Pursuing the Dream When Time is Scarce

As a full-time working mother pursuing the dream of publication, I often feel pulled in a thousand different directions. I know what it’s like to feel overwhelmed, inadequate, and stressed out. I think almost everybody does. After all, we live in a culture where time is a commodity. A precious resource. One we’d all like more of.

But as much as we might wish for the power to forgo sleep (oh, to be a vampire), I don’t see that happening anytime soon. So how can we do it? With our full plates, how can we manage to write too? After doing some reflecting, I came up with a short list of musts when it comes to balancing a hectic schedule and pushing toward our dream of publication.

1. Keep a sacred writing hour

This is crucial if you want to get serious about writing. For me, my sacred time is every morning from 5:00 to 6:00. This is my no-excuse hour devoted to novel writing. Not blogging. Not tweeting. But actual work on my WIP. Maybe you don’t have an hour to spare. That’s okay. Start with something smaller. But be diligent about carving out a set chunk of time each day.

2. Figure out priorities and structure time accordingly

For me, it’s God first, family second, writing third, then everything else. I never want to forget my ultimate pursuit and it’s not publication. It’s Jesus. That means getting up at an insane hour (4:00 am, gasp!) to pray and read the Bible before my writing time. At night, when I get home from work, it’s family time. If I get these three things right each day, I can go to bed knowing I stuck to my priorities.

3. Give up what you can, and cherish what you can’t

As much as we might want to, we can’t do everything. So learn to say no. Learn to ask for help. During the school year, I don’t do the laundry or cook. My husband does that. It’s his way of tangibly supporting my writing career. Might your spouse help more if you asked? Do you have older children who can pitch in? Are there things you can give up? I’ll never be the queen of hospitality or keep up with American Idol. Those are things I choose not to do. But of course, there are things I can’t give up. Like being a wife, a mother, and a Christian. Neither would I want to. Let go of what you can and embrace what you can’t.

4. Set realistic short-term and long-term goals

I’m a huge believer in setting goals. Without goals to strive toward, I roam aimlessly (usually on Twitter or Facebook). A long-term goal might be finishing a novel in a certain number of months. Figure out what short-term goals you need to set in order to accomplish your long-term one. This might be a specific word count each day. Make sure you don’t watch television or surf the Internet until you reach it. Above all, be honest about your circumstances and abilities and make goals that are realistic for YOU. Oh, and don’t forget to write them down.

5. Embrace Grace

We’re all busy. Nobody’s perfect. Everybody has good days and bad days. That same grace you extend to your friends, your husband, your children? Make sure to extend it to yourself too.

Questions to Ponder: Which of these do you already do? Which do you struggle with? How do you make time for writing amidst the chaos that is life?

* This article was first published in July of ’10 in the My Book Therapy E-Zine. I thought it would be appropriate for today’s post since summer is officially over and I’m back at work. You can view the original article here.removetweetmeme

Awe

I finished the rough draft for my 5th novel, A Broken Kind of Beautiful. Although they say not to get too attached to a title, since they’re prone to change, I can’t help myself with this one. I’m very attached. It fits perfectly with the story.

I pounded out eight thousand words on Saturday (thanks to my hubby who hung out with the B-man!) and ended up typing The End two weeks sooner than planned. I sat there awhile, blinking at my computer screen, sort of in awe. Not with myself. I’m hardly ever in awe with myself. But with this thing. This beautiful, insane, exhilarating, fear-inducing, tear-out-my-hair-but-I-wouldn’t-trade-it-for-the-world thing called writing. The art of pouring words onto a page and letting those words tell a story.

It’s such a gift. For the reader who loses herself in the pages, yes. But mostly, for the writer.

Every morning I wake up and spend time with God. I read His word. I write in my prayer journal. I listen. I always pray about my writing. That my stories would captivate and encourage. Speak truth. Inspire faith. But even more than that, I pray God would draw me closer to Him through my writing.

