SpeedTchr
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2010
- Messages
- 5,350
I used to do that, but after a while the typewriter in my lap became a tad uncomfortable.
Better than missing the tablet and taking a chisel to the balls.
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I used to do that, but after a while the typewriter in my lap became a tad uncomfortable.
How much does it cost per day? Trying to figure out if it's worth it just for the beer.I've installed/serviced espresso machines in a few Level and WeWork co-working spaces. Really nice, hip offices, with lots of amenities, including free espresso, cold brew and beer on tap etc.
Folks claim the setting gives them a sense of camaraderie and helps to keep them accountable.
Also nice to be surrounded by other creative, entrepreneurial types.
Working from home, with its distractions, can be hard. I can definitely see the appeal to these places.
Cranked out my 1,000-word quota, ate a delicious breakfast sandwich for lunch, and drank a boatload of coffee. Feel good! A little jittery but good!
Are you giving fiction a go?
If so, remember: If you are going to pay off a trait at the end, you have to establish that trait earlier. Goes for villains as well as protagonists.
Thanks for the tip.
The closest I will ever get to writing fiction is my monthly exercise schedule.
Gotcha. Writing 1,000 words in a coffee house seemed like a very burgeoning novelist thing to do.
I have a non-fiction book due on Dec. 1. I'm trying to treat writing it like a job. I have to write 500 words a day Monday to Thursday. (Friday is for editing and outlining.) That's 8,000 or so words a month. Something like 90,000 words, the publisher's target, in 11 months. Had to write 1,000 words today because I missed a day on Monday. I know the writer's life is supposed to be devoid of routine, but I have other projects going on, so I have to be disciplined about this. The coffee shop has helped me feel like I'm going to work.
Thinking about the whole book is hard. Writing 500 words a day, four days a week, is easy.
Really? I thought it was the opposite. You know, like Hemingway -- minus the alcoholism.
I like not waking up to an alarm, and I like setting my own schedule. I like not knowing what any given day holds.