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One of the most persistent myths in the writing pantheon is that "serious" writers write every day.
Like many myths, this one contains a kernel of truth, namely that many writers do write every day. The rhythm and discipline of sitting down every day is important to some writers, and many of them believe so wholeheartedly in their own process that they elevate this to "requirement" status. They can't imagine
not writing every day, so it becomes an ironclad rule and some hector others as unserious.
But you really don't have to write every day. You really don't. I certainly don't write every day.
I'm not a morning person, so I can't wake up early to write in the mornings. And after a long day's work I'm usually too mentally exhausted to write. So I get my writing done on weekends.
Moreover, I find the breaks between writing times to be very beneficial. Those breaks are ideas times, when I'm letting my mind wander, making free associations, and planning what I'm going to write when the weekend comes. By the time I finally get back to the computer, I'm ready.
Does this mean I write more slowly? I don't think so, actually. I wrote all three
Jacob Wonderbar novels in 6-8 months. I just had to carve out quite a bit of time on the weekends.
Don't let other writers shame your style. You don't have to write every day. Unless you do. Whatever works for you. Just get the job done.
Art: Captive balloon with clock face and bell, floating above the Eiffel Tower by Camille Grávis
One of the most common writing myths out there is the idea that you have to write every single day in order to be a writer.
Some people totally do this, and more power to them. They set word count goals, they wake up early or stay up late, they bend schedules to make sure they're getting some words down every single day.
Not me. Barring catastrophic deadlines I only write my novels on the weekend, and the vast majority of my blog posts too. And I know I'm not alone. Not all the writers out there are beholden to a routine or a schedule.
I worry that this myth intimidates people who would otherwise excel at writing from pursuing their writing dreams. Every single day is a major, major commitment, and not everyone could or even should do it. Sometimes your brain needs a break to unlock a problem or maybe you just have a different rhythm.
So don't fret if you are a somewhat sporadic writer. As long as your productivity remains high whatever your schedule you'll be just fine.
Art: Les raboteurs de parquet by Gustave Caillebotte
There's a popular idea that regularly floats around the bookosphere that literary agents and some prominent published authors not only
like publishers, they're actually working for publishers or are in bed with publishers (that's a popular one) or are hopelessly beholden to publishers or have been kidnapped and brainwashed into thinking that maybe publishers aren't insane conniving Monster McMonsterpants.
To be fair, there is a grain of truth that drives this myth: authors' and publishers' and agents' interests are often in alignment. Namely, agents and publishers and authors all want the same books to sell a bazillion copies and make everyone more money than a modest hedge fund.
Where grain of truth becomes myth is the idea that anyone, at any stage of the process, is going to set aside their own self-interest because they just love publishers so so so very irrationally much or are otherwise blinded by publisher sorcery. That's why authors have agents -- to fight on their behalf when their interests diverge from their publisher's.
Secondary myth: that agents like publishers more than their clients.
Make no mistake: Agents have every incentive to do what's best for their clients, not what's best for publishers. Yes, lots of people have their own bad-agent story to tell, but since agents only earn money when their clients earn money and only serve their clients as long as their clients wish, an agent only succeeds inasmuch as their clients do. The structure of the author/agent relationship was created specifically to keep an author's and agent's interests aligned.
For the most part? Everything works relatively smoothly in publishingland. And yes, sometimes agent/author/publisher interests align to the extent that agents and authors even agree with publishers' vision for the bookselling marketplace.
Many agents agreed with publishers and wrote dissenting letters to the DOJ over the collusion lawsuit, an
object of some Internet derision, at the same time that agents are also increasingly working directly with Amazon and selling books to them. How do those things go together? Because it's up to agents to look out for the clients both in the short term (selling books) and the long term (keeping an eye on the future publishing marketplace).
When author/agent interests diverge from publishers, as they do with onerous publisher contract clauses or with paltry royalty rates or if the publishing process doesn't unfold like it should, make no mistake: agents will fight publishers like hell. In bed.
(Just kidding.)
Art: De geldwisselaar en zijn vrouw by Marinus van Reymerswale
Us vs. them is fun. It gets people's blood boiling. It instills fear. It's thrilling to be on a team, especially when you feel like your team is winning.
These days it seems like traditional and self-publishing are increasingly pitted against each other on blogs and forums, as if one side or the other is the bastion of all that is good and pure in the world and the other side is the bastion of all that is horrible and evil.
This is insane.
