A comment by Patry to my last blog posting had to do with it’s one thing to get your butt in the chair, it’s another to stay off the Internet. Did I ever write about that? she asked.
I feel a little like Gandhi when he was asked by a concerned mother to tell her son to stop eating sugar. Gandhi said to give him two weeks. First he had to give up sugar, then he could tell her son not to eat it.
Dennis Palumbo (Writing from the Inside Out) said the Internet is death to writers and yes, uh-huh, for sure, it is. It is to me.
I seem to get work done anyway, despite the sucking action the Web has on me. I think I got more done before. Or did I just waste time differently??
I have, on occasion, used e-mail to get writing done. In Pen on Fire, I have a chapter on it. When you email, you tend to use your natural voice and so email can be a great way to find that voice. Of course once you find that voice, then what? Then you segue into a project or something you want to write, or you freewrite.
Everything in moderation, right? But it’s hard to stay moderate when your computer is online, all the time.
I like going to cafes that don’t work with my wireless because then I get work done without giving email or the Web another thought. And I swear I’m going to work that day every day–and then I don’t.
I especially like going away without my computer. But how often do I go away?
Palumbo says that writers he works with in his practice will do that, work where they don’t have internet access.
Let me say, right here and now, that I’m going to see about that, resisting the pull of the Internet. Then I can be true about how I did it.