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Stephen King says you should write at least a thousand words a day (if you are a newbie) before moving on to the two thousands that he averages.  I don’t particularly like King’s style even though I devoured his horror fiction as a teenager, but I’ve found myself listening to his book On Writing these past few nights (even falling asleep to it), thanks to a free audio version on YouTube.

His main theme is that you can’t improve a poor or good writer, but you can turn a competent one into a good one. I’m not so sure about that – does he also include storytellers in that mix? – but I agree with him that you need a space of your own to write, to shut out the world, and that you need routine.  Otherwise nothing gets done.

He also believes that plotting ruins a story, stiffens it - kills some of the surprising elements in it. Better to just put your characters in a situation and then watch them try to get out of it. What happens when a mother and son get trapped in a car, attacked by a dog? (Cujo) What happens when a family move into a remote, empty hotel and the husband goes nuts? (The Shining) There's a whole bestseller publishing industry that goes against this philosophy.

The guesthouse is empty this morning and I have the luxury of choosing to sleep in or do a bit of writing. I’ve braved the chilly outdoors to open the front door for our employees (who arrive at 7.30am) and serve a bowl of food to one of our dachshunds, Marcelinho. I’m now sipping on an instant cappuccino I prepared in my room, listening to iTunes on Shuffle and watching the sun creep up against my bedroom wall. My fingers are tapping away, as you know.

It rained yesterday and it was blissful. Our region has been suffering from extreme drought and we had even resorted to using tap water to keep the grass and trees green.  A young couple from Norway arrived last week and will stay with us until the end of May. They heard of us through a programme called WWOOF that connects organic farms with people interested in working exchange for full board. In the first few days they did an impressive clean up job of our veggie garden; now that rain is here (fingers crossed), I can get them to plant winter veggies like beet and lettuce.  At the end of their stay, I plan on getting them to plant two trees – so they can visit us in 20 years time and see how tall they have grown.

on 2014-05-19 06:25 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] wink-martindale.livejournal.com
I can't wait!!!!

on 2014-05-20 07:32 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] yearning.livejournal.com
yay, wwoof! I'm going back to my Italian farm in July and am really looking forward to it, the food is amazing.

when I was in France I just planted some zucchinis (I think), but that was fun and I did want to go back and see what became of them, but of course that's different..

You sound more happy or at least more content, that's good!

on 2014-05-20 02:46 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] picosgemeos.livejournal.com
Yes, I'm much better... maybe I got over the culture shock? ;-)

These Wwoofers are AMAZING. They've cleaned up a huge space for me and are now in the process of planting veggies and herbs, plus wild flowers. It's going to look awesome - and I've promised to keep up the work for them after they are gone.

on 2014-05-21 07:39 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] naturalbornkaos.livejournal.com
Very cool about the trees. That is such a lovely thing. :)

I agree that routine is key to writing and it's great to push out words. I feel so different on days when I actually manage to write something versus days when I don't. Unfortunately the latter just get more and more frequent for me and that's a black hole. It's a weird feeling - I try to sit down and write and just feel tired, frustrated, hopeless and it's miserable rather than fulfilling but the key, of course, all about fighting through that. I just wish I didn't feel too tired after work most days to bother fighting s because once you get into a spiral of not writing, it's much easier to just not write and then waste even more your limited free time feeling terrible about not writing (which is probably about 80% of my life right now!). So yeah. WRITE. WRITE LIKE THE WIND. AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE.

on 2014-05-21 08:20 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] picosgemeos.livejournal.com
I know what you mean! When I lived in London, I spent all day in front of a computer at work, so the desire to write when I got home just wasn't there. Doing a bit of writing before work helped, but it wasn't long enough or in any quiet space.

I'm now living somewhere which is technically perfect for a writer, but I still don't have that space - I'm constantly interrupted all day to deal with guesthouse matters, have to do errands, etc... the only plus side is that I have occasionally days when I've got nothing to do and it's on those days I really must push myself to write more.

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