A couple of months ago, I wrote an article for my RWA chapter newsletter about the Do’s and Don’ts of Setting Writing Goals. I thought I could use a refresher course before I craft some very attainable goals for the Ruby Slippered Sisterhood Winter Writing Festival.
So how does one do it? How do you keep going through writer’s block, the day job, life’s little interruptions? (Most of the content below is excerpted from the Nov./Dec. issue of NARWA’s newsletter, High Country Highlights.)
If there’s a key, it lies in simply setting the goal. You won’t get started until you have somewhere you want to go.
These goal-setting guidelines were originally set out in a “Do’s and Don’ts” list by the folks at Spark People, but they can be applied to writing just as easily as weight loss:
• Do create a plan. Don’t wait for “someday” to roll around.
Before I started to treat writing like my day job so it will become my day job, I had tons of story starts that I thought about working on but didn’t. I figured I’d get around to it “someday” — when I wasn’t busy with other things.
Well, believe me when I say “someday” never comes. If you don’t make writing a priority, you won’t get it done.
• Do start small. Don’t focus on too many things at once.
I’m struggling with this one right now. I have so many irons in the fire — writing about Beth and Cody in their island paradise, editing two Golden Heart entries and plotting my NaNo novel — that at the end of the day I haven’t done much of anything. I’ve probably written no more than 10,000 words in the last month. After cranking out 110,000 between January and July, that just seems pathetic.
This is as true now as it was back in October, when I wrote the article … though my projects have shifted. I’m no longer editing GH entries, I’m editing the NaNo novel — and still trying to get through the first draft of Beth & Cody’s tale. And I’m contemplating beginning the query process with “Beauty and the Ballplayer.”
• Do write it down. Don’t forget to give yourself a deadline.
“Deadlines turn wishes into goals,” the Spark People article said. Deadlines also give you something concrete to work toward. Just make sure it’s a deadline you can control. “I want to finish a 60,000-word novel in six months” is under your control; “I want to be published by the time I turn 40” is not.
• Do track your progress. Don’t fool yourself into failure.
I keep track of words written each day on an Excel spreadsheet. I also keep a list of agents I’ve queried and their responses. My friend Mallory recently blogged about GoalForIt, an online goal tracking program.
I find the idea of GoalForIt intriguing, but it could prove to be too much of a distraction for me. I can tell the days I spend more time playing online by the lower word count in my chart.
Why, oh why, can’t someone invent a program that beeps to remind you to get back to work every time you waste more than five minutes on Facebook or Twitter?
• Do find a support system. Don’t try to do it alone.
Yes, writing is a solitary pursuit. You can’t write by committee — at least not well. You can, however, seek the company of like-minded people to keep you going when you feel like giving up. Attend your local RWA chapter’s meetings. Read and comment on your favorite writing blogs. Schedule a write-in at the local coffee house. Ask someone whose opinion you trust to read through your contest entry before you mail it off.
To wrap it all up: The secret to writing success is to make time to write. Set some small, achievable goals and start meeting them. With determination and a little support from your writer friends, your star will rise.
If I do say so myself, that’s some pretty fantastic advice. Now, I just need to practice what I preached.
I actually watched a movie this week (Knight and Day) where Tom Cruise’s character said “someday” really means “never”. So true!
I don’t know about a program that beeps but I do know of one that turns off your internet access for a specified amount of time. Maybe that would help? Here’s the link: https://macfreedom.com/
Hmm. I still haven’t seen that movie, but I wanted to. (I set no stock in reviewers’ opinions, which I believe were all bad.)
I’ll have to check out that program … maybe. I could just go to Starbucks and not log onto anything until I’ve written at least XXX words.
[…] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Mallory Snow. Mallory Snow said: RT @arlenewrites: Setting writing goals: https://wp.me/pDlCK-8j […]
Great reminders, Arlene. I’m so excited to get back to writing regularly this week.