Lisa Hendrix

Myth. Magic. And the power of love.

Archive for September, 2008

Free at last

Posted by Lisa Hendrix on September 26, 2008
Posted under Craft, Muse, Writing Life

Over at Murderati, JT Ellison continues her series, A Virtual Montparnasse, with a long, thoughtful post on the pleasures and perils of the Internet for writers—a common topic on writers’ blogs these days, and for good reason. Not only do we let ourselves be distracted by obsessively following the trail of some bit of research into the digital hinterlands, like Ahab tracking the whale, but we use it to just plain procrastinate. Can’t write?  Update your MySpace page. Still can’t write? Hit Get Mail, answer each message, then hit it again a dozen times before you pop on over to Facebook to check those updates.

I read JTs missive with sympathy, but also with a bit of private glee, for though I am one of the worst offenders of this type, I have found the solution. I have found Freedom. Then I read far enough and learned she’d found it, too—or at least the concept. Damn. But that doesn’t mean I can’t write about it, too:

Freedom is a shareware program developed by Fred Stutzman, a PhD student at University of North Carolina’s School of Information and Library Science. This Apple-only program (yet another reason to give up your PC) disables your wireless and ethernet networking for a given time period.  In other words, you launch Freedom, tell it how much time you want in minutes (up to 360, i.e., 6 hours), and it locks out all your internet access, mail, etc., for that time period. No will power needed.

Here’s what Fred says:

Freedom is an exploration of least-effort computing (in which computational affordances are disabled for task focusing) and spatial reclamation (in which our computers resist encroachments of connectivity). 

That’s his PhD-speak version.   Here’s the English translation:

Freedom is an application that disables wireless and ethernet networking on an Apple computer for up to three hours at a time. Freedom will free you from the distractions of the internet, allowing you time to code, write, or create. At the end of your selected offline period, Freedom re-enables your network, restoring everything as normal.

Freedom enforces freedom; a reboot is the only circumvention of the Freedom time limit you specify. The hassle of rebooting means you’re less likely to cheat, and you’ll be more productive. Not rebooting is why we bought Apple computers in the first place. When first getting used to Freedom, I suggest using the software for short periods of time.

That’s right.  The only way around Freedom is to completely reboot.

I’ve been using it for a couple of weeks now, and I can tell you, it WORKS.  There’s no denying, it’s a little disconcerting to turn over your computer to this thing for the first time—kind of an Aack! It’s eating my baby’s brain feeling. Do what Fred says and start small, with just, say 30 minutes, and learn you can trust it to give your computer back when its done (it does, really). I recommend you check to make sure nothing that needs the Airport or ethernet is running before you launch Freedom (e.g., make sure Time Machine isn’t in the middle of a backup—in fact, turn TM off for the time being, just remember to turn it back on afterward).  And do be aware that you’ll see the spinning wheel of death as it shuts down your access, but that all you have to do is click on an app or open window and it will go away.  Just trust it and make the leap.  Once you do…Wow!

Think about it: six hours of no temptation. Six hours. It’s pretty damned wonderful.

What are your ways of avoiding/eliminating/killing procrastination in its digital form?

“With my cross-bow I shot the Albatross”

Posted by Lisa Hendrix on September 20, 2008
Posted under Muse, Writing Life
(quote from Coleridge, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner)

Someone on a writers’ loop I belong to recently celebrated finishing a non-fiction contract project. This is one she’d been grinding away at for a long time, and she referred to it as an ”albatross.” She was looking forward to a new contract, similar but with a different subject matter that she views as more interesting. Most of all, though, she was looking forward to not having the dead weight of the albatross around her neck, to having the time and the energy to work on her own personal project.

Albatross

I could totally understand. Once upon a time, I turned down a second interview on a technical writer position because after the first interview I had worried that spending all day writing manuals for utility company billing and location software (can anything possibly be more boring?) would make me hate writing.  I wasn’t published yet, but I knew I wanted to be. And I wanted to love getting there.

