Today's tip involves chocolate (collective YAY) and was sent in by Cate Morgan (tip #95) who blogs at Infinite Monkey and tweets @typemonkeytype. Please visit and follow after you're done reading here. Enjoy your chocolate!
Now that I have your attention, let’s do an experiment. Here’s what you need:
- 2 large jars of equal size, large as you like.
- Enough bags of small candy to fill one of the jars not quite to the top. I recommend M&Ms, but that’s just my personal preference. J
- A bunch of large candy bars
- Labels (optional)
- Marker
We’re going to talk about goals and prioritization. Actually, I’m going to blog, and hopefully I still have your attention with the mountain of chocolate.
We all have roles in life. We’re parents and children and siblings, employees, housekeepers and cooks, volunteers and, since we’re on the ROW80 site, writers. On each candy bar, write or label each of your roles. Line them up in the order of importance.
Okay, fill one of the jars with small candy. You might not fill it all the way to the top, but that’s okay. Get as close as you can. It goes without saying, but I’ll put it in writing anyway: escapees are fair game. Now, one at a time, try to fit the big candy bars into the full jar. Go on, I’ll wait while you stand on a chair for leverage and use the meat mallet. Try to not break anything.
Doesn’t work very well, does it?
Now pull the chocolate bars out of the candy, apologize for trying drown them in the chocolate witch trials, and realign them in order of importance. “Writer” is probably somewhere toward the end, because roles like “parent” or “employee” most likely come first. The whole “starving writer” gig tends to lose its charm after the age of twenty so. But do not despair; it isn’t the end of the world.
Now put the chocolate bars in the empty jar, again in order of importance. Dump the full container into the one with the candy bars a la New York mob. Laugh diabolically if you like. Oh, go on. It’s fun.
See where I’m going with this?
The moral of the story is life is full of minutiae, and we’re often tricked into believing it’s important. Fact of the matter is, minutiae is exactly what it looks like. It piles up around us, burying us, masking what is truly important.
Prioritization works the other way around.
You make room for the big, important stuff, and if a few M&Ms fall to the way side in the process, well, you can laugh. (Have I mentioned how much I love this demonstration? *crunch crunch crunch*)
I will bet you a crisp, new twenty dollar bill you forgot a role.
Forgot yourself, didn’tcha?
I thought as much. *grins*
You, as in YOU, are an individual-type person, complete and whole. You deserve some prioritization too, so be sure you take at least a little time for yourself, even if it’s only a half hour here and there.
One of my favorite me-rituals takes place on Sunday morning. The husband is still snoring merrily away like a grizzly bear hibernating for the winter. The coffee is fresh and piping hot, the resident Ninja Katz cavorting about my ankles. I sit at the dining room table and plan my week: What do I need to accomplish? How will I meet my goals?
Goals on their own are lovely, all bright and shiny and full of promise. Especially writing goals. But they do you no good whatsoever if you don’t have a plan to reach them. A word count goal or a promise to yourself to write every single day the sun brings is a good start.
Know what works better? Specific steps, or mini-goals, to get you there. Whether you’re a pantser, planner, or somewhere in the middle, you need milestones to reach for. I’m seriously OCD (I prefer the term “Zen”), and I like balance in my life every bit as much as coffee and M&Ms. I also work on more than one project at a time, whether I’m in the discovery stage of one and the revision or rehabilitation stage of a second (as I am now), which requires optimal prioritization.
It doesn’t have to be painful. I have a specific process, with very specific tasks. I assign myself tasks in groups of three for each project and if you’re a full, er, on pantser, you can brainstorm a scene before you write it. This way you get a real feel for what you’re working with before forming definite words around it. Yanno, minimizing the staring at the Blinking Cursor of Doom while maximizing the typeity-typeity. It isn’t planning so much as discovery, and one of my favorite parts of writing..
Do yourself a favor and consolidate either your writing or your you time with studying your craft. Spend some time reading and analyzing what you’ve read, or join a critique group just to read the work of others. You’ll gain beaucoup perspective. Every bit of insight helps.
Let’s review.
Block out time at the beginning of the week and assign yourself specific, reachable tasks in order to accomplish a larger goal.
Invest time to develop your craft, so your art will transcend craft.
Finally, treat your time as valuable. If you don’t, who will?
Ummmm . . . gonna eat those M&Ms?
~Cate Morgan
Okay. So this may make me sound crazy, but I'm not that into chocolate. What? I have sensitive teeth.
ReplyDeleteSeriously though? Even not being into chocolate that was an excellent metaphor.
Thanks, Cate!
My favorite kind of advice--the chocolate-y kind. ;)
ReplyDeleteSeriously though, a very thoughtful post. I especially like "Finally, treat your time as valuable. If you don’t, who will?" So true, and yet so easy to forget.
LOL!! Actually, I had to read this a second time skipping the chocolate part. Like a mermaid, it distracted me like a new shiny thing.
ReplyDeleteI must shake my head with shame that I often forget "me" since I focus so much on the kiddo, the paying gig and writing. This was a good post and I appreciate the prioritization reminder.
It's always a good tip to remember you. I find I'm more "employee" or "dog slave" than anything else (slave to my dog, nothing kinky) Anyways, another thing I often overlook is making short, reachable goals each week. Other than "wake up" and "remember to eat" I don't think about it much. Thanks for the tips!
ReplyDeleteI do find it hard to justify MY time, when I'm pulled in so many directions.
ReplyDeleteBut listing goals and prioritizing helps.
What a creative tip! Thank you :)
ReplyDeleteWhat a creative tip! Thank you :)
ReplyDeleteI like the idea of mini goals. We do need to invest time in developing our craft.
ReplyDelete