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#140218 06/01/03 07:47 AM
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Your friend and/or beta reader wants to see the next story/section. You haven't written it yet. eek What do you tell them?

And what do you tell yourself?

See, for a long time, I convinced myself that I could only write when it was absolutely quiet in the house. And while I had regular quiet periods, that worked fine -- at those times I was pretty good about sitting down at the keyboard and being able to write. But when my younger child stopped taking naps, and my husband began working from home... my quiet time pretty much disappeared. So, I figured I couldn't write anything. smile1

So I was just wondering if I'm the only one who says, "Oh, I can't write because _____ " and what some other excuses would be! (Who knows, I may need to use them sometime goofy )

PJ


"You told me you weren't like other men," she said, shaking her head at him when the storm of laughter had passed.
He grinned at her - a goofy, Clark Kent kind of a grin. "I have a gift for understatement."
"You can say that again," she told him.
"I have a...."
"Oh, shut up."

--Stardust, Caroline K
#140219 06/01/03 08:01 AM
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Pregnant with twins? Post-partum with twins? I admit it's a pretty specific excuse, and it wouldn't help, say, Tank goofy , but it's a pretty decent one. laugh

Hazel


Lois: You know the deal.
Clark: Superman gets the guys in capes, Lois and Clark get the guys in suits.

-- Action Comics 827
#140220 06/01/03 08:15 AM
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Not enough time.

Since summer began, I've actually managed to revise one story, start and complete two others (including the one I co-authored with Kathy) and start a third.

But during the school year? I just have a heck of a time finding a chance to write. I work two jobs (60-80 hours a week at the paper plus 20-30 hours a week at Barnes and Noble) plus I go to school full time. Throw in trying to spend a little quality time with my friends and actually, I don't know, *sleep* and finding time to write gets a little hairy. In a normal weekday, I'm up at 7-8 to get to school and I'm either in class or at the paper until with no downtime until 2-3 in the morning. On the weekends, I cram in three shifts at Barnes and Noble, plus 3pm - 2am Sunday at the paper. And I *try* to do homework in there sometime. So, writing slips to the bottom of the priority list.

What are my excuses during the summer when I have more freetime? Well, I'm still pretty busy, so not enough time is one. But also, I use "just not inspired" a lot. I can write to order if I have to, but I'd rather not. So I usually wait to be inspired. I'm inspired often enough that it doesn't seem to be a serious problem.

Annie


Being a reporter is as much a diagnosis as a job description. ~Anna Quindlen
#140221 06/01/03 08:34 AM
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Quote
Originally posted by AnnieM:
Not enough time.
Yeah, that's mine, too. Luckily for me, or not, my beta is a very patient person with as few time as me. It also helps that she lives quite a bit away and so has not the chance to get on my nerves by constant nagging.

Over the school year it's nearly impossible for me to write. I mean to write what I want to write. This school year I wrote at least 100 pages in word but 0 for my stories. *sighs* Now summer is about to start and I got myself a job...we'll see how I manage job and writing. I hope better than school and writing. 'Cause I really *want* to write more! It absolutely frustrates me to see tons of WIP and not being able to do anything about it.

~Sira

#140222 06/01/03 09:05 AM
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For me it's a lack of time as well. Between studying, homework, judo (already mostly skipped that so I can try to find more writing time), friends and my family and my job, it's hard to find time to write.

I've used the excuse of having written something, but not good enough to send to my betas at some point. Obviously, I really hadn't written more yet.

And the excuse of it's too good weather to sit in front of my laptop and write works too. It's hot and nice now, so not much computer time for me and I really don't spend that writing. Though I could take my laptop outside, but then I don't have an internet connection anymore... and I do study outside.

But I'm trying to write more in two weeks time, when I should have vacation!!!

Saskia


I tawt I taw a puddy cat!
#140223 06/01/03 09:44 AM
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Yep. Not enough time. Mostly because of studying. School homework and/or exams, foreign language homework and/or exams, piano homework and/or exams... I'm busy. As everyone. Let's not forget that, though L&C is a big (huge) part of our lives, it's not the only one...

AnnaBtG.


What we've got here is failure to communicate...
#140224 06/01/03 11:11 AM
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1. Not enough time for sure. If it's not school, sorority functions, Circle K, or church, it's working, Tae Kwon Do, or a trip somewhere.

2. Lack of silence. I need a completely empty house when I write, and my mom works at home. Plus she still thinks everyone online are serial killers so the only time I get to write is around midnight, but I'd rather chat then.

Jen


"Meg...who let you back in the house?" -Family Guy
#140225 06/01/03 11:20 AM
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Hmm, good question... I tend to get hung up on sections and need some idea bouncing, or character disection.. then I am off and running again. Another thing that tends to jolt me from writing is being busy or just plain having my routine interupted.


