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Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Thursday, September 4, 2014

How Bad Do You Want It?

It’s been about a month since my last post. Sorry about that, it’s been a busy past month. School’s started up again. So most of August since my last post was dedicated trying to finish summer homework and get my last few freedoms of summer in. It was the last summer I’ll ever have as a high school student, so I didn’t want to waste it.

Personally I don’t feel like it was wasted. I might not have accomplished as much as I was hoping to, for example I really would have liked to have finished my book revision. However, I did make some desperately needed changes and make it 2/3 through the book. I finished writing a major, soul destroying, three years in the making, total of 319,994 word fan fiction. My little sister and I developed a method of co-writing together. Margaret and I established the bare bones of a story we’d like to co-write together and maybe post here (Bare bones as in we have the basic development of two main characters and the world conception – more news will come when we ourselves know what’s going on. So it’s actually more like we have the bones, but no skeleton yet. Considering we were lucky to have a real conversation every two weeks this summer, I hope you can understand).

But school’s back, and along with it a regular schedule. I am taking a lot of hard classes this year, but I’m also a lot more determined to really focus on literary aspirations this year. If I am indeed going to have two books before twenty (TITLE DROP), I really need to get a move on, especially considering I turn 17 this month.

It also helps that this year in my AP English class we are required to submit a piece of writing every single Monday, though it doesn’t really matter what the writing is. And you can get a virtually unlimited amount of extra credit by submitting multiple pieces (as long as you complete all the other required assignments). So now, not only am I writing just because I’m a writer and that’s what I love to do, but now I can get school credit for it! Is that awesome or what?

You’re jealous, I know you are.

But enough catch up.

As I mentioned earlier in the post, I did not manage to finish my book revision by the end of summer. My new goal is that I want to have it ready to send out by my birthday. It’d definitely doable, but it might be hard, especially considering I’d like to keep my grades up and I also decided in my infinite wisdom that senior year would be a great time to all of a sudden get involved in a bunch of clubs and take all the hardest classes. Also, because I finished that giant story that I mentioned earlier, now my brain is free to go and come up with all of these other lovely, tempting story ideas that I want to write.

Last night I found myself done with my homework at 8:30, a rare occurrence – but I’m really trying to be better at getting homework done early this year for exactly the same reason that led me to working on my book instead of the most recent story that has captured my attending.

The most recent little temptress taking occupancy in my brain has been a short little fan fiction that would take a lot of explaining that wouldn't be relevant to this post. I’ve been writing it in between classes and sometimes in class when we’re done with whatever’s going on.

Last night I found myself with a few extra hours to work on my Monday Musing (the name of the assignment for English I mentioned), or in other words, time to write.

When I pulled up Microsoft Word, though, I had to make a decision about what to actually write. I could be productive and actually work on the story instead of letting it die a few scraps of paper in a notebook, or I could be even more productive and work on my book. Just as I was about to pull out the notebook I had been writing the story in, though, this thought occurred to me.

How bad do I really want this book?

I had two ways I was willing to spend my time, working on my book or working on a fan fiction. I wanted to work on the fan fiction. I wanted to write it instead of working on this blog post.

But I asked myself how bad I wanted my book. Did I want it more than I wanted to write that story?

The answer was yes, I did.

Just because I needed extra inspiration, I looked up a Youtube video. Eric Thomas’s “How Bad Do You Want It” speech set to “Time” from Inception and sports videos. The sports were kind of lost on me. Never been good at sports, and no real desire to be good at sports. But the message of the speech itself is really applicable to just about everything.

This is the first part of the speech:

“There was a young man who wanted to make a lot of money, and so he went to a guru. He told the guru he wanted to reach his level of greatness. And so the guru said: “If you want to be on the same level I’m on, I’ll meet you tomorrow at the beach.”

So the young man arrived at 4:00 a.m. He had on a suit, but he should have worn shorts. The old man grabbed his hand and said: “How bad do you want to be successful?” The young responded: “Badly.”

So the old man told the young man to walk out into the water. It was waist deep. The young man thought: “This old man is crazy.”

The young man said to himself: “I want to make money and this guy has me out here swimming. I didn’t ask to be a lifeguard. I want to make money.

Then the old man said: “Come out a little farther,” and the young man did so.

As the young man was up to his shoulders in water he again thought: “This old man is crazy! He’s making money, but he’s crazy.”

The old man said, “Come out a little farther.”

The young man obeyed, but wavered as if he might turn back.

So the old man said: “I thought you said you wanted to be successful?”

“I do,” said the student.

So the old man ordered the young man to come out even farther, and when he did he pushed the young man’s head under water and held it down. Although the young man fought, the old man would not let him up. Just before the young man passed out the old man raised his head above the surface and said: “When you want to succeed as bad as you want to breathe, then you’ll be successful.”

I don’t know how many of you have asthma today, but if you ever had an asthma attack before and you’re S.O.B. — you’ve got shortness of breath — and you’re wheezing, the only thing you’re trying to do is get some air. You don’t care about no basketball game. You don’t care what’s on TV.  You don’t care about nobody calling you. You don’t care about a party. The only thing you care about when you’re trying to breathe is to get some fresh air. That’s it. And when you get to the point where all you want to do is be successful as bad as you want to breathe, then you’ll be successful.

I am here to tell you Number #1, most of you say you want to be successful, but you don’t want it bad. You just kind of want it. You don’t want it badder than you want to party. You don’t want it as much as you want to be cool. Most of you don’t want success as much as you want to sleep. Some of you want sleep more than you want success. And I’m here to tell you today that if you want to be successful you got to be willing to give up sleep.

