This week, to welcome in the new year, I wanted to share two ideas I borrowed from other writers.
They are working
quite well to keep my goals moving forward. Maybe one or both will work for you!
Borrowed idea #1
Gretchen Rubin, author of many happiness and habit books, has made a study of why we stick to habits and why we break them, so I thought she'd be a good person to consult first.
Borrowed idea #1
Gretchen Rubin, author of many happiness and habit books, has made a study of why we stick to habits and why we break them, so I thought she'd be a good person to consult first.
She has a cool idea a recent newsletter.
Choose a one-word theme to describe your year ahead instead of
a long list of things you're going to do better and never do. For
example, her one word is re-purpose, because she wants to focus this year on using what she already has.
I liked this idea of theme. Theme can have layers of meaning (subtext).
I liked this idea of theme. Theme can have layers of meaning (subtext).
I'm toying with discover as my one-word theme. With a focus on discover,
I can be a beginner and let myself learn stuff, not have to be the expert. I can allow myself to explore which new skills could best upgrade my writing.
I can acknowledge that I am having problems with one character's story and rather than feeling stuck, like I should know it, I can begin to ask questions and let myself not know. I can admit to myself that there's always new tricks to learn in the ever-changing world of publishing and look for experts to help with that.
In other words, I get to let myself off the hook. Enjoy the discovery process. Maybe even more than the result!
Borrowed idea #2
A writing colleague invited me to join a private group for thirty days. Each day she posted a question for the group to respond to. We looked at our lives, our goals.
Borrowed idea #2
A writing colleague invited me to join a private group for thirty days. Each day she posted a question for the group to respond to. We looked at our lives, our goals.
It didn't take much time. I got ideas from others' posts. I liked looking at my own goals in a new way. I knew it was only for thirty days, so I could engage freely without feeling like I was saying yes to a long-term commitment.
What I took away: by limiting my engagement to just one month, it helped me stay connected.
We're all so busy, and this seemed doable.
Besides, I know something about myself: If I see an end ahead, a time of closure, I really try to enjoy a
particular experience. If we're only going to be at the beach for a weekend, I pay attention to the moments even more.
I
began to think about using this idea for short-commitment goals. Could I choose a three-week challenge for January and pick something I wanted to accomplish with my writing? Yes! I chose completing my storyboard for a new novel.
If this bombs, I'll start a new short-commitment goal in three weeks. Or try the same one again. It feels free and fun. But I think I'll also get something accomplished!
Resolutions that drag on (a whole year!) are losing propositions to many writers. But maybe try the theme and the short-commitment goal, see if you can stick with either. The theme can give you a way to sift your choices this year. The short-commitment goals can give you a way to apply what you choose.
Either way, you win! Try one or both this week, for your weekly writing exercise.
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