There is no "us" vs. "them." Traditional vs. self-publishing is a false dichotomy. It's an illusion created by people who either have let their frustrations get the best of them or are trying to sell you something. We're all writers trying to figure out the best way to get our books to readers. We're all on the same team.
No, the traditional publishing industry is not a hive of retrograde monsters out to steal and eat your newborn children. No, self-publishing is not a gang of unwashed crap artists trying to poison the literary well forever.
Publishing is a spectrum of choice, from traditional publishers who pay you, will handle most things for you and assume all risk in exchange for certain rights to your book, to self-publishing where you handle everything yourself, pay your own way, and adopt your own risk. And there's a whole lot more choice in between those two poles.
What's the right way?
There is no right way.Some authors want to let the publishers handle things for them. Some authors want to go for print glory because that's where the bulk of readers are right now (yes, still). Some authors want the freedom of control of self-publishing. Some authors want to experiment with pricing.
And guess what:
Some authors do both, and they always have. Even before e-publishing, many prominent authors got their start self-publishing. And many authors who used to be traditionally published moved to self-publishing. Some authors use hybrid models that combine elements of traditional and self-publishing.
There is no hundred foot wall between self-publishing and traditional publishing. Choosing one does not preclude the other, even if you feel like you're currently on the outs with traditional publishing. Or did you miss the recent seven figure book deal for the
self-published nutritionist?
Sure. It's fun to join up sides and start flinging mud. It's exciting to think that your team alone has the holy grail.
But I see a lot of authors out there getting taken for a ride by both sides. People are preying on writers' fears and frustrations.
The only way you'll be able to decide what's best for you is if you ignore the pied pipers, set aside your emotions, and think only about what's the right for your book.
Art: La Riña - Francisco de Goya
I have tweeted this before, but it's worth saying this in a blog post and reiterating it once again for good measure:
Be wary of anyone who tells you there's only one way to go about the publishing process.
There are as many ways to find success writing books as there are books. Anyone who tells you that the only right way is traditional publishing or self-publishing or with an agent or without an agent is probably simply telling you what has worked for them and projecting that experience onto you. Either that or they're trying to sell you something.
There's only one person who knows what's best for your manuscript: You.
Do your research, follow your gut, figure out what works best for you. And if the first thing doesn't work try something else. And if that doesn't work try a third way.
There's no map to finding success with books. There's just a constant journey.
THANK YOU!!!!
Amen. Be committed, but know that commitment means different things to different people. Write what you can, when you can.
Well, if you have a wife, kids, a full time teaching job, and a book being published, you may find your schedule a little hectic. So yeah, you may not be writing every single day.
And sometimes that day or two or three off is just what you need to recharge the batteries.
Hmm. I've never interpreted that advice as "write every single calendar day", but more, if there's a day you've designated as a writing day, then you need to write.
If you set weekends as writing days, you probably feel like you need to write something each weekend.
I think about the only 'rule' for writing that should ever be stated, anywhere, is IF IT WORKS FOR YOU, DO IT.
Provided, of course, it's legal and not injurious.
Thank you! One of those things that always intimidated me about writing was that, everywhere I turned, the one advice I saw was "if you want to get better, you have to write everyday."
Well... That doesn't work all the time, and somehow it made me feel that I was not doing enough to become better. It is only now that I am getting comfortable with the idea that so long as I write, it does not have to be every day at 5:00am, after exercising but before getting ready for work.
Sometimes that just doesn't happen.
I've tried it both ways. Right now the morning thing works well for me because I feel like my head is in the story every day, if only for an hour. But I will admit, in the past it really helped to have the uninterrupted stream of hours on weekends to get big chunks done. I think it really depends on a writer as person. If you write, than you're a writer, even if you're not on a schedule.
I think this idea is promoted by some who think that in order to make writing their "job," they have to go to work every day. It may be a result of so many thinking they have to go to school to become "writers."
Many years ago I remember listening to a then popular writer deplore that there were so many people out there writing who had little to say -- they just liked the glamour of being a writer. His advice was don't bother until you have a story you need to tell. While I believe that one often discovers what one has to say by writing, I also think there are a lot of people just putting words on computers or paper because they need to make their daily word count so they can call themselves writers.But who is reading them?
It's a balance.
I've been a NYT bestselling author, an editor & a publisher for decades & never heard this. What I do think is that you need to write consistently (which is not the same as every day).
What you do need to do everyday is to read & read a lot. To feed the muses, to stay close to the language.
