Ep 172: 4 Simple Ways to Put Your Own Writing First

Published: Oct. 30, 2018, noon

As you know from my interview with Shawn Smucker, he\u2019s a novelist with ambitious goals\u2014on track to write ten books in ten years. He's written three of his own books\u2014two novels and a memoir. His fourth will be released in 2019.\n\nTo make a living, he works as a cowriter and ghostwriter. Several years ago he was hit with the realization that he could live his whole life writing books for others and never write his own.\n\nWith that, he made the switch to writing his own things first every day. It might just be for an hour, but if he commits to writing his own projects first, he knows it's going to happen.\n\nShawn\u2019s wakeup call can serve as our own, calling for us to prioritize our own writing. If we don\u2019t, other things will swallow our time and energy and we\u2019ll have nothing left.\n\nBut when we do prioritize our writing\u2014when we put our own work first\u2014we start to achieve our writing goals and build our body of work.\n\nWe can bring our best, most creative selves to our own projects by prioritizing in four different ways.\n1. Write Your Own Things First Every Day\nShawn prioritizes his own writing by literally doing it first\u2014waking up early to commit a few minutes or a few hours to his work-in-progress. His secret is to follow a routine.\nMorning Routines\nShawn\u2019s routine has been to get up early, but instead of diving directly into the work-for-hire, he sits down and writes for an hour or so on his personal projects.\n\nWe can set up a routine, too: Get up early and write for 20 minutes or an hour on our own projects before proceeding with the rest of the day\u2014ensuring that our work progresses.\nFamous Writers\u2019 Morning Routines\nWe\u2019ll be in good company with this commitment to rising early to get to the work. In an interview for The Paris Review in 1958, Ernest Hemingway said:\nWhen I am working on a book or a story I write every morning as soon after first light as possible. There is no one to disturb you and it is cool or cold and you come to your work and warm as you write.\nThe Telegraph reported that several famous authors rose early to write, including WH Auden, Beethoven, and Victor Hugo. They all liked to wake at 6am. Kurt Vonnegut and Maya Angelou rose even earlier. "Murakami, Voltaire and John Milton all set their alarms at 4am.\u201d\n\nSo did Barbara Kingsolver. James Clear shared an excerpt of her explaining about the years when her kids were young. Back then, she said she rose early. \u201cToo early,\u201d in fact.\nFour o\u2019clock is standard. My morning begins with trying not to get up before the sun rises. But when I do, it\u2019s because my head is too full of words, and I just need to get to my desk and start dumping them into a file. I always wake with sentences pouring into my head. So getting to my desk every day feels like a long emergency.\nOne way to prioritize your writing, then, is to give it the first hours of every day, rising early to do so. Get up, get to your desk, and start dumping those words out of your head. If it feels like a emergency, maybe that\u2019s because it is.\n\n\n2. Carve Out Time to Binge Write\nMaybe early mornings and routines don\u2019t work for you, at least not right now while you\u2019re dealing with a broken arm or while you\u2019re serving as a caregiver for aging parents. When every day seems disrupted by the next demand or emergency, routines may seem unattainable and you may need more sleep to get through the day.\nBinge Writing to Make Progress\nTry a different way to prioritize your work: by carving out a chunk of time to binge write.\n\nBec Evans, cofounder of Prolifiko, \u201cthe world\u2019s digital coach,\u201d concedes that binge writing overall is "less productive, leads to fewer ideas, more procrastination and even depression.\u201d\n\nBut they surveyed writers on how they go about their work, and 36 percent of writers said "they wrote nothing for weeks, then had an intense period of writing. That\u2019s the reality of their lives\u2014bingeing is the only way they find time to write,