9.962. On the Power of What You Write

I’m going to talk about Trump for a minute here. The facts being what they are, he is a middling businessman who got really big off of name recognition. As a human he has his flaws, but he isn’t the absolute worst. He is a narcissist who refuses to back down or ever be wrong. I’d bet we all know a Trump in our lives. I am also willing to bet that we know that person well enough to keep them at a certain distance because we get they are full of crap and, more importantly, we get that possess a certain charisma which draws people to them–especially those who are looking for someone strong enough to say what they think and feel and strong enough to throw their belief behind.

Trump is a church and his words are the scripture. Whatever he says or writes is treated like gospel and whomever chooses to stand against him is made of something evil. This problem–and it is a problem–is compounded by secondary groups and hanger ons who are truly evil and or do have malicious intent and or do want to light the fuse on the powder keg so that something happens. Side note: If you spend your entire existence preparing for a conflict that will never come, have you failed? Should you feel like you ought to usher in that conflict, because you know you’re ready and you want to be able to help so that it ends the way you believe it ought to?

What we say has power. What we say can be used in terrible ways and to convince people to give of themselves in order to strengthen us. This is an ability that charisma creates. Know the power of what you say and be careful how you use that power.

9.961. Reflections on a Taco Tuesday

Still thinking about that work-life balance. I’ve been thinking more and more about the physical side of that balance–specifically being healthy. Writing does indeed mean Butt in Chair. Unfortunately, that is not the healthiest position for people to remain in for long stretches of time (and imagination). I try to get up and walk around every so often, but it is more likely I’ll catch myself hunched over the keyboard with a posture i’ll come to regret in ten years. What to do? I could be trendy and get one of those standing desks. However, that doesn’t feel like it is going to happen. I’m not hip enough for that.

I do go to the gym–though I have not gone or done anything physical in a week. Balance means making this a regular part of the day. Making anything regular is a force of habit. You need to decide that this is what you do regardless of not wanting to always do it. That is what I need to do with the health situation. I have a belly, and sitting in this chair all day is going to turn me into a poor man’s George RR Martin. I’m not prepared to see that happen. So, how much is it worth to me to make it not?

9.960. Reflections on a Monday Night

I believe that writers are by nature competitive sorts. I believe we look at published authors and say, yeah, I should be in the conversation where they are at. I always look at writers and consider what they write and their level of success and question if they are better than me or worse and ask what significant differences exist between us that allows them to be at the level of success they are at while I am not. I think it breaks down into three main categories: Location, Life Balance, and forcible will.

Location matters for a number of reasons. Where you are inspires and influences who you are. I happen to live in a place that is not inspirational at all. I am a better writer in Seattle. I am a better writer in New York. The influences around me motivate me to be better. This is an extension of Garbage in, Garbage out. If where you live is effectively garbage (be it the space or the people in that space or the things to do in that space) then you’re filtering garbage through your words.

Life Balance also matters. I have a full time job that is a distraction from writing. I have kids that deserve attention. I have a partner who I give my attention to freely. My writing is ahead of work but behind people. There is not a suitable balance in any of it.

Forcible will is the part where you decide you won’t quit and you will put in the time and effort and proposals to be great. I am far lazier with that than I ought to be. It impacts what I get published.

All of these factors reflect on me in a way that reminds me why these heavily published authors are who they are and why I am who I am. Yet again, I’ll reach for GIjoe when I say, “Knowing is half the battle.”

6.959. Week Log

It is 6:47 on a Sunday morning and I’ve already been up for two hours. Most of that time was spent sweeping and then mopping the floors while I listened to an Audiobook (Recursive by Blake Crouch) and thinking about taking the next steps in my writing project. I am going to be writing more on that project this morning. I am also going to be giving editor feedback to a cluster of short stories, prepping half a dozen new classes, and preparing for two new one to one student mentorships. Next week I’ll start to lay out my writing schedule in earnest as I get a better sense of what my days look like from a teaching perspective. My life here is a very scheduled affair and when I don’t put in time for the things that matter I find that the first few things to fall to waste are generally about me.

Writing is balance. The problem with feeling a story deeply or any project deeply is that you pour yourself into it at the exclusion of everything else. Worse even, you may be like me and sacrifice the long term for the short, present, and loud. For example, since I’ve been back I haven’t completed my exercise ring a single time. In comparison, when I was in Seattle with less on my plate (and the ability to walk outdoors) it was a rare day that the ring didn’t buzz happily with completion.

Here I need to schedule a workout. Here I need to decide if I am going to take the time to be on my bike or do something else. here there is more something else to be lost in. Yet there is also less to enjoy. What I get lost in is minutiae and cleaning up after people and chauffeuring people around. There is good in a lot of it, but I need to be smarter and more mindful of the time I spend on any of it, because I have far less time that truly belongs to me.

Knowing how much time you have to do what you want and need is a necessary part of this writing life.

6.958.

I didn’t need to wake up at 4:30 AM today, but sure enough by 4:34 I was awake and looking around my room trying to figure out what time it was. I went back to sleep for two precious hours and discovered in that rest how much I deeply enjoy the ‘bonus’ time with my partner. By 6:30 I was ready to be up and moving and working. I did work–diligently even–for several hours today. I accomplished a lot of writing and feel very good about the opportunity to put more words down on paper tomorrow. I am in a good headspace again with the writing, and I have finally managed to get to a healthy place with the writing transition from Seattle to Arizona. I didn’t think it would take any time and it took a ton of time. It ate through most of the time I have remaining to finish this latest 30,000 word project. So, I will need to work double time over the next few days. That means waking up early tomorrow to get my chores handled and then getting on the computer to get the words handled.

