Are These The Hardest Promises To Keep?

Dasies and dreams Pixababy

Do you make many promises? And if so, do you keep them? To me, it is important to keep my promises, so I don’t make many.

I hate being let down and equally, I hate letting people down.

There was one person I routinely let my promises slide for. Can you guess who it was? That person was me.

Maybe you are like that too? Discounting your own needs and wants and importance.

adult alone backlit dark
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Last week I had a tech crash and was without my computer for the week. Any week it would be annoying, but I had planned to enter a short story contest.And the deadline was Friday 13th – what could be more  apt?

I got my computer back on  Monday. It was just the basic setup, and a year’s worth of work was gone. I’d promised myself I would enter at least two stories in the contest.

I had two-thirds of one story written and a vague idea for another. The word length for submission was from 1,000 to 4,000 words.

Clocks Geralt

A writer friend cast an eye over the first story. I thought I had completed it and I’d listened to it through the read-aloud function. That read aloud alone picked up fifteen tiny mistakes. My eagle-eyed friend found missing commas, redundant commas, as well as making some pertinent comments. More work! I respect her judgement, so I made the changes. I submitted it with a day to spare. It was about 3,500 words.

What about story two? I had roughed out ideas in a notebook while I was without the computer.

 

Coffe cup and notebook Pixababy Engin_Akyurt

I decided to go for it. I knew my story wouldn’t have the care and attention that the first story had. But my promise to myself was to submit two stories.

I had the germ of an idea and I worked hard on it, and my wonderful friend was even able to have a quick look at it. Again I made changes.  Story Two was submitted at 6.30pm on Friday 13th. It was just over 3,00o words.

Pixababy cornfiedl and heart

It’s likely that neither will win a prize, many accomplished writers enter this contest. I felt wiped out, exhausted and yet exhilarated. I’d done it! I hadn’t let myself off the hook. Yes, there were difficulties, but nothing that I couldn’t overcome. It had been hard work, but I felt and feel terrific. Finally, I was giving my writing, my work. the respect that it deserved,

Ginger cat Pixababy Skorchanov

Is this a female thing or a generational thing? Is it the sign of a classic procrastinator?

What about you? Do you find it easy to keep the promises that you make to yourself?

It’s Time You Listened To Your Writing!

 

Listening Something that I found recently has really improved my writing. I shared the information with some writing buddies and discovered that they hadn’t known about it either, They were impressed and I was inundated with effusive thanks.

people coffee meeting team
Photo by Startup Stock Photos on Pexels.com

 Now I’m sharing it with you. It may not apply to all systems until recently I used Apache Open Office and I don’t think it is there. 

Then I switched to Microsoft Word and that’s where I found it. The Audio function. It is at the top left-hand corner of the page when you click over to tools. It says Read, Aloud Speech. For Mac users, there is a Speech function once you access System Preferences. I simply Googled that to find out.

Experimentally I tried it out. It has transformed my writing experience.

macbook apple woman computer
Photo by Startup Stock Photos on Pexels.com

Many of you will have been told to read your work out loud to allow you to spot errors and awkward phrasing. It is still good advice. Audio is better though, as the robotic voice disassociates you from your writing. We all fall a little in love with our words

red heart on a old opened book ii
Photo by Kaboompics .com on Pexels.com

It is easy to read your own work and see what you expect to see. I had proofread a document twice without noticing that scared had been typed sacred, Quite a different meaning!

Listening enables you to hear if your words flow, or if there is a section that needs work. It might be a good use of this function to run your document through it before you send it to an editor.

Suzi Love

SUZI LOVE ~ Writing about romance, history, crazy characters, the Aussie outback and extraordinary places.

Writers In The Storm

A Blog On Writing

Welcome to My World

Land of my Fathers. The Land of Song, Mountains, Myths and Legends, Stunning Scenery and so much more.

valerieparv

Come play inside a writer's brain, scary!

N M Cunningham

Fiction for genre fluid readers

Sophril Reads

Books and Tea!

Sonia Bellhouse- Author.

Love Beyond Time.

#1 South Wales Copywriter

No fluff. Just Words.

Josh Langley

- inspiring kids-

How to be eighty

Living and learning at any age

Romance Writers of Australia

Promoting excellence in romantic fiction Helping writers become published and maintain strong careers Providing continuing support and development

The Never Ending Bookshelf

Where dreams are just a bookshelf away ...

Nadia L King

A writer from Perth, Australia

The First Time podcast

Part reality show, part writers' master class. A podcast about the first time you...publish a book.

Mrs B's Book Reviews

Book reviews and recommendations from a self confessed book geek

Cauldrons and Cupcakes

Celebrating Life, Spirituality, Creativity and Kindness!

Wanna be a Writer?

writing tips, information and motivation

The Little Mermaid

MAKING A DIFFERENCE, ONE STEP AT A TIME

Dr. Eric Perry’s Blog

Motivate | Inspire | Uplift

%d bloggers like this: