October 18 2018

Finding Time to Write NaNoWriMo

As October draws to a close and November approaches I find myself thinking about how I will fit in the time it takes to write every day. There are several things I can do during October to lessen the demands on my time next month. While I am planning to use these to find the time to write 50,000 words in the 30 days of November for NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month), these ideas could work for anyone at any time of the year for any reason you might be looking to find more time in your schedule to do the things you need or want to do. So here is what I can do to save as much time as possible.

Stock the Pantry

This sounds so simple, but if we stock up on the basics and make sure we have what we need to make meals and snacks, this will save us from unscheduled trips to the grocery. I also highly recommend that you make sure you have enough toilet paper, paper towels, laundry detergent, paper plates or whatever it takes to keep things running smoothly without the need to do those pesky little tasks like washing dishes for the next four to six weeks. Obviously, I try to stock up when things are on sale anyway, but this might not be possible, so just this once, sale or not, I will be stocking up to get me through the month of November at the very least and preferably through the rest of the year…think hectic holidays.

Menu Planning

You might already plan your weekly meals, and if so, that is great. If you don’t, now is the time to get started on that new habit. Plan things that can be prepped now and frozen, then just thawed overnight and dumped in a crockpot in the morning before work to save time with dinner prep later. Consider adding bagged salads or salad kits to your meal plan once or twice a week. When life gets crazy-busy, this is not the time to eat junk food and cut back on fruits and veggies. These can actually be easy or no prep snack and meal options to fall back on. These are also super easy to throw in a lunch bag when heading out the door to work. Trust me, plan simple meals that take little time to cook or make extras and freeze meal-sized portions to be eaten next month. Maybe menu planning means partnering up with a friend and making a schedule where you trade off cooking and share the feast every other night or something. Get creative, but plan to nourish your body instead of punishing yourself with unhealthy alternatives.

Consider things like browning larger batches of ground beef or turkey all at once then drain and freeze it in bags of about 2 cups/1 pound so it is ready to make tacos, sloppy joes, spaghetti, Hamburger Helper or whatever you use it for. It thaws much faster when it is precooked than a block of raw meat and make dinner prep much faster because there is less cooking and cleaning time involved.

Grill a whole grill full of meat the next time you cookout and package the meat in individual serving sizes and freeze after it cools. We have pre-cooked burgers, brats, pork chops, chicken, and more. Having this food cooked and “banked” in the freezer means you can eat grilled meat with very little trouble all year long.

Clean all of your produce and bag it in snack-sized portions so it is easy to grab the healthy stuff and get back to writing. Anything you can do in larger batches and ahead of time will save you time later.

Clean the House

Yes, this means you. If your house is cleaned thoroughly this month then you can let it slide a little while you are busy next month. If possible just pick up after yourself regularly so it stays basically company-ready through November and you will be that much ahead of things for the holidays. We don’t want cleaning to be your procrastination activity of choice to avoid writing your novel. If you are overwhelmed and don’t know where to start, try FlyLady.

Practice Your Craft

Practice writing or doing something to work on your novel every day, if possible, to get a jump start on the habit for next month. Don’t hesitate to count “writing adjacent” activities toward the daily habit. My friend Alicia introduced this phrase to me and it means doing anything from outlining, reading, watching movies in a comparable genre to the novel you are writing, research, etc. as long as it has something to do with writing. It might just be five minutes a day the first week, but the next week you can increase it to ten minutes a day. If you want to be a writer, you must make time to write. Make it a priority in your life and start building small pockets of time to do something toward your writing goal with any free bit of time you find even if it is only five minutes at a time. All those little pockets of time can really add up. Keep a notebook or index cards with you to jot a quick idea or note about something that you thought of that you want to add to your novel. You can do this while standing in line, instead of pickup up your phone and scrolling through your social media feeds, instead of binging on TV or NetFlix. You know what your time stealers are…you don’t have to give them all up, but switch a few to writing adjacent activities. Thanks, Alicia for sharing writing adjacent-ing with us!

You Need A Plan

Plan what you will write. That means you need to get to know your characters, your setting and at least your major plot points ahead of time. Do whatever you can ahead of time to make sure you know what you are writing and will be ready to jump in a start writing on November 1st. If you have a well-planned project, you will be less likely to struggle with writer’s block when the pressure is on.

Those are my suggestions for organizing your time, specifically so you can write your novel with me and all the other NaNo participants in November. If you are not a writer, you can still make use of these tips (most of them anyway) to get you through those super busy times in your life without compromising your mental or physical health while you do so.

