How do you do it? By this I mean a bit about your process. Do you work off of a "pages per day" kind of deal--with a bare minimum of what you need to do for the day to be accomplished? A word count? Plot?
part two of the question formatting -- what does yours look like? When you're working on a work-in-progress. Times new roman? double space? single?
1) There are two options. Option A: I pick something from the stack of ongoing projects and work on it, taking reasonable breaks. I may have a specific project planned for a specific day, but usually not a word count or page count. I try to finish things before the deadline becomes an oppressive burden. Option B: A story leaps on my unsuspecting consciousness like a couger pouncing on a mountain goat. I resurface into this world when my partner knocks on the door and asks where supper is.
2) I write in MS Word using Arial 12 pt type, double spaced, double justified, because that is what I can read. Small type, serif type, and ragged margins are hard on my eyes. I try to be careful about this stuff because I spend many hours a day staring at this screen.
June 9 2008, 10:47:28 UTC 13 years ago
2. OpenOffice. (Down with Word!) Times New Roman, 12 point, single-spaced, double justified.
June 9 2008, 14:55:29 UTC 13 years ago
When active, usually at night until about 12.30 or 1.00am
2. MS Word, or whatever's available. Garamond font, 13 point, 1.5 line spacing, always always always. Otherwise my brain doesn't think I'm in it for serious.
June 9 2008, 23:41:20 UTC 13 years ago
2. I typically write on paper first. I type it out, if need be, when I'm happy with it. Most of my works are hardcopy, however.
June 9 2008, 23:50:14 UTC 13 years ago
I don't particularly want to be mugged by the muse when I'm in the shower, on a long car ride (it's cruel to my partner), or in a romantic situation. Come on, I spend hours a day in an opportune time, the muse can friggin' learn to aim. It's a huge target.
June 10 2008, 03:01:57 UTC 13 years ago
However, having recovered and not being entirely the same person I was, I was uncertain if my creativity had been similarly affected. I mean, when you start taking drugs which affect your brain chemistry, and your brain now responds differently, will this affect other areas of the intellect and imagination as well?
Well, the best advice I've seen echoed over and over again is that the best way to work on something like creativity is just to work at it. Constantly. Practise, practise, practise. Something, I admit, I've never had the discipline to do (it's hard to validate the need for homework/practise when you do exceptionally well without having done any). So, I've started doing little bits and pieces during quiet times at work.
It has proven to be a little rusted around the edges from lack of use. With some oil, some sandpaper and some elbow grease, I'm confident it'll be back in working condition in relatively little time.
June 10 2008, 05:46:24 UTC 13 years ago
June 10 2008, 16:32:19 UTC 13 years ago