Writing under Deadline
You may not like the
notion of having to write under the pressure of a
deadline, but it just might be the best thing that ever happened to you
by D. J. Herda
President
American Society of Authors and Writers
When I was a kid going to college to better learn the
intricacies of my chosen craft of novel writing, I was both surprised and
chagrinned when I learned that one of the pre-enrollment requirements for
"Novel Writing 101" was "Journalism 101, 102, and 103." Not just
one semester-long class of learning to write what I had no intentions of
using ever, but three!
Needless to say, I have thanked God each and every day
of my existence for those pre-enrollment requirements, because learning to
write like a journalist (and think and talk and interview like a journalist)
was exactly the kind of iron-fisted self-discipline I needed to learn.
And the single most critical thing I learned was how to write under
deadline.
Writing when you're floundering, out of "the mood," or
drifting aimlessly from one disconnected thought to another is damned hard
writing. Writing when your mind is focused and your thoughts are clear
is infinitely more pleasurable. And that's what writing under deadline
does for you. By writing under deadline, you remove yourself from the
temptations of piddling the day away and place your entire existence in the
act of creating the written word. That, in turn, makes you feel good
about yourself and your productivity, which in turn feeds the quality of
your writing, ad infinitum.
Of course, not all writers--particularly successful
ones who don't need the additional pressure of a deadline to turn out
quality work--use deadlines as motivational tools. Pop novelist Diana
Gabaldon explained, "Let's put it this way: we have deadlines in my
contracts because there's a space for them. I've never met one.
They get the book when I'm finished with it. They scream and tear
their hair a lot .... But I have a much higher loyalty to my book than
I do to any of them."
That may be all fine and well for her, but what about
for the rest of us? Do deadlines really work, even if they're only
self-imposed? Most definitely ... so long as they're realistic in
their expectations. You can't give yourself three days to write a
100,000-word novel and expect anything good to come of it. Similarly,
you can't announce a six-month deadline to produce five paragraphs of prose
and expect that the deadline will motivate you to higher grounds.
But when a deadline is carefully thought through and
judiciously applied (and adhered to), I can almost guarantee your success.
Here are just a few things a realistic deadline can help a writer to
accomplish:
1.) Put to death "writer's block." After all, if
you have to put fingers to keyboard--even if it takes you a few
minutes or an hour to start turning out creditable copy--you're not blocked,
are you?
2.) Start and keep the juices flowing. I've
known too many writers, including seasoned pros, who write a good page or
even a graf or two and then take the rest of the afternoon off. What
they neglect to realize is that's exactly the time they should be prodding
themselves onward. Writing that glows come from writers with flow.
Just the thought that you're writing, hour after hour, day after day, will
flush you with satisfaction and--I'd bet on it--show up in your writing, as
well.
3.) Keep you from going "stale" between writing
periods. Deadlines don't allow for idle time. Ask any
general-assignment reporter. If a working journalist completes one
story, it's only a quick slug of water and a half-smoked cigarette before
he's started on another.
4.) Help you break down your writing into more
manageable chunks. Deadlines are easier to manage, after all, if you
can create blocks of written words that fit neatly into corresponding
periods of time. You might tell yourself you'll write the introduction
of a book on needlepoint your first morning, then rewrite it and print it
out that afternoon. The next chapter may take two days, since it may
be longer, and so forth. The results are the same: you're writing
productively.
5.) Instill the joy of being a writer in you. Writer's
love nothing better than to write. By writing under deadline, you can
have that "God, this is terrific, I feel so good about this stuff" feeling
every single day for the rest of your life. And that kind of
confidence can't help but spell success.
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