15 Minutes to Write: The (Crazy) Writing Life

blog4 With the different deadlines I face, writing every day is a necessity. But even before I had deadlines, I wrote every day—just a smidgeon.

If I didn’t, then it was even harder the next day to get back into the groove. And my short writing session would drag out longer because I was writing slowly.

Writing really is a muscle that needs to be exercised. It’s easier to get back into your writing groove the next day if you’ve written the day before. Every day you skip makes it that much more difficult to pick it back up.

Another important reason to write every day? You get natural continuity of voice, pace, and plotting in your manuscript.

Lack of time is the number one excuse writers give for not writing. But if you can find 15 minutes, you can make progress on your manuscript:

Make a plan. Before you stop writing each day, jot down what you plan on writing the following day. This doesn’t have to be a major outline. Something as simple as “Dialogue—Kathy asks Jenny about her feelings about the murder victim and where she was during crime” will work out great.

Note where you left off the day before. Your fifteen minutes will be shot to Hades if you spend it rereading what you wrote the previous day. Again, a short note works well: “Kathy finished discussing the crime with Sam, left the park, and mulled over the potential suspects.”

Be forgiving and uncritical. This is a quick writing session to move your plot forward as much as possible in 15 minutes. You’re not going to write spotless, perfect prose here.

Open up to writing on the go. We’d all love to have a quiet, scenic little writing cabin to escape to. The reality is that many of us are writing on lunch breaks, while waiting for the train to arrive, in carpool lines, or pediatric waiting rooms. If you can learn to block out the world around you and quickly jump into your manuscript, you’ll get a lot more done.

Come equipped. There’s nothing worse than finding a small pocket of time in your day and not having anything to write on. Make a point of having a notebook in your car, desk drawer, and purse. Make sure to pack pens and pencils. Sometimes it’s just easier to whip out a piece of paper and a pencil than taking out your laptop.

But what if you only have 5 minutes to write?

It can be done! I have done real work on my manuscript in five minutes. Here’s how:

Character development: In five minutes, you can list as many things about your character as you can think of. They’re people—what do they like, dislike, and absolutely abhor? What are their pet peeves? Although this list may never make it into your manuscript, the point of the exercise is to give yourself more insight into your character and provide them more depth when you’re writing about them.

Character description: This is an easy exercise to do in 5 minutes. Describe your character. What do they look like? Sound like when they talk (loud speaker, soft speaker)? Do they smell like peppermints? Use your senses.

Setting description: Again, this is the perfect exercise for a 5 minute session. Pick a setting in your manuscript and elaborate on it.

Brainstorm 5 ideas for the next scene in your WIP: You do have one. This is your perfect time to think ahead and, off the top of your head, come up with five ideas for it. They can be as zany or as sedate as you like. Who knows what direction your story could go in? A little quick brainstorming session can open up new possibilities.

If you’re squeezing writing into a busy day, you’re far ahead of the curve. And just five or fifteen minutes a day can put you on track for finishing your first draft.

How do you squeeze writing into your day?

Freaking Myself Out

Bastubadaren--Tora-Vega-Holmstrom-1880-1967

So y’all know my philosophy toward writing a first draft—get the thing thrown on paper. Don’t stop to edit. Don’t stop to research. Don’t stop to think up last names for these characters, just mark them *** to make later. Just get the first draft done.

So five or six weeks into the process, I have a first draft.

And boy, does it need revising!

I’m now revising my first draft of the Memphis Barbeque series book two. And I’m reading along, thinking that actually, it’s pretty clean. Wow. Maybe, considering this is my 5th book, I’ve gotten this process more down-pat.

Then I read a scene from my WIP and I’m like, “Wait. Didn’t I have this scene ten pages back?”

And I did. Same scene, different words, same concept. Ten pages back.

Whups.

How could this happen? I’m guessing that when I picked up my writing one day (picking up from where I thought I’d left off), I thought I’d brainstormed the concept for the scene instead of actually writing it. But no, I’d already written it.

