I’ve been in a slump since I sent The Realm of Silence off to the editor. I’ve written little, and what I have written, I haven’t liked.
In part, because life
I’ve been distracted by my health, a busy day job, tax accounts time, and preparation to sell our house.
I’ve a complicated mix of health issues most of which were responding nicely to treatment — but in the past month, not so much. We’re still trying to find the source of some of them, but each specialist my GP sends me to finds and fixes something in his speciality and passes over everything else. Clearly, I’m in possession of Douglas Adams’ ‘Somebody Else’s Problem’ field, at least when it comes to medical specialists.
I love my day job, which is solving problems for organisations who want to communicate, proposing and then implementing plain English solutions. But 72 hours a fortnight plus 15 hours a fortnight commute eats into my days, especially when I arrive home too tired to do anything but sleep.
In New Zealand, most people have a 31 March financial year end, inherited from the English system of settling the year’s accounts on Lady’s Day. (Link to blog). I have until end of May to report, but I’m getting my bits and pieces together. With multiple sources of author income, superannuation, and a salary, it gets complicated.
And we’re readying our house for the market. Nearly two acres with a five-bedroom, two-bathroom dwelling that includes two living areas and a double garage, plus a sleep-out. And in a popular commuter town. We have a number of little jobs to do, but we’re tackling them a bit at a time and expect to be ready to sell in the New Zealand spring.
Deadlines, deadlines, deadlines
I was a freelance journalist a long long time ago. I learnt why the word ‘dead’ is in deadline. If your article doesn’t cross the line by the time the editor says, it’s dead. The publication will go ahead without it. Do it too often, and that editor won’t buy from you again. Before you know where you are, your career is dead.
I cannot help but apply the discipline I learnt then to my current fiction career.
I currently have three looming deadlines for stories that are not yet written, including the contemporary I started — but more about that soon.
- Short story of 3,000 words by 24 April.
- Contemporary of 30,000 words by 15 May
- Historical of 20,000 words by 4 June.
It is easy to counsel other people to slow down, renegotiate deadlines, withdraw from commitments, prioritise the people who are important to you and your own health. It’s much harder to apply that sage advice to myself. For one thing, keeping up a regular timetable of new releases is part of my strategy to achieve the longer-term goal of giving up the day job and writing fiction full time.
I can meet the goals on these three, and further goals over the year, if I write 1,500 to 2,000 words a day, six days a week. That’s not impossible. As long as a fair number of them are words I want to keep.
Let’s start at the very beginning
But I’m not writing, and I’ve finally figured out why. I started the contemporary in the wrong place, and I let the heroine know too much about the hero in the first pages of the story.
She’s a smart girl. She has him figured out straight up, and sympathises with his position.
No conflict, no tension, no drama, no story.
So to get them to their future through a story that will be fun to read, I need to go back to the beginning and start over.
Phew. I’m glad we’ve got that sorted!
Yeah, take some R&R time for yourself, that sounds like a punishing schedule. It might be good to schedule a day a week to guiltless no writing. You have enough other projects to fill that day relieving pressure on the days you do write.
With a schedule that tight, pick something to cut back on. I picked my blog a while back, as I was spending more energy feeding that than working on stuff that paid. You cannot market stories that don’t exist. You can pick back up when the house is sold and tax man petted.
2k a day, day in and day out gets wearing. I do it every November for NaNo, but it gets wearing and after three weeks the quality drops most years. Rewrites are a hell compared to times when I take breaks. I’ve finished the challenge, but unless inspiration is running really hot, my normal un-blocked writing speed is a little under 1500/day. A few hundred a day adds up fast. Don’t forget the joy in the grind.
It’s no sin to trim back when stressing out. Take care of yourself. We are not going to think any less if you rebalance for a while.
And congrats on finding the flaw. I’ve had too many stories stall because I could not figure out the problem.
I have a new beginning, written on the train yesterday morning. I knew I was in the right place when I put the iPad away at the end of the trip, eager to get onto the next scene, which was already unrolling inside my head.
Jude, hang in there and stop worrying. Take a few weeks off and go to Carrigaholt, Co. Clare, Ireland. Inhale that pure air; shop at Tesco’s deli bar in Kilrush; and if you can’t sleep, lie out in the damp grass and count the stars in the crystal clear sky!
Your readers love you and will be only too happy to await your next wonderful book.💝💝💝
Thank you, Kathleen
If I ever make it across half the world to Ireland, I’ll go looking for those wonderfully sounding places! And perhaps you and I could share a dish of tea?