As you read this, I am ensconced in a country cottage somewhere, my brow earnestly furrowed on a writing retreat. There are some other people here but for the most part I will be alone with my story and my laptop. Once, I used to be able to write any time and anywhere but these days, if I want to make sustained progress with a novel, I need to go away from home. I need to retreat into myself.
I make excellent progress when I'm away - who wouldn't, when all the stresses and strains of everyday life fall away and the biggest decision you have to make is whether to have another cup of tea or not? But because I can't go on retreat every weekend, I'd like to be able to keep that 'retreat feeling' when I get home. And it occurs to me that some aspects of being on retreat might travel back with me. Obviously, the solitude is tricky, especially with a day job, a toddler and other assorted family members around, but I think what I get most out of being on retreat is headspace - the freedom to be creative and work on my ideas. So I wonder if it's possible to carve out a niche to help maintain a bit of headspace when I get home? Maybe it's just about being disciplined, about spending less time faffing about on social media and more time writing. Or maybe it's about recognising that writing makes me happy, even though I have to sacrifice a couple of hours TV watching with my family, and that a happy me is worth everyone's while.
So my post-retreat resolution is to keep the retreat mentality going for as long as I can. Perhaps some enterprising soul could start a sweepstake on how long I last - the breaking point would be the first snappish, bad-tempered tweet about my WIP. Anyone who suggests twelve hours or less will be severely frown upon...
5 comments:
good luck - pull down a blind of words on the outside world perhaps? Oh and(sorry about this) but around twenty-four hours maximum
Part of the dilemma is the way stuff piles up while you're away - not just time-wasting stuff, but stuff that actually has to be addressed. So it's not fair to start counting hours immediately. Maybe start a week after you get back from your week? Or 3 days after your 3 days, or however much retreat time you managed to get? And also (which is something non-retreating people struggle to grasp) you have to factor in some level of fatigue - you've been concentrating and producing words like crazy, and that's hard work. Writing retreats are WONDERFUL and ESSENTIAL but they aren't HOLIDAYS!
I'd like a retreat - not for writing but just to be doing nothing!
I'd like a retreat - not for writing but just to be doing nothing!
This is something which has very much been in my mind recently. I'm editing hard at home and that's fine (I live alone in the country) for the mechanical stuff, but I often find the kind of breakthrough creative stuff, the real problem-solving, happens elsewhere. It can happen on the train, in the car, while walking, in Tesco's, etc., but I find there is nothing to beat a week at a retreat where you are alone with your work and nothing else. But you're right -- the dilemma of how to keep it going when you're home is a very real one. If it wasn't, they wouldn't be so important.
Post a Comment