Tag Archives: writing

This Will Only Hurt For A Little While

busyGood grief, what’s that woman up to now? It’s something I imagine people thinking about me on a fairly regular basis, but I guess I just can’t help it–gotta stay busy. I know, that whole “Stop Glorifying Busy” meme is floating around (and I’ve actually posted it and meant it sincerely myself a couple of times) but busy works for me (except for last week, when only loafing worked).

So, my new project, getting under way this week (while I keep whittling away at The Water Bearers), is the complete overhaul of my website.

I created that from a template, in a complete state of panic, because I was launching Widow Woman in a few short weeks and my old website needed a massive update. Well, it’s been over a year now, and I hate my website.

Not dislike, not ho, hum, I’m bored–nope, this is an active, visceral loathing. I’m sure it could be worse (check out these bad boys–I actually held my breath when I visited this site, in case mine was #4), but as I’m sure you’ll agree, it could also be so much better. I can’t wait to fix this thing. But I am facing two daunting problems: 1) budget–hey, I’m an indie author! I don’t have the budget to blow everything on a website design. 2) I’m a technological moron.

moron[Warning courtesy of Fugly.com. I shall ignore.] Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead because I’m happy to say, I think (Lord, I hope) I have found a solution. Checked out a bunch of different options, including staying with my current hosting service, to see if they had any better templates to offer (they don’t) or if they’d finally be able to fix the blog feed problems on my existing site (they couldn’t), and decided that after several years, it’s time for me to jump ship.

I found a new, well-received hosting service that works with WordPress templates and technological morons alike–plus, they offer the best (and when I say best, I mean BEST) customer support, 24/7, I’ve ever encountered. I wasn’t even a client yet today, and TJ, super-supporter extraordinaire, spent almost an hour on the phone with me, answering every stupid question I could possibly ask (“Where do I find this thingie?” “How do I install this whatchimacallit to my doohickey?”) with extraordinary patience, courtesy, and an utter lack of condescension. It was amazing, and the best part is, he promised to do it again, if I need him.

So I leaped today, signed up with them. As soon as they send me my activation email, I can start working on my new design. It may take me a couple of months, but hey, if I can go through the whole process of self-publishing a book, I’m not going to let a little thing like a plug-in stop me from having a new, fresh website.

Oh, wait. What’s a plug-in again? TJ! Help! Stay tuned; it’s always an adventure.

[OHMYGOSH! Update: While I was proofreading this post, the new hosting service called me to make sure I’d received my activation e-mail, ask me if I had any questions, and personally welcome me to the family! I love these people!]

 

Loafing with the Devil

25cfab14a0876544_lazylionMotivation. Some days you have it, some days you don’t.

I would say that today is a don’t, except that, before beginning this post, I looked up the definition of motivation:

 n. the general desire or willingness of someone to do something.

Aha! That’s when I realized that my problem today is not a lack of motivation, desire, or willingness. On the contrary, I’m positively bursting at the seams with that. The problem, my friends, is with the “something” I have a general desire or willingness to do. Because today, instead of feeling motivated to put my butt-in-chair and write, I have an irresistible motivation to put ass-on-couch and watch reruns of Sons of Anarchy or The Voice until naptime rolls around. Surf, snooze, repeat as needed.  

I’ll say it again: Just because I’m not motivated to do anything productive today does not mean I’m unmotivated.

What’s that face for?

All right. You caught me. To be perfectly frank, I’m not exactly sure what that means, other than that I probably won’t be very productive, but it certainly does make me wonder what’s happened with my focus since my last post. (Obviously, I’m having no problem with my motivation to italicize today. Go figure.)

photo-75It could be lack of coffee, though I am, in fact, on cup #2. Hmm. Just looked at my cup, and noticed it has a really bad attitude problem. Could my cup be the culprit? Hold on; I’m going to go pour the dregs into my I Love Mondays cup and drink the rest of it ironically.

It could be that I’ve had another contractor in the house all week (This one’s ridiculously chatty and chipper; are you seriously whistling while you work? Who does that outside of Disney movies? How do you expect me to pretend you’re not here with all this friendliness?), one that, while still preventing me from doing laundry, has left my kitchen accessible, full of dirty dishes yet compellingly inviting.

Maybe it’s that, after weeks of sweating it, my grad school application was finally marked “Complete” this morning, and this is just the post-sweat cool-down. (Yes, folks, here we go again: 6 weeks of angsty waiting for the verdict of the review board. And yes, I will post about it. Again. Apologizing in advance.) Like how you need to rest after running a marathon? I wouldn’t know what that feels like, personally, but I’m guessing it’s similar enough to work metaphorically.

