Sunday, September 27, 2020

Writing 'To Do' List

I thought this might be helpful to share with my fellow writers.

A Writer's “To Do” List

  1. Have writing implements and paper at the ready.

  2. Set up your workspace in a way that caters to your personal creative process.

  3. Make a blood sacrifice to the creative gods that they may bless your current endeavor. Should blood for whatever reason, not be available (only you know if you're cheating yourself. But thankfully the Elder Ones work on the honor system), a mixture of espresso and cabernet usually works nicely.

  4. Make sure you have the correct sacrifice for your genre. Warm goat's blood for horror. (Obviously.) And a warm cheese sandwich for news articles.

  5. Remove all potential distractions that may pull your focus from your writing.

  6. Be honest with yourself as to what those distractions are. Phone, work, family obligations, hygiene. If you need reference material, buy a thesaurus.

  7. Carve out time for the actual writing. The time will not present itself.

  8. Also, carve out anyone that attempts to impose on this time. You don't need these people in your life anyway, and running from the law can be quite invigorating for the creative process.

  9. Try to put as much as you can down on the paper, even if it doesn't all come together right away. Sometimes you have to get the bad ideas out of the way first to clear the road for the good ones.

  10. Stare into the internal abyss of existential dread that your life is meaningless and no one will ever enjoy your work.

  11. Get a beverage! It's important to stay hydrated!

  12. Back up your work. Nothing is worse than writing lost work.

  13. Don't give up. Even if everyone in your life has told you you are just wasting your time writing. Especially the landlady and her angry pet poodle, Chastity. That dog hated you long before you were overdue on rent.

  14. Occasionally work on something not at all related to your current project to till the old creative soil a bit.

  15. Scream into a pillow when you realize that the chapter based on a deep personal experience that took you five months of therapy and three months of writing to get out isn't going to work for the final product. Once finished screaming, strike the pillow with your weapon of choice while enjoying a nice cordial and listening to some therapeutic music. I recommend Chopin.

  16. Most importantly, have fun!

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