Tag Archive for: day job

Can Writing Motivate Writing?

by
Paula Gail Benson

When
your day job requires extensive writing, can the well run dry? Do you come home
from work and avoid the computer or laptop, just ready to let the words flow
over you from the closest television or other viewing or listening device? Do
you wake reserving your word skills for the workplace rather than spending an early
morning hour on a fiction project before heading to the office?

As a
legislative attorney, I’m constantly working with language. It’s always
fascinating to try to explain a concept with brevity, clarity, and
comprehensiveness. Like working on a puzzle, it’s usually a matter of figuring
out how to put the pieces together to create a picture everyone can see, appreciate,
and understand.

However,
after a full day of writing and rewriting, sometimes it’s difficult to convince
myself that I need to put in a few more hours at home, even if it’s on a
project I’m truly devoted to completing. I convince myself I need a break. And,
once I give myself permission to relax (to be ready for what tomorrow brings),
then it’s easy to keep depending upon that rest period.

So,
I began thinking about how to use my work writing to energize my fiction
writing.

Last
year, I started “bullet journaling” to organize my schedule and keep notes. I wrote
a message about it here at The Stiletto Gang. The official website was
established by Ryder Carroll, who now has a book called The Bullet Journal Method. Because bullet journaling is adaptable
to each practitioner, the ways to set up a journal may differ. I have used my bullet
journal not only to track appointments, work projects, and daily
accomplishments (like a mini-diary), but also for fiction. With everything in
one easy to carry notebook, I can capture ideas, phrases, bits of dialogue, and
other things I want to remember to explore in a story. For example, at dinner
one night, I had an incredible view overlooking the city. I wanted to capture
what I was seeing and wrote a description while I waited for the meal. Now, I
have the words to remember the image I found so intriguing. Maybe I’ll use it
in a story or maybe it’s just for my benefit, but it exercised those writing
muscles and that is always a good thing. Having the bullet journal made the
writing possible.

The
hand-written aspect of the bullet journal allows me to “think on the page” in a
different way from typing. In addition, because the bullet journals I use have
a “dot grid,” I’m not restricted by lined pages. I can write at an angle if I
want or use drawings to help illustrate what I mean. (I wonder if I should try
drawing legislative concepts?)

Another
“exercise” I’ve found myself using lately is to retell familiar stories from a
single character’s perspective. In particular, I’ve worked on a series of fairy
tales, starting with the prince’s viewpoint, then progressing to secondary characters,
and finally villains. I write examples on my personal blog, where I limit each
entry to 100 words (a drabble), forcing myself to make every word count and
meaningful, just like with writing legislation. It’s been a good motivator,
allowing me to focus on character traits and motivations rather than plot. For
one group (the villains), I used rhyme, another variation from my day job.

What I’ve concluded
is that filling that blank page, whether with a to do list or a story idea,
helps lead to more writing. In the bullet journal, I give myself the freedom to
let thoughts lead me. Sometimes, the road is a dead end. At other times, it’s a
great adventure. That’s the life of a fiction writer with a writing day job!

“Use Your Imagination”

Like many authors, I have a day job that keeps me far too
busy. Right now, I’m scrambling to handle everything that was deferred due to a
giant deadline. (Said deadline meant 12+ hour days for weeks and weeks – ack!)
One of those deferred items is making sure all the slides
for my teaching assignments (next week’s adventure) were appropriately timed, logged, approved, and all
the jazz that goes with having your class qualify for Continuing
Professional Education.
And because clearly I don’t have enough to do, I was assigned
a presentation about another service line (to present, fortunately, to just our
group rather than all partners and managers). I say ‘fortunately’ because the
partner who assigned this task made the mistake of saying, “Be creative! Think
outside the box! Use your imagination!”

Those clichés should give you a clue – tossing out phrases like that is throwing down the gauntlet for an author.

So instead of developing a wonderful blog post for you, I spent the afternoon on The Extremely Unlikely [Service Line Redacted]
Case – a Murder Mystery.
 

There’s a dead accountant.
And cops.


Lots of cops. 

   
Suspects.


Several suspects. 

And the boring stuff about the Service Line.
Tune in next month to see if I still have a job. 
Have you ever done anything completely silly or off-the-wall
for your day job? Please share!!

Cathy Perkins
started writing when recurring characters and dialogue populated her day job commuting
daydreams. Fortunately, that first novel lives under the bed, but she was
hooked on the joy of creating stories. When not writing, she can be found doing
battle with the beavers over the pond height or setting off on another travel
adventure. Born and raised in South Carolina, she now lives in Washington with
her husband, children, several dogs and the resident deer herd. 
Currently she’s employed in a financial day job. 

