what makes my desk look pretty today

Thank you, Retired Mountain Man.

These gorgeous flowers make me want to go out and buy fabric in all shades of pink and white and rose and then make a quilt with stitching in the shapes of flower petals just like these.

It’s a good thing I live twenty miles away from a store that might sell something like this.

Let’s talk about deadlines, now that I’m thinking about flowers and fabric and quilting.  Being a writer is a very weird profession.  Unless you are totally and completely in control of every hour of your life, if you are a writer you are going to experience–at least once–the nauseating, stressful, guilty, exhausting feeling of missing a deadline.

I try to be in control.  I set my alarm for five a.m.  I set weekly, daily and even hourly goals.  But you know I folded myself into a seaplane and flew over mountains to eat huckleberry pancakes last week.

I didn’t say, “Oh, thanks for inviting me to soar over Chimney Rock and land on a pristine, isolated lake, but I have to stay home and write.”

Nope, I didn’t say that.  Who in their right mind would?

So today I have spent six hours trying to figure out a particularly nasty little knot of conflict and motivation and character background.  I cannot move forward until it’s clear in my head.  I have filled many sheets of paper and I have kept the Keurig spitting out coffee since five-thirty.  I’ll spend another six or eight hours in order to write the number of pages I need to write today, in order to meet my new deadline, October 1st.

And I will admire my flowers.

Dahlias from Cougar Creek.

(to see some spectacular flower photos, go to Retired Mountain Lady)

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5 Responses to what makes my desk look pretty today

  1. nancy k's avatar nancy k says:

    Beautiful flowers. You can do it mom! 🙂

  2. Sharon's avatar Sharon says:

    That seaplane ride and huckleberry pancakes were research. They’ll show up in a future novel….or this one!
    Thank, God for movable deadlines. 🙂

  3. Connie's avatar Connie says:

    I know you can do it. Yes, indeed, as Sharon says, all life experiences are research. Enjoy.

  4. I guess that means I need to say here and research Idaho snow. 🙂

  5. Joules's avatar Joules says:

    Perhaps your characters need a good ol’ New Years Eve around the piano, and a spiked cocoa around the bonfire at the top of the Burkhart sled run? You really need to experience it to write, right?

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