Writer’s Toolbox

Ask The Writer

Your most pressing and perplexing questions about writing answered here by Gotham teacher Brandi Reissenweber.

Because of a recent job change, I don't have as much time to write as I used to. I'm exhausted when I get home and the last thing I want to think about is writing. How do people who work full time manage this?

Finding the time to write can be a major struggle. And writers who manage to clear that first hurdle face a second one: mustering up the emotional energy to actually write once that time comes. A good first step to changing your writing situation is to take an honest look at your schedule. Map out a typical day, including all the little extras that take up time: commuting, getting ready, errands. Then, look for the soft areas. Where do you waste time? What can you sacrifice? Perhaps you don’t need those three hours of television every night. Maybe you can scale back on after work gatherings at the coffee shop, weekend Guitar Hero marathons, or Sunday morning lounging with the newspaper.

For the time that falls at the end of the day—when you’re already exhausted—consider a short activity that you find relaxing, such as a walk, reading, or listening to music. That might be enough to put you in a different mindset after work and open up the opportunity to write. If you simply can’t write at the end of the day, go to sleep earlier so you can rise earlier in the morning. Log your writing time before the demands of the day interfere and distract. You will have accomplished a major goal before you even step out the front door.

Train yourself to write in any environment. If you only write in your home study, you’re eliminating precious opportunities from your schedule. Write on your lunch break at work. Or at the Laundromat during your weekly visit. Take public transportation if it’s available in your area and reclaim all of your commute time. Write while waiting for your daughter’s ballet lesson to end. For those of you who have strong feelings about your regular writing space, or are easily distracted outside it, this is bound to be a challenge at first. But you’ll find the more you do it, the easier it becomes.

Treat your writing time the same way you treat work or a meeting. Put it on your calendar. If you give yourself the excuse to skip writing, you’re bound to take it. But if you treat it like a scheduled event, you’re more likely to show up and do the work. And don’t give up if you find you don’t have as much time as you’d like. Writing three hours a week is better than none. Then reevaluate your schedule every so often…to see if you can add more.