6 TIPS TO BEAT PROCRASTINATION

Don’t let procrastination stop you ever again

ProcrastinationThere are ways to beat procrastination into submission. You can finally write or finish that damn book – and do just about anything you want to achieve and never had the willpower for.

  1. First, let me just make myself a cup of tea. Yup. The biggest willpower killer known to man. The “first, let me just…” syndrome. You can beat it by indulging it. Wha-at? Play straight into its evil hands? Clean the bathroom, eat some food, put a snack by your desk, make tea or coffee – do it all. Two of the worst things about the “first, let me just…” syndrome is the slowness and reluctance with which we perform the task and the constant interruptions. Each time you leave your post, you’re creating the need to summon your willpower all over again. By getting your excuses out of the way first, they lose their power.

  2. Ask yourself why you want this. Examine your true motivation. Your interest is rarely to pass an exam, and you might not even want to write a novel. If you’re a student, you want to graduate and make a killing in a good job. If you’re writing a novel, you may not be motivated by the journey, but by the idea of having written a book. Because you want to brag or create something permanent with your name on it. Are there other ways, better ways of achieving your true goal? If you want a good job, education and doing well in exams already is the easy way. Some achieve a millionaire lifestyle by other means, but those usually involve insane amounts of work and an unbelievably thick skin, because failures along the way are a given. Or you can rob a store and get sent to jail. If you want bragging rights or set a marker on your life by creating something lasting, consider a charitable purpose or take up knitting. Writing a book is hard. Most writers write because they cannot not write. It’s a compulsion. To them, writing a book is not about making money (which is unlikely anyway) or making your name known (a kiss-and-tell with a minor celebrity might have the same effect). It’s about writing. So before you start, understand your true motivation.

  3. Unplug your electricals. The lure of the plasma TV, phone calls from friends, E-mail – these are the the most common sources of external distraction. So pull the plug of the TV, switch off the phone, and disable the Internet (your computer probably has that function). Just remember to leave the computer on, if your work relies on it.

  4. Include friends and family. This is actually a diet tip that works well in these cases. By announcing your intentions, you remove any opportunity for other people to get in your way. Just make sure you offer your time at a later date. The people who love you don’t want to manipulate you. If they do, you have a whole other problem on your hands. Even kids can be convinced to let you have Me time, as long as you schedule some Them time for later.

  5. This step works well with step 4. Set an egg timer or an alarm clock to mark the official end of your task. Stick to it. Facing an unending task is daunting. It’s this uncertainty that subconsciously puts you off before you’ve started. By restricting the amount of time you allocate to your task, you no longer face a ‘never-ending’ session.

  6. Set specific goals. This is similar to step 5, but not equivalent. Setting a timer lets you know when you’re done for the day. Setting goals helps you get a sense of achievement. A powerful motivator not just for the task at hand, but for all future objectives. Use both methods in tandem for the best effect. When you set goals, you’re working toward something concrete. You know where you are on your journey, instead of meandering aimlessly in the darkness. When you reach your goal, you smile, because you have proven to yourself you can do it. Ideally, set an overall, specific goal, like writing your book within three months. But also split the overall goal into more digestible, smaller goals. Such as writing 1000 words a day. The advantage of this method is that it allows you to evaluate your progress. If you consistently fail to achieve your target, you may have to set more realistic goals and adjust your time frame.

Hopefully some of these ideas have given you a sense of optimism about achieving your goals. All goals need focus. These five steps help provide this focus. In the end, the decision of what you really want to do is up to you. You can get started on your task, of follow your goal of not doing any work. Your choice.

THE WRITE PATH with Jules Court


THe Write Path

Jules Court

In this series, guest bloggers tell us about finding their way through the writing landscape. My guest today is Jules Court, author of Rescuing Love. A short blurb from her website: “The last thing recently fired attorney Becca Lynch wants is a man, but Coast Guard rescue swimmer Alex Petrov might be just what she needs.”

Writer or not, you’ll be able to find much of yourself in her answers.

Jules Court

Jules has graciously agreed to give away a

FREE eBOOK of RESCUING LOVE 

to one of my readers.
Leave a comment (at the top, where it says X comments), and on July 9, she’ll pick a name out of a hat (real or metaphorical I’ll leave to Jules).

Let me hand over my mic. The next voice you’ll hear belongs to Jules.