If you have any other time management tips to share, please leave them in the comments below, use the contact form or send me a message via email. I am always looking for ways to save time or make more time for the million things I really want to do but never seem to have enough time for. If I get enough tips, I will compile them into a new post to share here.

If you don’t know what NaNoWriMo is, please read more here. It is really a great way to meet other writers and get started on your story.

Category: NaNoWriMo, Organizing, Writing | Comments Off on Finding Time to Write NaNoWriMo
October 12 2018

Praise (Five Minute Friday)

Music is one of my favorite ways to Praise God. While I love singing the classic hymns in church, I have found I enjoy singing along to contemporary Christian music even more. My favorite song is 10,000 Reasons (Bless the Lord) by Matt Redman.
Here are some of the words from that song:

And on that day
When my strength is failing
The end draws near
And my time has come
Still my soul will
Sing Your praise unending
Ten thousand years
And then forevermore
Forevermore
Songwriters: Jonas Myrin / Matt Redman
10,000 Reasons (Bless the Lord) lyrics © Capitol Christian Music Group

Here is the version with the lyrics and chords:

If you are going to get a song stuck in your head today, let it be this one.

This post is part of the weekly Five Minute Friday link-up!
The prompt this week is: Praise
The assignment: Write for five minutes on the word of the week. This is meant to be a free write, which means: no editing, no over-thinking, no worrying about perfect grammar or punctuation. Just write.

October 11 2018

Dressing Recipe

Dressing Recipe

When I was growing up, there was a dish my mother made that I always loved. She called this dish dressing, but others might call is stuffing. It took a long time to make because we couldn’t make it until we had enough bread heels saved up in our deep freezer. We never ate the two heels at the ends of the loaves of bread and that was just fine with my mom. She would throw them all into the basket in the deep freezer and when the basket got full, we could make a nice big pan of dressing. You are probably wondering what made this dressing so great. Maybe it was just because mom made it and there was a lot of it when she did.

I am going to try to share the recipe with you, but there was never a set recipe. So, to start, we always got out the metal cake pan that was the typical 9” x 13” x 3” deep pan. The bread would all be taken out of the freezer and allowed to thaw. One of us kids would be given the task of tearing the bread into small bite-sized pieces and tossing them into the pan. Mom would get a medium yellow onion and dice it up and toss it in. She may have even used the dehydrated onions on occasion if fresh wasn’t an option. She always kept the dried onions on hand just in case. Once the pan got full, she would add a bunch of ground sage (this is commonly found in the larger bottles in the spice aisle of the grocery store). She also added a generous amount of ground black pepper. Then she would add the chicken broth. As I recall, she used Swanson’s chicken broth in the big cans (about 46 ounces?) and usually one big can or maybe two was enough to moisten all the bread. It got stirred around until everything was mixed well.

If it was too soupy, we added more bread. If it was too dry, we added more chicken broth or if we were out, water worked too. She would taste it to decide if the seasonings were right and add more of something if she deemed it was needed. Once it was ready, she popped the pan in the oven, uncovered and baked it for about 30 minutes. I am guessing the temperature of the oven was most likely 350°F. It is a very easy and forgiving recipe. The only thing that needs to really cook is the diced onions.

When it is finished cooking, it smells and tastes wonderfully savory. It looks rather like a casserole I suppose and could actually be made more presentable for a potluck by baking it in a casserole dish instead of the huge metal pan, which never looked presentable or new for as long as I can remember. Whatever wasn’t eaten the night it was served would be put into the refrigerator. The next day when you wanted some, you just cut a piece much like a cake and put it in a microwavable dish and reheated it. Very easy. There is not much to spoil in it so it kept until it was gone and was a very inexpensive dish to make.

This was also an example of not wasting anything. You can use any kind of bread that is leftover to make it. When bread gets stale just toss it in the freezer. I have been known to make it with fresh bread and just used whatever we had on hand or bought the cheapest white bread from the day-old bakery outlet. The bread can be cut instead of tearing it up, I’m sure mom just wanted us to feel like we were being useful. When I got married and had a household of my own, we ate a lot more wheat and oat bread instead of just plain white and I noticed the different kinds of bread gave it an even better taste. If we had been one of those households where the mom cut the crusts off the sandwiches, I’m sure the crusts would have been saved to use in the next batch of dressing. We were not that type of household, we learned to eat things like bread and pizza crust. This was likely Mom’s way of making something delicious and filling out of old stale bread, but to me it is comfort food.

