It's been four months now since I quit the day job. I like to think that I stopped working for "the man." Of course, now I work for myself, and some days, I'm more demanding. Then again, some days, I give myself ice cream and walk along the beach. I guess it balances out.
Here, in no particular order, are some things I've learned. I'm guessing they also apply to any of you who've retired.
I'm a little lazy. I cut myself some slack right after I quit my job, and I spent a few weeks relaxing. That meant sleeping, reading a lot, watching television, and lunching with friends. And then yet more sleeping and reading. I figured my natural inclination for resting would taper off.
Maybe not so much.
Naps are good and bad. Don't get me wrong, naps are fantastic. Some days you wake up thinking, "not quite enough sleep, I'll nap later." And sometimes they sneak up on you. But I've found that often naps take twice as long to recover from as they last. And that can really throw a wrench into your whole day....
I do actually want to work. Maybe it's the diminishing bank account. Maybe it's the desire to interact with people once in a while. Or maybe it's that I do want to use what I've learned in my 20+-year career. Probably all of the above.
Don't get me wrong: I don't want to work too much. Just some.
I will actually exercise, write my next book, and talk to friends and family. I worried for a little while, because the lure of my bed, the sofa, and my bookshelves was awfully strong. But after detoxing from the load of people and expectations I'd been under, I have found some energy and will to do all the things that are either good for me (exercise) or that I want to do (book and talking).
It's hard to remember what day of the week it is. When you don't have to get up and get dressed for work, it's not easy to remember it's Tuesday. Good part: Mondays don't have the same sting. Bad part: remembering to move the car for street sweeping on Wednesdays.
Or, as my husband puts it: "Every day is Saturday."
Some days I need to put on makeup to feel less like a slob. I shower every day, but I don't always dress presentably. Let's be serious: I wear yoga pants every day. Unless I've got a customer visit or lunch with someone, I don't bother styling my hair or putting on makeup.
Until I reach an epic low of sloppy attire (usually because I need to do laundry), and then the next day I get dressed, blow-dry my hair, and put makeup on, even if I'm not going anywhere. Just to feel like a functional adult.
I am grateful, happy, and smug. Some of this sounds insufferable, I know. But I also know many people wouldn't want to work from home and some can't spend six months building a business. I'm so grateful I can do all of those things. And I'm in a good place.
How about the rest of you? Does this list ring true for anyone?
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Words of Wisdom from Charlaine Harris
I spent last weekend at the California Crime Writers Conference, a biennial event that I highly recommend to anyone interested in researching, writing, pitching, and marketing any kind of writing.
One of our two keynote speakers was the delightful Charlaine Harris, author of a variety of cozy mystery series, including the Sookie Stackhouse series, which became the TV series True Blood.
As I said, Charlaine is delightful. She's Southern (which may be relevant), and full of charm. Also full of excellent one-liners. Rather than try to rephrase her talk, I'm simply going to transcribe the notes I took. I hope they provide you motivation for any of your creative efforts!
"I'm still so insecure about what I'm doing that I'm afraid to read a book on writing, because I'm afraid to learn I've been doing it wrong."
"What I know for sure:
1. This is hard work. It never gets easier, it just gets easier to see the hard spots coming up.
2. Writing is a business.
3. Not only your protagonist needs to be a three-dimensional character. They all do."
"Real writers don't want to give their plots away at parties." (TK's note: Mostly they don't want to be at parties talking to people.)
"That's as daredevil as I get: writing without an outline."
"Being a writer requires finishing a book ... so much for the creative process. Show up every day, finish a book."
"The best way to learn to write is by writing"
"Why do this job at all? Because ultimately, this is the best job in the world."
One of our two keynote speakers was the delightful Charlaine Harris, author of a variety of cozy mystery series, including the Sookie Stackhouse series, which became the TV series True Blood.
As I said, Charlaine is delightful. She's Southern (which may be relevant), and full of charm. Also full of excellent one-liners. Rather than try to rephrase her talk, I'm simply going to transcribe the notes I took. I hope they provide you motivation for any of your creative efforts!
"I'm still so insecure about what I'm doing that I'm afraid to read a book on writing, because I'm afraid to learn I've been doing it wrong."
