SOLSC Day 7: How to Write Something Important

Read the prompt.
Paste it into a new document.
Stare at a blinking cursor for three minutes.
Ponder your life choices.
Open a new tab.
Play a number puzzle.
Remind yourself your work isn’t going to write itself.
Think about other stuff you’ve written that maybe comes close.
Open allll those other documents.
Find about twenty words’ worth of usable content.
Paste it in.
Congratulate yourself on a job well done with a break.
Go pet the dog.
Clean the kitchen. Where did all these crumbs come from?
Get back to work. You’re not helping yourself here, you know.
Spend three minutes locating your ear buds.
Spend another two minutes choosing just the right playlist.
Re-open the laptop.
Stare at the cursor for another two minutes.
Decide that maybe you just need to talk it out.
Spend the next ten minutes word-vomiting using dictation.
Realize you’ve just provided yourself with about four usable thoughts.
Spend ten minutes wordsmithing.
Add more thoughts.
Spend another ten minutes wordsmithing.
Realize that none of this gets to the heart of what you want to say.
Sit and think for seven minutes.
FIND THE HEART!
Write furiously for twenty minutes.
Spend thirty minutes rearranging your work.
Throw out half of it in the process.
Read it aloud to your kid.
Take his suggestions. They’re good ones.
Close your laptop.
Promise you won’t look at it again until tomorrow.
Tell your friends you’re proud of yourself for not overthinking.
Start overthinking.
Look at it again.
Decide you still like it.
Close your laptop.
Ask yourself if you should look at it once more before tomorrow, just in case.
Steel yourself. Discipline, Lainie. DISCIPLINE.
Wake up.
Read again.
Let. the. thing. GO.

      Published by Lainie Levin

      Mom of two, full-time teacher, wife, daughter, sister, friend, and holder of a very full plate

      5 thoughts on “SOLSC Day 7: How to Write Something Important

      1. Oh my gosh, you’ve nailed it haha. I loved finding the ear buds and then locating JUST the right music… I fall into that trap so many times when I’m trying to focus on writing. And man, does my kitchen (bathrooms/bedrooms/whatever) get super clean when I’m avoiding my laptop…

        1. RIGHT? I mean, I’d like to think it’s part of the process, of percolating ideas and letting them surface when they’re ready. But BOY, is my refrigerator clean right now.

      2. I love this “how to”! I do a lot of these steps (oh, how familiar they were! And here I thought I was the only one!), but I’m sure I can pick up some new tips for even better writing (I mean procrastinating). I loved this because it rang so true for me: “Find about twenty words’ worth of usable content. Paste it in. Congratulate yourself on a job well done with a break.” I also loved how “find the heart” was in all caps–and that after that, all the writing fell into place. True writing advice.

      3. This is priceless, Lainie! The self-talk is on point. All writers can relate to the back and forth (literally and figuratively) in your story. This struggle is real…especially this past week, as I’ve decided to join you all on this wild ride called the Slice of Life Story Challenge. Thank you for the humor and the heartache — I felt every word! I am sure whatever literary masterpiece is birthed as a result of today’s “agony” will be well-worth the wait! Big red HEART emoji here!

      4. This is the perfect plan for writing anything. Of course, on my list number 1 is always – procrastinate. Maybe with get a cup of coffee and pet the cat(s).

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