Showing posts with label jan drexler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jan drexler. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Procrastination vs. Discipline by Jan Drexler


Writing is hard.

No. Wait. Let me start over.

Disciplining myself to write is hard.

I love to write. I love to revise and edit. I love the feeling when God gives me the exact word I need to make a sentence sing.

BUT… Some days I’ll do just about anything else other than write. Do you have that same problem?

Some days the discipline of writing escapes me. It’s a battle. I stare at the computer screen. I answer emails. I scroll through Facebook. I answer more emails.

I procrastinate.

Procrastination is the antithesis of Discipline. Procrastination tells me I have plenty of time. Procrastination convinces me that cleaning the bathroom is much more important than putting words down on paper.

Procrastination tells me that today isn’t important.
 

But we have a way to win this battle!

Discipline is the armor of a writer. Discipline has its own set of weapons, and when I open that box, Procrastination flees!

What are the weapons of Discipline?

1) Routine. Make a schedule and keep it. When I plan a time to write, I’m more likely to stick to that plan. If my schedule says that my writing time is from 8:30 until noon every morning, then I know I’ll stick my bottom in my chair and put my hands on the keyboard.


2) Know your strengths and use them. I know there are two times in the day when I am most successful at writing, when my brain is most creative, so that’s when I schedule my writing time.

I also know I write more easily when I’ve done my homework: research, character development, and plotting. So, I make sure I have those things checked off the list when I sit down to write.

3) Treat your writing as a job. I learned this trick when I was a homeschooling mom. When a person works outside the home, their time is naturally divided into “work” and “non-work” hours. For those of us who work at home – whether it’s our primary occupation or not – we need to set aside our work time as sacred. Tell your friends not to call or stop by during those times. Don’t answer the phone. Turn off your social media notifications. Minimize interruptions where you can.

4) And that leads me to my final weapon: Be flexible. Life happens. The dog gets sick. Your child has a volleyball game. Your mom comes to visit for a week. If you can’t adjust for planned and unplanned life events, then Discipline will suffer. One unplanned dishwasher leak can throw off my schedule for days. So, when the interruption happens, take the needed time off without guilt – but then get back into your routine as soon as possible!

Do you find it hard to discipline yourself to write? What methods (or weapons!) have you found to be most effective?


~~~~~~


Jan Drexler’s ancestors were among the first Amish immigrants in the 1700s, and their experiences are the inspiration for her stories. Jan lives in the Black Hills of South Dakota with her husband and growing extended family. She writes historical Amish fiction and is published by Revell and Love Inspired.

Website: www.JanDrexler.com
Seekerville!: www.seekerville.blogspot.com
Fun blog: yankeebellecafe.blogspot.com
Twitter: @JanDrexler
Facebook: Jan Drexler, Author


The Sound of Distant Thunder
Katie Stuckey and Jonas Weaver are both romantics. Seventeen-year-old Katie is starry-eyed, in love with the idea of being in love, and does not want to wait to marry Jonas until she is eighteen, despite her parents' insistence. So much can happen in a year. Twenty-year-old Jonas is taken in by the romance of soldiering, especially in defense of anti-slavery, even though he knows war is at odds with the teachings of the church. When his married brother's name comes up in the draft list, he volunteers to take his brother's place. But can the commitment Katie and Jonas have made to each other survive the separation?

From the talented pen of Jan Drexler comes this brand new Amish series set against the backdrop of the Civil War. She puts her characters to the test as they struggle to reconcile their convictions and desires while the national conflict threatens to undermine and engulf their community.

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Digging Deep to Uncover Your Story’s Conflicts by Jan Drexler


Jan Drexler

We’ve all been there. You’re two chapters into your next book, and the words are flowing. You love your hero and heroine and their first meeting sent sparks flying. Your secondary characters are a great supporting cast, and the story is off to a wonderful start.

Then, like a balloon losing air, your story starts sinking. You haven’t hit that proverbial writer’s block, but you can see it up ahead. You frown at the computer screen. You make another cup of tea.  You wander around the house, talking to the cat. You have no idea how to write the next chapter.

What happened?

When I reach this point it’s usually because my conflicts aren’t strong enough.

Oh, the external conflict is fine. That pending avalanche, or the cattle rustlers, or the banker’s threat to foreclose on the mortgage…there’s no problem there.

No, it’s the internal conflict. That part of your hero’s soul that is buried so deep that you haven’t taken the time or energy to ferret it out yet. And you don’t want to. It’s hard work to get to the root cause of why your hero is such a jerk – 

Wait! Did I just say my hero is a jerk? Hmm. I guess he is. That’s why sparks flew when he met my heroine. But it isn’t enough to say he has a long way to go before he meets the heroine’s expectations. You, as the author, need to dig deep. 

It’s time to start asking questions.

Why did meeting the heroine make the hero act like a jerk? Maybe she’s a strong woman who wouldn’t back down.

Why does a strong woman threaten him? Maybe he has this idea of the perfect woman, and she doesn’t come close.

Why isn’t his “perfect woman” strong? Maybe because his mother was gentle and caring…

Ah! We’re getting close. Maybe the hero’s mother died when he was a small boy, and his memories of her have been distorted and idealized. He doesn’t remember how strong she was when the wagon train got hit by a flash flood and his father was carried away and she was left alone, caring for our hero and his four siblings…. He only remembers being held close by his loving, gentle mother.

And his conflict with the strong heroine can only be resolved when he discovers two things: that his mother was a fighter, and that the heroine can be gentle, caring, AND strong.

Digging deep into our characters’ pasts help us understand the backstories that dictate their goals, their motivations, and their conflicts. Digging deep helps us create a strong inner conflict that keeps our characters fighting against all of our efforts to give them a happy ending…until they finally accept the change God is trying to work in their lives and they’re able to resolve the turmoil in their souls. 


Are you ready to get to work?

About the Author

Mattie's Pledge
by Jan Drexler
Jan Drexler brings a unique understanding of Amish traditions and beliefs to her writing. Her ancestors were among the first Amish, Mennonite, and Brethren immigrants to Pennsylvania in the 1700s, and their experiences are the inspiration for her stories. Jan lives in the Black Hills of South Dakota with her husband of more than thirty years, where she enjoys hiking in the Hills and spending time with their four adult children and new son-in-law.

Find her here:
And on Mondays at the Yankee-Belle Café: http://yankeebellecafe.blogspot.com

Mattie's Pledge
Mattie Schrock is no stranger to uprooting her life. Even as her father relocated her family from one Amish community to the next, she always managed to find a footing in their new homes. Now as the Schrock family plans to move west from Somerset County to a fledgling Amish settlement in Indiana, she looks forward to connecting with old friends who will be joining them from another Pennsylvania community—friends like Jacob Yoder, who has always held a special place in her heart. But when a handsome Englisher tempts her to leave the Amish behind to search for adventure in the West, will her pledge to Jacob be the anchor that holds her secure?