The writing life is about discipline as much as it is about creativity. Getting that Butt in Chair time is only useful if you’re focused while you are doing it.

6.957. Reflections on a Friday Afternoon

It turns out I might be moving again. This is a short move–next door really–that finally merges down my family into one house. This is a good thing for the most part. There are certain to be growing pains, of course. I’m personally a huge fan of design and looking forward to ways to put together the new office, which while smaller than the present space, will be more intimate. The thought for today is about space–writing space specifically. I find myself wondering what is vital, what is just for glam, and what is going to make me the most productive version of myself?

I have these two posters my partner got me from the MoPop in Seattle. Both are about fantasy writing, which I used to and hope to do again. So, I want that kind of stuff around. I also want my books on writing and my sourcebooks for writing in specific worlds close enough to be accessible. All of this is reflective of what I have now. Add several monitors and all I am really discussing is a display identical to what already exists. What if I tried something different? What if the key is to start from scratch and rethink the plan? What if I don’t take the corner spot and don’t setup the situation I already have?

Change can be really good when you change for the better. So, I want to take some time and consider how to change my setup and make it better for me and my concentration.

Some Thoughts:

  1. MoPop is doing some really cool sci-fi stuff. Check it out.

6.956.

Last night I watched Vengeance with my partner. I must admit I didn’t know what to expect. That became even more muddled once I realized this was a project from Focus and Blumhouse. Nope, not horror. I worried about that for the first scene. This is something else entirely. Vengeance is able to take a critical look at one of the reddest bases in America and pry the ideas of that place apart and place in there a magnifying glass that allows us to see what could actually be and who we actually are to them.

The film was more cerebral than I thought it would be–especially the moment where the ‘stereotypical’ Texan asks the New Yorker what people from the coast must think of them. It was honest in a way that I’ve lost touch with living where I live. It was also well written tho didactic at times. Overall, I had fun. I laughed (sometimes where the rest of the crowd would not) I felt odd (sometimes where the rest of the crowd was laughing) and I felt like it was on point–perhaps too closely at times. It felt like a film that had a lot to say and played with the conventions of how to relay that theme without breaking through the fourth wall.

Vengeance is a reminder of how big and different the states can be–even within a state. In a time where we look at other countries as completely weird and foreign it is a none to subtle reminder how foreign this very large yet relatively sparsely populated country is to itself.

Some Thoughts:

  1. Finding acceptable compromise in designing a workspace is common but difficult. Finding happiness in planning a space together is a rare thing. I’m fortunate to have that rare thing in my life. Here’s to moving forward with the new office.

6.955. Beats

If you’re around writing long enough you’ll hear about a specific concept called Beats. Beats, or Story Beats, are moments in the narrative where you shift the tone intentionally. It’s like in a song where you move through the four count and land on that hard thump and then back to one. Those shifts define the pace of the story and create a sense of what is to come. Now we see this more in script writing because it is more obvious there. Scripts are visual blueprints, and the beats or changes are vivid on screen–especially on network television where the shows hit that cliffhanger moment before every commercial break in order to force you to stay in your seat in anticipation of the moment leading out of the break.

Larger works such as novellas, novels, or particularly long ‘short’ stories have beats. At least they ought to. My last novel struggled with the beats. I had a few things go well but that was not one of them. It is a thing I intend to fix in the sequel. I also expect to write more about this specific idea of beats in the future–perhaps even doing a visual layout of beats here over a ten minute run. Definitely worth the energy.

6.954.

Seated comfortably in my bat chair I find myself looking around my lovely space and thinking, “Dang, why haven’t I done more to be a better writer here?” The answer is: It isn’t about the space. It is about me putting my but in the chair and walling off the distractions. Today I had to put on an audiobook and distract part of my mind in order to actually focus enough to get any words on paper. Shockingly, it worked. I got a little bit done. I made some progress on a project that is due in 5 days that I absolutely am not close on. Every little bit counts, right?

Some Thoughts:

  1. My computer is in terrible shape. It needs love.

6.953. Reflections on a Monday Morning

School is in session and the sports that go with school are in session. This means it is time for a new schedule! I am presently struggling with the construction of that schedule, because I don’t entirely know what I am teaching. I know what my kids have going on. I know what my partner has going on. I have a vague (yet functional) sense of what I have going on, but there are several holes. Call it a swiss cheese schedule. Like the dairy product it does provide my day with inexplicable gaps. In some of these gaps I intend to place good writing hours. I need them. I am in the midsts of a solid production schedule, though the writing itself is tough going. I am going to need to be able to look at a calendar on a daily basis and say, “This is when I write.” I need that in order to be successful–especially as I ramp up for another novel.

So, what does ‘Writing Time’ need to look like? For me it is a block of time no less than two hours and hopefully pushing 4. I rarely have the luxury of four, so I need to think about how to become more focus in bursts of two. I also need to think about how to balance that with the rest of the important work stuff like being a teacher. There are enough hours in the day. It stands to reason that those hours may need to involve fewer video games.

Some Thoughts:

  1. I am going to need to start treating my obsession with youth football like a drug addiction. I cannot go too many days without thinking about it and every time I do think about it and the draw of that life (specifically the competitiveness of the situation and being able to see immediate results based on specific teaching styles and planning) I find myself wondering what it was I left unfinished. I believe that unfinished job is the construction of the perfect system–from top to bottom. What does it look like to craft a system that works? I built a playbook that works but I never built a practice and planning system to teach it and the core fundamentals around it. I left that one behind. So, once again, this addiction is really about accepting the things I cannot accomplish in my life.