The Writer

Seize the day

Whether a writer is a seasoned pro, totally new to writing, or somewhere in between, finding the time to write is always an issue. Some writers give up entirely on their dream and desire to write because even the idea of trying to find the time feels impossible and crushes them.

When I first started writing, I worked two jobs, went to school on top of having a lively social life, and had no car, which meant commuting took two to three hours a day. Essentially, I had the exact opposite of time; I had negative time. I was often overbooked, exhausted, and demoralized when it came to writing because all the writers I knew had the privilege of time, encouragement, and space.

It took me years to finally come up with a way of making a schedule that I return to throughout my career. When I finally realized a writing practice didn’t have to consist of writing X number of words a day, it became so much easier to use other authors’ methods as jumping-off points for building my own schedule and practice.

Before I could carve out

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Writer

The Writer1 min readLeadership
The Writer
T.J. Murphy, Editor Scott Brandsgaard, Senior Designer Ryan Gillis, Vice President of Marketing Strategy David Glassman, Chief Technology Officer Sue Veres Royal, President & Chief Executive Officer Amanda Joyce, Chief Financial Officer Gregory Charl
The Writer1 min read
Month Ahead
Today is National Read a Book Day. No need to say more. Agatha Christie was born on this day in 1890. She produced 66 novels and 14 story collections. National Comic Book Day. Excited for Halloween? Read The Dreaming by Queenie Chan. National Coffee
The Writer2 min read
Ursula K. Le Guin recreates reality
AT FIRST GLANCE, URSULA K. LE GUIN’S fiction — filled with wizardry, mystical lands and societies thousands of years in the future — appears to flaunt the old standard, “Write what you know.” But in the October 1991 issue of The Writer, Le Guin expla

Related Books & Audiobooks