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What Will You Give Up To Write Your Book?

    Categories: Writing

OLD POST ALERT! This is an older post and although you might find some useful tips, any technical or publishing information is likely to be out of date. Please click on Start Here on the menu bar above to find links to my most useful articles, videos and podcast. Thanks and happy writing! – Joanna Penn

Writing a book is a sacrifice of your precious time and energy. You could be doing many other things with that time.

In fact, if you have been wanting to write a book and have not yet managed it, then you already ARE doing other things with that time.

Lack of time seems to be the no. 1 reason people haven't written their books yet, so it is the main thing you need to overcome.

You can't have more hours in the day, so what will you give up in order to get that book written?

You cannot give up your family time or your job, so here are some other ideas.

  • Give up the TV. I haven't had a TV for nearly 3 years and it is a liberating experience! We still watch movies and download TV programs on the iTunes store, but there is no constant distraction or temptation to watch more than what is chosen. TV is a time suck. Relaxing but it also eats your life away.
  • Give up gaming. Yes, gaming is fun and relaxing but how much time do you really need? I recently listened to a podcast of Mur Lafferty's where she discusses with Jay Lake giving up gaming. He noted that for him it is the same part of the brain that games or writes, and so giving up gaming enabled him to write. I'm not a gamer but I have heard this before!
  • Give up some social time. I'm not suggesting you stop seeing your friends but perhaps cut back and see them every 2 weeks and keep the other time for writing.
  • Give up 1 hour of sleep. Ok, this is a hard one for me as I love sleep! But many people find that getting up an hour earlier in the mornings is effective for getting writing done, especially if it is before the kids get up.
  • Give up a relaxed commute. I commute nearly 2 hours per day and use the time to read all the blogs, catch up on key audios, do business emails and write on my little netbook, or even just Notes on my iPhone. I used to just listen to music but found that was a waste of time. Obviously this is only useful if you get the train or bus, but you could also think and dictate your thoughts while driving.

You don't have to go cold turkey and stop altogether, but how about at least cutting back on your hours?

Or give up for a month in November and do NaNoWriMo along with me and many others, and see what you can achieve!

Image: Flickr Creative Commons H.Koppdelaney

Joanna Penn:

View Comments (18)

  • Excellent post. I've been thinking about this a lot and was wanting to write a post on finding time as well. I hope you don't mind that I'm doing the same.

    I struggle with this and it's my number one barrier.

    I'll be sure to pass on some linklove in my post.

  • oh dear, hard!!! i think i'd give up some online social networking time because it's all that I do when I am done with work. Cutting back on that should do my story a little bit of good.

    oh, is it november already??? nanowrimo time. :-)

    nice post, keep it up!

  • Good post! It's hard to imagine where to find the time until you just do it! My plan is working so far - I get up an hour earlier that I need to and work on my novel, blogs, post to other peoples blogs, etc. At work, I take notes, Tweet when I have the chance, and am always thinking of the next scene.

    Night equals dinner, family time, daddy time with my son, some TV, and then once the baby is asleep, I'm on the couch with my wife, writing. As I said, this has been working so far!

    Jim

  • Interesting topic. I often get a lot of work done in my office while the rest of my family watches tv. But I don't even feel like I'm giving something up! To me, writing is far more interesting than a television show. Social time, now that's a harder one to let go :)

  • 1 wife, 2 kids, one job, two blogs, online groups to inspire and manage, book research, and now the NaNoWriMo. How to do it...? How to write that book...?

    A little bit here a little but there and amazingly it gets done.

    I heard that the author of Kite Runner would wake up an hour earlier than his family everyday and write.

    I prefer writing in the evening but lately the kids have me worn out. And I've just signed up for NaNoWriMo so I need to write 50,000 words in one month. Haven't wrote fiction in about 4 years now.

    T.V was easy to give up for me...especially now that a lot of channels post their shows online.

  • I've given up all of these things - and never regretted it. Well, except for sleep maybe! Sacrifice is never easy, but when I sit back and ask myself which is more important, which would I be more loath to lose, writing always, always wins.

    Great post.

  • What about Social Media? Gulp! Now that can be a time swallower.
    All are good recommendations. The fewer things you have clawing at you to eat up your time, the more time you have.

  • Hmm, I actually don't think you have to give up much to write a book. I didn't give anything up to write the first one. That's why it took over four years - and that was with a co-author.

    Now, to edit the book? That took as much time as writing it and I had to give up a bit of screwing around time. Then you have submitting to agents and publishers. That takes time too. Then I recorded it and released it as a free audiobook. Then I had to publicize it. To do all that, I gave up plenty - less working on the house, less time working out, less time with my wife in the evenings.

    Writing the second book only took about eight months, but still didn't seem to require a lot of sacrifice of things. Writing is the easy part - it's everything else that takes the time.

  • While I'm not participating in NaNoWriMo, I am working at reducing things that distract me from writing. I'm cutting down my time in front of the television and even trying to spend less time aimlessly surfing the web.
    I think that once you give up something a little, and see it's not so bad, it's easier to give it up a lot more. I have some friends who don't even own a television!

    Great post!

  • Joanna, it's a funny thing about you finding constructive things to do during your two hours commute. I recently gained a similar period of inactive time whilst driving to work. My choice was to down load podcasts about writing, author interviews and audio books. (Finding time to read is also one of my struggles.)

    I even blogged about it and listed some good links I found, quick link if anyone wants to grab the links, they are at the end of the post;
    http://www.andyshack.com/2009/09/24/making-time-to-write/

    And which podcasts did I put at the top of my list?

    Some by a nice English lady who is now residing in Australia.

    Thanks for your podcasts Joanna, they are appreciated.

    PS; If anyone knows how to make a MP3 file from a Video file I would dearly love to know. Thinks -:- I suppose I could just buy a more advanced media player.

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