
Where is your writing spot?
That is a funny question, I know, but every author has one.
You go there to sit quietly to compile your outline, craft your character, daydream about becoming a published author, complete with a hardcover first edition, and most importantly, write.
Your place can change. For instance, when I was a marketing associate, I would take my lunch breaks at a nearby local library where I would write away. It is where I finished a draft for one of my novels and then started two more which I am still working on currently.
It had everything a writer could want. It had the perfect ambiance, the smell of old books, friendly librarians ready to help you find something for research, and absolutely no distractions. Everything was centered on being a reader or a writer, and I had so much fun writing there.
Following the end of my employment there, I did not live close enough to that library to justify taking my lunch breaks at my new job.
My super cute wife was more than supportive in helping me find the right place where I could just write. We tried turning our guest room into a quasi-writing studio for me and that helped a little, but it never had the same feel.
I did not use that as an excuse however, I just wrote wherever I could, no matter how uncomfortable I felt. I am an author, dang it, and I want to write, so what is it? What is it about finding that spot?
I think that it is just that, it is a spot where we feel comfortable, where it almost makes sense. As we listen to the background noise or the deafening silence, we just know. It just feels like our place. We rarely get writer’s block there. Some of our greatest ideas come from there. It is just ours.
Stephen King writes from a studio in his home. Robin Jones Gunn writes on a beach. J.R.R. Tolkien wrote at a desk at the university where he taught. CS Lewis wrote in a library.
Finding your writing spot is important, and now I have a new one. Do you? Where do you write? I would love to hear about it.