Just one of the hundred things you catch during the second draft.

I immediately turned on myself. I had been happy with this manuscript and suddenly I was feeling 180 degrees opposite.

Ways to Get Back on Track (and Forget the Screw-ups):

Treat our own writing with some emotional distance. This is hard, but I’ve made it work before. Pretend that what you’re reading is something you’re reviewing for a critique group. Don’t take the errors personally—just fix them.

Reading published books in our genre with a critical eye, highlighter, and red pen. Treat it like English class, keep an emotional distance from it.

Know when enough’s enough. Have you picked your manuscript to death? You’ll know it’s been picked to death if you read through a few passages you’ve just edited and the whole soul of the story is missing. The spark has been edited out. Maybe at this point it’s time to give the manuscript to someone else to look over for you.

Remind yourself that you’re your own worst critic. So many of us are hardest on ourselves than any editor or agent could ever be.

Remember we’re all in this boat together. Are there authors who don’t have a rigorous editing process? If there are any, I don’t know them! We all look at the first draft with some anxiety or disgust. The first draft is what it is…it’s the bones of the story. The most important thing is getting it down on paper.

I do my best revision writing when I’m not picking on myself for whatever mistake I’ve made. By keeping positive and keeping some distance from the manuscript, I’ll make the editing process go a lot smoother.

How do you keep your mistakes in perspective?

Links for Writers

Terry3 I’ve gotten to the crazy point in my association with Twitter that I think everybody is on Twitter. It’s amazing how quickly the application messes with your mind.

I thought I’d post some writing links that I’ve come across lately that I thought were helpful or interesting. I’ve posted all of these on Twitter, so my apologies to my Twitter followers for the repost:

10 mistakes writers don’t see (but can easily fix when they do): http://tinyurl.com/5e7apa

5 guaranteed ways to hate your own writing: http://tinyurl.com/y9o86ar

Chapter endings–when your cliffhanging moment comes too soon: http://tinyurl.com/y89vxfl

Continuity in our writing: http://tinyurl.com/ycg76ud

10 ways to become a better #writer (w/ links to resources): http://tinyurl.com/58vco6

9 tips to help you through writing burnout: http://tinyurl.com/yl4hrfw

Sidekicks…who is Robin to your character’s Batman? http://tinyurl.com/y8qlrdt

What *not* to say during an author interview (Huff Post): http://tinyurl.com/ybvreav

The 3 Vs of distinctive voice in dialogue: http://tinyurl.com/yd8s4ep

5 ways to tell your story needs hijacking: http://tinyurl.com/ydlqb2j @glen_allison

Demystifying contracts–what every writer should know: http://tinyurl.com/yjp3xxd

9 ways to improve your author website: http://tinyurl.com/ykcfuey

Tips for naming characters: http://tinyurl.com/ylpphme

Tax deductions for writers: http://tinyurl.com/y9f2ja5

Too many characters in a scene? Mix and match: http://tinyurl.com/y949w6w

On writing beginnings: http://tinyurl.com/yeepuoh

All about ISBNs: http://tinyurl.com/yh4aa8b

Time and your protagonist: http://tinyurl.com/yzqblgw

Tips for developing character voice: http://tinyurl.com/yjr7hrr

Settling for a bad book deal: http://tinyurl.com/yzrzg67

An agent on ‘how to title your book’ : http://tinyurl.com/yjv5mjs

What’s at stake in your story? http://tinyurl.com/yjmxgt6

5 tips on writing story connections to engage your readers: http://tinyurl.com/y8w6n4j

On writing endings: http://tinyurl.com/yby3kyo

An editor on how multiple book deal advances are divided: http://tinyurl.com/ydk7fod

Why do I find it so hard to summarize my novel?: http://tinyurl.com/ye7ks6h

5 types of emails you should automatically be filtering: http://tinyurl.com/yktc5y9

