12 Responses

  1. sarah
    sarah at |

    Colleen, well, I wouldn’t say Just Do It if I didn’t think you could. If you consider the journey – look at what you’ve done and experienced regarding all of the events and work leading up to the inspiration and conception of ‘the book’ (if it’s still the story you talked about, yes?) then the writing of it will be the easy bit. Hey, here’s some advice: forget the word ‘book’ and think, “my story” Will that help? Ah, yes, petard – I think it might not be an actual thing you hang from, but some sort of bomb… I’ll be interested to know before I go lobbing it about again.

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  2. Mandy Hale
    Mandy Hale at |

    “Time to think. Time to sink”. So familiar to me also. I tell myself that is why my blog posts are relatively few and far between. When I was working a daily job this winter I almost never wrote. Didn’t have time to think of anything that I felt was worthwhile saying–that was the reason/excuse I gave myself. I much prefer to have the time to digest an idea, emotion, situation or story, letting the subconscious do most of the work. Many of what I consider my best things seem to spring whole as if from the forehead of Zeus. That doesn’t always have to happen at home; but the constant changes, accommodations, uncertainties of the way I best like to travel make it harder to do on the road. Collette, I understand where you’re coming from! (And maybe going to.)

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  3. Laurie
    Laurie at |

    I really only have one thing to say: http://ehdom.com/flowchart/

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  4. Jess @UsedYorkCity
    Jess @UsedYorkCity at |

    I found your blog through TravelerVoice, and am so glad I did! The constant conundrum that we have as travel writers (go or stay? network or research? blog or do my laundry?) is part of what I LOVE so much about the process…constant decisions, but in the end, they’re all good decisions because something is getting done.

    Have a LOVELY time in France, and I look forward to following along with your travel adventures!

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  5. sarah
    sarah at |

    Ah, but you’ll hang by your own petard by thinking you NEED to be home to write, that you NEED a familiar ceiling to stair at and a certain coffee cup. We only write in our heads, after all – the minute you put such limitations or ritualistic demands on your writing you’re done for. Besides, Collette (!) you’ve already contradicted yourself by being able to write this blog while on the road. I hate to quote a tennis shoe company, but ‘Just do it.’ By the way, all this gnashing you’re doing? It’s probably part of the process.
    And I might admit here that writing this has effectively allowed me ten minutes of work avoidance on that novel that’s due in two months!

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  6. Becca
    Becca at |

    Now you’ve got ME thinking about your situation and the dichotomies in your life. I think your need to be on the move is very deeply ingrained – just like my need to be mostly at home. I almost NEVER feel the need to be anywhere else except home. When we had our house in Florida, I often had the urge to go there (especially in the dead of winter) but it was really just another version of home.

    I wonder if you could even be productive if you gave up your wanderings and stayed put for a while? I think fighting your basic nature is counter productive to doing anything worthwhile artistically. Takes too much energy.

    That being said, I certainly don’t fight my preference for being home and I’m not terribly productive on my own Thing That Shall Not Be Named 🙂

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