Just a great feeling to have so many people interested in stuff I made up in my head. Hoping you enjoy it, more to come.
Free download of Run for the Money starting Friday the 13th…
right here…and continuing for 5 days under the Kindle select program. If $3.99 has been stopping you from reading a high stakes crime thriller complete with femme-fatales, hedge fund con-men, diamond smugglers and a rogue ex-con turned international manhunter – now’s you’re chance.
If you like it let the world know with a review.
The cure for procrastination is…
to just start. Pick up the pen, open the document, put on the running shoes. The rest will come, and then procrastination is non-existent. You can read all the blog posts and websites and books about all the apps and tricks to get over procrastination, but just starting makes all that superfluous.
You’ve done this before and you can do it again, and I challenge you to recall an exercise or creative session that you regretted later on. You won’t regret this one either.
For more take a look at a brilliant work on this: Mini Habits by Stephen Guise
J
You can create a world that becomes real…
The other day a friend asked if my main character in “Run For the Money“, Travis Black, was going to be in my 2nd book. When I heard this it made me realize…something that hadn’t been there before was now made real. If 2 people are standing on a porch talking about it, it exists. And if you made it up, well…the feeling is magic. You have sprinkled fairy dust and it came alive…write, and write some more, and feel the magic.
J
Motivation will come after you begin…
Most of us have it backwards, “When I feel motivated I’ll do…fill in the blank” The truth of it is, and you know this, is that the act of starting is what makes you keep going. Lighting the match creates the fire, start and then keep going instead of waiting to feel right.
Another way to say this is that action precedes feeling. Now go do something.
It’s a daily thing, or nothing…
We all say we want to: write a book, open a restaurant, do stand up, perform music…or whatever your creative dream is. The difference between those who say and those who do is that one word: do. The ones who get there, they do something every day to move them closer. That doesn’t include telling their friends about this great new idea, it means calling someone who can put you in front of somebody, it means writing 3 pages, it means practicing instead of watching TV, even while you practice feeling that common refrain: “I don’t think I’m cut out for this, who am I kidding?” It’s a daily thing, or it’s not…you know exactly what it takes, just do it more often. J
Doesn’t get much better than this…
If you’re familiar with James Altucher you may have already seen his post on writing today: http://bit.ly/1wUrXrl
if not…this is a guy you should follow if you’re a writer or in a creative pursuit. The post refers to an interview he did on his podcast with Andy Weir, author of The Martian. http://amzn.to/1wUuFgq
Brilliant insights into the creative process, self-publishing and why we’re in the best time ever to be a writer. Read the post, check out his podcasts…Enjoy.
Writing software… useful tool or the ultimate procrastination device?
The company that makes Scrivener has come out with a type of mind mapping tool for writers. Looks interesting, useful, and is modestly priced. But like Scrivener and any other writing software, there’s a fine line between productivity and a time sucking fascination with all the cool things it can do.
For me, the best bet is to open a simple text file, get the writing done in a distraction free environment, and transfer to Word or whatever later. Even Word with all it has can take up to 1/2 a day just on layouts and fonts. Be aware of these traps, and just write.
So now there’s this…
First this started out as a hobby, writing a book and sending it off to an agent. Long story short, the agents wanted this or that fixed, those of you who’ve been there know it’s a frustrating process, so I went the self-publishing route.
So much easier! No committee, no gate keepers, just me and my work. The challenge: getting the word out.
First friends and family, then Twitter, Goodreads, and now this blog. Hope you enjoy the posts on writing, creativity and the process.
J
