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How Can You Keep Writing if You Work Long Hours?

“I currently run an IT staffing agency and work in excess of 60 hours during the week, not to mention what gets handled on the weekends. So my question is this: how would you balance that with a love and desire to write?”

This is what Bryan wrote to me a few weeks ago … and I wanted to address his question on the blog, because I’m sure he isn’t the only person in this situation.

Maybe you’re struggling with something similar. It might be a 60-hour week, or caring for small children, or looking after elderly relatives, or working two jobs to make ends meet … whatever’s going on for you, there simply isn’t much time to spare for Writing.

And let’s be honest: there are no easy fixes here. If there were, you’d have found them already!

For the sake of this post, I’ll assume that you can’t reduce your working hours (or get help with other areas of your life).

And yet you really want to Write.

A lot of the conventional, tried-and-tested writing advice simply doesn’t apply to you. You simply cannot write for an hour every day, or block out two evenings per week to write. You don’t have the time – and you definitely don’t have the energy.

When I asked other authors about this in the Alliance of Independent Authors members’ Facebook group, the general consensus was that:

  • It is hard to write when working long hours – cut yourself some slack!
  • You need to accept that you can’t write much, or for long.
  • Use little scraps of time to write … five minutes here and there add up.

Here are the two solutions I’ve found in my own life when time (or energy) has been at a premium:

Possibility #1: Write for Very Short Sessions

Finding an hour to spare might be next to impossible – but could you find 15 minutes?

I find 15 minutes is about my minimum viable length, but some authors do even less: Katharine Grubb (who homeschools her five children) writes in 10 Minute bursts, for instance.

A couple of years ago, when Nick was just a baby and Kitty was two, I used to write in 15 minute bursts. It felt hardly worth doing – but when I looked at the new words and the editing I’d clocked up over a couple of weeks, it seemed much more worthwhile.

If you can write for 15 minutes on just six days a week, that’s an hour and a half per week. If you can hit 1,500 words in that time (which is fast but not insanely fast!) and do that every week for 50 weeks of the year, you’ve got a 75,000 word novel.

Possibility #2: Binge Write for Long Sessions

If short sessions don’t work for you, or if you simply want to occasionally have a much longer writing session, then a binge-writing approach might be your best solution.

Even if your weekends are often busy with work or family, can you get away once every month or two? I do this every 2 – 3 months: I book a hotel room overnight, and stay from 2pm Saturday until 11am Sunday. I get a heck of a lot of writing done! I still get a good chunk of the weekend with the kids, too.

I’d really recommend giving this a go if you’ve never tried it. You definitely don’t have to go anywhere fancy – just look for somewhere with desks in the bedrooms.

If you wrote, say, 6,000 words on one weekend each month (I’ve hit as many as 10,000 during my retreats) and you did that for 12 months, you’d have written a 72,000 word novel.

Of course, when you have very little time, making the most of it becomes even more vital.

How to Write Efficiently

These are some of the best tips I’ve come across over the years. I’m sure you’ve heard some of them before … but if you’re not already trying them, do give them a go.

#1: Turn Off or Remove as Many Distractions as Possible

One of the reasons I get so much writing done at the hotel is because my computer is too feeble to connect to the wifi there! I’d definitely suggest switching off your internet access while you write, if at all possible.

Set your phone to “do not disturb” or silent so that incoming texts or emails don’t disturb you. If you really do need to keep it on in case any urgent calls come in, can you at least put it across the room so it’s out of arm’s reach?

#2: Play Music or Sound that Helps You Focus

I’m drafting this blog post in our local library: the knitting group isn’t meeting today, but the toddler Duplo session is on upstairs, and a few minutes ago, a gentleman across the room from me was having a loud conversation on his mobile.

As always, I’m very glad of my headphones!

Some writers can tune out any background sound, but many find conversations or sudden, intermittent sounds very distracting. Others simply find that music helps them get into the writing zone.

When I began writing seriously, I always wrote in silence (or as near to it as I could get). These days, I almost always have music on. So even if you think you like to write in silence, give music (or ambient sound) a try. You might find it helps!

My favourite type of headphones are the in-ear ones: they’re much comfier than old-school ear buds, and they’re cheap and very portable. These are my current pair. All the brands I’ve had have muffled outside noise, and very little noise “leaks” from them (meaning I can crank up my metal, even in the library….)

#3: Spend Five Minutes Planning BEFORE You Write

Whether you’re writing non-fiction or fiction, spending a few minutes planning can save you a ton of time when you’re trying to write it.

I’ve always planned blog posts ahead of time (it usually takes me about 5 minutes to write a plan), but I’m still getting into the habit of planning scenes of my novel before I jump into writing.

Rachel Aaron, author of 2K to 10K: How to Write Faster, Write Better, and Write More of What You Love, says that planning scenes ahead of time is one of the biggest reasons she was able to go from writing 2,000 words per day to a whopping 10,000.

In How I Went From Writing 2,000 Words a Day to 10,000 Words a Day, she writes:

If you want to write faster, the first step is to know what you’re writing before you write it. I’m not even talking about macro plot stuff, I mean working out the back and forth exchanges of an argument between characters, blocking out fights, writing up fast descriptions.

(Quick confession: I bought Rachel’s book four years ago, and I STILL have trouble remembering to plan scenes before I write them! I find it hugely helpful when I do take those extra five minutes, though – so it’s a habit well worth trying to stick with, even if it doesn’t come naturally for you.)

Ultimately, do keep writing. Regular very short sessions add up; so do occasional writing binges. Look for some way to fit writing into your life (enlist the help of family and friends if you can) … and stick with it.

It’s not easy – and you, like me, may have to resist the temptation to compare yourself to other writers who have fewer demands on their time. But even if you can’t write everything you want to write, you can write something.

How will you get more writing into your life? Do you want to try short writing sessions, binge-writing … or something else entirely? Pop a comment below to tell us.



This post first appeared on Aliventures | Master The Art, Craft And Business O, please read the originial post: here

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How Can You Keep Writing if You Work Long Hours?

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