Sunday, November 25, 2007

Getting Started 2

You've seen writers in movies spinning their craft in all manner of ways: speaking into a tape recorder on the go, dictating to a proficient assistant, writing longhand by the dim light of a nearly spent candle, two-finger typing on an old Remington, scribbling into a notebook under bed sheets by flashlight, leaning against a park's tree balancing a laptop on your thighs. Yes, these all work as I will attest from experience -- even, on more than one occasion, I have written an entire article on my Treo handphone (thank goodness for its qwerty keyboard!).

However, to set yourself on the road to writing professionally, you need to find a base from which to operate, someplace you can call your 'office'. If you are reading this, you have access to a computer. Great! If it's yours, so much the better. If you are at a library, yes, that can work too, as can a neighborhood Internet cafe or a club. However, if you are reading this from your workplace or someone else's home, it's time for you to exercise a little of your nesting instinct.

Set aside some space in your own home as your writing place. It may be an elaborate home office or it may be a fold-away table in a corner of one room (if the latter, keep the fold-away in sight, not hidden in a closet -- your place has to beckon you). If you are surrounded by family, I strongly urge an investment in noise-cancelling earphones and an MP3 player (sometimes listening to music through your computer slows down your machine's speed to an aggravating level). You want to insulate yourself from interruption. I share a study room with my spouse. We each have our own desks and sit back to back to minimise visual disruption. We also have our own Aiwa noise-cancelling headsets -- mine are currently playing Keola and Kapono Beamer (I love writing to Hawaiian music!). I suggest if you are putting your writing table in your bedroom, also place it so that your back is to the bed. You don't want to be enticed to lay down and day-dream. Heavy zzz's could result. A corner in a kitchen also works, except at meal times.

Once you have your space, outfit it with your tools. Keep them to a minimum: computer, printer, headphones, dictionary, thesaurus, book of quotations, voice recorder, paper, writing instruments and a lamp. Online dictionaries and other references are useful but I prefer to use a separate digital dictionary and thesaurus as well as a paperback book of quotations so that my writing stays in front of me on my computer screen. I am also a big list writer, so the paper and pencils/pens come in handy constantly both for noting ideas and research points that require checking. Aside from the computer and lamp, the rest of these items can be kept in a basket at your feet.

Now you are ready to start -- almost.

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Saturday, November 24, 2007

Getting Started

So, you want to be a writer. Easy enough: if you can read, you can write. OK, wait a minute. You want SOMEONE ELSE to read your writing. That changes the whole ballgame. How do you write engaging text that draws a reader's attention? How do you establish credibility so that your writing is believable?

What's more: how do you get paid for your writing?

I intend to explore each of these subjects and much more on this blog. "Watch this space."

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