A couple weeks ago, while my mom and I drove to the mall, we started talking about my new story. I said something that surprised her. I told her how hard it was for me. To sit at my computer desk and pound out the words. I told her how the whole daunting task fills me with angst. I have no idea what I’m going to write. My words are lousy and dull and lifeless. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve sat, elbows straddling my laptop, fingers digging into my hair, blinking at my computer screen because I. Can’t. Make. The. Story. Work.

This is my 5th novel. So far, God has showed up every time. Maybe not as quick as I want Him to or when I want Him to. But He shows up. He draws me near and uses my weakness to magnify His strength. And when He does, I can’t help but feel awe. In awe that He gave me something I enjoy so much it burns all the way down into my toes. I finished another rough draft. Now it’s time to revise. Oh dear.

If you’re interested, here’s the back cover blurb for A Broken Kind of Beautiful.

Question to Ponder: How do you feel when you finish a rough draft? Or if you’re not a writer, how do you feel when you finish a big task?removetweetmeme

Cast Your Net

Whether you’re a writer or a pastor or an agent or an artist or a student or a mom or a (insert job here), most of us have a vision in our head – some marker we can hold up or point to and say, “See, I’m successful. This proves it.”

Basically, we have something we aspire to accomplish. Something we’ve set out to do, because it’s a passion or a calling or an itch we must scratch. Call it what you will.

For me, it’s writing. I aspire to be a published author. That’s my big goal. That’s the vision I’ve painted in my head. Someday, I hope I can pluck my books off a shelf in Borders or see them posted on Amazon. Even crazier – I hope people read them. That’s my aspiration.

There’s only one problem.

I can’t control it. Or maybe, I should say, getting published isn’t under my control. Sure, there are things I can do. Like write, for one. Write well, for another. Study the craft. Come up with a killer plot and gripping characters. Go to conferences. Take classes. Network with industry professionals. Learn from rejection. Listen to critique. Pray. These are all things I can do. But doing them, even doing every single one of them well, will not guarantee my books make it on a shelf someday.

All I can do is write. And when it gets hard, keep writing. Persevere. Because I’m a writer and that’s what writers do. Maybe the book my agent submitted will sell. Maybe it won’t. Maybe the book I’m working on now will sell. But maybe not. I can’t control what sells and what doesn’t. I can’t control the ebb and flow of the market or timing or the economy. I can only keep writing. That’s my job. That’s what I have control over.

Reminds me of this story from the Bible. A story about a few fishermen who also happened to be disciples. All night, they fished. They cast out their nets again and again and came back empty every time. The next morning, I can imagine they were tired. Discouraged. Worn out. But Jesus comes to them and tells Simon to cast his net again. To put it out into deep water and let it down.

Simon says, “Master, we’ve worked hard all night and haven’t caught anything. But because you say so, I will let down the nets.”

The Bible tells us that when they did so, they caught a huge number of fish. So huge that their nets started to break. They needed another boat to come help them and the fish filled both boats so full that they started to sink. Talk about a catch! Talk about the epitome of success! Talk about reaching their goals!

Here’s the thing.

They worked all night with no results. But even so, they did the work. Not just a few times, but all night long, despite reeling in empty net after empty net. They couldn’t control the catch, but they could keep casting their net. So they did. They showed up and did the work. Because that’s all they could do. The catch didn’t come until Jesus showed up.

So I’ll keep writing. For as long as this passion burns my in heart, I’ll write. I’ll keep casting my net, and hope one day, Jesus shows up and blesses me with a catch.

The horse is prepared for the day of battle, but victory belongs to the Lord. Proverbs 21:31

Questions to Ponder: What net are you casting these days? And since I didn’t do 3 C’s, feel free to share those too! (Nothing much new going on in my life…God is good, adding words to my WIP, and enjoying the summer with my son)

*Thanks to Cory for inspiring this post with his message at our camp service last Sunday.
*I’m taking a blogging break next week. Happy Fourth!

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