Saturday, December 29, 2012

Committing to 2013


I have a confession. I hate commitments. Personal or professional, it doesn't matter. I like knowing that I have an escape plan, a way out. It's not so bad in my personal life. If someone doesn't like it, they are free to walk away. But in the professional world, it's a career killer. Wondering why I haven't blogged in nearly two years? Curious as to why it's been nearly a year since I published anything under my own name, and over six months since I published anything at all? Lack of commitment. I'd love to blame my day job - and I often do - but that is something I could always leave, if I were willing to commit.

I always, ALWAYS, hedge my bets. And while it makes me feel safe, it also means I have very little to show for my efforts. Sales are slowing down now. And because I didn't commit to anything in 2012, I have no new material to help boost them. January will be the first month in over a year that I won't get paid any royalties. And that stings.

So it's time to change.

I'm miserable when I'm not producing fiction. But before I quit my job and dive into the lifestyle of a working writer, it's time to assess what I want to accomplish, and then <gasp!> commit to a plan that will help me succeed.

I'd like to see myself doing 5000 words a week. 50 weeks a year. 250,000 total new words of fiction in 2013. At the speed I write, that is only 5-10 hours a week.

Can I do it? Maybe. With 55 hours taken up by my day job and commute, I'm already facing a tall order. Add in time spent editing, maybe 15-20 hours a week, and it becomes even more daunting. Maybe the goal is too high. For sure I'm going to be tired more days than not, even before I try to write. When will I see my family? What about...

There. See how easy it was to almost talk myself out of it? Sneak Preview: I bet I fight the same battle, with the same arguments, every time I sit down to write in 2013. But I will try to persevere. Likely I will fail on all fronts. And fail big. I'll be lucky to get half the words down that I say I'll write. I hope I fail so hard. Because you know what? Even if I only make it halfway to my goal in 2013, that'll still be 125,000 new words that I write. At my average length, that's one novel and more than a half-dozen short stories. I'll take it.

So here's to committing, whether to success or failure, in 2013. Happy New Year.