Top 10 newbie writer mistakes: http://tinyurl.com/yh6e9ux

Tips for synopsis writing: http://tinyurl.com/yjwmybn

10 writing rules you can’t break–and how to break them: http://tinyurl.com/yl3wz5t

Sentence structure mistakes: http://tinyurl.com/ylyz9vs

8 reasons your blog isn’t getting comments: http://tinyurl.com/ycda8v2

How writing your own review can help your novel: http://tinyurl.com/ylqzgyq

The curse of the fast writer: http://tinyurl.com/y8t7z95

6 time management tips for writers: http://kenncrawford.com/?p=15

How to start a novel: http://tinyurl.com/ykz3pvj

Can’t make a deadline? Don’t cover it up–tell your editor: http://tinyurl.com/yjv2a24

Writing a query letter with voice: http://tinyurl.com/yf2zvvj

Why editors use form rejection letters: http://tinyurl.com/yd4bd47

Establish goals when setting up a writing critique group: http://tinyurl.com/ya97oke

Why a writer needs confidence: http://tinyurl.com/yboeulo

Hope everyone can find an interesting article to read for their Sunday. :)

Bookless

Girl Reading--Eugen Spiro-1874-1972 Do you know how you have so much going on and there are small things that you mean to check on, but they slip through the cracks? Then you remember them again…then you forget them again…then you finally act on them.

I’m going to be vague here because I don’t want anyone losing their job over this.

My daughter goes to a particular activity that I drop her off for. At one point during this activity, she goes to a cafeteria for a snack. I do also pack a snack, but there are other things in the cafeteria that she’d like to eat from time to time.

This is the money-free 21st century, so she has a PIN code to punch in to pay for the snack in the cafeteria. I keep $25 in the account for her snacks.

About a month ago, she told me she’d forgotten her PIN. And, apparently, my house had eaten the piece of paper that the PIN was originally on. “Ask the cafeteria lady to look you up on her printout,” I said.

Several times during the last month I remembered to ask her if she’d gotten her PIN. “The lady says she can’t find me. I’m not in her book,” said my daughter with a The Grown-Up-Has-Spoken air.

I continued getting frustrated about this. I’ve put $25 in an account that no one can access?!

Finally, on Wednesday, after about a month of this, I decided to go to the cafeteria myself. I would help find the missing PIN.

I walked up, smiling, to the lady. I quickly explained the situation. “So let’s look up her number real quick,” I said briskly, nodding at the binder next to her.

She looked at me with a terrified face that froze me, although I didn’t understand why she was frightened. “Her last name?” she asked.

“Craig.”

“Starting with the letter….?”

“C.”

She opened the binder and flipped through the pages. She was in the Ps.

I was really puzzled now. “I’m sorry…it’s Craig. With a C.”

Again the scared look.

She carefully found the Cs and ran a finger down the page of CAs.

“It’s not here,” she said, looking at me.

If she’d turned a gun on me, I wouldn’t have been more shocked. She couldn’t read.

She wasn’t an English as a Second Language citizen. She was a native. And she was at least 45 years old. And she was functionally, if not completely, illiterate.

And I found that completely chilling.

“You know?” I said, “These printouts sometimes list folks all crazy and out of order. Could I…?” She handed me the binder, I found the CRs, and jotted down the PIN. As nice as I tried to be, we shared a look that meant that SHE knew that I knew that she couldn’t read. And that she’d been telling my daughter for a month that her name wasn’t in that binder to cover up for the fact.

I didn’t sleep well that night. I couldn’t imagine a world without books. My life revolves around books and writing. If I have any extra snippets of time, I’ve got my face in a book.

I know that Terry Odell is a literacy volunteer and my hat’s off to her. She’s opening up a new world to her students. One day, when I’m done volunteering for my children’s groups, I’d like to promote literacy and volunteer, too.

With all the talk and controversy of e-books versus printed books…what really matters is the reading. It’s the escape it provides and the worlds it opens up for us. Reading is the ultimate entertainment.

God help those of us who aren’t able to share in the pleasure.

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