As I discover every day, no daily writing session stands alone, each hour of
work, each day of work ties to the one before—and connects to the one to come
after. Writing builds on itself.
With everything we all have going on in our daily
lives, our minds can only be expected to hold on to a plotline for so long.
Let’s face it, life gets in the way. I’m
a walking/talking example—I’m a month behind my personal schedule as a result
of real life (and two colds) keeping me from writing. Life has an annoying
tendency to take our minds away from our characters and make us talk to and
interact with actual living, breathing people. When this happens and I get back
to my writing, what momentum I’d built up has gone bye-bye. Then I have to take valuable writing time to
go back over what I’d done before to bring myself back up to speed.
It’s not just the words that we lose our grasp on
when we don’t (or can’t) write every day. A particular character’s emotional
state, emotions they had in the scene where you stopped were right there,
bubbling on the surface of your consciousness, ready to be tapped again. If you
lose a day or two, that bubbling has stopped.
To write every day takes discipline and persistence.
Discipline to do it, and persistence to see it through to the end of the book,
and beyond to getting an agent and publisher.
For those who want it badly enough, the dream of reaching that final
goal is enough to keep us moving forward. There are plenty of roadblocks: life,
family and friends who don’t understand (or worse yet, who don’t believe in
you), and just the cold, hard truth that writing is hard work. It’s lonely
work. If you want to be a published writer, you have to trudge on despite all
of this.
I have a full-time job, so carving out time to write
wasn’t (and still isn’t) easy; but I really wanted to be published, so I found
the time. I started writing on a more regular schedule, and I could see the
improvement. And when I saw the improvement, I wanted to write more. With that
came confidence and a determination to reach my goal.
I’d still be writing even if I wasn’t published,
because writing isn’t just what I do—writing is who I am. It’s like an
addiction, you can’t stop, and you don’t want to. When I’m not writing, I’m
thinking about writing. When I’m writing, I’m happy. When I’m between projects,
I can get a little cranky. Just ask my amazingly patient and supportive
husband.
Writing for publication is like any other goal worth
working and fighting for. You have to
put your nose to the proverbial grindstone and just do the work. Believe me,
after working for it for over twenty years, it is so worth it.