Marns
~pobody's nerfect
#140226 06/01/03 11:20 AM
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Laziness. Poor time management. A head full of distracting thoughts about other things I need to be doing (like, at the moment, job hunting). And sometimes, work wink .

Actually, I go through phases of being very productive and others of lacking any creativity, whatsoever. Actually, that's not quite right. I usually have creative thoughts. However, quite often ideas refuse to translate into words on paper. Sometimes the words flow easily. Other times, they just jam together, causing a blockage somewhere in the synapses between my brain and my fingers.

Also, just because I'm not writing LnC doesn't mean that I'm not writing, period. I got distracted a couple of years ago from writing LnC because I was writing fanfic for another show. Then, occasionally, I'll attempt to write something original. So far, those efforts have resulted in a very small number of short stories and disjointed pages of what might, one day, become several novels. (Yeah, right. With my talent for procrastination?)

Oh... right... You wanted excuses, not explanations. In that case, I'd have to go with lack of time, too.

Chris (who is wondering just how Annie survives)

#140227 06/01/03 11:39 AM
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I have to have inspiration in order to write, and I've learned over the last year or so that inspiration comes from time to myself. If I don't get a couple of hours a day in which I can sit and think any silly thing that floats into my head, I simply don't have anything to write.

Once I have something to write, though, I just can't keep it in; and nothing will stop me thinking about it. Sometimes the house could fall down around my ears (or the kids kill each other) and I'd still be sitting there thinking about that scene, and what he says, and what her reaction would be, and...

And then there are the times - like the past week - when the story I'm thinking about is *not* the story I'm meant to be writing. BRs don't like that excuse at all. laugh

Mere


A diabolically, fiendishly clever mind. Possibly someone evil enough to take over the world. CC Aiken, Can You Guess the Writer? challenge
#140228 06/01/03 11:41 AM
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Wow, talk about multi-tasking! Maybe my life is a lot easier than I thought it was goofy

Maybe I asked the wrong question. What are the ways people use to make writing time? One of my tricks is to take my notebook with me to the bathroom blush And while I can't recommend that you write while driving... I have to confess that once or twice I've tried it goofy

PJ


"You told me you weren't like other men," she said, shaking her head at him when the storm of laughter had passed.
He grinned at her - a goofy, Clark Kent kind of a grin. "I have a gift for understatement."
"You can say that again," she told him.
"I have a...."
"Oh, shut up."

--Stardust, Caroline K
#140229 06/01/03 12:24 PM
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You need an excuse to not write, just retire. It's easy you just... wait, that didn't work out too well either.

Truthfully, I do have the time to write if I want it, and there are times when I actually feel guilty if I'm not writing. A lot of that comes from the fact that I have fewer distractions in the evenings than I used to, and that is mainly because television, in general, sucks now.

Still, I find that I'm most 'inspired' to write when I'm no where near my computer. Mostly, on the way to work, or during work, I think about a story and am all hyped up to write it. That is until I get home and can actually write it. Then I'm 'not in the mood'.

I find that if I force myself to sit down and start to write, one of two things will happen. Either the words will begin to flow and I'll be able to be quite productive for hours, or it'll take forever to bang out a few paragraphs. Usually that's when I give up and put on a DVD (usually the Corrs) or something.

Tank (who'd really like to get back to more reading of general non Lois and Clark stuff, you know, like real books, but finds it hard to do as he falls asleep too quickly now days)

#140230 06/01/03 12:58 PM
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Guilt.

I am so behind with paperwork for my business, that I find it hard to write. But then I don't get the paperwork done either; instead I read fanfic.

Also, illness is no fun. I've been ill on and off since the beginning of April, and it's really hard to think creatively when your brain is muzzy and your nose is plugged. (And you keep making disgusting snorting sounds, but we won't get into that.)

Lack of time is another biggie for me at the moment. The wholesaling aspect of my business has taken off like crazy, with no sign of slowing down, and there's a lot of prep work I have to do at home for it.

Lots of ideas, no time, guilt and illness. Yep, that covers it for me.

Irene


I try to take one day at a time, but sometimes several days attack me at once.
#140231 06/01/03 03:11 PM
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What are the ways people use to make writing time?
Ho hum, a new question.

1. Write at midnight. It's not ideal for me, but I get the silence I need to do research and put together ideas.

2. Write in my head while I'm gardening. Even if it's just a snippet of an idea, if I can think of something interesting to put in, I'll roll with it at midnight.

3. Just wait for my folks to go out of town. <g> They'll be in Destin on Wednesday, and assuming that my sister works, I'll be all over MS Word.

