by Janis Patterson
I spend waaaay too much time online. First, there's email to
check, just to make sure there's nothing that has to be attended to, as
everyone knows email is the best way to contact me. Then there's my twice-daily
check of my sales stats - lately that has been a masochistic exercise in
depression, to say the least! Of course, there's research to be done, for I
simply have to know the depth of a stylish hem flounce in 1816 or the exact
caliber of a Broomhandle Mauser... All legitimate reasons, all time-consuming,
and if I would just stop there I would be all right.
Unfortunately, minutes spent online are far too much like
potato chips or jelly beans - far too easy to overindulge in. I promise myself just
one quick look on Facebook or Twitter, just long enough to do a little promo
and do a fast check to see what my friends are doing... then sometimes at least
an hour later I'll notice the clock and scream Noooo! It can't have been thaaat long!
Even more unfortunately (from a time sense only, as I am
very happy), I have a husband and a home and an extended family to look after.
Clothes must be washed, the kitchen cleaned, meals cooked, dust bunnies
rearranged, errands run... the minutiae of daily living. Unlike the internet,
each of these makes a perfect excuse not to write. I won't struggle with this chapter right now, especially since
(insert household chore of choice here) has
to be done.
Back when I was single my late mother used to swear she
could tell how my writing was going by looking at my kitchen. If it was a
disaster area almost fit for condemnation she knew the new book was going well.
When she came over to find me cleaning the gasket of my dishwasher with a
cotton swab and alcohol for the third day in a row, she would suggest that I
start checking the want ads for a real job.
Make no mistake - I am a professional writer. Writing is my
job. When I don't write I don't get paid. (Sometimes even when I do write I
don't get paid, but that's another rant for another blog.) And I do my best to
treat my writing just like I would an office job - dedication, responsibility, reasonable
hours, decent output, respect for my craft.
Unexpected exigencies aside, I try to ration the lunches
with girlfriends (though some still cannot understand why since I work at home
- and therefore obviously don't have a 'real' job - I can't just drop
everything and go run and play at any time) and other social/political
necessities. I spend very little time at the store, meaning primarily the
grocery store, as I dislike shopping and am known for wearing clothes until
they are old enough to vote. There is one exception to this - when my dear
friend from Peru comes up once or twice a year for a visit we spend a great
deal of time shopping, as for her it is almost a religious experience. So much
so that some clerks remember us from one excursion to the next!
Sometimes looking at my life I wonder that I get anything
done, let alone why I put myself through such hard work and dedication and mental
gymnastics for such a (recently, at least) insultingly paltry return.
(Something really must be done about falling book sales!) It took me a long
time, but I finally figured it out...
I can't do anything else. There are times I hate writing,
there are times I vow never to write anything but a grocery list again, there
are times I really wish the characters in my head would just SHUT UP... but
there are more times I glory in the act of creation, feel delight that something
works out swimmingly when I had feared it would take days of effort to make the
situation work, joy that my characters have morphed into real, believable -
albeit incorporeal - people with minds of their own...
In other words, I love writing. I can't imagine ever
spending my life doing anything else. No matter how creative I can be in
avoiding doing it!
6 comments:
I love writing, too. Writing and reading. And I, too, am a great procrastinator. But I think procrastination sometimes pays off. There are things that happen in my head at the back of my mind that come out on the page once I get writing again. Whereas I'm pretty sure that, if I did the "write every day no matter what" thing, there would be more "do overs" anyway. I think a lot of the "do overs" occur in my mind when I'm procrastinating. (Or maybe that's just my rationalizing.)
Janis,
I, too, am a procrastinator. I, too, sometimes wonder that my books manage to get written. I find I must check out my email each morning, and then I can write. In fact, I write best in the late afternoon. I've come to realize this is simply my pattern as I'm not a morning person.
Allotting time for all that needs to be done isn't easy. We do need to make time each day to write though. As to dust, it's very patient and waits for us.
A lot of us could have written that post. My home will never be neat and tidy or clean. I can't imagine not getting to my desk every morning before I do anything else, hurrying to get down the phrases and scenes that came to my while I was getting ready for the day. I wouldn't want any other life.
Love this! You're a hoot!
All very true, and well said. Puzzling, isn't it, how we manage to avoid doing the very thing we also most want to do. :-)
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