It's hard to explain the peculiar existence that is the freelancing life to people who don't, well, freelance. Sometimes it becomes difficult to separate my personal life from my professional one since both occur in pajamas, with 5 cups of coffee, and my ancient, chubby cat with the crazy eye on my lap. These are strange and wonderful days.
Let us imagine for a moment a day in the life of the freelance writer (okay, it’s me). Early morning finds me padding into the kitchen for a snack, squinty-eyed, in my uniform of ragtag and probably unsettling to the outside eye assortment of pajama clothes. A lot of work later, and there I am shuffling (and sometimes marching, depending on how much coffee I’ve consumed) back to the kitchen for my reward for said work—some combination of meat and cheese if I’m lucky, cold soup out of a can if I’m not.
Often, when feeling particularly dedicated to a project, I transform from writer to adventurer. I know I must eat to go on, so I dutifully forage for sustenance and then slurp my Progresso so that I can sally forth, trusty steed (okay, it’s the same fat cat with the oddball eye) beside me, to add another sentence to my city of words.
Really, all the hours of work, cans of soup, and pajamas to launder, come down to that one shining moment in the verbal zone. This zone often emerges out of the most difficult of writing tasks. You know the ones: they initially appear so confounding and insurmountable that you avoid them for as long as you can (which, when you write for a living, is not very long).
Avoidance techniques differ from person to person, but my evasion is usually of the aforementioned meat and cheese variety; but it can also involve a number of pointless activities, including, but not limited to, internet research that is really just gussied up social network prowling; searches for long-lost items that have fallen behind furniture; and the organization of the iTunes library. The one item it never seems to include, though, is cleaning—a fact immediately apparent upon entering this scribbler’s apartment.
However, on those rare occasions, the avoided chore becomes a piece of writing I can be proud of. Watching that growth process, which many people describe as something that takes place outside of them, is rather extraordinary. It may not be the same as seeing a human born, but these word babies are the closest we logophiles get to that maternal miracle. Face it folks, sentence spawning is sexy.
Yet the maternal imagery doesn’t end there. As my link to just about everything writerly, my computer has become the umbilical cord that connects me to my aspirations. Every morning, I wake up and rush to turn it on, hoping to find a missive alerting me that I have become a writing success overnight (please note, this missive has not yet arrived). One of the most thrilling aspects of the life of the cyber-scribe is the refresh button, which seems to offer an eternal promise of newness; with a single click, everything could change.
The flipside of this button’s potential ecstasies involves refreshing up a storm and seeing, with supreme glee, that I’ve received a message, only to discover that it’s a) a rejection letter, b) the last person I would ever want to hear from in my life, or, worst of all, c) a piece of writing that I’ve emailed myself. I often use the email method instead of the perpetually misplaced memory stick that contains all my important writing, proudly purchased from a guy at Radio Shack who promised it would “change my life.” It didn’t. What it did do was remain permanently lost, causing my inbox to bulge with souvenirs from writing travels past.
If my email is ever successfully pilfered, the pirates will find themselves with slices of thought fraught with inconsistencies, typos, and, my personal favorite, evidence of interest lost. There is one reason, and one reason alone, however, that I would recommend that you don’t engage in this method of cyber memory: good old auto-epistolary disorder, or the unfortunate ailment that comes from accidentally receiving letters from yourself. Let me put it this way, there is nothing more deflating than waiting for a sign of extra-writerial life, only to find that you have been contacted…by your own writing.
Ah well, what’s a gal to do? The writing has become the best of friends over the years. Indeed, the sound of a computer turning on has replaced the turning of a knob or the thump of a door in my social sonics. At certain points, living becomes writing with brief, almost surreal, interludes of “real life.” It starts to feel like my verbal creations are reality and the outside world is the mad thing I’ve invented. Yet, at the same time, I need that outer world to write about and, oh that’s right, to have some extra-writerial fun. I’m telling you, the life of the freelance writer can be so insular that next time I receive a letter from myself, I’m going to respond. You never know, there may be some rich pen pal potential there


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Comments
Nice snippet from your life, enjoyed.
My life is very much like this. Except for the writing, the cat, the soup, the emails... okay, my life is nothing like this.
Oh well, hope it keeps getting better.
R
PS -- I hope you're backing up to an external hard drive and perhaps to an online document storage site! You don't want that umbilical chord cut very dramatically!
