The Craft of Writing, The Writer's Life
Be consistent in showing up. Getting to your writing only once in a while won’t keep it alive. Make “routine” and “regularity” sacred words! Creative people are often spontaneous and many of us prefer to work when we are “inspired.” What a mysterious and magical idea...
The Craft of Writing, The Writer's Life
Writers who do not write are often perfectionists. Since perfection does not exist and it is wholly unattainable, perfectionism leads us to procrastinate. In turn, procrastination turns into paralysis, i.e., not writing. Perfectionism is the primary reason I see for...
The Craft of Writing, The Writer's Life
Pull out three sheets of paper. Label the first page “Starting,” the second page “Working,” and the third page “Completing.” List as many strategies as you can to help you start, work, and complete your creative project. What strategies do you use to begin and carry...
The Craft of Writing, The Writer's Life
If you intend to go deep in your writing, you must not fear the darkness. It is in that darkness that your new, and possible your best, work resides. You must proceed blind and uncertain into that darkness, but in there resides your future accomplishments. When you...
The Craft of Writing, The Writer's Life
You will have your critics. What will you do about them? Last week, we discussed our external critics—friends, family, fellow writers, perhaps agents and publishers—and identified five ways to deal with them. This week, the subject is our harshest critic—ourselves....