4. I've been known to just lock myself in various rooms, but then other people in the house get curious as to what I'm doing, and then my entire concentration breaks.


"Meg...who let you back in the house?" -Family Guy
#140232 06/01/03 04:38 PM
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<g> A dragon ate my muse. Hey wink works for me! I've been getting nags for the third story of my NK trilogy lately, but I haven't been working on it. My best excuse as to why is that I've got a WIP being posted right now and that *technically* since the second story is finished, I can wait on the third. wink

I usually manage to get the most work done in the middle of the night right now--it's easier to write when I don't have people looking over my shoulder. While RRs are fun, wink I don't generally manage to produce much when people are reading over my shoulder as I write.

BrightFeather


“Rules only make sense if they are both kept and broken. Breaking the rule is one way of observing it.”
--Thomas Moore

"Keep an open mind, I always say. Drives sensible people mad, I know, but what did we ever get from sensible people? Not poetry or art or music, that's for sure."
--Charles de Lint, Someplace to Be Flying
#140233 06/01/03 05:50 PM
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I tend to read the last few pages of what I have written previously before I go to bed, then I have a little spiral notebook on my beside table and a pencil... I scribble for a while until i can't hold my head up any longer... closing my eyes and drifting for a bit tends to get the juice flowing again, I get to visualize the scene that I am working on and then the pencil starts flying in the shortened sentences/point form. I don't worry about getting the wording right, just the gist of the scene down when I do that. It tends to expand when I type it into the computer the next day. smile1


Marns
~pobody's nerfect
#140234 06/01/03 06:46 PM
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Chris (who is wondering just how Annie survives)
Time management skills, a lot of caffeine, and a sense of humor. Seriously, it's funny the things you can do when you have to. smile

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Maybe I asked the wrong question. What are the ways people use to make writing time?
I take a notebook with me everywhere I go. As a journalist, I never know when something is going to come up and I'm going to need a notebook and pen. The same goes for writing fiction. I never know just when that perfect snipped of dialogue or that perfect description is going to pop into my head. I need to be able to write it down before I'm distracted. This serves a second purpose because it allows me to use every spare minute. When I'm in line, or waiting to go in to interview someone, waiting for one of my writers to be done with a late story so I can edit it or sitting in traffic - I write. At B&N I get two fifteen-minute breaks and one thirty-minute break for every eight hour shift. So I spend one hour per day at B&N writing. Sure, there are times when I get distracted and I'm not able to use every snippet of time to write, but because I always have a notebook with me, I always have the option. Sometimes I outline scenes, sometimes I write down snippets of dialogue, sometimes I write out whole scenes. All that's important to me is that I do *something* so that I don't get out of habit.

Annie


Being a reporter is as much a diagnosis as a job description. ~Anna Quindlen
#140235 06/02/03 01:31 AM
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What are the ways people use to make writing time?
I have 2 ways:

1. I work my stories in my mind whenever I have free time - during the way to school, lying in the bed trying to sleep, in the bathroom etc..

2. I have standard Internet times. I log in the Internet every afternoon at 3 o'clock and every midnight for at least one hour every time, no matter what. While doing the rest of things I want to do, I have opened one of my stories and write a little. This way, I move on with them, and when I have to log off, I think it would be a pity to let them where they are, so I finish one scene - and if I have more time, continue to the next one, and the next one, and the next one...

AnnaBtG.


What we've got here is failure to communicate...
#140236 06/03/03 12:30 AM
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Now that the five kids are home for the summer, I plan to use the couple hours of imsomnia I get during the middle of the night to get out of bed and write. So instead of tossing and turning and wishing I was writing, I plan on doing it.

Missy smile1

#140237 06/03/03 02:23 AM
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What do I tell my beta if I haven't written the next section? Simple: I haven't written the next section. wink

Elaborating a bit - I do this for fun, but there are other things I do for fun, too. Sometimes I want to do those more than I want to do this.

Put another way, I don't let writing control my spare time - I refuse to feel guilty if I haven't written much recently. I'd extend that further to include the whole of my participation in the fandom. I love being a part of it, and I contribute what I can to it, but I've got other parts of my life which deserve my attention just as much as L&C does.

I *do*, however, feel enormously guilty if I haven't BR'd the latest section someone else has sent me. That's an entirely different ball game, because then someone is relying on me and I feel a responsibility towards them.

I suppose you could argue that I have a responsibility towards my readers, too, but I still put my own pleasure just a little bit ahead of theirs. smile

So what do I tell myself? Easy - there's always tomorrow. laugh

Yvonne
(who could procrastinate for Britain wink )

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