Spring is definitely in the air (unless you live in the southern hemisphere or in a part of the world where it snowed this past weekend…but most of us have seen signs of spring). While fall will always be my favorite season, spring is another season that makes writing seem a little more magical to […]
Archives for 2011
Writing Day and Night
I’ve finished most of my big writing projects late at night or early in the morning after an all-nighter. Despite all that, I’m a morning person. I finished the best thing I’ve ever written last summer in the late afternoon/early evening when I was able to focus on writing full time. Night and Day Most […]
Millions or Enough?
On Monday, Kristin Bair O’Keeffe asked readers of Writerhead what they’d go the whole wide world over for. She asked readers what they wanted in life–with their writing and just as a human sharing space on the planet with billions of other humans. I answered. As a writer, I want enough. By that, I mean […]
Monday Motivation: Fear and Excitement
I like speaking before groups of people even though it terrifies me. I’ve written about my first experience as a street performing juggler before (and the fears I overcame to finally go before hundreds of people and do my thing). When I train people at work, it’s never bothered me; it’s just when I become […]
Where is the Big Literary E-Book Self Publisher?
Maybe I just haven’t seen it, but where is the big literary e-book success story? Okay, so maybe you’re thinking, “One doesn’t write literary fiction because it pays in piles of cash.” All right–I’ll give you that. Where, then, is the e-book self publishing equivalent of Jodi Picoult, Kathryn Stockett, Abraham Verghese, or Sara Gruen? […]
12 Tips to Prepare for a Writing Weekend
If you’re like most people juggling work and writing, you spend a good part of your day at the job that pays the bills wishing you were home writing. When it comes time to take vacation, you probably use the time to write–not actually take a vacation. It doesn’t have to be that way if […]
Monday Motivation: How to Stick to a Decision
I started a new job a month ago. I figured I’d like the job because I know somebody who’s been there for over 6 months and they like it (we have similar taste in what constitutes a good job). For me, it’s a gut feeling–you just know if a job is good or bad on […]
The Benefits of Sequential Content (Video)
I finally got around to breaking up the video of the presentation I gave last week about using WordPress to manage online sequential content. Thanks to the Art Institute in Dallas and the Dallas/Fort Worth WordPress Meetup group–I had a great time! For those who have been asking, here are the videos:
Self Publishing Ebooks
In the mid 90s, there was a big self publishing trend…with comic books. In the early 90s, I wrote comics for independent publishers who, just because they self published, found a certain degree of success. The companies I worked with, no matter what level of promotion, always seemed to break even…or make a profit. When […]
Dyslexic Writers Unite!
Yes, I had to triple check the headline to be sure I didn’t pull the old “untie” gag. Paul Lamb recently shared this post about being a dyslexic writer. I’ve corresponded with CMStewart about her problems with numbers. I’ve met many dyslexic writers, and even more dyslexic creative people doing cool things. “You Can Fix […]
Monday Motivation – Moving Forward (With Writing)
Three weeks ago — after being laid off twice in less than a year and a run at freelance technical writing and editing — I’ve returned to a day job. (Writing procedures for a large finance company.) Looking back on the past year and then some, I’m proud of what I accomplished as a writer. […]
The Benefits of Sequential Content (Preview)
This Saturday, March 26, I’m giving a presentation at the Art Institute in Dallas about how you can use sequential content to keep people coming back to all you’re doing online (and how to use WordPress to manage your sequential content). If you aren’t already a member of the Dallas/Fort Worth WordPress Meetup group, go […]
The Benefits of Sequential Content
I’ve always been obsessed with the structure of things. When I was younger and shoved into learning disability classes for dyslexia, something clicked: I saw the importance of being able to string words together. By becoming fixated on syntax — from the way letters went together to form words to how words went together to […]
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