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Use that Back to School energy for your writing!
It’s September, and I don’t know about you, but this time of year I always get this rush of nervous, excited, Back to School energy. As writers, we can use this to our advantage! If you’ve been hedging about writing that book or script, now is a great time to commit to it.
And if you’re deep into a book or script already, it’s also a good time to take a step back for a few days and evaluate where you are and what will get you over the finish line.
For those of you who are into or approaching Act III, for sure - use that fall energy to race ahead to your Final Battle!
The Three-Part Act Three
Expanding on Act III
Act III: The Castle
For those of you somewhere in the middle:
You might consider committing to getting through your first draft by November 1 - then using Nanowrimo to do your second draft in a month. You don’t have to officially join Nanowrimo to use the idea of it for extra inspiration.
(I’ll be doing a brainstorming and story structure review series for Preptober, and continue throughout November with prompts and encouragement.)
And for those of you who aren’t anywhere near Act III, or who are struggling to progress or even to get started at all, it’s time for this vital reminder:
Fifteen minutes of writing a day for a year equals a book in a year.
When I was teaching dance I would always quote my students a study on workouts that concluded:
A 15-minute workout basically delivers 80% of the results of a 1-hour workout.
Well, that's a total game changer! Anyone can do fifteen minutes, right? For eighty percent of the results? So why the hell not work out? Where do I sign?
And I think that’s a really important concept to grasp for ANYTHING we want to do.
How about learning a language, or improving a language you already have a foundation in? 15 minutes a day.
Playing the piano or getting back to it? 15 minutes a day.
Writing a book? ABSOLUTELY.
I don’t think it’s said often enough that you CAN write a novel (or a script, or a TV pilot....) in whatever time you have. Even if that’s only fifteen minutes a day. If you have kids, if you have the day job from hell, if you are clinically depressed, if there’s a pandemic, if democracy (or half of Congress) seems to be crumbling around you— whatever is going on in your life, if you have fifteen minutes a day, as long as you write EVERY DAY, to the best of your ability, you can write a novel that way.
In fact, I wrote my first novel, The Harrowing, by writing just five minutes per day.
My day job was screenwriting, at the time, and yes, it was a writing job, but it had turned into the day job from hell. But fury is a wonderful motivator and at the end of the day, every day, I was so pissed off at the producers I was working for that I would make myself write five minutes a day on the novel EVERY NIGHT, just out of spite.
Okay, of course there’s a trick to this: If you write five minutes a day, or fifteen, you will write more than five or fifteen minutes a day, sometimes a whole hell of a lot more per day most days.
But it’s the first five minutes that are the hardest.
Sometimes I was so tired that all I could manage was a sentence, but I would sit down at my desk and write that one sentence. Then some days I’d tell myself all I needed to write was a sentence—and I’d end up writing three pages.
It’s just like the first five minutes of exercise, something I learned a long time ago. As long as I can drag myself to a dance class (or to the living room) and endure that first five minutes of the workout, and I give myself permission to leave after five minutes if I want to, I will generally do the whole class, and usually end up loving it. (There are these wonderful things called endorphins, you see, and they kick in after a certain amount of exposure to pain...)
The trick to writing, and exercise, is—it’s STARTING that’s hard.
I have been writing professionally for . . . well, never mind how many years. But even after all those many years—every single day, I have to trick myself into writing. I will do anything—scrub toilets, clean the cat box, do my taxes, do my mother’s taxes—rather than sit down to write. It’s absurd. I mean, what’s so hard about writing, besides everything?
But I know this just like I know it about exercise. If you can just start writing, and commit to just that fifteen minutes, or even five, those five minutes will turn into ten, and those ten minutes will turn into pages, and just one page a day for a year is a book.
If even that seems too much right now, try committing each morning to a
Non-Zero Day.
This principle was legendarily posted some years ago on Reddit by “Ryan from Canada,” who described a Zero Day as one in which you have done no action to advance toward your dream. So a Non-Zero Day is one in which you take at least one small action toward your dream—whatever it is. If it’s getting close to bedtime, and you’re still at zero—do something. Anything. A bit of research. Make a list to do tomorrow.
It’s such a catchy idea that it’s easy to implement.
If you really can’t write at all, because of exhausting extenuating circumstances, like the illness or death of a loved one (or on the other side of the spectrum but equally exhausting, a new baby!) - you probably are still watching a movie or TV once in a whole. How about committing to watching movies and TV consciously, to work on your craft? When you finally do have time to get back to that book or script, you’ll be doing so on a much higher level. More here!
Think about it.
Or better yet, write for five minutes, or fifteen, right now.
- Alex
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Need some help? The Screenwriting Tricks for Authors workshop is available online, as a self-paced course with all the videos, assignments, movie breakdowns and personalized feedback you need to get that book written this year, 15 minutes at time.
In three parts, and you only pay for what you use.
One-on-one coaching also available in The Writers’ Room.
Get the workbooks:
Stealing Hollywood ebook, $4.99, also available as print workbook
Writing Love ebook, $2.99