The
Working Mom's Tricks to Writing a Novel
in Your Free (!) Time
by Alina Adams
Got kids? Got a job? Got a life? Also got a burning need to write
a novel?
Yeah. Me, too.
Got a problem? Yeah. Me, too.
In the two years prior to the birth of my oldest
child, I'd published three romance novels, dozens of magazine articles
and a non-fiction book on figure skating, while working a full-time
job. In the four years since the birth of my oldest child, I've published
one romance novel, one non-fiction book on figure skater Sarah Hughes
and one mystery novel. Although it's certainly no mystery why my output
has dropped so precipitously.
It took a lot of trial and error (and crying over
spilled breast-milk on a computer key-board) before I even began to
figure out how to balance the mothering with the mystery, the toddler
with the typing, and the wailing with the writing.
However, four years later, I can honestly say that
I've managed to work out a few "Working Mom Tricks For Writing
a Novel in Your Free (!) Time," which I am eager to share
with those interested in forgoing trivial matters like eating, sleeping,
and the facade of sanity all in order to indulge that elusive muse
and squeeze a satisfying writing side-dish on to an already overflowing
platter.
Trick #1: Think First: In Stanley
Kubrick's film, "The Shining," aspiring writer Jack Nicholson
goes ballistic when wife Shelley Duval interrupts him with the excuse,
"I didn't hear you typing, so I thought you weren't working."
"Just because you don't hear me typing,"
Jack roars back, "Doesn't mean I'm not working." (And then
he goes on a killing spree. Just ignore that part.)
Because the homicidal lunatic has a point.
"Writing" is the act of actually sitting
at a keyboard and tapping keys to produce words that might one day
form sentences and then actual, coherent thoughts. "Writing,"
is an act that can and often is interrupted by someone wanting to
sit on your lap and visit, "Noggin.com, please!" (hopefully
your child and not your boss), as well as by someone asking you to
watch their phone while they pop out to lunch with their latest girl-friend
(hopefully a co-worker and not your husband).
"Working" on the other hand, consists merely
of thinking about what you're going to write, and thus can be done
while driving, washing dishes, doing laundry, making beds, giving
baths, standing in line at the grocery store, packing lunches, showering,
breast-feeding, pushing a carriage, standing on a subway platform,
cooking, and even while reading "The Cat in the Hat" for
the umpteenth time, since you probably can do the whole thing on auto-pilot
by now.
The best part is, "working," works. You
don't have to be in front of a computer to think about a scene, to
decide what you want it to be about, where you want to set it, how
you want each character to approach it, and where you need it to lead.
Remember reading "The Cat in the Hat" until you can trill
it by heart? Playing the same scene in your head over and over again,
polishing the dialogue, the structure, picking just the right word
to describe a key plot point makes it much, much easier to maximize
your precious computer time once you do get the squatters off your
lap.
Trick #2: Skip Lunch. And on-line
solitaire: The law mandates that every employee receive a one-hour
lunch every day. The law does not mandate what you can or should do
with it.
Look at that computer on your desk. It can be used
for reports and spreadsheets and schedules. It can also be used for
writing your book. In your free time.
What free time? Well, there's lunch for a start.
A good hour to sit in relative silence and get your thoughts together
- on paper, no less!
Plus, let's be honest, here: Lunch aside, how much
of those seven other hours at work do you use for getting the job
done, and how many are spent playing solitaire, surfing the web, chatting
with co-workers and forwarding e-mail jokes and petitions?
That's all prime, writing time. No one is suggesting
shirking your duties and risking your job. But, if you're going to
take breaks anyway, why not get your high from writing instead of
caffeine?
Trick #3: Write Longhand: Even the
most lightweight laptop is a tricky thing to schlep to the playground
or Gymboree. However, a notebook and pen fit easily into the most
crowded diaper bag (strong suggestion: attach the pen to the notebook
or you'll loose both in the Desetin Depths). Write longhand while
you're sitting on a bench at the playground. Write longhand while
you're standing and rocking a stroller with your foot. Write longhand
while breastfeeding and while waiting for your pasta to boil and while
waiting outside of my "My First Karate Class." The best
part is, entering your text into the computer later will give you
the chance to revaluate your work with a fresh eye, fix those mistakes
made on the first go around and, best of all, also counts as an official
second draft i.e. you're that much closer now to a polished manuscript!
Trick #4: Get Your Kids into the Act:
Experts say that reading to your children is the best thing any parent
can do to bond, raise IQ and otherwiseearn their Mother-of-the-Year
stripes. Sure, toddlers and up would probably rather hear "Winnie
the Pooh" than "Mommy's Work in Progress." But, can
an infant really tell the difference?
Nothing gives writers a better idea of whether a
scene, especially one featuring lots of dialogue, is working, than
reading it out loud. It can be an ego-crushing experience as you realize
that the brilliance you heard in your head doesn't quite match the
drivel you seem to be articulating now... but that which does not
kill you gets you ready for more editorial rejection later on. And
that's a good thing. Probably.
So grab that baby and that manuscript and read it
out loud until the prose finally shines. Or your infant is old enough
to start requesting a different title.
Then start again with the next book - and the next child.
Alina Adams is a New York City-based working mother of two boys
(a four year old and a newborn), the author of four romance novels,
two non-fiction books, multiple magazine articles, and her first mystery,
"Murder on Ice" (Berkley Prime Crime 11/03). She
is usually exhausted, and doesn't really recommend her lifestyle to
anyone but the most writing-obsessed.
Alina can be contacted at www.AlinaAdams.com.
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