We all have goals and mine is to write on my WIP every day
so I can have a story complete every two months. Big goal for me with a full
time day job, but I believe I can do it if I plan right. Before I go to bed I
review my calendar, and any notes I’ve written to myself, and go over
everything I want to get accomplished the next day. You see, I’m a list kind of
person. I make a list of things I need to do, projects I need to write, things
I need to buy at the store and I even make myself a note to check my lists.
Kind of OCD, don’t you think?
My intentions are great and in my head it works out
perfectly.
This is my perfect day:
Get up, take a long hot bubble bath. (Yes, I really do take
a bubble bath every morning, I know TMI) I would review my e-mails, while
drinking my coffee, feed the animals and go to work. At work I would visit my blogs
on my breaks and work on my story during lunch. When I get home I finish my
feeding, life on a farm never ends, then I get to spend the rest of the evening
in front of the computer working on my
stories, and marketing my name. Yeah right!
Here is how my day really goes.
I wake up, turn on my computer and go feed the animals, but
I first have to track down the cat that got out, find the dog food dish that
was drug off sometime in the night and argue with a very spoiled ferret that
insists on morning attention. I run my bath and open my e-mail to find I have
over 100 new ones since the night before and my brain goes into overload. I
rush through my bath and find I’m running late by now, so I skip the coffee to get
to work on time.
At work I never get a break and my lunch hour is spent
catching up on everything I had on my lists. I finally get home and find I have
a cow out, a garden that needs water because Mother nature refuses to water for
me, and dinner to make. When this is over with
it’s after eight and I finally get to sit down in front of the
computer. Who said I would be lonely
when my children moved out, I have a head full of characters fighting over
who’s scene I write first. (My sister is a psych nurse and swears I need a
support group, I told her I had all of you, and the voices in my head to keep
me company. She was not amused.) After a few hours of writing, marketing,
blogging and facebook chats with the kids my day ends. I shut down the
computer, look up and realize my husband placed a cup of coffee beside me and
went to bed, a long time ago. Note to self, fit in time for husband tomorrow.
As you can see my lists help keep my mind organized, but
does nothing for me in real life, but that won’t stop me. Someday things will
slow down, I will have more books written and will be able to at least go part
time at my day job. Until then I will still mark my calendar, make my lists and
try to write each day. I just won’t panic,
or rip my hair out when word count for the day is zero because life got in the
way.
What gets in your way from reaching your goal, or at least
your daily word count?
To be released late 2012, early 2013 through Black Opal Book, Rescued from the Dark:What if you woke up from a nightmare, trapped in a world of darkness, with no memory of how you got there? Rescued from the Dark is a passionate, gripping story about FBI agent, Jason Michaels, confronting his duty to his country, and struggling with his feelings for a woman with no memory of their love.
Undercover Agent,Jason Michaels, infiltrates the terrorist cell and risks everything, even his life, to save the FBI intern who stole his heart, then walked away. Once Mercy wakes from her coma Jason struggles with the fact that she does not remember what happened, but anguishes with the idea that she believes their unborn child belongs to her ex. Jason soon realizes the terrorists vow to get her back to claim their secrets locked in her memory, no matter what the cost. In a race against time, Jason and Mercy struggle to fight their attraction, and put their differences aside, as they launch a manhunt to save their country and each other.
2 comments:
My writing obstacles are mostly work-centered--I spend at least 10 hours at work per day, and by the time I get home, my energy is shot. I usually put my butt in the chair for a few hours and do make progress, but sometimes I'm just too tired. And before you suggest getting up extra-early, that's not going to happen. I'm a night owl, and proud of it! :)
So funny! Your day sounds exactly like mine.
I get up far to early work all day and am shocked when I look up at night to see it's 11 and time for bed, and only half of my list has been completed.
I really need a way to find time to write more. Sigh...
Let me know if you ever find the secret. :)
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