Your Sacred Writing Space
Getting
 what you want in this world requires an act of will over nature. If the
 natural un-tethered state of things is to move toward chaos, then 
humanity is here to inject order. 
And 
to create order we must make decisions about what makes our lives 
better, more comfortable and more effective, if possible without causing
 too much strife and discomfort to nature, to what's already good, or to
 those around us.
It's 
all very well having a Zen-like respect for the universe, and a belief 
in karma, but we humans are designed to be creative. And as we know from
 physics, nothing is created from nothing - it is all disassembled and 
reorganized energy.
In 
this sense, all creativity is disruptive. And often the most disruptive 
thing a writer can do is to insist on having a writing space somewhere 
in their living quarters!
I 
fought for years to get my own writing space. It was hard when I had no 
writing career to speak of. Trying to convince partners that I should be
 allowed to take over an entire room to have as my own was an uphill 
struggle. Often too, when I did take over a room and decorate it to my 
satisfaction, my partner would then decide I'd made the space perfect 
for some other purpose: a guest bedroom, a child's play area or even 
once, an ideal studio apartment for paying tenants. Gah!
It 
was easy enough when I was single. Simply putting a cheap desk in my 
bedroom usually did the trick. If the bedroom wasn't big enough, the 
kitchen table had to suffice. In one shared house I converted the 
cupboard under the stairs, a space that which wasn't big enough to stand
 in and had no windows - or much air for that matter!
Stephen
 King used to write in the basement of his house, close to a hot water 
pipe that acted as a radiator in the cold months. He wrote in there 
during the evenings to, you guessed it, get away from the sound of the 
TV: the writer's perennial distraction.
Philip
 K Dick rented a tumbledown shack a couple of miles away from his 
apartment, so that he felt like he was going to work to write, rather 
than stay at home and do nothing or get distracted by his (usually 
nagging) partner.
Meeting
 Robyn, my darling wife, also a full-time writer since 1998, was a 
godsend. Not only did she already have a writing room of her own, she 
understood implicitly that writers need their own space. 
When 
we moved in together, two rooms were automatically set aside as writing 
spaces, one for each of us. These days, Robyn doesn't use hers. It 
doubles as an office for employees when we need assistance for a major 
project. Robyn writes in the front room during the day. Sometimes I do 
too. 
But 
mostly I write from here: my dream space, surrounded by thousands of 
reference books and files, all my toys, and more technology than I could
 have ever dreamed of owning!
The
 thing I don't have in the room is a phone. Hate the things. Over the 
years I've noticed the only people who disturb you during the day are 
telemarketers and bill collectors. And who needs either of them?
Ultimately,
 it's not the physical writing space that's as important as the writing 
space in your head. The room is really a trigger. You need it so that as
 soon as you walk in and sit down, your mind goes into writing mode, 
automatically.
Having
 your own desk and work-space is taken for granted in the corporate 
world. You wouldn't dream of employing someone and then not give them a 
PC, a phone, a desk, a chair and space in a cubicle. It's fundamental to
 productivity. So why would you think you don't need these things in a 
home office?
My 
advice is, wherever you live, no matter what your circumstance, you aim 
to get your own writing space and, even if it's just the corner of a 
bed, an outhouse, or a cold step somewhere, you should begin to regard 
that space as sacred.
Because it is sacred. Once you've written for any length of time in your sacred writing space, then being blocked is an impossibility.
The 
mind loves routine. The more you do something in the same environment, 
the better able your mind is able to switch to the requirements of that 
setting. It's like training an animal to always sleep in the same place.
 We're creatures of habit. Once you understand that, you'll see the 
benefit of manufacturing the writing habit through self-discipline and 
subconscious triggers like your desk, chair, computer and personal 
writing effects.
You 
need everything that motivates you within reach. Your dictionaries, 
writers’ market guides, encyclopedias, and your favorite writing 
resources should be only a step or preferably an arm's length away. 
Fill 
your space with personal trinkets that inspire you. I have a statue of 
Thoth, the Egyptian god of writing, on my desk; a bust of Beethoven; a 
banker's lamp; a rock crystal; a remote control toy helicopter and 
incense burning paraphernalia: all things that make me feel at home. I 
have pictures on the walls of past projects: book covers; play, film and
 writing-talk posters. I have a whiteboard that I fill with inspiring 
quotes by other writers or people I admire. It all helps make my 
personal writing space feel special. And I believe it works wonders for 
my creativity.   
But what you mustn't do is to fill your writing space with distractions.
Once you have something in your room that persistently takes you away from writing: remove it. Banish it.
In 
one writing space I had back in the UK I wrote on a computer that had 
games on it. I was forever flipping over the screen to complete just one
 more level. It was disastrous for my long term concentration level and 
productivity.
These
 days, I don't have any computer games preloaded onto my writing 
computers. And when I'm writing, I switch off the internet connection. 
You can't concentrate properly if emails or updates are constantly 
pinging when you should be focused on your next sentence!
Remember,
 writing is all about habit and you need only good habits in your 
writing space. The sacred is closely related to ritual. And rituals 
require strict adherence if they're going to be meaningful and helpful 
to you.
Keep Writing!
Rob Parnell's Writing Academy 

 
 
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