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Balancing Work and Writing
Greetings most venerated and gifted fellow pen smiths! I have a question. And this just comes from an observation in my own life. For those of you who have full time jobs (40hrs a week or more), as well as even possibly family and other things, how do you handle working your job and keeping up with your writing hobbies? I ask because I currently work 50+ hours a week (Five 10's a week or more) and yet still somehow manage to put out about 6k-12k words a week in writing, sometimes upwards of 20k over a week. It's kind of a balancing act between doing well at my job and still producing quality literature on my offtime. (writing is a relaxing hobby for me, so it's my stress reliever, and benefits others with the enjoyment of a good story!) In the end I'm wondering how you guys handle the balancing act between work and writing in your own lives.
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#2 |
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I just happen to work the equivalent of a full-time job through self employment and blend in book writing. I put in a little time of writing here and there and don't come close to your volume.
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cacoethes scribendi
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I've used the word "balance" quite a lot on this forum over the last few months, but balancing work and writing is where I really struggle.
My work fluctuates a lot, and this means the time available for writing fluctuates with it - but in the opposite direction, of course. Over the last few years I've had quite a lot of months that average out over 70 work hours per week - and I don't count the hours spent maintaining my own business and computer systems and so on. I know from some of those that I interact with for my work that my work hours are not particularly unusual, so I always feel a bit ashamed when I grumble (but I do anyway). I also know from long experience that things might turn around at any time and leave me with very little work - so I don't really have much choice but to take it while it's available. Balance barely comes into it. But I have, in the last few months, been trying to extract a bit more time for myself (and so my writing), despite continuing pressure for work. But it is difficult to do, and runs into a related problem... A few years ago I was airing my grievances in this regard and Nancy Fulda observed: Quote:
But while programming tugs at the same creative resources, it doesn't fill the same need nor offer the same satisfactions, and so my compulsion to write sits frustrated until I can make time to get back to it. All of which brings me to what you said about writing being a relaxing hobby. I wish I could say that was always true, but I can't. ... And it's all my own fault. I have no deadlines for my writing; it doesn't actually matter if it takes weeks or months or years or never. But it does matter to me. It's why I can relate to the various, usually tongue-in-cheek (at least, ostensibly so), posts about being addicted to writing. I've had a taste of what it's like when the writing really starts working, and I want more! The fact that my work (the kind that actually puts food on the table) gets in the way of my getting more is very frustrating and keeps pushing the cycle of stress over my writing. It's quite silly. Intellectually I can see that very clearly, but changing how I feel about it is something else again. ... And then I add to it by spending time here on MobileRead complaining about it all. ![]() Last edited by gmw; 09-15-2017 at 09:16 AM. |
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#5 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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Quote:
In my software development I can see a lot of similarities with my writing. Everything starts out quite nebulous. First there is the bright spark of "we need something like this", then imagining some of the major highlights involved in the work, and finally down to coding the details and making it all come together even though the code takes on a life of its own, with it's own design peculiarities, requiring things to fit together this way rather than that. (Not to mention the occasional major rewrite when you stuff up.) The analogy carries even closer when I realise that there are some programming jobs that I particularly enjoy, such as when I'm exploring a new problem space and have lots to learn about the details (c.f. story ideas that can keep my attention beyond the first few pages of notes) versus those that are almost repeats of what I've seen or done before (c.f. story ideas that get abandoned as boring). But the thing I like most about writing over programming is that there can be, eventually, an end to it, and that end is a tangible thing with a future*. Programming, on the other hand, has only one end: the great bit-bucket in the sky. The moment you stop actively working on a product it begins to die. If you're lucky(?) that death may be a long and drawn out one, with users scattered here and there still tenuously holding onto it as the best thing since sliced bread, but if you're no longer working on it then the final redundancy and demise is certain. I have a product I've been developing for twenty years, and it is a very sad thing to know that it will never really be considered complete, and the day I retire and stop working on it - unless I can find a successor - will be the day that the product begins to die. Or it may catch a major ailment (like Pratchett's Small Gods, the users may stop believing in it) before I retire and have to be put out of its misery. Twenty years of creation, and the end is foreordained. It it any wonder I prefer to write? * Sure, the future for many books will be to get lost amid the swamp of other work in the basements of Amazon and Smashwords collections (far beyond the front pages where anyone ever looks), but the book is still there, as complete and usable and enjoyable (or not) as the day when the last t was crossed and i was dotted. |
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GMW, that's a very interesting take on the whole thing. And you're right, there is quite a creative process when it comes to programming as you start with an idea and have to flesh it out and figure out where you're as you go along until you reach the finish product.
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