Staring at the blank page…
Starting to write is like starting to run. Your brain starts playing tricks on you from step one.
“I’m too tired to run”.
“It’s too hot today — it’s dangerous to run outside”.
“My feet hurt, my head hurts, my throat hurts — let’s not go out today”.
“10k? That’s too much. Let’s run less. You can’t possibly do it”.
Sound familiar?
I sat down to write yesterday, and it was difficult, very difficult to start. My mind started wandering, suggesting that I read my twitter feed, or the NYT, or do anything, just anything but write. It’s like that almost every time I sit down and write, and the only way I found to overcome it is to map out reasonable daily goals and force myself to start anyway. Usually when I start writing I can push myself well enough to the finish, sometimes even a bit farther. The same thing happens when I run — the first 2-3k are a pain, but then I get into the rhythm, and start enjoying myself.
There’s never been a run that I’ve regretted.
There’s never been a writing session that I’ve regretted.
I just need to remember that when the tiny little coward in my brain decided to protest.
Every. Single. Time.
Tabletop Day
Tabletop Day was a huge hit today – we were 9 people gathered in my brother’s apartment, and we played:
- Sushi Go (twice)
- Tsuro
- 7 Wonders
- Resistance (twice with the regular rules and once with the expansion, which made it much better).
- Hanabi
- Sheriff of Nottingham
Not bad for 8 hours, including a lunch break 🙂
I hope that you had a great Tabletop Day. Play more games!
The notebook you use
The best notebook is the one that you use.
If Moleskine makes the notebooks you want to use, then they are the best. After years of collecting dust, I find myself gravitating back to them more. Maybe it’s because their paper isn’t perfect, and I don’t feel guilty if I just use a simple gel ink pen or a pencil on them, and maybe it’s something about their format that is just right for me right now.
If Leuchtturm, Rhodia, Baron Fig, Midori, Field Notes is what makes you pull out a pen or pencil and fill up those pages, then these are the notebooks for you.
There is no perfect notebook — we live in an imperfect world. Your baseline should be a simple composition notebook, and not a leather-bound, gilt-edged masterpiece that you are too afraid to use.
Just a friendly reminder that a notebook is not worth much if it has empty pages and you have a full mind.
This week’s recommendations
Podcast: Do by Friday. A weekly challenge show by Merlin Mann, Alex Cox, and Max Temkin. It’s funny, it’s insightful, it’s well worth your time.
Book: A Month in the Country, by J L Carr. This is a 104 page lyrical masterpiece about a WWI veteran hired to restore a medieval mural in a Yorkshire church. A real gem- one of those books that you judge other people by.
Tea: Feng Qing Premium Black Gold Pearls – a “chocolate and malt” Yunnan black tea rolled into large marbles. Sweet, mellow, smooth and a feast for the eyes. Almost too good to share.
And also: if your New Year’s Resolutions aren’t SMART, you are wasting your time, attention, and effort.
Bluetooth Headphones
Buying
I couldn’t sleep last night for no good reason other than the noise from the neighbouring synagogue and my terrible late night iPhone Twitter habits. The iPhone addiction is on me, but what can you do about French tourists being obnoxiously loud obnoxiously late when they stand outside a synagogue long after closing time, far past midnight? I considered throwing a bucket of water or hefting a shoe at them, but I couldn’t be bothered to get out of bed. Meanwhile, they outshouted the closed windows and air conditioning. Only American tourists get any louder.
I saw an episode of Brooklyn Nine-Nine tonight that hit close to home regarding to my spending habits. Unlike Jake Peralta I am saving money, and I have never even considered buying one massage chair, let alone six, but I can get carried away sometimes buying junk that I don’t need and will never use. There is a collector’s bug that runs in the family that doesn’t help, and FOMO is a real thing when it comes to limited editions of things that I like (mostly pens and stationery), but mostly I just need to learn that buying stuff online is not a good coping mechanism for a bad day at work or a sleepless night. Money spent on experiences, like races and trips and escape rooms with friends, is better spent, period. And maybe more than me needing to learn to just enjoy using what I have, I need to accept that whether it’s headphones or pens or mechanical keyboards, there is no true perfection out there — there is only what there is.
NaNoWriMo
NaNoWriMo, or National Novel Writing Month, begins in November, which means my twitter feed is starting to get choked with related writing-tool-and-advice links. From style guides to plot models that show you exactly how you can write the next Harry Potter book, it seems that you need to become the next Harper Lee is a word counting app or calendar printout, a laptop, and a coffee shop. Take a little step back from all the genuine enthusiasm for writing, and you will see a horde of retailers taking advantage of the event to sell you just the right pen, notebook or laptop bag that will make you a successful author.
So before you click on that can’t be missed writing tips link or head for checkout, a few things you might want to think about:
Tools do count. I know the joy of notebooks nice enough to make you want to use them, but not too nice to make you afraid to use. But remember that tools are only there to facilitate writing — there is no pen or writing app that will do the actual writing for you. Buying stuff will always be easier and more fun than sitting your ass at a table and getting the actual writing done. Writing is and always will be challenging, to everyone.
NaNoWriMo is probably setting you up to fail. 50,000 words in 30 days is more than even professional writers can deal with, and they do it full time and with years of experience. Writing 1,667 words a day, every single days is a herculean task, a feat of writing bravado that will probably result in something far, far, far from publishable, even if complete in time, and yes, even as a draft. Writing requires time stewing with yourself, your plot and your characters. There are no shortcuts, and steaming through the process is a bit like trying to see Rome, Paris and London in 3 days. It may be possible, but you are so busy rushing that you miss a lot.
Word count is just a metric for writing progress — sometimes it goes up, sometimes it goes down. Putting an emphasis on it rather than on your plot, setting or characters is like planning your family vacation for the sole purpose of maxing out your flight miles.
So here is my bit of NaNoWriMo advice: use the enthusiasm and sense of community around NaNoWriMo to get writing, but take a step back from the mayhem for the sake of your story and your peace of mind.
Winter Clock
Today we switch over to winter clock. Days are already getting darker sooner, and even in sweltering Tel-Aviv the coolness of autumn is creeping in.
At work the clock change is a big deal, with thousands of servers having to switch timezones automatically, not all of them doing so smoothly or successfully. While everyone at home will be having an extra hour of sleep, dozens of my colleagues will be hunched over keyboards, working into the small hours of the night, coaxing stubborn stragglers to rejoin the fold.
A few servers tried to jump the gun two weeks ago, moving to the winter clock way too early and without telling anyone. As it was in the middle of a holiday weekend, it could not have happened at less convenient time. The guy that accidentally made the change that started that whole chain of events is probably going to have bad karma for at least a month after that.







