Writing Control To Major Tom

(This column is posted at www.StevenSavage.com and Steve’s Tumblr.  Find out more at my newsletter.)

Writing can certainly be stressful – we deal with formatting, editing, book covers, more editing, marketing, publishing, and editing and re-publishing. If you’ve ever put out anything written, you know how nail-biting it can be.

Yet also, we keep doing it. We like it, we enjoy it, we feel fulfilled by it. For many of us it’s automatic.

I began thinking over the benefits of writing, and realized that there’s one we rarely think about – the sense of control.

With a busy before-and-after holiday season for many people I knew, I began noticing friends who were writers being remarkably productive. It was as if the stress was somehow fueling their drive to write . . .

. . . and then I realized that my writing also gave me a sense of control. When things get crazy in life, the one thing I can rely on is I can craft and publish articles and books and more. After a talk with one of the many writers I know, they confirmed the same experience.

Writing gives us a sense of control – and that makes it valuable beyond its many other virtues.

With writing you can be get something done. When you feel down a blog post or a few pages of a book is reminder that, yes, you can do things.

Writing allows you to reach people. Sure one person may buy your book, five people read your Tumblr post, but you reached someone. It’s a reminder you can connect.

Writing allows you to exercise a skill and improve. Each piece of writing is a learning experience, and thus you get a little bit better. It’s a reminder you can grow.

Writing allows you to create something new. Writing keeps your creativity going, remind you there’s options in life, maybe ones you’ve never thought of.

So next time you feel bad or down, go ahead and keep up on your writing. Get things done. Publish. Produce. Dive into that power writing gives you – you’ll feel better and might just be better.

Steven Savage



Steve’s Update 1/28/2019

(This column is posted at www.StevenSavage.com and Steve’s Tumblr.  Find out more at my newsletter.)

Hello everyone! Well the holiday may be over, but I’m plugging away as always!

So what have I done the last week(s)?

  • A Bridge To The Quiet Planet: The print copy editing is done! One quick approval on the final copy, and we’re good, so look for an announcement soon! Also remember it’s in in ebook format! Also be sure to check out this free world guide!
  • Way With Worlds: Doing the Cities book. Not much else to say, though I’m thinking I may post samples in my newsletter!
  • Seventh Sanctum: Didn’t get to doing any new generators, but am tweaking the Nexus!
  • Expanding My Publishing: Continues! I’ve got it all over like Kobo, and at Itch.io.
  • Other: Working on my upcoming plans.

What’s next?

  • A Bridge To The Quiet Planet: Approving the final print copy. I may start some marketing.
  • Way With Worlds: Still writing, so don’t expect much change on that front for a month or so
  • Expanding My Publishing: I hope to have it all done!
  • Other: Not much right now. I hope to get to the Brainstorm Book, but starts of month get busy. I also plan to return to my code upgrade experiments around the middle of the month.

Steven Savage

Better Or Blockers

(This column is posted at www.StevenSavage.com and Steve’s Tumblr.  Find out more at my newsletter.)

At a recent Agile Leadership Conference I encountered the work of Ken Rubin, an Agile coach and business expert. I can pretty much say if you’re a Project Manager or Scrum Master, read his stuff.

However, out of the many things he talked about – many things – was about how people can get improvement wrong. See, sometimes trying to improve is the wrong thing.

Which of course, sounds weird for a guy who talks about improvement, but hang in there.

See he brought up an example that if you’ve got a plan but 90% if blocked, hung up, waiting for information, then you don’t want to improve. No amount of better processes or practices will make a big difference because your problem is not how you’re doing it, it’s how you’ve got things messing you up.

Think of it this way, if there’s all sorts of things screwing up your plans, why try to be better at how you do things? Instead, start tackling the things screwing you up – the blockers.

Maybe you are doing things right. Maybe all your processes and plans really are good. It’s just you have to find what’s blocking you from being your best.

So next time you’re trying to get your book, or home, or life, or job in order, take inventory of what’s hanging you up. It might be you’re fine, just a little unaware.

Steven Savage