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2016 in Writing: The Best of This Blog, Year in Review, and Goals for 2017

Posted on December 30, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

This post contains affiliate links.

As I’m writing this post, it is 3.45 pm, and it’s snowing heavily outside. Power is out for the second time, and I’m just glad we live on the sixth floor of a seven-storey apartment. (My intolerance of heights disappears when there are floods everywhere, and I’m just glad we are safe, warm and dry.)

2016 has been a weird year, to say the least. I’ve had personal and professional ups and downs, as well as financial ones. I’m not going to talk about what a terrible year it has been on a global scale. We all know what happened. News and social media feeds and friends’ updates, and even our favorite cartoons, constantly reminded us that the world had become even more dangerous than many of us knew.

Best of 2016 for This Writer

Let’s not mock anyone who feels 2016 has been the worst year ever. If they live in a country where terrorism attacks have increased, it might truly be the worst year ever.

Now that we acknowledged that, below are some of my highlights:

  • I finally decided on the theme and launch date of my travel blog.
  • I was published on The Washington Post’s Solo-ish blog.
  • I took some great courses on advancing my writing and my writing career.
  • I started to stick to some of my earlier resolutions.
  • I read some great books.
  • I’ve made some important decisions to make 2017 different in a terrific way.
  • I was active on some amazing FB groups, made great connections and friends.
  • I started cold-pitching.
  • I responded to calls for submissions, meaning I wrote according to a given theme and sold two articles in this vein.

Some of My Favorite Movies of the Year:

  • The Girl on the Train starring Emily Blunt and Justin Theroux.
  • Hacksaw Ridge starring Andrew Garfield.
  • Allied starring Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard.

Favorite Novels

  • The Girl on the Train (My review on the blog.)
  • Behind Closed Doors  (My review on the blog.)

Favorite Series (That Premiered in 2016)

  • This is Us
  • Bull
  • Good Behavior (My review on my entertainment blog.)
  • Designated Survivor

Plans and Goals for 2017

  • Train my Dragon Dictate: Apparently, there is a book on it. My hands hurt, but typing has always been my favorite method of getting my point across and recording those points.
  • Move, move, move! I plan on getting a gym membership or taking regular dance classes again. I’m particularly interested in zumba.
  • Travel, travel, travel. I haven’t been aboard since 2015, and I’m itching.
  • Pitch, pitch, pitch! This goes for both fiction and non-fiction. Gina Horkey’s 90 Day Pitching Challenge was an awesome prompt in the right direction, but I still have some organizing to do. I haven’t been able to keep up with the 10 pitches-a-day goal. I fully plan to this year.
  • Eat more healthily. If I can’t eat perfectly healthily, I will at least add healthy stuff to make the relatively less healthy better. For instance, to keep my blood sugar level in check, I’ll have some nuts with your dark chocolate. Advice borrowed from one of my country’s top nutritionists.
  • Launch my first e-book on productivity.
  • Take on more coaching work
  • Respond the more submission calls.
  • When you are taking a course, actually apply the sound advice.

2016’s Top Posts on the Blog

  • Bad Traits for Characters: From Mildly Annoying to Deal-Breaker, From This Makes for a Fine Villain to Let’s Put This Person to Jail Forever. Sometimes, it is harder to “corrupt” our darling characters than killing them. Do your characters need an extra flaw or to make them more human? Read this post for a through list. I also wrote part 2.
  • How Not To Pitch An Editor: Be Vague and Impatient. Pitching is our bread and butter. Whether you’re looking to guest post, apply for a staff writing job or pitching ideas, you need to know your pitching etiquette. I offer two of the most important things to avoid with real life examples.
  • Life is Too Short, David Bowie is Dead, and Why You Should Make 2016 Your Best One Yet. More than a tribute post, this is a post that celebrates life and the living while paying respects to our idols and favorite pop culture influences.
  • How to Handle The Negativity Toward Your Writing No Matter The Source. Whether it’s a tough-loving editor, a bitter client or yourself, you need to be able to handle negativity and rejection. This post shows you how.
  • This Writer Is Getting Smarter About Money: And How You Can Too. A post on knowing how to manage your finances, including setting goals for our dream life, knowing where our money goes and how to make more.
  • A Love Letter to All Freelancers With a Health Condition. Are you a freelancer writer whose productivity takes a huge blow due to health problems? You’re not alone. Read on for motivation, inspiration and support.
  • The Incredible Productivity of Stolen Moments. Will you do better work when you feel like you’re cheating on what needs to be done with your writing? You just might.
  • Starting All Over Again: Rejection and Planning Again. Based on how I got stung by and got back up after being rejected by the University of British Colombia, this is a post on life after big rejections. 

*

That is it. What about you? What are your favorite moments of 2016? What are your goals and plans for 2017? Let me know in the comments!

