Writers are often alone when they work. Hours pass in silence as one long moment; light fades as day turns back to face the coming night.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The writing day can be, in some ways, too short, but it's actually a long series of hours, for months at a time, and there is a stillness there.
The cool thing about writing is that there is really never a typical day. Sometimes I get a rhythm going and head off to work every morning and come home at night. Sometimes I'll write for two days straight and then be utterly blank for the next two.
I tend to write during the day so I can see my children at night. But if my kids aren't with me and I have a chunk of time when I'm a single woman living in my house for a miraculous week, I will get to write at different hours.
I write best late at night, when everyone in the house has gone to bed. There's something magical about that late night silence that appeals to me.
We writers are shy, nocturnal creatures. Push us into the light and the light blinds us.
At night I can write for hours.
I need quiet and solitude to work. Darkness is best. If I am wide awake, I can't write.
When you work alone at home, time can become shapeless. There are no eleven o'clock meetings or afternoon coffee breaks. The light outside may clue me in to what part of the day it is, but if all is going well, the hours bleed together.
I'm up at 8:30 every morning, and I write from about 9:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M. - with some breaks, of course. I really try to see writing as a career that I turn off when my husband comes home from work. Otherwise, writing could very easily become all-consuming.
You've probably never thought about it before unless you happen to write for a living, but professional writers are doomed to spend most of their waking hours sitting by themselves at a desk, staring at a blank computer screen and waiting for lightning to strike.
No opposing quotes found.