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[personal profile] elfs
Scott Westerfeld (who wrote the wonderful pulp singularity novel The Risen Empire) quotes Raymond Chandler:
The important thing is that there should be a space of time, say four hours a day at least, when a professional writer doesn't do anything else but write. He doesn't have to write, and if he doesn't feel like it, he shouldn't try. He can look out of the window or stand on his head or writhe on the floor. But he is not to do any other positive thing, not read, write letters, glance at magazines, or write checks. Write or nothing. It's the same principle as keeping order in a school. If you make the pupils behave, they will learn something just to keep from being bored. I find it works. Two very simple rules, (A) you don't have to write. (B) you can't do anything else. The rest comes of itself.
I try to adhere to this rule by taking my laptop to places where the Internet is not: unwireless cafes sometimes, but most often the Metro Bus system. That works for me: it's an uninterrupted (usually) block of time (about 30 minutes, sometimes longer, rarely much longer) where I can't do anything but write.

Naturally, the universe can't leave well enough alone. Friday morning I saw a note: This bus has free wireless. Great. The best way to avoid succumbing to temptation is to put it far, far away. Metro has brought it closer. Lovely.

Date: 2006-12-10 06:50 pm (UTC)
jenk: Faye (eyes)
From: [personal profile] jenk
Do you want to know how many technical articles and performance reviews I completed by booting DOS and launching Edit? No alt-tab. No playing with fonts, even. Once I adjust the screen colors from white-on-black to pink-on-black and back again, there's nothing to do but write.

Date: 2006-12-10 09:53 pm (UTC)

Date: 2006-12-11 03:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] velvet-wood.livejournal.com
Easy enough... pull your wireless card and leave it at home. Or at work, whichever. Or one at each place, so you won't have to take it back and forth and be tempted.

Of course, I couldn't possibly write without internet... I use it to look stuff up way, way too often, and go a bit crazy when I'm trying to plot something out and can't look up, say, the dominant social customs and political leanings of Thailand in the 1980's, or the specific religious practices of the remote areas of Romania/Hungary over the past thousand years. Sure, I can jot in a placeholder for some things (Damn it, I need a name and some features for a large city in the southeast section of Africa... and what the heck do they use for money, anyway?) and go on, but others really bog me down (would this character, given X background, actually do Y? I need to know more about X!).

I really love http://www.lii.org/ . It's so wonderful. But I can also understand the temptation to read other stories, comics, cnn.com, fark.com, slashdot, etc. ad infinitum.

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