Photo by Tyler Nix on Unsplash |
This is one of those posts, but it’s also not one of those posts.
For me, the most important part of writing is simply to write.
On any given day, there are about a thousand things that crop up that I’m not ready for. Whether it’s my daughter coming home from school with marker on her shirt from art class, or my husband calling to say he won’t be home for dinner, which also means I’m on homework duty. To having a non-fiction assignment come up. To having first round edits and final read-through documents come in from my editors on the same day.
And all of those things can seem, in the moment, to be more important that getting the two or three thousand words on paper that I’ve set for my goal.
What I’ve found, though, is that putting off the writing has a snowball effect. Because the next day not only do I still need to write those words, I also need to write the current day’s words. And there are more last minute emergencies to deal with: like learning my mother-in-law is coming over for dinner, and that I have to fill out an art fact sheet for my cover designer, and I have blog and promo posts to write for my upcoming book release, and I haven’t updated my social media sites in too many days. And. And. And and and and and.
That’s why, no matter what else I have going on, what other items are on my to-do list, what little emergencies have come up that day, at 1 PM every day, I’m at my computer. Writing the new words. The emergencies wait. The to-do list waits. The new words get written, and then I go back to the errands and emergencies and to-do list items. Because if the new words aren’t on the paper, I can’t edit them. If I can’t edit them, I can’t turn them in to my agent or editor. If I can’t turn them in, I can’t perfect them. If I can’t perfect them (at least as much as I can perfect them), I can’t publish them to share with readers.
What about you? What is the most important part of writing, for you?
Kristina Knight's latest release, Moonlight Match, is available now!
Moonlight Match is part of the Resort to Romance continuity project ~ 10 sweet romances, all set during a week-long matchmaking event in the Bahamas!
Aster Harrington believes in love but love doesn’t seem to believe in her. She’s hoping Goldie and Ginny, the matchmakers who’ve matched on two generations of Harringtons, can work a little love magic for her…
Some call Ethan Talbot rigid, but he prefers to think of himself as prepared. Unfortunately, when he’s matched with Aster Harrington at Joy Island’s Matchmaking Week, all those carefully prepared plans go out the window. He can get back to finding a suitable wife once he’s home in New York. After all, how much damage can one week in the Bahamas do to his plans?
3 comments:
It's about the writing with me, too, and being the "certain age" I am makes that very possible. What doesn't happen today can happen tomorrow. That being said, I miss having kids in the house even though it made writing a whole different (and lesser) ballgame. I guess all times are wonderful if you know where to find the good--and you do.
Agreed. Butt in chair writing is the most important part.
denise
thanks for visiting, Liz and Denise! Some days BIC is so hard - today is shaping up to be one of those days, I can tell!!
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