 

 

Filed Under: Career Management for Writers, Inspiration and Motivation, Writing Tagged With: freelancing, how to be more productive as a writer, how to deal with rejection, how to handle rejection, how to pitch an editor, productivity tips for writers, writing, writing goals for 2017

How to Stay Fit, Productive, and Sane As A Freelance Writer: 10 Tips for Having The Best Freelance Writing Work Day At a Shopping Mall

Posted on December 25, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Özsüt, Akasya
The café this post was written at. Özsüt, in Akasya shopping mall, Istanbul.

Sitcoms of the 80s and 90s depicted shopping malls as teenagers’ haven. No reason it can’t be one of your offices.

Look, I know a shopping mall isn’t the epitome of health. Yes, a walk in the woods or going to a coffee shop with a sea view is better. But sometimes you need the change, size and the warmth.

If you are already healthy and can stand the harsh winter weather, please, by all means, walk outside every day. As much as you can. Even if it is just to and back from your favorite coffee shop.

But:

What if you sweat so much that by the time you get to the coffee house, even if it is just 15 minutes from your house, you look like you fell into a lake? Including and especially your hair? There is no possible way you can conveniently carry extra clothes, underwear, and hair-dryer along with your laptop and other freelancing essentials. Not unless you have the shoulder strength of a veteran backpacker. I don’t. And oh, one change of clothes doesn’t take my sweat away.

You might think the sweating is because I’m fat, but I’m not. While unfortunately I have extra weight I’m trying to lose, calling me fat would be scientifically incorrect. Picture below for scale.

 

Birthday Mohito, Hard Rock Café, Istanbul
Me, December 2016. Birthday Mojito.

Okay. So you, for one reason or another, you can’t walk to favorite coffee shop every day. You don’t live in a mansion, and you don’t have a treadmill desk (aff. link). You don’t have a gym membership. How are you going to get your exercise?

That’s where shopping malls come in.

I live in a city where malls are ubiquitous. They come with a selection of restaurants, coffee shops and all kinds of stores. And with so many malls to choose from, there are ones that aren’t too crowded and too expensive.

Here’s how to make the most of that mall:

  1. Set your timer. We all stay focused for different lengths. If the Pomodoro technique of working for 25-minute periods with 5 minute breaks (and then a 20-25 minute break at the end of 4-5 periods) gets your productivity going, great. If not, find out your sweet spot. But for the love of gods of productivity and sanity, don’t stay glued to your computer for hours on end.

Yes, I’m guilty of this. I suppose most writers are. It comes back to bite me in the form of extra pounds and nerve entrapment. So I’m writing this to remind you and myself.

It’s perfectly fine not to distract yourself in the middle of a productivity burst. But we all know they don’t always happen. So take regular breaks.

What has got this to do with the mall, you ask?

  1. Take a short walk during your break. I don’t know how shopping malls work in your country, but in mine, most shopping mall cafés don’t have bathrooms of their own. So you have to take like at least 500 steps just for a bathroom break. 2 bathroom breaks, you already got your first 1000.

Now, obviously it is better if you walk continuously at a certain speed. But 500 every time you need to pee, and if you have a regular-sized bladder and keep yourself hydrated enough, it is still a lot more than the bathroom-going exercise in your house.

  1. Take a longer walk during your longer break. Explore the stores. The bigger the mall, the better. If you actually try stuff on, the more calories gone. Sure, it is not sports. But it is better than staring at your TV or just doing the dishes. And never underestimate how many calories can be spent during shopping. One summer, my main method of exercise was shopping, and I lost like 18 pounds (about 8kgs.) Of course, I live in Istanbul, a shopping heaven. Never underestimate the power of your legs.

What about my stuff?

Unless I personally know the staff, I just take all valuable items with me: desktop, money, phone. I have MacBook Air (aff.link), so leaving everything else still makes me light as rain. No one steals your coat. Of course, it doesn’t hurt to tell the staff you are coming back.

But no one thinks you are a runner when you leave behind a table full of stuff. It might not fly everywhere, but it has worked for me so far. And there are almost always other friendly people who will watch your stuff. No one minds having the responsibility of watching your coat and some stationery.

Alternatively, you can use a co-working space; some malls have them. Or you can rent lockers at a little cost.

  1. Go outside, even if it is just the parking lot. You obviously need natural light and fresh air. So go get it. You are already dressed; you won’t get lazy.
  1. Walk back home. Or take a longer method of transportation. As long as it is safe and doable, try walking back.
  1. Take the escalators, and walk on them. (Unless you have a problem with your knees and the doctors told you to avoid them.)
  1. Always take the longer route. Go to the further escalator, further bathroom. Stride along the largest stores.
  1. Choose a café or restaurant with healthy options. I get that eating healthily generally costs a lot more. But unless it is Burger King, there is something healthy (or healthy-ish), affordable, tasty and fulfilling on the menu. Order that.