Writer’s block? Headache? Post-government shutdown hangover? Barometric pressure changes? Demonic—or angelic—possession? (My daughter did make me watch an episode of Supernatural with her yesterday when she was home sick…

SPN-Castiel-supernatural-8177301-500-313Castiel? Is that you? Are you sending out a message on angel radio that yes, yes, YES! I should just lie down on that couch and loaf all day, doing absolutely nothing productive, not just for my own good but for the good of all mankind? Hmph. You almost had me, but I’m guessing that’s more likely Satan, talking—you know, idle hands and all. But I digress. Plenty of motivation for that, apparently; hell, my whole day so far has been one big digression.)

Ugh. I got nuthin’. Not one single good reason for being motivated to do less than my best. Yeah, that’s right, you heard me: I have no excuse. (And this is what I looked like when I said that, too. We could be twins, I’m so NO-EXCUSEY. Whoa, all caps! Maybe there’s hope for today after all.)

Well, she sighed, I think we all know the best, perhaps the only cure for a lack of, or the wrong type of, motivation: Brute force—and more coffee. Hello, cup #3, help me get my butt back into my chair. Maybe I’ll catch a nap this afternoon? Shut up, Satan.

Too Busy to Blog?

I learned a valuable lesson this week: I should have painters come to my house every day, like I did this week. It’s been the best thing that could’ve happened for my writing (and this in a week that includes a 3-hour coffee date with a new friend and an early school dismissal for my kids). Seriously, not being able to access the kitchen or the laundry room (you know I’m sobbing about that last bit) has forced me to practice the Butt-in-Chair philosophy I admire so much in more disciplined (and less frenetic) writers.

I whipped through several article drafts; completed two audio transcriptions; finished polishing my Purpose Letter for my grad school application; hammered out the rough draft of another post; and selected and collated the writing samples I need to submit along with my application. (I laughed out loud when I saw that the samples I had chosen added up to precisely the 40-page submission limit. Whee! I love it when things end up like that!)

Lesson learned: If you stop eating and worrying about wearing clean clothes, you can sure accomplish a lot in a day. Here endeth the lesson.

The cool part about pulling those writing samples is that some of them are things I haven’t looked back at for a while. After living and breathing Widow Woman, sitting down to try to narrow down a few key pages for my sample felt surreal. I mean, I know I wrote the darned thing, but when you don’t look at something for a long time, it no longer feels like it’s yours.

I included a short story I wrote, along with excerpts from my two novels-in-progress. The YA novel, The Water Bearers, is one I’m working on all the time, and it’s the one I just submitted to my new writers’ group for (a very helpful and insightful) critique, so I didn’t experience any out-of-body experiences looking that one over again. I’ve got some work to do to polish the sample, so it feels very now, very present. But my second novel, well, I haven’t looked at that one in almost six months, and I’d sort of forgotten how much I loved where it was going–I felt giddy going back to it, and can’t wait to get both my writing application and my first (technically, second) novel completed so I can get back to it again.

Oh, well–looks like I’d better find something else for my painter to work on–maybe he can paint my office door shut.

Love being back to work. 🙂

Image

Rusty

photo-53That’s how I’m feeling today: rusty. I’m resuming so many activities now, things I’ve been doing for so many years (writing, back-to-school routines, friend-making) that they should seem familiar and easy, but they don’t. I feel like I’m bumbling and stumbling at every turn. But, as we all know, it’s just the first week of school, and once I get these rusty joints moving again, everything will move much more smoothly. (It doesn’t help that I just found out yesterday that I now need bifocals. If that doesn’t scream approaching middle-age, I’m not sure what does. And since I’ve been 27 for so long now, I’m not sure why this is happening to me. I mean, come on! I’ve been practically blind from nearsightedness and astigmatism since I was a kid; I guess I always just assumed that when I started to become farsighted, at some point, the two would have to meet in the middle and I’d wind up having 20/20 vision, but my optometrist tells me it doesn’t work that way. Nuts. Totally unfair.) Anyway, I may be rusty and blind and wearing cheaters over my glasses until my new lenses come in, but hey, I’m still moving, and that’s the point of today’s post, so let’s get on with it.

What have I been up to since my last post? Well, I joined a local writers’ group and have agreed to share some of my novel-in-progress for critique. That’s a little nerve-wracking, to say the least. I’ve never shown anyone a work that wasn’t at least finished, let alone shown a group of people I’ll be meeting for the first time when they critique it. Ah, well. Nothing like jumping right in feet first, is there? Can you say, “Cannonball!”?

I also discovered a local branch of the state writers’ conference and just signed up with them. I’m very excited to see they sponsor a huge writers’ conference in April, and have already marked my calendar. Creeeeeeaaaaak. What was that? Oh, I think that was one of those rusty joints I mentioned earlier; they’re groaning a lot from lack of use. Hmm…what else…I rediscovered my virtual book tour, which I began this spring and which is, apparently, still under way. (Thank God someone was paying attention, because I clearly wasn’t). It’s been fun this week, catching up on the reviews and interviews, though own my promotional activities around the tour are still pretty spotty, to say the least. In that light, here’s a link to one of my recent stops, an interviewErrrrrrrrkkkkkk. Oooo, there goes another joint.

