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Timeslots

posted in Blog, personal stuff on March 7th, 2007

The other day, a friend of mine asked me how I could find time to blog in my busy schedule. After all, good content takes time to create and I’m blogging in a non-native language too, so, according to him, I would have to spend even more time on creating an entry than normal bloggers do.

The way I come up with posts is rather unorthodox. When I go to bed, after reading the last news of the day, I’ll start reminiscing on the events of the day and the past week. After finding something that interests me, I’d grab my phone and jot down a few quick thoughts and finally go to sleep.

The inspiration I get for writing entries isn’t really limited to personal stuff though. Sometimes it’s a project at college that I’ve been working on and sometimes it’s something I read somewhere that I have a strong opinion about that I want to share with others.

The next morning then, I’d grab my notes while commuting and think them through again, sometimes you come up with great ideas before going to bed and at other times you just don’t.

Not all of the notes I jot down are really worthy to write about and if they are not, I’ll just have to wait for another rush of inspiration to come my way. However, if I deem a set of notes interesting, I’d start writing more about it…

There have been occasions when I started writing and midway through, I’d come up with another possible entry, not necessarily related to the current one, and jot that one down too.

All in all, I just utilize the time that is available to me in the best way possible, I guess.

too busy to be productive?

posted in College, personal stuff on October 22nd, 2006

So, it’s been ten days again since I last blogged and while I do have a few things I want to discuss, I thought I’d get this one out:

It’s once again the last week of a term, midterms are coming up (well, one anyway) and our current project is due to be presented in a few days, too. We’ll see how that goes … I’m hoping good, but I’m prepared for bad too.

So, currently when you switch on the TV or read any newspaper, you’re guaranteed to come across someone talking about how little time we have and how precious it is and all …

If you ask me, we don’t have little time, we just choose to spend it the wrong way. As a student, I know that I “waste” loads of sparetime during the last week of a project because I choose to procrastinate quite a long time; granted, it works out every single time, but I’m certain that I’d have more free time and less stress if I’d start finishing stuff earlier.

Then again, it seems that when I create stuff last-minute, I always come up with stuff I’m happy with. I’ve talked to other students and I know they feel the same way. My guess is that this is just the way creative people choose to work and to be honest, this way of working has advantages too.

If you prepare stuff weeks up front, you’ll not be able to incorporate up-to-the-minute information into your article, presentation, discussion, simply because you don’t know up front what’s gonna happen.

Moreover, if you start out too early, your creation might lack “depth”. I’d like to take an essay I wrote a year ago as an example. The task was to discuss a media landscape, I choose the SciFi Channel, finished my text three (!) weeks up front and ended up rewriting the whole piece from scratch the night before it was due, turns out the text I wrote during the second pass was something I’m really proud of, while the text I wrote up front was sub-par.

So, while in general it might seem like a bad idea, it seems to be a very acceptable (and already accepted) way for creative people to create stuff. Granted, you sacrifice loads of sparetime in the last days prior to the deadline, but then again, you already used that sparetime up front anyway.

[UPDATE]:

Jack seems to be experiencing a similar problem, having too little time to do stuff he likes.