Tag Archives: writing motivation

How to Make Yourself Do Anything

It’s time to talk about motivation. Basically, I respond to both positive and negative motivation. Depending on the situation one works better than the other. For instance, I manage to get to work on time every day for the positive reason that I get paid to work and the negative reason that I don’t want to get in trouble. It’s a lot more complicated than that, but those are the core reasons.

When it comes to personal issues it is a different matter. Here’s some of the motivation techniques I’ve used to encourage myself to write over the years:

  • Follow contest deadlines. This gives me a set deadline to work toward and, in theory, something concrete.
  • Pay myself. I set up a payment plan where I gave myself a cash reward every 1,000 words with the total going toward tuition at a writing conference I wanted to attend. This worked great until I outsmarted myself and wrote words just to get the reward.
  • Same as above, except with time instead of number of words
  • Be accountable to another person, an informal “editor”. This worked too except it is an incredible drain on the other person and I can’t expect even the best of friends to do that long term.

All of these things work for a time, and then I run out of steam. So how do you make yourself do something consistently and over a long period of time? As an adult I make myself do things every day. I obviously have the ability, so why is it so hard to make myself do some of the things that are very important to me?

Time is part of the issue. I think that is a legitimate excuse in many cases. While I’m trying to write an hour every day, I’ve decided it would be far better to squeeze in what I can – even 15 minutes – than not to write at all. But I really feel I have that hour a day, somewhere within my day, to write.

How can I motivate myself? By remembering why I want to do this. I don’t want to be that person I hear in the lunchroom who talks about all the things they want to do, but never does them. I want to know I tried my best, and if nothing comes of it at least I did that much. I want to learn and grow and that only comes from doing – not from thinking about it. I can do this!

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Filed under April 2011

Does Planning Ahead Ruin Motivation?

In general, I’m a planner. I like to think about what I’m going to do and tweak the plan before I do it. I would not describe myself as spontaneous, and I like a drama-free life. When I write, though, I find over-planning bores me. One of the reasons I’ve taken a break from my first story of the year was that I knew exactly where it was going and I didn’t feel like writing my way there. Now I’m at the point with this story where I think I should do some planning.

I’ve written the opening scene (which still days later I think is really good) and the next scene. There are only two characters in those scenes, but I’ve now opened things up to more characters and to keep everyone straight I’m inclined to make character notes or even write complete character studies for some. That’s a lot of work, most of which won’t make it into the story, but I know it will make a difference in my brain. I also tend to forget a lot of details as I go along and writing everything out will give me something to refer to later for consistency.

I also need to do some minor world building, mainly to establish the “rules” of this particular story. I’m not writing any kind of epic fantasy, but there are some unusual aspects and I need to know where the boundaries are so everything makes sense.

The good thing is that is all the fun part. The problem is once that’s done I have to get down to work and get it all on paper, or screen. Without doing all that planning things are likely to be a jumbled mess and that will frustrate me. With all that planning I often feel like I’ve written the story in my head, enjoyed it, and who cares if it ever sees the light of day. Well, obviously I care so I need to get over it.

Okay, decision made. Do the planning. Grow up and do the hard work after.

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Filed under April 2011

New Story, New Motivation

I hit a wall, and I was avoiding writing. I hate to admit it, but I was not writing an hour a day (gasp, scream, oh the horror!). I’ve had another idea poking around in my brain for a couple of months. And like everything shiny and new it was much more appealing than my old crusty story.

I am officially and publicly cutting myself some slack. My goal right now is consistency and to develop good writing habits. Eventually I’m bound to get better, or at least lose my mind enough that I don’t care anymore. Like a good magpie I am choosing the shiny, new story – at least for now.

Poof! Like magic I’m back in the game. Switching focus was all it took to bring the spring back into my fingers on the keyboard. This leads me to wonder if ideas need vacations? By putting my original story on the back burner will my subconscious work on it like secret elves making shoes in the night? Was that what was happening to my shiny, new story these last couple months? I’m inclined to think it was because the new story is moving much faster, and I feel a clearer goal than before.

Or could I just be learning? If the secret to writing better is to, well, write, wouldn’t it make sense that things would get easier over time? Each story should be better, more fully formed, than the last. Then again, we’ve all read sequels that were inferior to the original. I’ve heard musicians say you have a lifetime to create your first album and a year to create the second. I assume that means once you’ve created something, and filled it with everything you have, what is left to fill the next creation? Maybe all we need is the luxury of time.

Or, maybe my first idea was junk and this one is more worthy of exploration. Only time will tell. Either way I’m setting my first hard deadling of the year: A complete draft (of either story) by Easter.

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Filed under April 2011