So here’s how it’s going to go…

I have a book to finish.

I have no excuse not to complete this draft within the timescales I previously set one of many a drunken nights on Twitter.

I have take the liberty of printing myself a calendar off* and scribbling all over it with the days I’ve essentially lost to procrastination or just general laziness.

Now I have the remaining days to work myself into the ground in an attempt to get a working draft out for my beta readers by the first week in October.

I remember mentioning a long time ago about an inspirational quote I read at a customer’s workstation, which stated:

A Goal Without a Plan is just a Wish

I have the plan for the story. I wrote it months ago.

I have no excuse.

It begins here.

* I print my calendars from CalendarsThatWork.com. You should, too.

Rejection! Rejection! Re-JECT-ion!

Stepping through the front door after work today, I spotted sitting behind it the self-addressed envelope I sent out in April, which I sent to my first literary agent since my rejection streak of 2005.

I never received the confirmation postcard I sent to them along with the letter, and I was starting to suspect the demons who live at the Post Office might have eaten either it or the letter. Turns out they just didn’t take the two minutes to put it back in their post pile. So that was a nice waste of 36p of a stamp and however much the postcard was. But the important thing — I suppose — is that they got it.

I picked up the letter. Not much weight to it, which tells it all, really. I would say my hands were trembling and my heart was pounding in my chest as I ripped the envelope open, but that would be a huge lie. Already feeling suitably downtrodden, I opened it with a sigh and a brush of overwhelming pessimism before opening it up to read the pre-printed letter saying that they, regrettably, do not have the confidence to represent my work. Which, to me, is just a nice way of saying: ‘Yeah, we think this is shit, now fuck off. Bye!’

On the upside, they did spell my name right.

I am taking some solace in the fact that part of their submission guidelines advised to expect four weeks for a response, and this took closer to eight; I’m going to imagine that this was because they were fiercely torn and desperately wanted to take my book, but, due to some reason — let’s say the financial instability of the company — they decided it was better, for my benefit, not to. I’m not going to steer towards what is more likely the truth, that the delay is down to the fact that they have received an unusually large influx of weak submissions lately that they’ve had to sift through before reaching my own creation of suckiness.

So anyway, they’ve said ‘No’, and it fells like a kick in the balls, or at least, I would imagine it is, since I don’t actually possess balls of my own.

I suppose it’s not all bad, really. In the time since I sent the submission in the first place, I’ve thought about my options. Traditional publishing would be nice, sure, but nowadays, what chance have I got…really? I think I mentioned a while back about the quality of others’ work that I’ve come across — sometimes inadvertently — online. These people are in the same position as I am, and yet their work seems leaps and bounds beyond the best that I’m capable of doing.

The people who have read my work — family and close friends excluded — have had nice things to say about it, but since it’s been systematically rejected — in all its manifestations — for the last seven years by professionals, I have to consider the prospect that it’s just not considered a marketable product.

And then I have to sit back and think what exactly it is I want out of my writing. With every day that passes, I reach closer to the realisation that I may never become a published author. And at the end of the day, that’s never what it’s been about. Not for me. I just enjoy writing, creating characters and entirely new worlds for them to run around in, swearing and fighting and generally getting into mischief.

Going forwards, since the traditional route is falling further and further away, I think I’m going to go down the self-publishing route, at least in the foreseeable future. If anyone buys and reads it (and hopefully enjoys it!), great, and if not, fuck them, and I’ll keep writing regardless.

^_^

Procrastination Station: Hyperbole & a Half

I appreciate that the time we spend on this Earth is both precious and fleeting. I do, I get that. Any day, life can be ripped away through any number of natural and/or man made causes, and it’s important that if you are capable of producing something that you think is meaningful, something that you want the world to know about — whether it’s a story you want to share or a just something you think others will relate to — you have to work hard to document it. Be productive, be prolific, be profuse! Write whenever and wherever you can, because your story must be told!

Or…procrastinate.

Ensure you keep the Internet open at all times, so that when your mind wanders from the task at hand, you have an easy avenue out. Keep the television on, because you never know when that episode of Friends you’ve seen for about the eighteenth time could be on again. Make sure your computer has some games installed on it, or – failing that – that you have a games console within reach. Make sure your cupboards are stocked with food for culinary adventures and your house is kept in perpetual messiness (because you never know when you will get that uncontrollable urge to clean things). And, most importantly, appreciate the fact that you’re not alone in your desire to basically not do what you’re constantly telling yourself you’re supposed to. We all suffer from bouts of procrastination. It’s about time we embraced it.

You can buy both this mug and this poster, as well as a whole host of other illustrations from Hyperbole and a Half from Allie’s Zazzle site. I know I’m already going to order the mug; once I get my writing room back, I’ll probably get the poster, as well. So go and buy some things, support procrastinating and those who do it now!

P.S. You should also check out Allie’s blog, Hyperbole and a Half, because it’s funny as hell, in particular “How a Fish Almost Destroyed My Childhood” and any of the posts to do with Spaghatta Nadle. I would have done a Procrastination Station for the blog already, but since I’ve been doing very little other than procrastinating for a while, I figured it would be best to space it out a little bit.

P.P.S. I am very aware that the majority of my posts lately are not about writing, and even though I do joke about how this blog is built up in the majority about things that involve avoiding writing, I’m getting slightly conscious of the fact that I haven’t strung a sentence together in any work or other in a good month or so (excluding “The Genesis” synopsis, it’s closer to two, pushing on three!), and while I’m definitely not the type to be making promises I have no intentions of keeping, I do hope that this month and maybe next month, I will be able to force something a bit more productive out.

Whoooooo’s that giiiiirl, runnin arrrrrround wiv yeeeeeew!

Catrina MalinkaBong bong, who’s, bong bong, that…

Who’s That Girl sketch if you don’t know the reference.  Ah, Harry Enfield; that man painted my teen years with his antics.

So anyway, yeah, I’ve tweaked around with the site design YET AGAIN, and I have a lovely modified layout now.

As you can see, there’s a young lady crouching on the top of the page (unless of course I’ve changed the site since then, in which case here‘s what she looked like!), and also to the right.  That’s Catrina. Give her a wave.

Obviously, people will have different ideas of what Catrina looks like.  She looks different on the cover of The Genesis, for example.  That version up there is more what I personally see her to look like.  I made her using Second Life, one of my great procrastination stations. I (will) have an entire page chatting on about Second Life, which you can find here, to read in more detail about what exactly it is, and how I’ve been using it.

Hope you like her!

I should be in bed…

But I’m not. Instead, I’m playing on this awesome new game I bought called The Movies, by Lionhead Studios. Now, it’s an old game in itself (released in 2003 and updated until around 2005), and you basically…make…well, can you guess? Movies, that’s right! Clever you!

So yeah I’ve been spending a good few hours messing around with that, making as many VS characters as I could (I made 4; I didn’t even get to Attilla). And I can imagine maaaaaaaany more hours being wasted invested into this little piece of joy.

Check out the characters:

Catrina and Fox in ... a basement?

Catrina in the Subway ... waitin' for the decommissioned line?

Catrina in the Subway ... waitin' for the decommissioned line?

Fox, also at the station. Someone should tell these guys the trains don't run anymore.

Fox, also at the station. Someone should tell these guys the trains don't run anymore.

I’m sorry but are they not awesome?

Aaaaanyhoo, with that little gem, I’m off to bed.

Oh, and on the writing front (you know, that little niggling thing that I have to keep doing at some point?). Yeah, I’m a day behind now. But it was totally worth it.  Totally.