I agree that myth may have caused a lot of writer guilt over the years. I'd say write whenever you can, but what's absolutely necessary is to be a writer every day.
i've always said this to old school types who insist that the only way to write is to do it methodically, every day, as you would a job. Well, I don't want writing to become a job, as in an obligation. I want it to stay a joy. I do think that (for me) it's important to visit the world of whatever I'm working on - even if it's just to think through a scene or wonder about a character's motivation. Happily, I can do this while driving or in the shower so that IS something I do every day.
I learned this the hard way after I spent nearly every day forcing out writing that wasn't very good, because I really needed time to mull over the story. It's nice to see this reconfirmed!
I agree!
I don't always write every day, but I try to do something writing related. That can be reading a book or planning a post by doing research.
Nathan, Hallelujah! Someone who agrees with my writing style. I identify with Lawrence Block's description of the Sunday Writer in his book, Telling Lies For Fun And Profit. I've had several novels published by traditional publishers, but...(said in hushed tones)...some days I don't write.
Thanks for the post.
Douglas Adams hardly ever wrote and tended to do it only when forced, at that.
I hear so many conflicting reports about this. Write when you can, write everyday to get yourself used to writing every day. Write write write... *sigh*
So confuzzled.
It depends on how productive you want to be and if you want to be a professional (part of which means you write even when you don't feel like it. Or would you rather have a doctor who shows up only when he feels like it?) The writing quota that has fed my family.
However, I do agree to this extent: I counsel a WEEKLY quota, and writing 6 days a week. Thus, if you miss a day, you don't beat yourself up. You adjust the other days. And you take a whole day off to recharge. Works wonders.
Even if you have full time obligations, find the number of words you can COMFORTABLY do in a week. Then up that by 10% and go for it.
As Peter DeVries put it: "I only write when I'm inspired, and I see to it that I’m inspired at nine o’clock every morning."
I WANT to write every day. I THINK about my current story every day. But to actually do it is another matter. Full time day job, kids, and just life has a way of saying oh hell no. Plus I actually need a few hours sleep if anything is going to make sense. Even with my schedule I think I'm going pretty good.
Thanks for this.
Very inspiring! Thank you! And I hope you're settling in the Big Apple nicely. :D
Thanks for this Nathan! When I was first struggling to get my fiction published--and working two jobs--a guy at a party asked me if I wrote every day. I said I didn't, but I wrote regularly. He said I couldn't call myself a writer if I didn't write every day of the week. I felt like such a failure. Then I started asking successful writers what they thought. NOT ONE said they wrote every single day.
I agree with what Ruth Harris said. To be a good writer, you must READ every day.
Although I'm not sure this once a month thing is working for me either.
I agree with you, Nathan. I think it's more important to have writing goals for more flexible periods of time, such as for a week, and accommodate "life" in the schedule too. Having buffers can protect you from burnout.
I think the key, as has been pointed out by others, is a) consistency (however often it may be) and b) to not go crazy in the process of writing...it's okay to take breaks and remember that there is more to life than writing!
Very good food for thought, Nathan, as usual!
Definitely! I write (or do something related) most days, but it's normal with any job to have a weekend of some sort where you don't work. The key point is having discipline. If you shove all your writing into a few days a week, but do it consistently and produce enough that way, then more power to you.
I'm more of a weekly quota person, anyway. As long as I meet my goals for a week, I don't care if I do it in three days or five or seven. The flexibility is nice.
AGREED! I've always been wary of that advice.
On that note, it's not necessary to write fiction every day. In my day job, I write copy and brainstorm for websites and apps. I find that that kind of writing (not even every day) keeps my brain trained quite well, thankyouverymuch.
I heard a woman at the San Francisco Writers Conference say, "Sometimes I'm writing when I'm getting things ready for dinner, and my husband doesn't realize I'm doing character development while my head is in the refrigerator."
Sometimes writing needs us to be away from it for a while for it to really cook.
AWESOME advice!
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I mean, I try to do something every day. A lot of days that may mean looking for places to submit poems and short stories, or communicating with friends who are reading my chapters, or doing some kind of writing that pertains to my job. Even when I do write, as often as not it's not writing writing, it's revising and putting in research time. I'm glad I'm not the only one.
Thanks for the message that there are so many different types of writer lifestyles.
In undergrad I took an intensive course which focused on the link between writers' lives and their work. Whenever I feel writer's guilt or think about how I should write everyday, I try to remember William Carlos Williams.
