Archive for ◊ January, 2009 ◊

31 Jan 2009 One Month Down. Time to Re-evaluate Those Goals

So. One month of the year, already gone. How are you doing on your goals?

By now, you’ve probably got a system going in order to keep up with what you want to be doing. You’ve figured out which goals you’re going to keep, and which ones, despite your best intentions, may have been too ambitious.

It’s time to revisit. And maybe even do a little bit of pruning.

1. What does your monthly income look like in comparison to your goals? Did you aim for $3,000 when you’ve only made $500 in the last few months and about $1,000 this month? Take a good look at your goals and make sure they’re (a) in relation how you’ve been doing over the past six months and (b) in relation to how you did this month.

2. Have you been as productive as you thought you would? This is where most freelancers over-estimate. In thinking we’re going to send out a pitch every day, and keep in touch with all our friends, and organize our computers, and edit all our photos, and write three articles a week, we start out strong but start taking five-hour naps in the afternoon by the end of the work week. If you set some productivity outputs but haven’t met them, it’s time to fine-tune those goals now and not in January 2010.

3. What have you learned during this month of January? Maybe you’ve discovered that despite your best intentions, you never got back to that novel you started. Maybe you’ve been under-selling yourself by thinking you could only do so much when you’re capable of a lot more. Look closely at January. It’s possibly an accurate representation of what the next six months may look like.

4. Finally, have you achieved any goals already, say a magazine you’ve been meaning to write for? Then you’re obviously doing something right. Keep doing it!

The end of January is a great time to look at your goals and expectations and match them with the realities of your situation. You’re not too far ahead in the year and you still have some reality to base that assessment on. Doing so will avoid disappointments over too-ambitious goals in the months that follow.

30 Jan 2009 Quote of the Day

“Ever tried.  Ever failed.  No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better.”

- Samuel Beckett

29 Jan 2009 The Writing Groove

I have, by some miracle of nature, been getting up at five every morning and starting my days early. I’m very productive between five and ten, and then, when the humdrum of the world starts, when the noises of the outside world start infiltrating my senses, I lose my concentration.

I’m really excited about the book project. It’s a very simple, straightforward book, and I’m quite looking forward to digging my teeth into it. After all the journalism work, the heavy research, it feels like a breather to not have to be the researcher on this one. Since I’m just the ghostwriter, my publisher is sending me most of the material, and then I swoop in and whip it into shape.

I’m now just waiting to receive all the materials so I can get started. To meet my deadline, I’m looking at a schedule of 2,000 words a day.

That’ll flex those creative muscles all right.

28 Jan 2009 Where the Magic Happens

I realized the other day, that in the several years that I’ve been blogging and telling you folks about my writing life, I’ve never talked about one thing: my office.

Or the lack thereof.

I could probably afford an office, but what’s the point? I’d never end up going there. I keep such odd hours that the convenience of being able to work on the sofa, the bed, the floor, is all too appealing.

But then, I live alone and have done so for a while now. I’m used to traveling and writing from a hotel room. An office would be a change of pace. And I’m not sure I’d like it.

On the other hand, in those days before late 2005, which is when I bought my first laptop, I did have a semi-office. Because I needed to work on a desktop and sit there on a chair in front of it while I worked, I spent less time on it. I actually had to get up and go to bed. I couldn’t turn over in the morning and switch on the computer to watch the news even before I’d gotten out of bed.

I’m pretty flexible, so as long as I have a room– any room– with a door and a lock, I’m able to work. Lately, I’ve been dreaming of a small room with bookshelves lining the walls though.

27 Jan 2009 Marriage Revisited. Here We Go Again.

I don’t know if it amuses me or annoys me more, but every time I write an article or an essay mentioning the word “marriage,” I get an average of twenty e-mails from wise Indian women telling me that I’m missing out, and that maybe I should reconsider my single and radical ways.

Because, you know, it’s way better to be in a crappy abusive marriage than it is to be single.

What the fuck, people?

And then there are those that send me 1,000-word e-mails explaining to me, in detail, how compromise isn’t such a bad thing and that Western women have to compromise too, you know.