A couple of customized tips for those with a sensitive stomach:

I have gastritis, so I feel your pain. I have to take medication every day and limit my consumption of coffee to two mugs. Eating outside is always risky. What you can do to reduce the risk of food poisoning, indigestion and nausea:

– Order plain Greek yoghurt alongside whatever you are having. If you are in Turkey or at a Turkish restaurant, order Ayran (a traditional soft drink made with yoghurt, salt and water.) It greatly reduces the risk of nausea and or food poisoning. It is also great for your immune system.

– Ask for extra lemons for your salad. Lemon that stuff up! And I don’t mean lemon juice or sauce. I mean actual lemon slices. Not everyone washes salad ingredients so well. With the amount of chemical products we use on plants, you can’t be too careful. Also, it is extra vitamin C. Don’t you love killing multiple birds with one stone?

– Order hot, plain black tea with your meal and drink it with lemon. Also reduces risk of nausea, indigestion or food-poisoning.

– If you can’t or won’t do any of the above, add lemon to your water. It is healthier, better for your metabolism and again, protects your precious stomach. You are welcome. 🙂

  1. Obviously, don’t ignore the health of your wallet. I recommend choosing a mall with a range of stores, affordable to are you freaking kidding me? In case you need to do some shopping, get that chore done, without killing your budget.
  1. Enjoy other people. You don’t have to mingle with them, but even being alone in a crowd lightens the unbearable heaviness of working alone. And if you are at a co-working space, you can meet other freelancers.

*

There you go. As I said, if you can take long walks in nature, walk or cycle to your favorite coffee shop or office, it is much better. But if you need a change of scenery, it is far too cold or hot to be outside and taking a hike is not an option, try working at a shopping mall. It might be very good for you. Guess where this post was written?

 

Filed Under: Inspiration and Motivation, Writing Tagged With: freelancing, health tips for writers, office alternatives, productivity for writers, time management for writers, writing, writing at coffee shops, writing productivity

How Not to Be A Writer: Lessons from Westworld’s Obnoxious Writer Character Lee Sizemore

Posted on December 16, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

 

Westworld series
Westworld series starring Evan Rachel Wood, Thandie Newton, James Marsden and Jeffrey Wright. Image via imdv.com.

Westworld is an impressive sci-fi, drama and mystery series on HBO. It recently completed its first season, and got nominated for a couple of Golden Globe Awards. I’ll be soon posting my review on my entertainment blog; I’m a huge fan.

The casting is pretty terrific: Evan Rachel Wood, Thandie Newton, James Marsden, Ben Barnes, Anthony Hopkins and Ed Harris.

But for those who haven’t seen it, here is a brief rundown of what’s what: (No spoilers):

Westworld is an advanced theme park where guests mingle with (and do pretty much anything they want to or with) the park’s residents: Magnificent AI robots that look, act, think and feel like humans. The catch is that they don’t know they are AIs, and the “merciful” creator of the park, Ford (Anthony Hophins) has designed them and the rules so that they don’t remember what they have done or what they have gone through. This causes an infinite loop for them: living the same day over and over again, with the exceptions of what the guests have in mind.

Westworld starring James Marsden and Evan Rachel Wood. Image via HBO.
Westworld starring James Marsden and Evan Rachel Wood. Image via HBO.

The “main” AIs are Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood) and Maeve (Thandie Newton). Dolores leads a peaceful existence in their Wild West town with her parents. Maeve runs the brothel.

While some guests prefer family friendly tours and activities, others love wrecking havoc and mayhem: Man in Black (Ed Harris) is on a quest to make the most of it by reaching levels not achieved by other guests. He commits murder, rapes, attacks, tortures….Whatever to get him closer to get to that level.

How Not To Be A Writer: 5 Important Lessons from Westworld

And behind it all is a corporation that has to deal with politics, and the board members are not always pleased with how Ford operates. There is also the work of Lee Sizemore (Simon Quarterman), the writer whose job is to come up with entertaining AI storylines.

Simon Quarterman, Westworld
Simon Quarterman, Westworld. Image via pinterest.

Lee is pretty much a guide on how not to be a writer, man or a human being. He’s obnoxious, insincere, closed to criticism, immature, opportunistic, and insincere. Everyone either hates him, is annoyed by him, or just doesn’t give a damn about him.

Ford thinks he is a joke and mostly ignores or changes whatever he writes. The board sees him as a pawn they can use or discard according to what they need.

Most characters on this show possess grey qualities. They are not entirely bad or good. (It can be argued that Man in Black is mostly bad, but that’s another story.) But Lee? Lee is purely annoying.