He was a doctor and wrote poetry and thought poetry while he worked, after he got home, or on his off-days. Those of us with certain aspirations can't resist demanding careers, but it doesn't make us any less valued in the writing community.
Thanks for the reminder!
Oh my gosh! Thank you! I'm sorry I'm such a weakling I needed your permission to feel like a writer anyway, but thanks for giving it.
Claudine
Let's not forget that if you make yourself write everyday, that's also 7 days of content to edit. The more forced the writing, the more editing and deleting. I'd assume that most people don't have time for that, as well.
By the way, brilliant accompanying illustration!
Nathan, I read with an enormous sigh of relief.
I follow a number of blogs that are discussing various writing programs.
With a busy schedule that simply doesn't have enough time, I was starting to feel like an outlier on the author's bell curve.
Thanks for the calming voice. I write when I can, or when I feel inspired by my dark inner muse.
I won't feel guilty about not being able to do more.
Zack....
Oh ThankYouThankYou for saying this! You're the best. Completely brilliant.
Now I just need to work on that "high productivity" part ...
I'm trying to work out a way to write while I'm asleep.
I have learned to write when I want to write rather than forcing myself to write. In the long run I get more done this way, because if I burn myself out completely I'll stop writing for a much longer time.
Here's my thing: I'm not good enough to take a day off. The clock's ticking and I don't want to look back and think I could've been better had I worked a little harder, gotten up a little earlier.
I understand the balance with life and other jobs, but for me, it comes down to lack of skill and power of language. I'd be a fool not to get in the cages every day. Just not gifted enough to take that chance.
I absolutely wholeheartedly agree with you. Sort of.
I don't write on a schedule, either. Pretty much, it's when I know I'll have time free, such as on the train to work or home, or on a weekend.
I used to think I had to write every day. In fact, I used to think I had to finish, at least in rough draft, a novel a year.
And that was when I had agents who seemed to encourage me to do that.
Then I became a journalist, and wrote something almost every day anyway. And then I began to realize that whether it's a letter, an email, a status post on ebay, or even a tweet, it's still writing.
In fact, when I work on my motorcycle, it's writing. Really. Sometimes even when I'm riding it. Because it frees up my mind, or my subconscious mind, or whatever, to solve literary problems like word choice, or plot, or structure, or even ideas. Anything that is meditative--that takes you inside yourself, for an undetermined amount of time, to think, does that.
So. Yes. I agree with you. You don't really have to sit down and physically "write" something every day or risk losing your ability, craft, skill, talent, gift, whatever you want to call it.
But you do have to engage, even subconsciously, in the creative process. Every day. Even if it's only day-dreaming, that turns out to be the basis for a novel. Or a neat turn of phrase in a tweet or other mostly off-hand thing.
Or so I believe.
And actually, if you do any of the above, you can write a rough draft of a novel, at least, in a year.
It's a question of goal setting rather than enforced rigor.
I learned early on that writing when my muse is on coffee break only produces drivel. Sometimes it's best to just take a break and regroup. The words will flow when they flow. Great post, enjoyed reading it.
What a re...LIEF!
Now, will you come do to my floors what is being done in the picture?
I mean, since you're not writing everyday...;)
I was taught this as well, but have never held to it. If you force yourself to write, the story suffers. The one thing I do believe in, though, is that nothing should ever be thrown away or deleted. You never know when that rough draft is the only one with a line in it that you decide you really want to use or if those paragraphs you wrote and tossed were actually useable. Even if it's a note on a napkin, I keep it. But I don't write everyday. ^_^
Sorry to disagree, but when I wrote my second novel I worked on it five days a week. If I missed a day, I'd make it up on the weekend. If you want a career in writing, you need to treat it like a job. And I'm a single mother who was working full-time. The question to ask yourself is: How bad do you want it?
I wanted to finish my book very badly. I would have lost momentum had I written any less. From what I've seen, the most successful writers consider their writing top priority--even more so than family (though they'd never admit it). I would wager they spend more time on their writing than they do with their family.
This is good to hear.
While it'd be great to write every day, I'm at peace with the fact that I'm slow and not super prolific. It takes me a while to settle into the right headspace, I can't just 'switch it on' and write in hour-or-less chunks. As long as I'm steadily making progress on my novel (my first), I don't beat myself up too much.
If it turns into a chore I won't finish it at all.
Perhaps the discipline will come with experience. Certainly if I didn't have another day job I would do thinks a bit differently.
That is so right! Every writer is different and has their own way of doing it.
