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View Full Version : Deadlines. Act on it, or put it off?


truelyana
05-02-2007, 09:39 PM
A general note: I have always left coursework till a couple of days or a day before the deadline.

At the moment, I can't seem to get into writing. I have an essay due in tomorrow, and I have only just done a structure and notes. I'm not sure if it's a lack of motivation, or just putting it off on purpose. One way or another, I know I will have to do it(also that's another issue-the having to do part. It's like now, i'm forced to do it-although deep down, I really enjoy it)

I usually take my time out with every piece of writing. I have found out that under the deadline I can get inspired pretty quickly and flow at ease. I have tried preparing a couple of weeks before for essays and somehow, It doesn't seem to work as I either do it, or I don't. I don't feel too at ease trapped inbetween the middle of something. Like for instances if you type about 1,000 words and then you take a 3 day break, and come back to it.

Does anyone have any similiar experiences? Do you have any techniques that are incorporated into your daily life, that help you cope with doing the work instantly, rather than waiting around until you feel you want to do it?

ClaudiaGray
05-02-2007, 09:51 PM
The best way to work around this -- and really some of the best advice I think any writer can take -- is to make writing a part of your normal schedule. If you're not doing anything else, you're writing (not watching TV, not playing video games, etc.) IMHO, it's less about finding time to write regularly than getting yourself to a point where you have to find time to not write, where the decision to take a day or two off has to be conscious and based in a real reason.

That said, yeah, of course I kick into high gear when I know a deadline is coming. The difference is that now I do that a month or two before the deadline, instead of a couple of days, and I've already made progress by then; that way, you can use that deadline rush for polishing, strong editing and rewriting.

truelyana
05-02-2007, 09:56 PM
The best way to work around this -- and really some of the best advice I think any writer can take -- is to make writing a part of your normal schedule. If you're not doing anything else, you're writing (not watching TV, not playing video games, etc.) IMHO, it's less about finding time to write regularly than getting yourself to a point where you have to find time to not write, where the decision to take a day or two off has to be conscious and based in a real reason.

That said, yeah, of course I kick into high gear when I know a deadline is coming. The difference is that now I do that a month or two before the deadline, instead of a couple of days, and I've already made progress by then; that way, you can use that deadline rush for polishing, strong editing and rewriting.

That's a good tip. I made that decision earlier but, somehow I have jumped on the Internet to distract myself from the writing. (That is one of my weaknesses-the Internet)

Namatu
05-02-2007, 10:02 PM
I do the same thing. A regular writing schedule does help, but I find deadlines motivate me to keep that regular schedule!

MidnightMuse
05-02-2007, 10:30 PM
I don't have deadlines, but back in my school daze I did - tried not to put things off till they became a rush, though. That only happened if I was mega-busy the whole time with other class-work as well.

I do make writing a regularly scheduled part of my day, though. Something gets written down every day, no matter how little or how long. Always something.

Sassee
05-02-2007, 10:46 PM
I've never been able to do an assignment early. I always do them last minute. But oddly, that works for me... so I dunno what to tell you. :(

sunna
05-02-2007, 10:47 PM
I loved deadlines when I had them, and it took me a while to figure out how to keep on track without them - but now I am in the same boat Claudia's in - trying to find time to do anything other than write. I keep swinging wide of that elusive happy medium. :)

For a while I was part of a group of novel writers and we all sent one another a new chapter every three weeks, which was fabulous inspiration for me. When that broke up I started making myself sit in front of the PC after work for at least an hour; and slowly that hour became the 4-hours-daily thing that it currently is.

Apparently my mother was right all along about art being a discipline. I have no intention of telling her so, though. ;)

Soccer Mom
05-03-2007, 12:08 AM
Deadlines vs procrastination?

I'll have to get back to you on that one.

Jamesaritchie
05-03-2007, 12:21 AM
I don't need deadlines to make me write, I write every day. But I do need deadlines to make me work on a specific project. If it weren't for deadlines, I'd spend far too much time working on projects that are easy, that are a bit more enjoyable, etc.

Deadlines, and the guarantee that I'm going to be sitting down and writing pretty much every day, barring Sunday, is what gets the work done.

truelyana
05-05-2007, 02:47 PM
Update

I have created a Schedule for my dissertation which is due in 9th May.

So far it is working and as I am determined in sticking by it. I have made a structure plan of the overall dissertation including a word count of each section and also a brief note of what I am going to include in each. I have organised myself around that so far so I know, how it will flow when it comes to reaching that section. I plan to come in early to University tomorrow again, and monday. Tuesday will be my overall draft day, to go over it all. :)

I am happy and feel at ease with this schedule so far, as i am working on it at my own pace without the pressures.

Thank you guys for your kind tips and support :)

I'll keep you updated xx

maestrowork
05-05-2007, 04:28 PM
I am a master procrastinator, even at school. I'd wait until the very last minute -- knowing my abilities and the difficulty of the work, it could be an hour or a couple of days -- and I strive on that. The closer it gets the more "productive" I get. It doesn't guarantee quality, though. Sometimes a rush job is just a rush job. But I get it done -- adrenaline is a good thing.

Making a schedule and to-do list and cross that off work for me unless I really feel crappy. But they certainly help ease my mind if the project is a bit complicated -- so I know I won't be scrambling to figure things out at the last minute.

