Pre-Writing (#4 of 6 Tools to Write)

#4 in a series of 6

Another mistake we make is to assume that what flows from our pen must be finished product. Logically, we know this makes no sense. There’s always a bit of re-writing before the proofreading and editing. We would never expect others to deliver perfection without practice.

[image: photo of picture frame http://www.sxc.hu/photo/636590 by Oliver Gruener http://www.sxc.hu/profile/Plusverde” width=”222″ height=”253″ class=”alignright size-full wp-image-2485]Whether it’s the next chapter in your novel or a page of marketing copy for your website, it can help to sit down and intentionally scribble the ugliest, roughest draft you can imagine. Make it your plan to write something so simple, so messy, so basic, so ugly, that you can’t possibly use it. This is just a note to yourself about what you’re planning to think about considering writing.

This is much like the trick I use to get myself to do household chores. If a picture needs hanging, next time I see the hammer I lay it on the floor where the picture is to be hung. Then when I run across the box of nails, I set that in place. If the picture needs a hanger attached to it, that goes in the pile as well. Eventually I walk past, look at this instant picture hanging kit sitting on the floor, and realize that it will take almost no effort to finish the task. It gets done.

The hardest part about writing is writing. Not the polishing, the formatting, the editing. Just starting. Just putting down the few words that say what we really mean.

Pre-writing is a way to start ugly and simple and just get something down on paper.

Once the task is started, sometimes the compulsion to continue is overwhelming.

That’s okay too.

Continued tomorrow.

Timer (#3 of 6 Tools to Write)

#3 in a series of 6

[image: photo http://www.sxc.hu/photo/429177 by scott craig http://www.cancerbox.com/” width=”200″ height=”139″ class=”alignright size-full wp-image-2479]Being passionate souls, writers have a tendency to over promise, over commit and just plain try too hard.

When facing a challenging task, it’s human nature to try to swallow the elephant in one gulp. Every “getting things done” specialist in the world tells us that’s wrong — and yet we persist. If you want a jump start on eating the elephant, start with one tiny bite.

If you’re 12 years behind on your book, it’s easy to assume that it will take four hours a day for the next 10 years to catch up. And what happens is you spend four hours a day worrying about writing and zero hours a day doing it. If you missed yesterday’s post on habits and rituals, go back and read it. Then we’ll talk about why a 5-minute timer is such a great habit-building tool.

This all-or-nothing perspective makes habit-building a real challenge. … more … “Timer (#3 of 6 Tools to Write)”

Your Writing Schedule (#2 of 6 Tools to Write)

#2 in a series of 6

Every February thousands of songwriters converge on February Writing Album Month. FAWM founder Burr Settles lives by the Jack London quote which has always been part of FAWM culture: “You can’t wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club.”

To many artists it seems nonsensical to sit down and intentionally crank out 14 songs in 28 days.

That’s not creativity; that’s just work. they say.

Seven years of participation taught me otherwise.

[image: photo of office http://www.sxc.hu/photo/947942 by stephan fleet http://stephanfleet.com/]

… more … “Your Writing Schedule (#2 of 6 Tools to Write)”

Your Writing Environment (#1 of 6 Tools to Write)

Revisiting this list of 6 tools to get you writing instead of whimpering in the fetal position on the closet floor.

The first, because it is largest, most evident, and the most mechanical (which means the easiest to think about and implement) is your environment.

The pervasive image of the starving artist huddled, shivering in their garret leads us, perhaps unconsciously, to believe that art is immune to environment, or even that art is created by pain and suffering.

Your rational brain knows that this is nonsense.

“Even the most abstract mind is affected by the surroundings of the body. No one is immune to the impressions that impinge on the senses from the outside. Creative individuals may seem to disregard their environment and work happily in even the most dismal surroundings . . . in reality, the spatiotemporal context in which creative persons live has consequences that often go unnoticed. The right milieu is important in more ways than one.”—Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Creativity: Flow and the Psychology of Discovery and Invention, p. 126

A proper environment, as Csikszentmihalyi points out, adds enormously to our ability to create.

[image: photo http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1354904 by kslyesmith http://www.sxc.hu/profile/kslyesmith” width=”444″ height=”165″ class=”aligncenter size-full wp-image-2417]

Here are a few things you should carefully inspect to ensure that they are the best you can arrange for your writing environment. Some will have a large effect. Some will have a small effect. But all will affect the comfort and ease of your creative abilities.