I think the reason it's said that to be a writer you must write every day is because for some people, if they *don't* get into the habit of doing something on a regular basis, it's that much easier to put it off. I count myself among them.
I want to add that if you feel driven to write every day you'd better have a very understanding partner, or better still one who is as driven as you are.
Voice of experience here.
Thanks for this post. Very refreshing for those of us who can't write full time.
I find that when someone or some idea begins to impose rules on writing, for me, it takes the joy out of it. Finding my own rhythm about it took a long time but I think the best thing is knowing yourself and adhering to your own writing style. I respond better to deadlines than to daily quotas. Following your passion shouldn't equal drudgery. Also, I agree with others here that when I'm not typing at the keyboard, I'm still writing by continuously engaging in creative pursuits to feed the fire.
Totally agree. When I was first starting and I saw this splattered all over people's blogs, I started feeling demotivated because I felt like I didn't have what it takes. People just need to find their own rhythm and what works best for them. That's all there is to it.
I'm happy if I can fit in four writing sessions a week, and each session is no more than 2 hours. (usually about 90 minutes). At the moment, I work full-time. I always felt guilty for not writing more, but I just finished my 4th novel in three years, so I'm not doing too badly considering. (plus a partially finished one.)
Yesterday was a rare luxury where I didn't write and didn't feel guilty because I had sent my mss off to the editor Sunday evening. It felt good to have a breather.
Yes, it is necessary for some authors to write every day. Especially genre authors who are up against a great deal of competition. It's also something we like to do and don't feel forced doing...as career authors, not part time authors.
And there are career writers out here. We aren't doing it because we're trying to be the next 50 Shades or whatever the next big book is. We're doing it because we LOVE doing it. We can't wait to do it.
You're making a good point here, that writing is different for all authors and some can't work every day. But if you do write every day there's nothing wrong with that either.
I disagree. Like any craft, writing takes practice and commitment. No, you don't have to write every day. But you should. If you are a professional athlete, you can bet you will work out every day. If you are a scholar, you will read every day. If you are a commercial pilot, you better damn sure be studying your charts and weather every day. To say that, as a writer, you don't need to write every day is to give people an excuse not to. And we have plenty of excuses for that already. If you are a professional or want to become one, you work at it *every day*. That is what separates the good from the truly great. I am not there yet, but I write every day. And I will continue to do so until I am great (or dead).
I like to write every day, but I think I psych myself out sometimes. The "need" to write all the time blocks me because I'm to anxious about getting enough done in a day. Thanks for this post! Maybe I'll relax a little!
I used to write every day, but I've learned that I've been missing out on alot of life at the same time.
Thank you! It's so refreshing to hear a voice of (relatively) undriven reason in this business!
I agree that you don’t need to write every day. However, sometimes it is too easy to not write if you do not have a set schedule or a self-imposed deadline for your writing. Finding a balance is important and hard. I find I write in chucks. I will write every day for a week or two and then take time off. Between making quality time for my Wife and 3 kids, a full time and part time teaching job, and everything else; making writing a priority on daily basis is not always possible. Thanks for the encouraging post!!
Whew! lol
This post was an Ah-Ha moment for me! I thought you had to do it every day! That's what every body said! So I wouldn't write because why do it if you weren't going to do it the "right way". You just opened my world up! Thank you!! <3
Wow, Nathan, this is such a wonderful post. When I read it, a great sigh of relief went through me.
I don't write every day, and don't think that would fit my natural rhythm. I feel I write better when I am rested and open, not exhausted and pressured. I need space and openness inside myself, to access my best work.
But - it's so hard not to feel guilty on some level for not doing with the daily writing thing, even if I know it's wrong for me. This post was so permission giving. What a gift. Thank you, Nathan!
Thank you!!!
Funny how helpful it is to have that express permission.
Committing to writing joyfully, rather than writing because I felt obligated, got me writing six days a week and enjoying it. No more feeling guilty for not writing that seventh day.
Yes! Thank you! For a few years, I did push myself to write everyday, sick or healthy, home or on vacation. A bad concussion set me off that track. Now, I write when I can and I don't make myself sick about it -- and I think I'm writing better and (gasp) enjoying it much more.
Thank you for "saying" this. I have been cracking my skull trying to find how to develop my writing and this is not helping.. :)
Personally, I find that writing every day actually makes it easier for me. Obviously, when I'm between projects, I don't. But when I've got a goal or something to work on, I'll squeeze in the time as often as I physically can, because it helps me to write more coherently and I don't lose track of my plot :D