I get up at 6am in order to have an hour's writing time before work. I can't really write in the evenings because of family commitments. During any given day I maybe have an hour or two when I can be usefully thinking about the story, its characters etc. I'm hoping to get it under my skin to the extent where I can be working on it even when I'm not writing. |
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Tiger, this is EXACTLY the way I do it, too! I have a full-time job and a family, and the day-job and family take up all my evenings and the whole of the day-time at weekends, so I also get up early and write. I usually do 5.30-7 am on weekdays, and maybe 6-9 am on weekends (I'm lucky that all my clan like to lie in - or else are happy to veg in front of the TV at weekends until 9 am, when they start appearing and demanding breakfast). I also try to keep the story ticking over in my brain, and use time like in the bath or driving to work (if I'm not running through my lectures in my head!) to let the next scene form itself.
It is absolutely doable. I can generally write a novel in 8-10 months working this way. I don't put pressure on myself by setting daily or weekly word-count targets - I know that there are some periods (when work is stressful, or family stuff gets on top of me) when I won't write much at all. In busy teaching times, my 5.30-7 slot gets used up with day-job work. But I know there will be other spells when I have more elbow room and it will go much quicker. Or little bonuses, like a train journey, or an evening when my partner is out and the kids go to bed, and I can just write.
Good luck with it!
Rosy x
<Added>I find that my brain does a lot of background processing while I work on other things, so you may actually find this will improve your writing and output. |
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I also very much agree with Gaius about this. Writing a bit each day, but then letting the story simmer or gestate in your subconscious for the rest of the day while you fly around doing other things is, for me, a really productive way of working. If I ever do have a longer, unbroken period to write, I tend to dry up - I get to the end of the part which has formed in the depths of my brain...
<Added>And I agree very much with Nancy about being protective of my early morning writing time. Disciplined, too, I guess, but I never perceive it that way - it is my wonderful, selfish 'me' time, before I turn back into a mum and a teacher, at the beck and call of others (it sometimes feels like!) for the rest of my day.
And I agree, also, about finishing each session on a middle bit... The other thing I sometimes do is plan a bit (or dream a bit - it is often not as coherent as 'planning'
in the bath last thing at night, and then jot down a few snatches of ideas in bed - a line of dialogue, a thought for a new paragraph - so that in the morning I feel I have something to get going on straight away.