Embracing the Change

by J.M. Phillippe

Like many other writers, I have a day job. I am a social worker and have spent the last four years working in child welfare. While this can be a very rewarding field to work in, it is also a very draining field to work in. Self-care is a constant challenge due to the demands of the job. When you rarely get time for lunch, it is even harder to make time for writing — which has not been good for me, or my publishing schedule. 
It’s not just the hours, which are long, or the paperwork, which even the most prolific of writers would find daunting to keep up with — it’s that the constant stress leaves you so little mental energy to dig into character and conflict. Writing is work, of course, but it began to feel like more work than it ever had before. 
Every writer, regardless of their outside life, struggles to fit writing into that life. Writing is a very time consuming enterprise, and much of that time is spent away from other people, and away from the maintenance of every day living. It’s hard to write and do dishes at the same time (though so easy to get dishes done when you are avoiding a particularly challenging writing session). Time spent writing is time AWAY. You have to have the time to spare (or the ability to create it).  I was running out of away time to dedicate to writing (or laundry, which was piling up on the regular). Something had to give. 
So I sought out and found a new job at a mental health clinic — I will now be working as a therapist full time. What I am hoping this means is that I will have more time — and energy — for writing. 
And yet, change is hard. Change makes people very uncomfortable. (As someone who helps people change their lives for a living, I can attest that most people find it at best, a frustrating experience). So even though I’m very excited for this change, I am also nervous. What if this doesn’t work out the way I hope it will? What if I start to feel burned out again? What if I don’t make time for writing in this new schedule? 
Change comes with risk — it invites the unknown into your life. It leaves variables on the table that only time and experience can solve. And at this point, I’m still not sure what X will turn out to be. 
It feels very much like sitting down to write a new story with only a vague outline in mind, and no real idea how it’s going to end. So you’d think I’d be used to this feeling, used to facing down the unknown. The very act of writing is the act of embracing change over and over, solving for x time and time again. Writing is meant to be uncomfortable and challenging, or else it wouldn’t also be rewarding. Change, like writing, is hard every single time. It also is the only way that something new, and potentially amazing, can happen. 
Here’s to opening the door and inviting in the amazing!
***

J.M. Phillippe is the author of Perfect Likeness and the newly released short story The Sight. She has lived in the deserts of California, the suburbs of Seattle, and the mad rush of New York City. She worked as a freelance journalist before earning a masters’ in social work. She works as a family therapist in Brooklyn, New York and spends her free-time decorating her tiny apartment to her cat Oscar Wilde’s liking, drinking cider at her favorite British-style pub, and training to be the next Karate Kid, one wax-on at a time.

Rocking the Day Job

By Cathy Perkins
Waving from warm, sunny Orlando today. Quite a change from
last month’s endless snow.

photo by Cathy PerkinsI wish I could say I’m on vacation. Instead, I’m rocking the
day job, teaching at my firm’s management school and taking a (shh! really
boring) mandatory class, made bearable by my peers (who also have to take it).
This week made me think about careers and balancing. I know
authors who have ditched their day job to write full time. Many others are like
me—working full time at a job that pays the bills and offers health insurance.
Since it’s the season to count your blessings and make plans for the new year,
I’ll start with gratitude I have an interesting job that sends me money twice a
month. J
Layer in writing, volunteers gigs, and the rest of my life,
however, and it’s a lot of balls to keep in the air. Over the past few weeks,
I’ve read a number of blog posts talking about time management and work/life
balance. While I try to implement some of the tips, consistently, the best advice I’ve received is “write every day.” Even
if it’s only a line or two, put those words on the page first thing in the
morning. Otherwise, the day’s demands can catch up (and overwhelm) leaving
you exhausted at the end of the day.  Creative energy? What’s that? As much as I hate to admit it, I find if I get
out of the “habit” of writing, days or weeks can slide past.
photo by Cathy Perkins
What about you? Are you rocking the day job? Writing full
time? Balancing other commitments? 

What’s your best advice for maintaining
balance or finding time to write?

Oh. And the deer came over to welcome me home to the snow.  

Ask the Conductor

By Bethany Maines
Recently, I spent an hour at our historical documents
library chasing down the names of the trolley stops between Tacoma and Spanaway
Lake in the year 1914. Why, I hear you ask? What possible strange writer thing
could I be up to? Is there a new novel in the works featuring a motorman’s
adventures trying to the clear the name of a fellow conductor whose trolley
appeared to take a turn too fast and go over an embankment fiery ball of flames
in turn of the century Tacoma Washington? No, although now that you mention it,
I would totally read that novel.

In fact this research mission was related to my day job –
graphic design. While it’s rare for a design job to take me to the library, I
strongly feel that both hats that I wear revolve around the same theme – I tell
stories. Sometimes it’s in words and the stories are of my own in invention and
sometimes it’s for a client who wants to showcase their unique narrative either
in print or in the case of the trolley client on the side of their building.
Yes, they take different skills, but at the end of the day, I feel like there’s
a lot of overlap. Each project must have a beginning that sets the stage and
leads the viewer/reader into main message and then conclude in a satisfactory
manner. I think my ability to spot a narrative aids me in both lines of work.
And of course, the benefit to being paid to research strange topics, is that
who knows when a novel will require the use of my new found trolley knowledge.
Bethany Maines is the author of the Carrie
Mae Mysteries
, Tales from the City of
Destiny
and An Unseen Current.
 
You can also view the Carrie Mae youtube video
or catch up with her on Twitter and Facebook.