1. What made you want to be a writer?

I’ve been an avid reader my entire life. I remember starting school already knowing my alphabet; I’d forced my older sister to teach me what she was learning. I was also a born storyteller and a bit of a tyrant. I’d demand that my friends act out with our Barbie Dolls these elaborate scenarios I created, and Heaven help anyone who went off script. No ad-libbing in my productions.

Throughout my childhood, I scribbled stories, and even had a brief flirtation with poetry in high school (the angst was great in this one). So, when it came time to pick colleges, I informed my parents that I would be attending a certain pricy liberal arts college and majoring in Creative Writing. They weren’t having it. Instead, I attended a large state university on a partial scholarship and majored in something more “practical”. (Full disclosure- I mostly majored in Beer and Boys.)

After college, I joined the working world and my writing dream just kind of drifted away. I laughed at my childhood delusions about being a writer. I lived in the real world now. That probably would have been it for writing and me, if I hadn’t made a spectacularly terrible life decision.

I went to law school.

It was a soul-sucking, self-esteem crushing pit of despair. I turned to reading to escape. But not reading my casebooks like I should have, no, I discovered Romance novels. My prior concept of the genre was: all bodice ripping, all the time. But, I couldn’t have been more wrong. Plus, romances contained two things I desperately needed: hope and a guaranteed happy ending. They kick-started my dormant imagination. Soon, when I was supposed to be briefing cases for class, I was pounding away at my own romance novel, instead.

I did graduate from law school (and, surprisingly, not at the bottom of the class), and I even passed the Bar. But I knew, I wasn’t a lawyer. I was a writer.

2. What is the toughest part about writing?

Facing the blank page. I like editing, I like tinkering, but I hate that blasted blank page. It leaves too much room for doubt to slither in. That little voice in the back of my head whispering that I suck, that I’m not really a writer, that everything I write is trash. Whenever I’m unsure of where my story is going, I feel like I’ll never have another idea. That’s it. We had a good run, but it’s over.

Once I make it through that first draft, it’s still not all golden words dripping from my pen. I have good and bad days, but at least I know I can finish a story. My advice to new writers is never abandon a story. You have to prove to yourself that you can finish something, even when a new, shiny idea that you haven’t screwed up yet is beckoning. Resist and keep wrestling with the pig you’ve got.

3. Have you experienced an aha moment, a piece of advice or a moment where something fell into place?

Recently, I picked up a story I’d relegated to the bowels of my computer, because I thought it was an embarrassment. But, reading it with fresh eyes made me realize two things: 1) Yeah, it wasn’t great, but it could be fixed, and 2) (more importantly) I couldn’t tell the difference in the writing between what was written on a day each word was chipped out of my brain with a pick axe, and what was written on a day the words flowed like honey, and little birds twittered about and braided my hair, while a unicorn farted rainbows. So on a difficult writing day, keep going. It’s not as bad you think; it’s just your perception.

4. Whose style do you admire, or is there a line you wish you’d come up with?

I’m a huge fan of Dorothy Parker. I’m always pushing The Portable Dorothy Parker on people, because it contains her short stories as well as her poetry and reviews. She’s mostly remembered for her wit now, but her short stories are masterpieces of tight, sharp writing. You could cut yourself on her prose.

Within the Romance genre, I’m an unabashed Meljean Brook fangirl. She writes some the smartest, tightest plotted paranormal/steampunk books out there, and she still manages to put a satisfying and deeply characterized romance into each one. Also, Courtney Milan writes some seriously intelligent, well-crafted Historical Romances.

5. Describe your ideal reader. Who do you write for?

This probably makes me sound more egotistical than Tony Stark, but I’m writing for me. I write (or try to write) the books I want to read. My ideal reader likes romance books with heroines who have a spine and heroes who aren’t abusive jerks but are actual nice guys- not fedora wearing, friend-zone whiners, but men who like and respect women.

A big thank you to Carmen for giving me the space to spout off my many opinions. I’ve got a Contemporary Romance entitled Rescuing Love available from Bookstrand Publishing at www.bookstrand.com/rescuing-love and Amazon. You can also check me out at www.julescourt.com.

 

BLURB

 


Recently fired attorney, Becca Lynch, only came home to Cape Cod, Massachusetts to strap on a bridesmaid dress and accompany an old friend down the aisle. Just one week of pretending that her life’s great and she’s not secretly falling apart.

A complication of the male variety is the last thing she wants. But a blistering encounter with a handsome stranger in the employee bathroom of her hometown bar might be just what she needs.

