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Writing Tip #10: YOU Are Your Best Source of Motivation

Wednesday, September 17, 2014 7:30 am

There are going to be days (weeks . . . months . . .) when we don’t feel like writing. We may sit in front of the computer for an hour and write six words—and then delete three of them. Or during our designated writing time, we find that’s the best time to scrub the toilet and clean out that dark corner cabinet that’s been emanating a funky smell for at least three months.

We’ve turned into Rick Castle staring at his laptop for hours on end and then jumping to grab the phone when it rings and, instead of hello, saying, “Please tell me there’s a dead body,” so he can get away from the writing he’s supposed to be doing.

What we need is motivation. So where do we get it?

Writing Tip #10. YOU are your best source of motivation.

No matter how many writing groups you join, no matter how active you are in them, no matter how many blogs you write and read and comment on, no matter how many writers’ forums you participate in, when it comes down to it, writing is a solitary venture. Unless you put YOUR butt in YOUR chair and start committing words to paper (whether electronic or wood pulp), your story will not get written.

And, yes, I need this lesson as much as or more than anyone who may be reading this post.

There are external stimuli that can put the pressure on you to write: school, critique partners, readers expecting the next chapter (contracts, deadlines, agents, editors). But the truth of the matter is, they aren’t in control of your writing, you are.

If the artist works only when he feels like it, he’s not apt to build up much of a body of work. Inspiration far more often comes during the work than before it, because the largest part of the job of the artist is to listen to the work, and to go where it tells him to go. Ultimately, when you are writing, you stop thinking and write what you hear.

(L’Engle, p. 149)

Remember the most famous line to come out of the movie A League of Their Own about baseball and crying? Well . . .

There’s no whining—there’s no whining in writing!

But I don’t feel like writing.

Tough. Do it anyway. Sure, you may find that you’re writing drivel that you’re eventually going to edit out in a future revision—but as our guru Ms. L’Engle said, more often than not, you’ll find that once you make yourself sit down and do the work, the inspiration will come.

I’ll double up my word count tomorrow.

“You pile up enough tomorrows, and you’ll find you are left with nothing but a lot of empty yesterdays” (The Music Man).

That’s a really slippery slope—I don’t feel like writing today, so I’ll double up tomorrow. And then tomorrow—I don’t feel like writing today, but I can get three days worth of words written tomorrow. And soon, you’re pressed up against your deadline (whether it’s self-imposed or external) and you’re having to write 28,000 words over Thanksgiving week to make your deadline. (Hello, Ransome’s Crossing.) Or you’re sitting on about 22,000 words on June 17 with forty-four days in which to write the remaining 83,000 words. (Hello, Ransome’s Quest.)

So what are some ways in which you can keep yourself motivated?

1. Pick a project you want to work on.

2. Take a moment to remember why you started writing in the first place.

3. If your story has lost steam, stop writing and sit down and read it.

4. If you can’t come up with any ideas on your own, brainstorm with a few trusted people.

5. Set daily goals.

6. Reward yourself when you meet your goals.

7. Develop a routine/create a schedule.

8. Unplug.

9. Take regular breaks.

10. Believe in yourself.

You know it takes courage to write. It takes courage to write when you’re not published and you don’t have an agent.

It takes courage to write when you are published and you do have an agent (this is why so many writers drink to excess or anything they can think of to drink to).

You have it inside you to fight this fight. Write, think about what you write, then write some more.

Day by day. Year by year.

Do that, and you’ll jump ahead of 90 percent of the folks out there who want to get published.

(Bell, p. 258)

__________________________________________
Works Cited:

Bell, James Scott. The Art of War for Writers: Fiction Writing Strategies, Tactics, and Exercises. Cincinnati, OH: Writer’s Digest Books, 2009. Print.

L’Engle, Madeleine. Walking on Water: Reflections on Faith and Art. Wheaton, IL: Harold Shaw Publishers, 1980. Print.

Music Man, The. Dir. Morton DaCosta. Warner Bros. 1962. Film.

Posted by Kaye Dacus

Categories: Authors/Reading, craft of fiction writing, Fiction Writing Series, Road to Publication, writing business, Writing Process

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3 Responses to “Writing Tip #10: YOU Are Your Best Source of Motivation”

  1. Oh, Kaye, how well you expressed this here. I rarely “feel” like writing. I keep my daily goals low just in case my healthy jumps in with a stoppage of work and I have to push faster later. And like you, I don’t always make it every day. The more I write, the more I realize I have a short time span to write. So I am looking for stories that really interest me.

    Like

    By Darlene Franklin on Saturday, September 20, 2014 at 9:59 am

  2. […] Writing Tip #10: YOU are your best source of motivation! […]

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    By #FirstDraft60 Day 37: Monday Momentum–What’s Motivating You Today? #amwriting #nanowrimo | KayeDacus.com on Monday, November 7, 2016 at 6:16 am

  3. […] Writing Tip #10: YOU are your best source of motivation! […]

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    By Writer-Talk Wednesday: Kaye’s Top Ten Writing Tips | #amwriting #top10 #2017WritingGoals | KayeDacus.com on Wednesday, March 1, 2017 at 3:46 pm



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