Showing posts with label Time to write. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Time to write. Show all posts

Monday, March 27, 2017

Writing in a Vacuum

I still remember the moment it first dawned on me that all I really wanted was to string words together for a living. Suddenly everything made sense. Why my English teacher loved me, but my history teacher didn’t… why the library was the closest thing to heaven on earth for me… why song lyrics made me cry. Words. It was all about words.

Armed with this revelation, I expected life to rearrange itself so that I could do what I’d been created to do – write. To my horror, the dishes didn’t wash themselves, laundry continued to pile up and my family kept eyeing me hopefully at mealtimes. Then there was the small matter of earning enough to do my bit to support our growing brood.

I’ll admit I threw some spectacular tantrums. Why me? was a common theme. I knew many stay-at-home moms who didn’t have a thimble-full of the vision and passion that I had, yet they had time on their hands – the one thing I didn’t seem to have enough of.

So I did life. I raised my babies, with all the wiping and washing that comes with them. I went to work and reconciled accounts, laughed and cried with colleagues. I danced and dug in the garden. I ironed through mountains of laundry that would crush small countries if piled in a heap. I wrote in stolen pockets of time, cherished moments of word-weaving made all the more precious for their rarity.

Years down the line I can see a truth that I couldn’t before – my writing is richer because my life has been full. 


Nothing thrives in a vacuum, but word-seeds germinated in the rich soil of life experience grow tall and strong, effortlessly bearing the message intending for the reader’s heart.

So if you are facing the frustration of not being able to write full-time, take heart! The real life you live will seep into your words packing them with oomph and gusto to transport your reader. As you embrace your life you will see your writing come to life!


Where are you at? Fitting in bits of writing in between, or able to spend as much time as you want? How do you manage when real life gets a bit too busy?

Dianne J. Wilson writes novels from her hometown in East London, South Africa, where she lives with her husband and three daughters. She is neck-deep in a three book contract for a YA series, Spirit Walker, with Pelican / Watershed.

Finding Mia is available from AmazonPelican / Harbourlight, Barnes & Noble and other bookstores.

Shackles is available as a free ebook from Amazon & Smashwords.


Find her on FacebookTwitter and her sporadic blog Doodles.

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Finding Time to Write, by Renee-Ann Giggie

Do you ever get in a “I don’t feel like doing anything” mood? A time when even the things you feel most passionate about no longer appeal to you? In the busyness of life, we all need “Me-Time” to rejuvenate our energy and refill our creative well. But will we fit that special time into our routine, enough to see a difference? How?

Being a writer is a demanding job, just getting the material down on paper, and then every writer has various additional responsibilities to factor into his or her daily schedule, as well. You may be juggling motherhood, a full-or part-time job, or caring for elderly parents. You may have church duties or your own health issues. Don't forget, writers also have to market their books, research new material, and support their fellow writers. Is your head spinning yet?

When my boys were growing up, writing wasn’t a priority for me. I made the decision not to write, whether it was conscious or unconscious, because I didn't have the Me-Time needed to make it happen. My creative well was full for my boys, but my fiction writing came from a different well inside of me, and that one needed to be replenished.



Do you ever take time for YOU?

Do you take time away from your family? Away from priorities and responsibilities, to pen those ideas that have been dancing in your head all day but you were too busy to write them down? Or just to nap. The ideas will develop while you sleep. At some point the three large mounds of laundry will have to wait another day. Don't let them stare you down. If you're serious about writing, you'll find that half-hour to rejuvenate your creative self, your soul, and keep writing.

Is there anyone who can help you find an hour a day to yourself?

Having two grown-up/out-of-the-nest kids doesn't mean I’m less busy. I may be done with the task of raising two very active little boys, but I still have meals to prepare, laundry to do, a house to clean, a vegetable garden to maintain, as well as a rotation-shift/full-time job that takes me out of the house five days a week. I thank God daily, though. He’d blessed me with a wonderful husband who not only helps with the chores, but supports my writing, 200%.

Daily Me-Time is a vital part of every writer’s life. Whether you steal 15 minutes, half an hour, or an hour to take a walk, catnap, brainstorm, put fingers to the keyboard--it will make you the writer you want to be. Go ahead and try fitting yourself into your day!

A young mother shared how she wrote during her two 15-minute work breaks, half hour commute on the bus (each way), and one hour after the kids went to bed to pen more words to her manuscript, keeping her entire weekends for responsibilities and family time. Do the math. Two-and-a-half hours a day, five days a week. It adds up, and with this kind of dedication, she’s set to complete her manuscript.

Do you fit Me-Time into your schedule? How? When?



Renee-Ann’s desire to write began very early but remained a hobby until just a few years ago when she wrote her first novel, Stella’s Plea, (Nov. 2012). She’s a member of several writing groups and is no stranger to Christian writers’ conferences, where she thrives on learning, and then looks forward to the next conference. She and her husband live in New Brunswick, Canada. Her latest release is titled Emma's Prayer.



Blurb from Emma's Prayer:

A teen pregnancy. A couple desperate for a family. A baby awaiting adoption.

When the opportunity presents itself, will Emma Leigh Roberts take back what’s rightfully hers, or will she come to terms with the consequences of her decision?

When Cynthia Manning, a small town speech therapist, suffers another miscarriage, she and her husband Logan turn to adoption. They’re delighted when a baby boy is placed in their home. Is heartbreak inevitable?