As a rescue swimmer for the United States Coast Guard, Alex Petrov doesn’t think twice about jumping from a helicopter into raging seas if lives are at stake, but off the clock, he prefers calmer waters.

Hooking up with a stranger, who turns out to be his roommate’s sister, just isn’t something he does. Until Becca.

But passion doesn’t worry about bad timing, and love can prove a more uncontrollable force than any ocean wave.

15 URBAN FANTASY AUTHORS YOU SHOULD READ

15 Urban Fantasy Authors I Love

Urban fantasyI prefer Urban Fantasy to Paranormal Romance, although Urban Fantasy typically also contains a generous helping of romance. In fact, the line between the two genres is so smudgy, writers, aka me, get confused about where to place themselves. Since my focus is on the ‘fantasy’ plot rather than the ‘boy-meets-girl’ plot, I declared myself an Urban Fantasy Author years ago, and I’ve stuck with it since. This is the definition on which I based this article.

Last month, I published a short list of my five favorite urban fantasy authors. Of course I realized my mistake quickly. How can you possibly distil a whole world of exciting plots and delicious characters to five lousy entries? It just won’t do. So in full awareness that this collection is not complete either, here a more exhaustive attempt at introducing some of my favorite writers, in no particular order, together with my favorite series. Among them you will find some of the most popular Urban Fantasy writers, and hopefully a few names you haven’t yet read, but are eager to check out.

Patricia Briggs Her Mercy Thompson series is an exercise in smart, interesting urban fantasy. She has also published other series, but Mercy Thompson was the first of hers that got me hooked. You can’t beat werewolves, can you?

Kim Harrison Kim’s series The Hollows got me started in Urban Fantasy. Her quirky characters, intricate relationships and heart-pounding plots make her books a real joy. Witches, vampires, demons, werewolves — there’s no need to choose just one. To date, The Hollows is still one of my favorites.

Darynda Jones When Darynda came on the scene, I was stunned. Here was finally someone who wrote like me. An immodest thought, but one borne out of deep admiration. In all fairness I should say I want to write like her. Her main character, Charley Davidson, can see ghosts and helps them cross over. It’s fun, original, and with plots that keep you interested.

Jim Butcher Jim Butcher’s wizard Harry Dresden is a flawed and therefore all too likeable character. The plots are highly imaginative, and the characters as quirky as can be. What’s not to love?

Jennifer Rardin’s Jaz Parks series is a winner. Yeah, I know, some people like their Urban Fantasy sexy and serious, but if you’re after sexy and snarky, you’re at the right address. Sadly, Jennifer Rardin passed away in 2010, but her books are as readable as ever.

Laurell K. Hamilton Laurell K. Hamilton’s Anita Blake series, at least the earlier books, are must-buy reads. Anita Blake raises the dead and is a licensed vampire executioner. She’s tough, funny, and very sexy. Halfway through the series, Laurell changed the genre from Urban Fantasy to, I guess, Erotic Paranormal. I don’t mind sex in books, but plots always come first, and hers were getting a little thin in that department. That said, anyone who likes Urban Fantasy should give her books a go.

Amanda Bonilla Amanda’s Shaede Assassin series is a breath of fresh air. I was hooked from book one. Here we have fantasy that didn’t involve werewolves or vampires or any other creatures from lore. Nope, Amanda made up a whole new world for us, with the main character being an assassin. Hey, a girl’s gotta eat, right?

Jennifer Estep Jennifer’s Elemental Assassin series features Gin Blanco, the feared ‘Spider,’ an assassin not to be trifled with. As a rule I never trifle with assassins, but Gin Blanco knows her stuff, that is to say her elements, which makes her all the more dangerous. Really fun read.

Rachel Caine Another writer who steps away from the more traditional mythologies. Joanne Baldwin is a Weather Warden who always seems to be running from or toward things. There’s never a dull moment when she’s around.

Jaye Wells Jaye Wells gave the old witches and vampires genre a fresh twist with her Sabina Kane series, and although I adore the main character, her mischief demon Gigul steals the show every time.

Mary Buckham Mary’s Invisible Recruits series took me unawares. I’m an avid reader and my favorite authors simply couldn’t keep up with my demand. I was always looking for new stuff. Mary’s a great teacher, so out of curiosity, I gave her books a try. Well, I love, love, love her character, Alex Noziak. Talk about kick-butt. With twisted plots that keep you guessing, Mary’s books make her another author to add to my must-read list.

