writing the first thing you do every day
Have a legal-sized notepad and pen beside your bed, and write a couple
of pages as soon as you wake up. Cover two sheets of paper with words.
Many writers, including Dorothea Brande, who is famous for this "writing
first" technique, have recommended it, and it works.
=> Six: Give up your attachment to the outcome
If you say to yourself: "I'm going find the time to write and I'm writing
a bestseller" you're just about guaranteed to fail. You're putting too
much pressure on yourself. Relax. Tell yourself you're writing because
it's fun, and if it's published that's OK, if not, that's OK too.
To carve out time to write, you must make the commitment to writing first.
Once you're committed, you'll find the time to do it, even if that time
is in five-minute segments.
The benefits of finding the time to write are immense. You'll feel better
about yourself. You'll gain in confidence and self-esteem. And you'll
discover, or rediscover, that writing is a lot of fun, and that makes
it worth doing.
To
read more articles by Angela Booth, visit the Digital- e Web site--Information
for writers and creatives. Ebooks, free ezines, Creatives Club. Love to
write? Turn your talent into a business! http://www.digital-e.biz/
Use
of this web site is an indication of your agreement with our Terms
of Service and Privacy
Statement.Copyright
2001 - 2010 Krista Barrett, Writer Gazette & Topzone Systems Inc.
All contents and graphics copyrighted - Do not copy! Contact us at:
Web Design by Krista Barrett.