When Parenting and Writing Collide
When Parenting and Writing Collide by Magdalena
Ball
“Mommy…mommy!”
“Darling, please be quiet, mommy’s trying to compose a
sentence.”
Yeah, right. Try waving a red flag to a bull and asking it not to
charge. Combining parenting with writing is probably no more
difficult than combining parenting with any job, except that
writing doesn’t usually come with a flash/separate office and
childcare initiatives, and can often be put aside when something
urgent calls. As a parent, something urgent is always calling.
It’s easy to try and do it all—support school council,
attend events, Playgroup, lessons, matches, help with homework, or
even take on a “day job” to pay the bills. So how do
you make the time? How do you say no when your children (What could
be more important?) are counting on you to be there for them? How
do you get those sentences composed when everything else is more
urgent?
• Don’t try to be superperson. You have to accept that
you are a parent and that your children will only be little and
attention hungry for a short time. You shouldn’t stop
writing, by any means, but you also have to be realistic about what
you can accomplish. Long projects like novels will take many years.
If you write shorter pieces, you’ll have to be honest about
the output you can manage.
• Plan, plan, plan and then expect the plan to go a little
askew if someone gets sick. Sit down for a few hours each year
(after the kids have gone to bed perhaps, or while they are at
school), and plan what you are going to accomplish during that
year, bearing in mind that your family will also need your time.
Each month spend a half hour or so revising the plan; each week a
few minutes and each day a moment, so that you’re always
clear about what you are going to achieve from a writing
perspective.
• Cut your plan into bite sized, relatively urgent pieces and
make sure it’s in your planner/diary. Don’t have a
planner/diary? You need one. Decide what writing work you’ll
be doing each week and that way you can maximise any available
time, whether it’s an hour after the kids are in bed, or five
hours while they’re at school. Once the big plan is broken
into little segments, you’ll feel a sense of writerly
accomplishment meeting those small goals, but only if they are
achievable!
Above all, don’t resent your children. What else is life
about? The time spent with your children is, even in the most
Machiavellian terms (never mind what you’re doing for
them…think of what they’re doing for you), inspiration
for your work. Notice what excites them, what interests them, how
they look while they play and you’ve already got the basis
for your next characterisation. Parent writers are lucky in that
their work and play often bisect and that the joy and unconditional
love in a child’s eye is the best fodder for writing.
Magdalena Ball runs The Compulsive Reader .
Her stories, poetry, reviews and articles have appeared in many
printed anthologies and journals, and have won several awards. She
is the author of 3 books: The Art of Assessment (nonfiction), Quark
Soup (poetry), and
Sleep Before Evening (a literary fiction novel).
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