… more … “Your Writing Environment (#1 of 6 Tools to Write)”

What Are You Willing to Risk for Your Art?

Entrepreneurs love to talk about risk, especially the risks they take to bring their products and services to market.

They always seem to be talking about money. They invest heavily in their creation and if it doesn’t take off they could lost it all.

I have yet to hear one of these risk-takers say they’ll lose everything they own.

Even that isn’t what’s scary.

If running out of money is the worst thing you can imagine you don’t have much imagination.

[image: Maslow's Heirarchy: the higher you go . . .” width=”444″ height=”330″ class=”aligncenter size-full wp-image-2386]

… more … “What Are You Willing to Risk for Your Art?”

When There Are No Exceptions

[image: photo http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1319306 by Nick Albufairas http://www.sxc.hu/profile/nickwijnan” width=”222″ height=”222″ class=”alignright size-full wp-image-2381]Facts are facts, right?

Here’s a fact you may remember from Middle School Biology: the human body has 206 bones.

Except sometimes.

It’s not uncommon to have an extra rib, or an extra bone in the arch of your foot. (Between the two, it could be as high as 20% of the population.) Those people have 207 bones. (Unless you have both an extra rib and one of 3 possible extra bones in your foot.)

Exceptions exist. Even to well-known medical facts.

Let me ask you about another fact: does listening to Mozart make you smarter? Will it make your child smarter?

… more … “When There Are No Exceptions”

5 Ways to Provide the Fresh Blog Content Your Fans Crave

[image: photo http://www.sxc.hu/photo/15900 by Andras Deak http://www.sxc.hu/profile/dean” width=”200″ height=”324″ class=”alignright size-full wp-image-2353]We’ve all seen a teenager open the refrigerator for the thirteenth time hoping miraculously that a pizza has appeared where only broccoli lay before.

There’s a marvelous scene in one of the Crocodile Dundee movies where someone points out that his hotel room has a television. He turns it on saying, “I’ve seen television before.” As the I Love Lucy theme fades in he says, “Yup, that’s what was on”.

Can you imagine if the food in the fridge really never changed or if the show on television was actually always the same?

There are some activities in life which hinge on variety, newness, change, to keep our attention. Eating the same foods over and over again gets boring fast – even pizza.

The single greatest reason for potential fans (which means potential purchasers of your book) to visit your website is to find something new.

… more … “5 Ways to Provide the Fresh Blog Content Your Fans Crave”

How My Mom’s Kitchen Advice is Hindering Your Writing

[image: photo http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1416846 by Suzanne T http://www.sxc.hu/profile/jaroas” width=”170″ height=”300″ class=”alignright size-medium wp-image-2296]Invariably, during every cooking show my mom watches she tells the professional on the screen you shouldn’t crack the eggs right into the dish you’re preparing; what if one of the eggs is bad? You just ruined the whole thing!

Oh, and when you’re done washing the dishes and wiping the table, rinse the dish cloth in cold water. Prevents germs from growing so it doesn’t start to stink.

My mom grew up in a home and a time when eggs could be dodgy and when laundry was done weekly, not daily (or more.)

Those TV chefs? They probably use hand-selected organic custom eggs from their private stock.

The dishcloth? Own 7. Wash in bleach. No smell.

Here are some writing questions I see all the time:

… more … “How My Mom’s Kitchen Advice is Hindering Your Writing”

Getting Ready to Prepare to Plan to Begin to Think About Writing My Next Novel

[image: anodyne]The website said the first Jake Calcutta mystery anodyne would be released August of 2012.

Some of the delay has been life getting in the way. Some has certainly been procrastination.

The majority of it has been me driving myself to write a better book.

Through the Fog is a fun read. I’m working on (read thinking about) a sequel. But it’s not the serious mystery that will make people think I’m Chandler reborn.

… more … “Getting Ready to Prepare to Plan to Begin to Think About Writing My Next Novel”

Year-Long Workshop: Get Your Book Out of the Someday Box in 2014

[image: was this place new when you started your novel?” width=”222″ height=”111″ class=”alignright size-full wp-image-2263]What if I could lead you by the hand and promise that in 2014 you’d finally finish that novel?

What’s more, what if I gave you greatly increased chances that it would be good?

Is that worth paying for?

Details to come.