Novelists Managing Day Jobs Have To Make It Work

I never wanted to be one of those novelists managing day jobs. Yet, I got up this morning planning to work on an article for a corporate client. This is pretty straightforward work, crafting a piece based on an interview I did last week about a technical topic I’ve done a fair bit of reading up on.

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Segmenting my days into mental spaces is something I attempt to practice with some level of religious commitment. It’s a serious business to go from corporate article to fantasy novel writing to lesson planning for creative writing classes. I need to keep a clear head to stay clear on my goals.

However, my devotion to schedule-related doctrine wanes with embarrassing regularity, especially when I get distracted by a digital rabbit hole.

Creative vs. Corporate

Welcome to my morning. I got up and went to YouTube to put on ten hours of cello music. Instead, a video on an ancient religious order called The Scarlet Council appeared in my feed. (I feel like I’m stating the obvious, but I love a good historical conspiracy theory). How could I refuse such an offer to delve into ancient mysteries?

Well, it’s 2.5 hours later and I’m back into corporate mode, one of those novelists managing day jobs. Black turtle neck and hair up in a bun ready to bust out some business-focused material.

The reward is I wrote thirteen pages of Woman On The Wall  (1500 words or so) while listening to the 70-minute video. All that despite the fact I’m getting a later start than I wanted to on the other work.

This is my life, trying to balance curiosity and the need to create with my more intellect-based writing projects.

I’ll shift again in about two hours, prepping for an evening teaching creative writing classes.

Despite the chaos, it’s satisfying to know I’m quite capable of connecting my deep calling to write to everything I pursue in life.

Lately, people ask me why I write and I just tell them, “For me, writing is the mother blood. Everything else manifests as a result of it.”

How do writers really partition all of this off?

I tell you about my antics. Really, though, it is all about setting priorities for me. I know exactly what HAS to be done every day. Then, everything else is a bonus. If I need to do billing, I do it first. Then, loosen up the schedule. If I have to teach, of course that is the priority.

Writing has, over the years, never really become something I can turn on and off easily. So, I also have started watching my own creative energy. I know I write best in the morning. So, I always book in for the heavy mental lifting at 5 a.m.

In the end, giving yourself space to develop a system (and you have to develop one) is key.

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