Right. Because someone who’s being pressured into agreeing to marry someone she doesn’t know is making the same kind of compromise as someone choosing to take certain decisions for the one she loves. And you can totally tell me that women have the same rights in India as they do in America without sounding like an idiot. I won’t even laugh. Promise. (When was the last time religious fundamentalists could freely walk into an American pub and beat up the women?)

Of course, I’m too Western in my ways (said to me before I’d stepped foot in the West), and too influenced by my “foreign friends.” (Read: You don’t have a brain.)

“I have many American friends, and they all have to face challenges in their marriages, too,” one woman wrote to me. Jeez, you think?

But people, let’s get one thing clear. If you think the way America is currently treating its women is acceptable, then we are so so fucked.

However, when an American woman walks out of a marriage, she doesn’t immediately become “used goods.” She has the opportunity to exist in society without being ridiculed every step of the way. She can get married a second time, a third time, adopt children, or continue to remain single by choice. An Indian woman, in contrast, will be ostracized, blamed, judged, and thought of as an easy target by male predators. She will have trouble adopting a child, she will have trouble dating, she will have trouble simply existing.

To set the record straight, I don’t have anything against marriage. I’d actually quite like the idea of making an honest man out of the boyfriend person and having a family of three kids, four dogs, and seven goldfish. But there is also absolutely no doubt in my mind that if the marriage were to become anything but a union of equality and love, I would have no second thoughts about packing up my bags and my goldfish and leaving.

When the women sending me e-mails give me advice about settling for someone who “may not be perfect,” I always want to ask them how many times they’ve given the same advice to men.

Women go to such extreme lengths to look beautiful, to impress men, to be smart, to take care of them, to make themselves perfect for these men. Yet, why do we not ask for the same standards from our men? And why do we allow ourselves to become what others want us to become?

Some feminists like to blame men for all our problems. Men are not the problem. Most of the men in my life are less judgmental than the women in my life. The problem is not with all men. The problem is with us and what we allow ourselves to become out of fear.

So scared are we of being single that we not only “settle” for men who “may not be perfect,” but we let them beat us, abuse us, cheat on us, and take advantage of us, only to forgive them and let them disrespect us all over again.

What’s the big deal about being single anyway? Why NOT ask for perfection from your man? Why not ask for equality and genuine love, respect and understanding? Why not create that space in your life for someone who truly deserves your love, and have fun with your life regardless of whether or not you ever find him?

I did. And you know what? When the idea of finding a man became irrelevant, when I no longer cared about being in a relationship, when I was out finding my happiness– traveling, having fun, and enjoying my life for all it was–I found him.

And if I hadn’t? I’d be happy anyway.

26 Jan 2009 Just Call Me Author

Well, what do you know. A few days ago, I started saying, “Book! I need to write a book! Book, book, book!”

And just now, I got hired to write a book. It’s a ghostwriting gig, so I don’t get to talk about it, and while I don’t get the glory, the money is mine. All mine!

Now you’re probably going to ask me how I found the gig (and the one before it that didn’t work out). I didn’t. They found me. They e-mailed and said, “Hey, we’ve seen your work, we like your work. Would you like to write a book for us?”

The writing business builds on itself. It’s very easy to get disheartened when you get heaps upon heaps of rejections, when you think the editors you’ve worked with don’t even remember your name, let alone the quality of your work, and when nothing sticks.

But it’s not a game for the impatient. The editor you’ve been writing to for years comes across an idea and notes that you’re the perfect person to do it. A staffer moves from one publication to the other, taking you with her. A client recommends you to her friend. It all happens behind the scenes. You don’t know it. You can’t possibly know it. Until it sticks.

I sent a Letter of Introduction to an editor of a magazine recently. The publication is aimed at highlighting issues that concern social injustice and human rights. I wrote to the editor with my bio and credentials and expressed an interest in writing for her. She wrote back to say, “Mridu, you don’t know me, but we’ve been reading your work for months. I’d love to work with you.” And then she handed me an assignment.

Maybe this is a good time to note that in January 2003, exactly six years ago, I had my first article appear in print. It would take another year before I would find and quit a job in publishing to pursue freelancing. And it would be another year before I would graduate from college and go full-time. It really hasn’t been all that long, has it?

But it took at least five years before people started finding me and coming to me, instead of me running after them and begging for work.

It took five years. Sometimes, it takes more.