One of my writer-friends, back when she had several toddlers and a day job to fit writing around, used to say that no one else will defend your time for you. You have to do it yourself. Which means you have to make writing one of your top three or four priorities. Not necessarily the one top-level must-absolutely-do-regardless thing – feeding the toddlers obviously comes before writing. But if you want to actually get writing done, it has to take automatic precedence over most of your want-to-do list. Unfortunately, most people are very bad at this.

Especially including me.

I used to say yes to nearly everything anyone wanted me to do, unless it was something I loathed, and even then, if the asker was a good enough friend (or in enough trouble), I would often say yes and hate doing it. I’m not just talking about big stuff here, like “will you help me move into my new apartment?” but little stuff as well, like “Will you hem my jeans, since I can’t sew?” or “…bake brownies for the party Saturday?”

Over the years, I have gotten a lot better at defending my writing time. I can and do say “No” to all sorts of things now that I never would have before. There’s still a major problem though, and I think that it is one that writers are especially prone to, and that is saying No to things I really would love to do, but that realistically I don’t have time to do and still write.

There are only 24 hours in a day and they are all full of something. Saying Yes to anything means implicitly saying No to everything else, because I can’t go to the concert and make dinner at the same time. All too often, the “no” comes out of my writing time.

It’s easy to push writing off to tomorrow when a friend calls wanting to go out to dinner at my favorite restaurant, especially if it’s someone I haven’t seen in a couple of years who is passing through town. It’s easy to say “I’ll catch up later” when I’m invited to go to a special event I really want to attend, whether that’s the State Fair, Shepherd’s Harvest, or the 4th Street Fantasy Convention.

The catch is the “putting off today’s writing til tomorrow” isn’t actually putting it off; it’s dropping that two hours from the schedule entirely. Because when tomorrow comes, I will not do both the four-hour segment I was planning on and another four hours of catch-up…and even if I somehow manage to force myself to work that long, I won’t get the same amount of useful writing done as I would have gotten from two separate sessions on different days. The brain gets tired.

For brief periods, I can fool myself into thinking that this time, I’ll be able to do two four-hour sessions tomorrow, or maybe one regular session and then an extra hour every day for the next four days. Realistically, though, that trick never works. Sometimes, I manage one day, maybe even two, and then something else comes up that I want to do, and the next thing I know, I’m theoretically “catching up” by writing an extra hour every day for the next year and a half. At that point, I have to stop and admit that this is not working, and start saying no to things I really, really want to do.

This is especially important when my writing is not going very well. There are days when doing the dishes looks more attractive than swearing at a blank screen for four more hours; if somebody calls up to suggest a movie I want to see or just dinner out, I find it practically impossible to say no. It also becomes harder and harder to distinguish between “I am frustrated and will leap at any excuse to avoid working on this” and “I am getting burned out and actually do need a break.”

Because the other problem with defending one’s writing time is that one can get too energetic about it and end up burning one’s brain to a crisp, at which point it can take weeks or months to get back in the groove. In the end, it’s a balancing act, and it is easy to fall off either side … and whether one wimps out on saying “no” or burns out because one said “no” too often, the end result is no writing getting done.

7 Comments
  1. As an amateur I find this both encouraging and discouraging. On one hand, if professional writers also have this problem then I am in good company. On the other hand, if professional writers also have this problem, what chance do I have of overcoming it? 😉

    • You don’t. You cope with it.

    • What Mary said. Figuring out how to cope is part of becoming a professional, because the fundamental problem never goes away. If you have a day job, somebody else sets the hours and deadlines, and you meet them or there are consequences (getting fired). If you are self-employed, there are still consequences – not getting writing done – but if you wish to avoid them, you have to set your writing hours and deadlines yourself, and take them seriously, because nobody will do that for you. Nobody else can.

    • You don’t overcome it, but you do, with practice, get better at juggling it. (Says the person who hasn’t written in a week, because the new cat needs attention and the computer’s been down and the house needs repairs and….) As our hostess says, it’s a balancing act. If you can’t stay consistently on the high-wire, at least get good at bouncing on the net and climbing back up the ladder.

  2. Non-intuitively, I got more writing done when I had a busier schedule. Now that I have lots of free time, the blocks when I could squeeze a page or two in are deemed less valuable.

    Relatedly, Elbert Hubbard had this to say: “If you want work done well, select a busy man. The other kind has no time.”

    • When I had a day job, odd blocks of time had to be snatched right then, or they vanished. Once I was managing my own time, saying “I will write from 9 to 11 every morning” was an arbitrary choice, which could easily be altered by me deciding “No, today I’ll write from 2 to 4 in the afternoon” or “… from 10 to 11 and then from 4 to 5”. I find it very difficult to take my own arbitrary time-slots seriously; I do better with “I will write 4 pages today.” Even that has problems – the main one being that the longer I am in this business, the more positive I get that I can write those 4 pages in 15 minutes before bedtime, when actually I can’t even type that fast.

      Overconfidence regularly eats my lunch.

  3. “This is especially important when my writing is not going very well.”

    Oh, yes. Sometimes I can write on one story, but not another. Sometimes the other one does need a little more time on the backburner — but sometimes I’m shirking the hard part.