Kudos for taking your first step and sticking with your schedule.

Good luck.

JamieFord
05-05-2007, 05:05 PM
When I'm on a project, I write 7-days a week until it's done. I hate taking a day off. Writing for me is like a diesel engine--takes forever to warm up, but once it's going, it'll go forever. If I stop for a few days, it takes a while to get going again, so I set a word-count goal of 1,500-2,000/day, and just chug along.

Tachyon
05-05-2007, 09:26 PM
I like what Douglas Adams said about deadlines: "I love deadlines. I love the whooshing noise they make as they go by."

Procrastination is awesome. Unfortunately, it has rather bad consequences in some cases. :/

If I know that I have to do some writing, and I'm running out of time, then I try to get myself into the mood with some music or a movie. If I'm writing fiction, then I choose something appropriate for the emotions that I want to invoke when writing--for example, I'll watch a tragedy or listen to some quiet, sad music if I'm writing a sad scene. If it's a battle scene I'd listen to something like "Ride of the Valkryies". :D

Writing non-fiction, like essays, is a bit harder. Unlike my fiction writing, which is mostly organic, I prefer to have an outline ready for my essay. This makes the experience less painful. Then I just take it one paragraph at a time, and I force myself to write a rough copy. I don't care how good it is, how unpolished it reads: finishing a draft is my first goal. Then I take a break. Depending on how much time I have left, I'll polish it up and send it to a friend who has volunteered to read it over for me. He or she will give me suggestions, and then I'll revise, one paragraph at a time. At the end of it all, my essay is much stronger. I have one friend in particular who is so good at rending my stuff to shreds (but also knows when something I've written is good and should be left as it is).

Beta readers really help motivate me, perhaps because the changes that they propose have come from another set of eyes. They've taken the time to read the piece, so I feel responsible for giving them a return on that investment by improving it. If I notice a flaw, I'll probably just say, "Yeah, I'll fix that later" and go back to doing nothing. :r

truelyana
05-06-2007, 02:32 PM
I am a master procrastinator, even at school. I'd wait until the very last minute -- knowing my abilities and the difficulty of the work, it could be a hour or a couple of days -- and I strive on that. The closer it gets the more "productive" I get. Kudos for taking your first step and sticking with your schedule.

Good luck.

I used to be the same with every deadline.

Thanks :)

I'm sure you guys Tachyon and Jamie, will find your own way of working.

jclarkdawe
05-06-2007, 04:48 PM
I hate deadlines. I hated them in college, I hate them now. But developing an approach that makes you write, whether you want to or not, is going to be important if you want to write and make money at it.

I write an answer-the-question column for a magazine. Typical approach is for my editor to send me the question on Monday and want it on Wednesday. Forty-eight hours to research and write approximately 1,000 words. If it isn't there on Wednesday, it doesn't go in, and I don't get paid.

Is this reasonable? Probably not. But this is the way my editor works, and I need to deal with it.

When Equine Liability was in the editing process, I'd get it back from my publisher, with corrections, and a note saying, "Could I have it done by next week?"

Writing when you don't want to write sucks. If you want to become a professional, though, you have to learn how to deal with it. With my magazine article, it usually involves five minutes of swearing, then re-arranging my life to get it done. College is a learning opportunity, whether it involves learning how to recover from a keg party by the next morning or having to write when you don't want to.

If tight deadlines are what you need to make you work, just wait until you have to explain to your child why you have to miss their softball game because you screwed around on a deadline and now no longer have time to go to their game. I've learned that when I have a long deadline, I cut it in half, and tell myself it needs to be done by that date. Reduces my stress levels, but I'm also aware that some deadlines are just not going to have any time. You just have to go out and get her done.

Jim Clark-Dawe

Jamesaritchie
05-06-2007, 07:06 PM
I've learned that when I have a long deadline, I cut it in half, and tell myself it needs to be done by that date.

Jim Clark-Dawe

Interesting approach. I may have to try it. My approach adds to stress levels. If I have a six month deadline, and I know I can write the novel in two months, I wait until two months before deadline to begin writing.

truelyana
05-08-2007, 05:46 PM
Well now I have 6,400 words left(got to do it by tomorrow: 24 hours) and my imagination is dead. (Not surprising as, I've never been pretty inspirational with academic work)

I have alot of resources scattered everywhere, books, journals etc... I just have difficulties in making up sentences. All i'm doing is re-modifying the words in places and re-constituting new paraphrases with references. (Which takes a while, and it's pretty repetitive)

Does anyone have any tips on how, to get the inspiration flowing especially under these tight deadlines, in relation to academic work? (it's all policy related)

truelyana
05-08-2007, 08:05 PM
UPDATE

I'm on 2,000 words now. I'm just writing anything and not putting any thought into it, which is very easy going :D

A la dissi-pa-academic-robot-tization haahaaa haa

scarletpeaches
05-08-2007, 08:07 PM
Interesting approach. I may have to try it. My approach adds to stress levels. If I have a six month deadline, and I know I can write the novel in two months, I wait until two months before deadline to begin writing.

Otherwise known as the "Scarletpeaches' seeing how long you can lie in bed and still be on time for your appointments" approach. ;)