Make no mistake about this. I think as writers, we have a tendency to rely heavily upon the artistic part of the writing. We love that. We love being inspired and being creative.
All of those things are important and they work together to produce your unique voice. That’s some magical stuff, for sure.
However, here is something that may appear contradictory to that.
This is work. It really is. It’s work and it requires effort from you.
Before I started writing my novel, I wrote when I “felt led to.” It was a cool way to say that I did it only when I felt like it. However, now that we have those deadlines set in place, I “feel led to” every morning between 6:30 and 8:30 am.
While this idea may appear to weaken the excitement of writing, I’ve found it does the opposite under the right perspective. Here are my tips to help you put some work into your writing.
1) View it as a scheduled responsibility instead of something you do when you have time. What gets scheduled gets accomplished. I know my schedule and when someone makes an appointment with me, I keep it. I am treating my writing like an appointment with a person. This keeps me from blowing it off.
2) Write without regard for emotion instead of under the direction of it. I’ve gotten up every morning between 5:00 and 5:45 am. I know how my day is, and I know that if I waited until I felt like writing later on in the day, my schedule may not agree with that sentiment. I also know that I like sleep, and when my bed has a womb-like warmth and the sun still isn’t up, I don’t feel like getting up and sitting in a stiff office chair in front of a computer. But I refuse to let my emotion get the best of me.
3) Get the words on the page regardless of how the words feel coming out. Anne Lamott (we’ll examine her book on writing in an upcoming Video About A Book) says that every single rough draft is – well – it’s her saying. But they’re not perfect. Every writer ever goes through intense periods of believing that they are writing the best words ever written and the worst garbage ever produced. Write anyway. It’s work.
You might write 1000 words and 100 of them are good. Don’t focus on that right now. Focus on words meeting paper and you having more words today than you did yesterday. As writers, it’s our job!