You have to be willing to work off of three hours of sleep, two hours of sleep. If you really want to be successful, some day you’re going to have to stay up three days in a row because if you go to sleep you might miss the opportunity to be successful. That’s how bad you got to want it.””

I am not telling you in anyways to ignore everything else in your life in order to write. No. I want to breathe a lot more than I want good grades in my classes, and I’m working on that as well as my book, but the point is that if we really want this, we can’t just bandy about.  We can’t just “kind of want it.”

We have to actually want it.

I’ve talked before on this blog that it’s hard. It is. I don’t even know a lot of things about what I’m doing. I’m just muddling through all of this myself. I do know that it’s hard though.

More than that, though, I do know that if I don’t want it bad, if I don’t really want it, if I don’t want it more than I want to write some other story or surf Facebook then it’s not going to happen.

If you don’t want it bad enough, you won’t work hard enough to get it.


It does NOT have the full speech. But it does have epic music. 

Friday, February 28, 2014

You're Procrastinating


This. This is the story of MY LIFE.

And yet, literally as soon as I wrote that sentence I went and started procrastinating again.

I realized that today was Friday and I needed to write a blog post when I logged onto my computer. But then I thought, it is Friday and it’s raining and I’m in a good mood, so I’m going to read some stories that I have saved on my computer. Then I started reading more. Then I started watching Youtube videos. Then I ran across this one.

You’d think a video that literally accuses you of procrastinating while you’re watching it would make me stop, but no I kept watching more.

Talk about helpless.

Procrastination is a problem that I think almost everyone faces. There are very few people who are immune to it. There are some people who are better at not procrastinating than others. While I do procrastinate a lot, I also always seem to be able to know when I really do need to sit down and start working. The problem comes when a project is bigger/takes up more time than you were anticipating.

I feel like the problem when us, young writers in particular, is that we have so much access to it when we’re trying to work. I’m assuming that most of us do our writing on the computer on some sort of word processor. If you write on paper, good for you, J.K. Rowling wrote most of Harry Potter on paper before typing it up. You’re also incredibly lucky that you don’t have all of the distractions that are readily available when you write on the computer.

I in particular have a lot of reasons to write on the computer. A lot of the times I do so so that I can talk to Margaret about problems that I’m having as I’m writing or get her opinion on things. I also don’t buy a lot of music so a lot of the music I listen to I do so on Youtube.

And while I’m not saying that adults don’t procrastinate with them too, I find that our generation is particularly affected by distractions such as Facebook, Instagram, Snap Chat, tumblr, fanfiction, Youtube, Twitter, Pintrest etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. There is no end of website and aps that you can waste your time on. There’s a guy in my English class who spend almost 2 days straight mastering the Flappy Bird game (and his high score is over 215 last time I heard of. Ladies and gentlemen, it doesn’t get much more procrastinating than that.)

As I said before, I am no exception. I procrastinate a ton. So does Margaret. Just a few days ago we both sat down and determined that we were going to do something productive. This was us on Valentine’s Day when I was working on the Romance post and she was working on a short story.

[2/14/2014 3:48:57 PM] Margaret: How goes it?
[2/14/2014 3:49:07 PM] Amanda : ... uh... got distracted?
[2/14/2014 3:49:18 PM] Amanda : Bad Manda
[2/14/2014 3:49:26 PM] Amanda : How goes yours?
[2/14/2014 3:49:51 PM] Margaret: ...
[2/14/2014 3:49:54 PM] Margaret: um.
[2/14/2014 3:49:56 PM] Margaret: hmmmmm.
[2/14/2014 3:50:05 PM] Margaret: We really need to be able to shut the internet off with skype still on
[2/14/2014 3:50:08 PM] Amanda : Distracted as well?
[2/14/2014 3:50:19 PM] Amanda : Yyyeeaaaaaahhhhh

(I got distracted well over three times trying to find this tiny bit of conversation)

It’s tough not procrastinating. And I think we all KNOW that we shouldn’t procrastinate. We all know that everything would be a lot better if we don’t procrastinate. We’ll accomplish a lot more, the fun browsing and mindless activities will be more fun because we won’t have the stress looming in the back of our minds… but that never actually seems to stop us does it?

And then there are the things that you can’t really procrastinate on. It’s all fine and well to avoid doing your homework until 9:00 pm the day before it’s due, but for a lot of things you have to be ready all the time so that you can be prepared at any moment. You don’t want to get a response or a call or email or whatever from an agent/editor asking for a look at your manuscript… except it’s not ready for them to look at it. Burn and crash go your dreams.

Okay so that’s a tad dramatic.

But still.

Procrastinating is something we can’t really afford to do. Especially if we really do want to have two books before twenty *titledrop*. I have less than 4 years left. You never know how long it’ll take to get published. Perhaps this post is more an encouragement to myself than really talking to you guys.

And to finish this up I’m going to give you the one quote that always seems to be able to get me to actually do something.

It was said by the Terminator himself, Arnold Schwarzenegger in a commencement speech to some USC (University of Southern California) students. You can find the whole speech here

But here’s the quote: 

“But when you're out there partying, horsing around, someone out there at the same time is working hard.Someone is getting smarter and someone is winning.”
So, while you’re off procrastinating, someone else is working hard and getting an agent/editor.

If that’s not motivation I don’t know what is.