So if there is anything we can learn from Lee is what not to do. And we do love a good lesson:

  1. Be rude. It’s simple. Nobody likes an arrogant jerk who thinks they are better than everyone. With the exception of jerks who are actually better than everyone (see House), and they we forgive them. For entertainment purposes. I still think House wouldn’t have lived that long in real life.
  1. Just scratch your own back. It is not cool only to be after your own success. You need to consider other people and help when you can. If you are self-absorbed, you’ll end up without great writing jobs or awesome friends.
  1. Kiss ass. Everyone likes a heartfelt compliment. But ass-kissing? Nope. It shows. If you don’t mean it, don’t say it.
  1. Never accept feedback or consider your employer’s needs. You can do whatever you want…on your own story that wasn’t commissioned by other people. But if you were hired to write stories for someone else, you have to accept that you don’t have full creative control. It doesn’t work that way.
  1. Be drunk and destroy company property. No explanation needed, really. He actually pees on the park model and gets witnessed by his boss. Ouch.

*

There you go. I never understood why and how Lee has his job. And I’m not sure we will find out in season 2. But for people like Lee, good things don’t last for very long.

*

Which writer characters have you seen on the screen?

Filed Under: Career Management for Writers, Fictional Writers: Writer Characters in Movies, TV Series and Books Tagged With: anthony hopkins, ed harris, evan rachel wood, james mars den, jeffrey wright, simon quarterman, west world hbo series, west world series, westworld, writer characters, writer characters on TV

What I Can and I Can’t Do For Writers As A Writer

Posted on November 29, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Every once in a while, I’ll get an email from a freelance writer that asks me to do something I can’t or don’t do. It might be in the form of a pitch to write for me, or it might be a CV to… Well, I really don’t know why someone would send me a writing CV out of blue, but they do.

Well, let’s go over for my abilities, services and well, capabilities about the matter:

I can’t hire you as a writer.

I am a writer. I’m a one-person business. I’m not an agency, so I can’t hire you as a writer.

I can’t find you work.

Learning to write great pitches, differentiating yourself and landing jobs are things you have to do yourself. I can offer you advice on how to do what, but I can’t feed you jobs.

Yes, I might refer work to writers, but those will be the writers whose work I know well. In other words, one semi-customized email from you won’t get you referral work from me.

I’m open to business partnerships.

If you want to be my researcher:

  • I can be your proofreader or social media manager.
  • I can be a brainstorming partner, offer career management tips, and I can help you become more productive.
  • I can also be your virtual assistant.

So we can exchange services.

I don’t accept guest posts on this blog, unless….

Unless you are John Grisham. Or Kathryn Bigelow. What? I’m not going to turn them down!

The truth is, I am not fond of asking for guest posts because I can’t pay writers at the moment. And this blog has a very specific goal: helping writers make money while writing (about) what they love. So asking writers to write for free doesn’t sit well with me.

If you are in love with my blog and my writing, I can write for you too, and that will be payment. Eye for an eye in a positive context. Go over the content on my site, how I format things and the style. Then send me a pitch. But as of this post, yours might be the first “outside” post ever.

And of course I’ll promote the hell out of the post. Duh!

But still, go pitch that idea to a publication that pays first.

I help with social media.

I offer help with social media. If you have a specific question, shoot. The free mentoring is all over the blog posts. Email me, or tweet me a question, and I’ll gladly answer.

I mentor.

I offer mentoring. Most writers I know have a strong support group, me included. Some of these are free FB groups. Some of these are private FB groups I was invited to join after purchasing an awesome course. I run two writing groups myself:

Writers Helping Writers    Writers help each other pretty much everything writing-related. However, I try to keep this group about non-fiction

Logline Buddies Logline Buddies is where you come for fiction-related questions, especially to fix your loglines.

Again, email me, or tweet me a question, and I’ll gladly answer. If you’re not following me on Twitter, I’m @zoeyclark.

But if you need more time and attention, you can hire me as a mentor. E-mail me for my fees.

I provide script reading and coverage.

Yes, you can hire me to read your script. However, even though I follow the industry, I am not in it yet. So I’m not going to give you a pass, consider, or recommend.

But I have read and watched a lot. Like really a lot. And I am always studying structure, format, subtext, dialogue and beyond. So if you are new to screenwriting, you can benefit from my expertise.

I haven’t won anything yet, but I was asked for a treatment after a pitch. I was a semi-finalist with a TV pilot, and a feature of mine got a Consider from a SpecScout reader.

The advantage of working with me is that I’ll do my best to see your story through your eyes. I also answer follow-up questions. E-mail me for at pinartarhan@windowslive.com for my fees.

If you want someone more experienced, I can gladly refer you to the names and companies below. I have worked with them at least once, and I still use them whenever I need professional reading.

(I don’t get a commission for recommending these people and companies.)

Lucy V Hay

Coverage Ink

Selling Your Screenplay

SpecScout

So there you go. I hope I could help. : )

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Filed Under: Career Management for Writers Tagged With: career management for writers, writing

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