"What I know for sure:
1. This is hard work. It never gets easier, it just gets easier to see the hard spots coming up.
2. Writing is a business.
3. Not only your protagonist needs to be a three-dimensional character. They all do."
"Real writers don't want to give their plots away at parties." (TK's note: Mostly they don't want to be at parties talking to people.)
"That's as daredevil as I get: writing without an outline."
"Being a writer requires finishing a book ... so much for the creative process. Show up every day, finish a book."
"The best way to learn to write is by writing"
"Why do this job at all? Because ultimately, this is the best job in the world."
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
How Writing Happens
“I’ll be there tomorrow,” Holly
reminded me. “Try to go one more day without finding anyone dead.”
“Funny. Did you find someone to
give us costs for racing in NASCAR?”
“Two sets of data coming later this
week—I’ll confirm after this weekend.”
“Great.
I’m going to email Alexa this morning to start getting IndyCar numbers.”
Those are a couple lines in the new Kate Reilly Racing
Mystery that I’m currently working on. Exciting, I know. NOTE: I’m trusting you.
Those are only a rough draft, and they haven’t been edited. Don’t judge!
From what I remember, the writing of those sentences
flowed fairly well (it was a couple days ago). They didn’t require much
thought. Much angst. A simple wrapping up of a phone conversation between Kate
and her BFF and manager, Holly Wilson.
The next sentence wasn’t so easy, and I thought I’d let
you in on how the writing process sometimes works. Italics are my thoughts, the
rest is what I wrote….
_____________________
OK, I’ve got to get
them off the phone. Should I even keep the last couple lines? Do people care who’s
looking up what race series information? I think I mentioned who’d do which one
before, maybe I should delete … but then what would I close the conversation
with? Besides, it’s realistic they’d touch base about the business they need to
do. Just leave it. Take it out in the edit if you don’t like it. But is it—JUST
LEAVE IT. [breathe, take a drink of water]
Now how do I get
them off the phone? I don’t want to say “goodbye” and “goodbye,” but I should
reference them ending the conversation. Well, I could take Kate straight to an
action … no, that would feel too abrupt for Holly, who’s a friend.
I
hung up the phone and
No, that’s too
abrupt also. [delete] There should be
some reference to Holly, not just Kate doing. Kate could say something?
Reference saying something?
I
wished her safe travels and hung up.
Gaaaahhhhhh, that’s
boring. [delete] Stupid blinking
cursor. Why is it so hard to explain the action of friends saying goodbye and
hanging up the phone? Because you don’t describe the dull stuff in a book, you reference
the dull stuff while you move the plot forward. Am I moving the plot forward
with every sentence? I don’t think so. OK, at least do something more
interesting than hanging up.
What’s Kate going
to do next? [consult synopsis and timeline] Get a text from someone or call someone else. Could one of those
overlap?
The
text from Alexa came in as I was saying said goodbye to Holly.
No, you decided the
interaction with Alexa would be an email or phone call, not a text, so you don’t
have to deal with the formatting of texts in this book. And the email—or another
call—crossing with Holly’s call is just … unnecessarily complicated. Who cares
if a tone rings in Kate’s ear? The timing of the two isn’t important. FOR PETE’S
SAKE, YOU’RE JUST TRYING TO HANG UP THE PHONE. [delete]
Fine, how would I say
it out loud to someone?
We
hung up
… and something. "While" something? No. Come on! What would they say to each other? They’ll see each other tomorrow—oh,
will Kate get her at the airport? Hell, I decide what Kate does, so she WILL pick Holly up. In real life, they’d confirm a time. Maybe. Am I sure? WRITE IT.
We hung up after confirming what time her plane got in the next day.
Awkward. Fix.
We
hung up after confirming what time she was arriving the next day.
Too long and still awkward. Fix.
We
hung up after confirming her arrival time the next day.
Huh. [reread,
reread] I can live with that. I think.
Hmmmm. Should I … NO. Leave it. But maybe I should—YOU SHOULD LEAVE IT. Fine.
Next sentence?
_____________________
I don't go through this process for every sentence. But it's guaranteed to happen at least three times on every book page. Sometimes less, sometimes more. But it's extra annoying when you struggle like this over the lines that aren't even vital to the story.
So friends, pity your local writer. And when she's indecisive, cranky, frustrated, or distraught for what seems like no reason? Remember what she goes through some days, just to HANG UP THE DAMN PHONE.
*Ironic note: I've edited this post about four times.
*Ironic note: I've edited this post about four times.