Wednesday, I wrote about killing the Muse. If I have a Muse, this is what he looks like: He’s a short, gruff guy with a big heart. He wears a yellow hardhat and chews on a cigar. He has a pop eye and says stuff like, “Come on, kid—get … [Continue reading]
Killing the Muse
People who wait for inspiration typically stagnate more than they produce. It's a nice thought that some unseen entity -- a Muse -- watches over you as you do the things that keep you from writing, just waiting for the right moment to whisper … [Continue reading]
The Sunday Night Ache
Sunday nights get to me. I love having a weekend to see the people I love, and I love having a weekend to write! Sunday night signals a return to the 5/7ths of the week I have to work. When it comes to jobs, I have a good one. I've turned … [Continue reading]
Looking Back
There are times I look back on my writing progress in recent years and feel like I haven't done enough. I can come up with excuses; some of them are even valid: I spent a couple years caring for my big sister before she died from cancer in … [Continue reading]
The Big Writing Lesson I Learned from Juggling
I know it goes without saying, but to get good at something, you have to practice. A lot! I've been juggling since 1981 (and I have the picture to prove it!). I used to devote all my free time to juggling. Later, I devoted most of my free … [Continue reading]
Odd Jobs Help Writing
You probably spend the day working someplace where you wouldn't be if you made a living writing full time. I've worked at my current job (editing and formatting airplane manuals) for almost five years. I like my job as much as I can like a day job. … [Continue reading]
The Best Thing About Halloween
My wife knew my writing before she knew me. She was an artist working for a small independent comic book publisher in 1992. I was writing for the company. She read a couple scripts I wrote that were being developed, and she loved my … [Continue reading]
The 50,000-Word Race
NaNoWriMo begins at 12:00 a.m. on November 1st. For the uninitiated, NaNoWriMo stands for National Novel Writing Month. Each November, over 100,000 people take a vow to write 50,000 words in 30 days. Less than 20% succeed. Fifty thousand words … [Continue reading]
Thank You
Thank you to everybody who's been reading The Juggling Writer. It really means a lot to me. Thank you to those who have subscribed to this blog, and thank you to those who have commented to entries. If you haven't subscribed, it's as easy as … [Continue reading]
The Big Three
I always loved reading and writing. When I was younger, I read and wrote as much as I could, but I never thought about being a writer. I didn't think about being a writer until discovering two things: the movie, Time Bandits, and Stephen King's book, … [Continue reading]
Coffee and Tea
I wonder how many great books would have never been written had we never discovered what to do with tea leaves and coffee beans… … [Continue reading]
The Takeoff Roll
Last year, I read a friend's first novel. He critiqued some of my writing in the past, and it was nice returning the favor. He's getting ready to submit the novel to an agent who reads his writing, and he asked me if I felt the novel was tight … [Continue reading]
10 Ways to Keep Writing While Traveling for Work
Traveling for work (the day job), can cut into a writing schedule. Here are 10 tips to help you keep writing, or at least focus on writing-related things, while on the road. 1. Make a Writing Schedule Before You Leave Making a writing … [Continue reading]
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