I love this: "One of the most thrilling aspects of the life of the cyber-scribe is the refresh button, which seems to offer an eternal promise of newness; with a single click, everything could change."
The internet serves up all the emotions of RL. Do we get trapped in the quicksand? It's a skill to balance your inner and outer existences. The strange, challenging thing about living on the internet is that it's like real life, and it isn't. You can make friends, make money, learn skills, make art, fall in love. The internet is pig heaven for writers, it's like moving some place and realizing this is where you were meant to live. Is there a part of RL that we really need and we're not getting by being online all the time, and could we even tell? Have we gone feral? Because online life seems real.
That sounds like a very sad day.
Works for me, and you have the benefit of working at home.
I haven't had coffee in years.
Or alcohol or drugs for that matter.
Joan: I'm so glad.
designanator: I'm proud to have the same Macbook as you, you talented devil. And I love that window idea.
snarkychaser: yes, I've been holding off on the whiny children for just such a reason. There's plenty of time to have my writing interrupted in the future:)
Rita: I kind of like my cold soup, hee hee.
Blue in TX: I never said I made a good living, though:)
Matt: what a wonderful thing to say. thank you!
Lea: happy to hear I'm not alone on this one
Dear Reader: glad to hear it. yes, coffee is a miracle
Linda: I might have no choice but to become my own pen pal if things continue in this direction:)
OEsheepdog: oh, you
Cranky: I've had many a morning where I need virtual Viagra.
Kimberly: oh the pesky outside world, who needs it:)
Madam Roth: yeah, I love coffee shops for just that reason--sometimes you just need to get yourself and the work out of the house.
femme forte: an A++ from you goes a long way. Thank you.
The Good Daughter: there is definitely always something fairly useless to do:(
Densie: such a challenge!
Grace: Thanks so much. Eating soup out of a can is definitely fun.
RARoberts: nothing to feel bad about at all. take pride in your pjs!
Luminous Muse: I just read your last post and there's definitely hope!
sophieh: thanks so much!
Yawp: I'm glad you think my word baby has something to say:)
D Art: Thanks for the recommendation!
susan: thanks for rating and sharing
littlewillie: exactly. now why didn't I think of that?
Gabby Abby: it's actually a photograph of a friend
Bellwether: I can be a harsh taskmaster. I have finally started using my memory stick…after fishing it out from behind the sofa.
mhold: why, thank you.
Sirenita: I know exactly what you mean about the strange land that is the internet. Your thoughts are so great here, maybe you should turn them into a post.
Trig: thanks for dropping by, cuz.
fetboy: you're absolutely right that a bit of a release would have helped matters
trilogy; thanks so much. And when I speak to myself, I make sure to address me as "self."
And I'm with rita on that cold soup part. Unless you've found a nice gazpacho or vichyssoise?
As for your not receiving notice of being a "writing success," well, you're wrong there. Each comment you get should tell you that you already are. Now, if what you're waiting for is notification of riches, well . . . . Wrong line of work.
I think you have a mahhvelous pen pal
Pilgrim: I like your take on the whole thing. thanks!
fingerlakeswanderer: yes being in the zone is just about the only thing that can make me forget to eat
Scarlett: I'll let you know when I find it, too. I'm glad you think my pen pal is mahvelous:)
Caracalla: yes, working in the nude can create all sorts of fun
Chiller: wow, just looked up the letter. I loved this line: "I've successfully overcome two depressive episodes in the past and I know a lot about positive psychology, but trying to become a student of it right now feels like spreading a veneer of platitudes over a "True Blood"-esque maenad-induced darkness that seems to keep cropping up in my life and getting the better of me" and I loved Cary's response. I think I may still be wandering.
lol. it is.
Great post, can relate on many levels, especially the marching...it's copious amounts of tea over here though...
My routine is to delicious the nugget, notepad doc my notes, dropbox the notes, add the rss feed to my reader, then pray I dont lose it all. If need be I email it too. Then I fix another cup of coffee, and check my notes to see what I am SUPPOSED to be doing.
From a male perspective, it's not so much giving birth as it is having the muse who got away say I love you...
Once again you rock. Do you think shorter comments can allow me to get more work done?
Great write and read. Thanks....
Tichoana: oh boy, a young kid is a lot more responsibility than an ancient cat.
Jack: thanks for talking about your process as well so that I don't feel like the only nutcase in pajamas (boxers) ranting about my life