If they gave awards for
procrastination, I certainly would have a mantle full of trophies.
The largest challenge I have had
to overcome since becoming a full-time writer is focusing my
energies on accomplishing my writing goals. It’s just too easy to
waste time when I don’t have a deadline staring me in the face—and
sometimes even when I do.
Procrastination stunts your growth
as a writer, and kills your creativity. Let’s look at some of the
reasons why writers procrastinate and how you can defeat it and be
more productive:
Feeling Overwhelmed
If you’re anything like me, you’re
juggling multiple writing projects at the same time, trying to
prioritize what to work on first, and still have time to catch up on
industry news.
I’m overwhelmed just thinking
about it.
And therein lies the problem—
writers have minds that never stop.
If we aren’t thinking about our
three or four ongoing projects, we’re hatching ideas for new stories
and articles, or we’re despairing over the fact that three months
unread trade journals sit in a pile of paperwork on our desks.
Sit down and take a deep breath.
Now write a to-do list.
Seeing your goals on paper will
make it easier to prioritize what needs to come first.
Finishing the article due next
week will come before you write another chapter in your romance
novel, which isn’t under contract yet.
And those trade journals; you’re
never going to read them if you put them in a pile for later. And
when the deadline for the contest you really wanted to enter
has passed, you’ll be kicking yourself.
So… skim through trade journals as
soon as they come in. Cut out articles of interest and tuck them
into a manila folder to take with you everywhere you go.
Okay, so now you know how to keep
from feeling overwhelmed, but what about those writing goals—are
they specific enough?
Focusing Your Goals
Having too many goals can actually
keep you from accomplishing any of them. It’s too much information
to digest; and rather than think about it, our minds say ‘there
is no way I can do all that’.
So, we start to put things off. We
miss one goal, which leads to missing the next one, and the next. In
the end, we spend more time revising our goals than actually
obtaining them.
But you have the power to solve
this problem. Remember that to-do list you wrote? Break it down to
monthly goals, and then to weekly goals.
This way your to-do list becomes
more manageable.
You aren’t concentrating on every
single goal you want to accomplish all at once. And by breaking your
tasks into smaller chunks, you can tackle each goal a little bit at
a time and experience that feeling of accomplishment which comes
from crossing an item off your list.
You have now set specific goals,
but there is still one last opportunity for procrastination to
strangle the life out of your creativity—when you sit down to write.
Time Wasters
Even when I am totally engrossed
in a project, I can find myself surfing the Internet and answering
emails instead of focusing on what needs to get done. When I hit a
rough spot, like when words don’t flow well, I wander away to do
something easier.
Sound familiar?
Writers are anxious people. They
spend some of their time thinking they’re great, and the rest of the
time believing they stink. Anxiety forces writers to revise their
work over and over again to make it the best it can be.
That’s a good thing.
But when writers get too anxious
they can’t create anything. They ignore their writing goals. They
substitute busy work for writing time. They cease to be productive.
In her book titled Page after
Page, author Heather Sellers says, "The best way to manage
anxiety is to shine a little light on it. Resisting it makes it
worse. What is light in this case? Putting words down on paper. It’s
the work that makes demons vanish."
Knowing this will actually help
you defeat procrastination for good sounds wonderful, but it isn’t
always easy to put into practice.
So, what do you do? Work in
segments.
Start with writing for only five
minutes. During those five minutes you must focus one hundred
percent of your energy on writing. Once that time is up, you can do
anything else you want, but have a plan for when you will go back to
writing for another five minutes. Slowly increase the segments until
you are spending half an hour of uninterrupted time on your work.
Perfectionism is anxiety’s partner
in crime. It keeps you from accomplishing goals because none of your
writing is ever good enough. After a while, you avoid writing
because there’s no point if you can’t achieve perfection.
Here are ways you can free
yourself from the confines of perfectionism:
Allow yourself to accept a
crappy first draft. That’s why they call it a first
draft—it’s the unrevised flow of ideas that are rambling
around in your head.
Accept that done is
better than perfect. There is a point where you have
to say, "It’s good enough".
Ask for feedback. An
objective set of eyes can see mistakes clearer than you can,
and by putting your article or story in the hands of someone
else you are free to tackle your next project.
You have the power and the
ability to conquer procrastination. In a few simple steps you’ll be
on your way to becoming a more productive writer.
About the
author:
Cheryl C. Malandrinos began writing as a teenager,
but it wasn’t until she became a stay-at-home mother that she began
to fulfill her dream of a full-time writing career. She is a
freelancer who specializes in time management tips for writers. She
has also written articles on everyday life in the 1800’s, gardening,
parenting, and women’s health issues. Visit Cheryl’s website at
http://ccmalandrinos.tripod.com/