Category: Money Saving, Recipes | Comments Off on Dressing Recipe
October 5 2018

Share (Five Minute Friday)

Each week, at the most amazing writing group ever, someone brings chocolate to share. It started a while back when we planned a chocolate pitch-in, but it has been kept up by someone every week. Sometimes it is something home-baked, other times it is store-bought, or prepackaged commercial, brand-name chocolate. Occasionally, it is something that doesn’t even contain chocolate, but it doesn’t matter. It is all about the sharing, really.

What do you share? Who do you share it with?

This post is part of the weekly Five Minute Friday link-up!
The prompt this week is: Share
The assignment: Write for five minutes on the word of the week. This is meant to be a free write, which means: no editing, no over-thinking, no worrying about perfect grammar or punctuation. Just write.

October 4 2018

3rd Quarter Goal Check-in

Here is the list of my 2018 Goals.

FAMILY/FRIENDS
Spring Break Cabin Trip (March 23-30) (Read More Here)
London Trip (September 21-29) (Watch for details and photos)
College Avenue Stitchers (1st Saturdays) (7/12)
FlyFests (2nd Saturdays) (9/12)
Knit & Crochet It Forward (2nd Saturdays) (9/12)
YarnSlingers (3rd Tuesdays) (8/12)

HEALTH/FITNESS
Sleep (6 hours/night) (73/92 this Qtr) 79.3% (barely better than last Qtr)
Water (6 cups/day) (76/92 this Qtr) 82.6% (worse than last Qtr)
Cardio (15/92 this Qtr) 16% (Achilles Tendon trouble since 7/1)
Strength (0/92 this Qtr) 0% (no excuses really)

HOUSE
Finish Cleaning Office (cleared table from the hall that I piled office stuff on)
Backup Floppy Disks to Iomega Drive (ALL 434 DONE! as of 4/24)
Paint Table for Porch (DONE! as of  4/29) (See proof here)
Master Bedroom (work on it) (destruction is done) (See proof here)

We have decided to Reclaim Our Home, one room or area at a time.
We turned our daughter’s old bedroom into our Reading Room.
We decluttered and cleaned the Landing, Garage and the Basement!

FINANCES
Pay Off Car Loan (DONE as of 7/17!)
Pay Off TAN (making monthly payments) (9/12)
Pay ALL Bills on Time (so far, so good) (9/12)
Save $6,000 for London Trip (scraped it up somehow)

We cut the cable and will save over $200/month!

GIVING
Donate 36 Crocheted Hats (41 done so far)
Donate $ to NaNoWriMo (November) (no progress yet this year)
Gift Wrap for DAR (December) (no progress yet this year)

I have also added crochet edging to 6 baby blankets (30″x30″) this year and taught a great group of ladies how to do this as well. All blankets will be gifted to family or charity. I made 10 soap sacks too!

FUN/HOBBIES
Get Family Tree Maker (upgrade from 2006 version) (no progress yet this year)
Update My Genealogy Websites (ALL DONE! as of 4/16, see Karen’s Kin)
Setup a Way to Sell my Crochet Online (got Etsy Store up and posted 30 listings/49 pcs total)(Sold 1 hat!)

Got a My Heritage DNA test kit for my birthday (review to come)

PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT
Read 100 Books (87/100) (see GoodReads for specifics)
Complete Modern Mrs. Darcy Reading Challenge (8/12)
Read 3 Personal Development Books (21/3)
Update Resume (DONE and currently job hunting)

BLOG
1 New Blog Post/Week (Thursdays) (40 +4 book reviews) 
Continue Five Minute Friday Posts (39)

YOUTUBE
Continue to Add Content (13 video clips posted this Qtr) 
Try to Film Bullet Journal Flip Through (I filmed it!)
Try Being On Camera with Someone for a Virtual Write-In (still thinking about it)

I did test Google Hangouts with my adult son who lives in another city
I took a free class (5/11-15) to learn how to edit videos and have posted a few to my IG feed

WRITING
Complete NaNoWriMo (November) (no progress yet this year)
Read 3 Writing Craft Books (DONE 4/3)
Take 3 Writing Classes (1/3)
Submit 3 Guest Blog Posts or Magazine Articles for Publication (DONE)
Write 3 Contest Entries (DONE) I won for the state on a DAR essay contest I entered but didn’t make it past that level.
Thursday Night Writing Group (33/52) LOVE this group!

Word counts are steady but not as much as I’d like. Pretty much just writing blog posts, resumes, and cover letters these days.

How are you doing on your goals so far this year? Is there anything we can help you with? Let us know in the comments or email me through the contact form.
Please subscribe so you won’t miss anything I post.

Category: Goals | Comments Off on 3rd Quarter Goal Check-in