Kate Griffin Kate Griffin’s book A Madness of Angels stole my breath from the very first paragraph. Matt Griffin is a 21st century sorcerer of urban magic. I don’t want to give too much away, but it is one of the most stunningly beautiful Urban Fantasy books I’ve ever read. And as I mentioned, I read a lot.

Keri Arthur Keri Arthur’s Guardian series with Riley Jenson is fresh and littered with three-dimensional characters. Riley is no prude, thanks to her werewolf genes. The same genes that make her such a powerful investigator. With each book, Riley’s personal circumstances get more complicated, and the plots more twisty and turny. Isn’t Urban Fantasy great?

Faith Hunter Faith Hunter’s Jane Yellowrock is a skinwalker of Cherokee descent who makes her living hunting vampires. Something about Jane, and her alter ego Beast makes her an incredibly compelling character. Perhaps it’s her wit, or her no-nonsensitude. Definitely worth reading.

S.J. Day Sylvia Day’s Marked novels immediately sucked me in. Eve Hollis is Marked, which means she can identify infernals (demons) and, if need be, eliminate them. She’s constantly torn between Abel and his brother (your guessed it) Cain, and there’s enough intrigue and mystery to keep me interested. Sadly the series is quite short.

I’ve also read some fantastic new authors recently, but the above is a compilation of the crème de la crème IMHO. Clearly I’ve missed out authors whose books I devour, some because they’re outside what I call the Urban Fantasy genre, some because their names escape me for the moment (I apologize). All of them have helped shape my writing, in terms of plot, style and humor. More than that, through their delicate relationships, vivid characters and solid plots, they still make me read as a reader and not as a writer. I hope I’ll never lose that ability.

Building Trust In Fiction And Life

After watching an episode of the TV series “Perception,” I became interested in the issue of trust. On the show, Dr. Pierce suggests not only does a breach of trust affect the same parts of our systems that regulate our visceral responses, but we’re also physically rewarded when we believe in something or someone.

So reading fantasy and suspending disbelief results in a physical response of comfort and happiness. Who needs chocolate, eh?

The idea of physical responses explains why I keep exploring the effects of trust and the betrayal of that trust in my characters.

I dug further into the subject. Please note I’m not a psychologist, so what follows is as much my opinion as it is fact. It has been suggested that trust recovery is easiest and strongest if a long, good relationship existed prior to the breach. I believe that tallies with our expectations. The reason may be that once a relationship becomes habitualized, trust responses are automatic. If your husband of twenty years has cheated on you, you want to believe it was a one-off and it’s not going to happen again. They’ve learned their lesson. Right? Without intervention by our rational sides – and well-meaning, interfering friends – we might readily forgive.

However, if the breach occurs early on in a relationship, trust recovery is inherently weak*. This is because our responses are still somewhat under our control and not yet automatic.

What’s worse for an author is that building trust in high-stress and emotionally charged situation is a bitch. Pile on the stress, and our hearing diminishes, our logic abilities suffer, and remembering information becomes harder than driving a stick shift while knitting. According to the Handbook of Risk and Crisis Communication (Heath and Hair), it takes several positive messages to outweigh just one negative message.

Applying this to the lives of our fictional characters, we have to be careful how we build trust believably. The reader feels, or is supposed to feel, with our main character (MC). The minute an unproven character lies – and is caught in a lie – the reader, just as our MC, will be suspicious and write him off.

On the flip side, proving your trustworthiness on the fly goes a long way toward building deep relationships. And by deep relationships I mean those that will survive some form of betrayal. But is it even possible to quick-build deep trust over the course of a few chapters?

Here, actions do speak louder than words.

Management getaways often focus on this. You are blindfolded and told to fall backward, on the understanding a coworker catches you. Why would you possibly do this? Well, mostly it’s down to peer pressure, i.e. the fear of looking stupid if you refuse, plus the rational part of your brain that convinces you the organizers know what they’re doing. So you don the blindfold and fall. Now the pressure shifts to the other party. If Gary from Accounts does his job and prevents you from cracking open your head, your brain is a leap closer to trusting him with more vital aspects of your life. Go, Gary! Repeat such a high-stake exercise a few times, and your responses become automatic. Like it or not, you want to forgive.