So even though it would have made me a ton of money (oh, lordy, I just totaled up how much I would have made in the intervening years…), I told them ‘thank you very much but a second interview would be a waste of your time and mine.’  They were shocked. Shocked! And I was sick to my stomach for days. Fortunately, I had the support of my husband, but it was still a really scary thing to do—I’m definitely a bird in the hand type, and this was choosing the one in the bush, which proceeded to fly off for another five years or so.  But during that five years, the writing was fun.  And it has stayed fun, even with deadlines and rewrites and long gaps between sales.

I often wish I had the fortitude to do both the fun and the not-fun writing, and I surely admire those who manage it. But I knew I wasn’t, and I did what I had to do.  I have since taken other jobs to help make ends meet, but I made sure none of them had anything to do with writing (except for a short-term job grading high-school English papers—now that was enlightening, in a grim sort of way).  They were all things that, even if they left me physically tired, left me with a desire to write and a brain with which to do it.

That’s what it’s about: protecting the writing.  I was dead serious about it, and if you want to write, you need to be serious about it, too.  Honor not just your skill and the muse, but your desire to write.  It’s a delicate thing, and it needs nourishing. Whether it’s  finding some way to keep body and soul together that isn’t a soul-sucking brain drain, or simply carving out a little time of your own, do whatever you need to do to make it possible, and preferably fun, for you to write.

Shoot the damned albatross–and then make sure you toss it overboard instead of turning it into a necklace. You can borrow my cross-bow.

 

Avast ye mateys!

Posted by Lisa Hendrix on September 19, 2008
Posted under Humor, Muse, My Heroes

 

 

It’s International Talk Like a Pirate Day and  I’m practicing the pirate lingo I learned at the Official ITLAP Website, including the pick-up lines for Lady Pirates (my personal favorite: That’s quite a cutlass ye got thar, what ye need is a good scabbard!)

If you don’t have time to learn Pirate, try their English to Pirate translator.

To the left, the original Lady Pirate, Anne Bonney.

 

 

 

 

P.S. — Vikings are pirates, too, you know.  So I suppose “Pass the lutefisk” is also Pirate Lingo…

September Contest now LIVE

Posted by Lisa Hendrix on September 17, 2008
Posted under Contest

I announced this on the front page of the website, but I realized I’d better duplicate the news here so my RSS subscribers can get in on the fun:

In anticipation of the November 4 release of IMMORTAL WARRIOR, I’m giving one lucky reader a chance to win an autographed ARC (advance reading copy), which for those who don’t know, is a bound copy of the uncorrected galley of the book—what reviewers get.

Be the first on your block to read the book Romantic Times magazine called “a bold and beautiful fairytale for grownups…Not to be missed!” (more info and great reviews here).

Enter via my CONTEST PAGE.

Contest closes Sept. 30, 2008. Best of luck to all.

 





Palin for President

Posted by Lisa Hendrix on September 14, 2008
Posted under Humor, Muse, My Heroes

Michael Palin, that is…

 

Via Red State Rebels

 

#1 Requirement for Twitter Clients…

Posted by Lisa Hendrix on September 8, 2008
Posted under Humor, My Heroes

…apparently involves including a screenshot with an inane comment of my husband’s.  Yep another one, this time on Syrinx from MRR Software (link on the image).  That’s him, third one down (second human).

 

If you can’t read it, it says:

 

Considering ingredient list for pizza and wondering if I should make enough for the boy that isn’t home yet.

 

Deep.

 

Yes, he cooks, Actually makes pizza dough from scratch…part of the reason I love him.

 

Blog Day 2008 — Pick Five

Posted by Lisa Hendrix on September 1, 2008
Posted under Wanderings

Today is Blog Day.

I didn’t even know there was a Blog Day, until Mitch Joel at Six Pixels of Separation told me.  According to the Blog Day website:

“BlogDay was created with the belief that bloggers should have one day dedicated to getting to know other bloggers from other countries and areas of interest. On that day Bloggers will recommend other blogs to their blog visitors. With the goal in mind, on this day every blogger will post a recommendation of 5 new blogs. This way, all blog readers will find themselves leaping around and discovering new, previously unknown blogs.”

My question is, how do I limit it to five?

Wet Noodle Posse

Manuscript Mavens

Writers Technology Companion

Fangs, Fur, and Fey

Open Book (Stephanie Bond)

Murderati

and of course, Rose City Romance Writers

I could keep going.  And I will, over time, on my Links Page.

Happy surfing.

 

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