How do I motivate myself?

|

If you look at my posting frequency over the last two months, you'll notice that it's been woefully insufficient. I know I've noticed. On one hand, it's a problem. I feel that it is in my own intellectual best interest to be writing every darn day. On the other hand, there's no real appreciable difference in my life if I don't. So it falls to the wayside. If I had a paper to write, writing a dumb story wasn't high on my list of things to do. Now, if I come home from a day of online work, there's a good chance that I won't want to sit at my computer long enough to produce. But when writing becomes a second-order priority, my own ability to write diminishes.

Now, when I try to pound out 500-1,000 words I find myself dragging, unable to come up with deep thoughts to support the veneer that actually makes it to the page. What I end up with is like an iceberg without any ice under the surface. Maybe it looks the same at first, but it's missing its defining depth. But that gives too much significance to crap like The Return of Android Steve.

However, disregarding quality, in the last three months my ability to simply produce written words has diminished. I can't write because I don't write. If I could start again, it would become more routine.

Maybe the point is not that I need to remember how to write, but I need to remember that writing isn't easy. Sure I can say that I know writing those dumb short stories took a lot of time, but I can say that with out internalizing the realization.

Thus I have resigned myself to sucking until I can get back in the rhythm of expending the effort. I will not put artificial goals such as one story a day on myself. Such promises -- bound to be broken -- will only provide an excuse to stop once the inevitable occurs. Instead, I simply offer myself this one hope: I would like to write more.

Can the next season of Lost start tomorrow, please?

There were so many cliffhangers in the season finale, I'm so excited for the next episode. But alas, I'll have to wait months for that. In case you're blissfully uninitiated, you can download season one and season two on iTunes. Make sure you start from the beginning. I promise you won't be disappointed.

FYI: My computer is in the shop

| | | | | |

I'm going to be quite slow getting back to people until I have my little darling back. But Mr. Portland is currently en route to California, where he will have his left hinge replaced -- after I carelessly broke apart the metal holding it together in a fit of rage-induced super-human strength.

Hopefully, I'll be up and running at full speed again on Saturday at the earliest, Monday at the latest. In the mean time, calling me on the phone would probably be your most fruitful course of action, should you desire to communicate with me.

Answers to inevitable questions:

1. It was bad
2. No, I don't know how it broke
3. A lot. :-(

Woke up sick today

| |

Given all that I've put my body through over the past two weeks while writing, this was inevitable. But I'd really rather just be healthy. I've been good today, so far. I've turned down activities -- such as getting dim sum with Darren and a goon who's in town -- in lieu of getting my work down and takin'er easy.

I want to be better for this weekend. Putnam's coming to town for a few days, passing through on his way back home. It would be the pits if I were moping about all gabber-wokey.

Thesis status report.

| |

I've told a lot of people to stop talking to me. If I have done this to you, I am sorry. But it is paying off. I just have to write the introduction and conclusion on my thesis. Then I'm ready for the process of revision, which is its own special kind of hell.

Comments are welcome. Moreover, they are probably the only reliable way to get ahold of me for the next 48 hours as I intend to cut off most other forms of contact.

Thesis Update 50/58 (Note: You might have noticed that the denominator is going up. This happens when I write more than my target page count for each section. Generally, I'd say it's a good thing when that happens.)

Kyle H. Stoneman: ON THE RECORD

|

I am using this forum to make a statement in an official, and binding capacity: A very powerful way to make a real point is to disguise it as a joke. People will laugh, but they can still tell it has a kernel of truth.

Maybe I'll make a less thinly veiled post about this in the future. But the above statement is the meat of what that post would be about.

P.S., Jokes also reach people who don't read editorial pages. (You all know that's true.)

Syndicate content