Another way of proving our worthiness is by confiding secrets. You’re laying yourself open, risking humiliation – or worse – by spilling all. Ordinarily, building trust this way is gradual, with the revelation about our lives and secrets increasing in importance, until finally, trust becomes automatic behavior.

So if we, as writers, want to build a believable relationship between our main character, our secondary character and the reader, we should combine serious jeopardy for the vulnerable party and a strong, overwhelming show of trustworthiness by the other character.

This danger need not be physical, but it needs to be stressful, and it needs to be based on scenarios where the trust we’re establishing can be tested. The repeated passing of these tests will make trust an automatic response, which is what we want. Throw Mary and Gary into a hell-like world. If Gary supports Mary, saves her from scoundrels, and macgyvers a device that catapults the pair out of the pits of hell, Mary begins trusting him automatically (that is to say even against her better judgment), even if he subsequently lies to her.  

A revelation of a heavy-weight of a secret, and its reciprocation by the other character, could also speed up the process. So if Gary catches Mary sneak into the office at night, Mary will be on the defensive and not trust him enough to tell him why she’s breaking in. BUT if Gary discloses a huge secret about himself, Mary might have the confidence to reciprocate. Once bonded by these secrets, their little alliance will stand square against the outside world. Their trust is strong.

A final word. Trust is also an issue in creating relationships between authors and readers. You can build trust by producing quality books of reliable content. But get it right from day one. Once gone, trust with your readership is not easily regained.

*”Effect of relationship experience on trust recovery following a breach,” Schilke et al., PNAS

Word Formatting For Writers – Before You Submit

During the revision and editing phase, it is not uncommon for certain formatting errors to sneak into your manuscript. Where, for example, do these extraneous spaces at the beginning of paragraphs come from?!

You might believe you have to slog through your three hundred or so pages and correct formatting faux-pas by hand. Not so. Quite a few of them can be addressed by familiarizing yourself with “nonprinting” characters. Use this quick check list in conjunction with Word’s Find and Replace function (Ctrl+H) to blast the little buggers into oblivion.

Remember to approve each occurrence separately. If you click “Replace All,” you might be setting yourself up for trouble.

[] indicates a space (i.e. tap spacebar once)
Remove extraneous space at start of a paragraph:
Find: ^p[] (i.e. ^p followed by a space)
Replace with: ^p (i.e. ^p without a space)

Replace extraneous space before punctuation mark:
Find: []? []. [],
Replace with: ? . ,
(em dashes and ellipses may be followed by a space and punctuation mark, depending on house style, so be sure not to click “Replace All.”)

Replace en dashes (–) with em dashes (—):
Find: ^=
Replace with: ^+ or Ctrl+Alt+- (hyphen on the number pad)
(em dashes have no spaces, except at the end of the sentence, where you type —[].)

Replace hyphens (-) with em dashes (—):
Find: –
Replace with: ^+ or Ctrl+Alt+- (hyphen on the number pad)
(Depending on your publisher’s or agent’s house style, em dashes have no spaces, except at the end of the sentence, where you type —[].)

Replace dot dot dot (…) with ellipsis (…):
Find: …
Replace with: Ctrl+Alt+.
(Depending on agent or editor, ellipses have no spaces, except at the end of the sentence, where you type …[].)

Delete stray tabs at the start of a paragraph (when you should have been indenting your paragraphs):
Find: ^t
Replace with: (i.e. leave box empty)
Follow this up by highlighting the entire text, then redoing the hanging indent.

Reformatting extra large spaces between paragraphs:
Highlight all text. Click on the “paragraph” tab and tick “Don’t add space between paragraphs of the same style”. Then click “OK.”

Replace double space with single space:
Find: [][]
Replace with: []

You may need to carry out many more pre-submission edits (for example, replacing overused words with more exciting expressions). Once again, intelligent Word formatting comes to the rescue:

Overuse of names (e.g. Anna) in dialogue:
Find: , Anna.
Replace with: (i.e. leave box empty).
Find: , Anna?
Replace with: (i.e. leave box empty)

Overuse of “out of” when “out” will do (e.g. stares out (of) the window):
Find: []out of[]
Replace with: []out[]
(Do NOT accidentally click “Replace All.”)

Overuse of “sit down”/”stand up”/”down on” when “sit”/”stand”/”on” will do (e.g. he sat (down) on the edge of the bed):
Find: sit down
Replace with: sit

If you have any editing tips not covered here, please post a comment. I’d love to hear about new shortcuts and tricks that might speed up the editing process.