I’ve also started researching grad schools–again. I know, I know. This again? Well, what can I say? It’s always bothered me that I’ve never finished my M.F.A., so I’m thinking maybe new state, new school, new chance for admission into a new program. I hate having unfinished business. I’ll keep you posted on that one–at least I don’t have to take the G.R.E. again–thank God for that.

I finally watched the video of my last appearance on “It’s A Woman’s World.” That brought back some great memories, and as soon as I can remember how I converted it from DVD to YouTube-uploadable format the last time, I’ll be sharing that with you, too, but if you missed some of the earlier ones, here’s a link. Snapcracklepop! Ouch, I think something just snapped in half! It’s amazing how fast you can lose momentum and turn into a rusted bag of bolts…let me see–what else? I’ve worked out some plot points on The Water Bearers (in case you don’t remember, that’s the working title of my second novel) and cleared up a couple of plot holes, which was probably a good thing to complete prior to sharing my work with my new writers’ group. If I can ever get past obsessively editing the first nine chapters, I’ll be in good shape to start writing the new ones.

So–I’m no longer whining (well, at least not as much, and most of that is my joints’ fault); in fact, I’m starting to feel pretty limber again, getting back into my writing groove. Boy, does it feel good. Glad you’re along for the ride!

 

 

Chutes & Ladders

photo-52Coffee, reheated for the third time, check. Classical music lilting through my headphones, check. Bright morning sunlight, streaming through the window of my new office, check.

All the pieces seem to be in place, so why am I struggling to write? It’s certainly not that I have nothing to say—that’s never a struggle for me. Maybe it’s just that there’s been too much to say. Yeah. I like that. Too much to say and not sure how to say it.

It’s been almost two months since our family relocated from the Midwest to the East Coast, and I must confess, I’m still reeling from all the change.

The Good: The cross-country drive with my husband, our three kids, and our crazy Weimaraner was the most uneventful road trip I’ve ever had. No bad weather, no one was carsick, no horrible construction backups, no breakdowns (emotional or vehicular). The movers arrived on time, unloaded in a single day, and went their merry way; the neighbors are friendly and brought treats to welcome us; the weather here, in sharp contrast to Minnesota’s apparently lingering winter chill, is glorious; early visits by family members have been wonderful; and exploring this part of the country, which we’ve always loved, delights and entertains us.

The Bad: The house, in spite of its beautiful bones, is presenting some challenges (all right, to be honest, some days I feel like I’m living in a remake of The Money Pit), as are the kids. When did my children turn into The Bad News Bears? Limiting them to just one camp each this summer (reasoning at the time being that we’d be too busy exploring to want to be tied into a bunch of camps) looks to have been a tactical mistake. Between unpacking, moving-in-related errands, and contractors’ visits, they’ve been housebound more often than we’d planned, which is resulting in just a bit more “family time” than we’re finding healthy (if “family time” is a euphemism for trying to tear each others’ hair out by the roots and includes plentiful cussing and routine slamming of doors). ’nuff said on that topic.

The Ugly (Wait, there’s more?): This is the part I couldn’t figure out how to express. When you move, and especially when you move to a place where you don’t really know anyone, it can almost feel like a little death. I know, I still have my husband and my three kids and our crazy dog, and numerous other blessings which I count every day (well, the dog, maybe not every day…). But there are so many other things I feel are lost, that I feel like I’ve almost been in mourning since we moved: the easy, daily contact with our friends; the familiarity of our old home and community and routines—those things are all gone. I miss them. But I’ve also been feeling an additional loss: the writing foundation I’ve worked so hard to build over the last few years. My writing group; my network of local contacts, which led to such wonderful opportunities, from conferences and signings to television appearances; so many local resources—I’ve left them all behind, and now, I have to start all over again. I am feeling…well, how I’m feeling depends on what day it is, honestly. Some days, I’m depressed as hell (if I’d written this on one of those days, the title would’ve been “My Controlled Burn”). Other days I’m invigorated and inspired. It feels like my life’s become a giant game of Chutes & Ladders, where one day I’m climbing up the ladder just fine, and the next, I’m sliding back down to the bottom. I guess that’s why I haven’t been writing much—too confused to know what to say or how to feel. I’ve been stuck.

But today, I’ve decided to try to force myself back into a sense of control. Fake it ‘til you make it, right? If I have to start all over again, then that’s what I’ll do, no sense whining about it. Just do it. So I’m putting my feet back on the rungs of the ladder and climbing again. It may be slow going, but I plan on taking it one rung at a time; the important thing is to still be in the game. Next post, I promise: less whining, more sunshine.

P.S. Speaking of ladders, what do you think of my new office? Oops, guess I forgot to include that in “The Good.” And it’s a Big Good. You can’t go wrong with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves so big and full you need a ladder to access them all. Yep. Up is good, and that’s where I’m headed.