tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492727141826685682.post1164049383740150605..comments2023-12-11T02:33:00.656-06:00Comments on dean frech ~ lgbtqia+ romance writer: The Dust of Everday LifeAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13493621740394362155noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492727141826685682.post-55197654646555073592012-05-12T20:09:20.757-05:002012-05-12T20:09:20.757-05:00That's a good question. I struggle with time i...That's a good question. I struggle with time issues also. I have a thirty-seven hour a week j.o.b. that I'm lucky enough to do from home: technician for a Telecommunications company; and they have set me up to help clients via e-mail. <br /><br />However, I like my mornings to write. By evening, I get too tired. Around five AM are when the big ideas start to flow. Trouble with this is that my job also begins in the morning. So most morning it's a race to get half a chapter in before I begin work. Some mornings, I get carried away, and unlike you, I can't keep inspiration for later. The wonderful subplot that will shake the reading world to its core will definitely vanish if I don't put it to paper—oh, not completely, but enough that the story will have lost its zing. <br /><br />So, when I see the hour of eight AM rounding the clock in my office, I summon my pea-sized, adrenalin charged noggin and swiftly write down, in abbreviated form, all the twists and turns I can sum up. (To my credit, I’m a fast typist.)<br /><br />As you have most likely wished ten times a week: If only I could write full time... I have done the same, the boundaries being set for me.Joss Landryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07870943150559036730noreply@blogger.com