I stuck to the rules and I have three new poems to show for it. I felt like I’d had enough after two, but three is the target. Either three revised or three composed. Being inflexible, and having started to write, I carried on writing, even if the rules would have allowed me to write two and revise one.
Silly as it may sound (I am, after all, talking about writing poetry, not cleaning out a hen house) I am now in need of a rest. This blog post is a rest. Just a change of pace.
Yesterday I deviated from the rules, and things went wrong. The gardeners arrived and did their job. I went out to avoid the first three hours then returned, made cups of tea for us all and got to work. I couldn’t think of poetry so I got stuck into an article I am writing – fact checking and constructing a biography from snippets. It’s coming together slowly. Very slowly. However, it did fill the day so although I veered off track, I did at least spend several hours in useful pursuits.
Flexibility, as TP just remarked, is key. The rules and targets are to make me work with more focus. If I can fill a few hours with effort instead of frittering my time away all day, it is time well spent and proof that a few rules and targets can help.
I have set targets before, for junior sports clubs and for writing and in all cases I have achieved much more when I plan and write it down. The trick is to make sure you sit down and write something out. I’ve let things drift for the last three years and although some good things have happened, I have to say that more would have happened if I had planned.
I use the SMART model – that’s Specific, Measurable,, Something, Something and Time-bound or Timely (they struggle a bit with that last one). I always have to look it up because I can’t remember the middle bit. It’s Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound.
I will end up with a table that has magazine names with times and targets in boxes. It fits quite well. The names are Specific, the targets are Measurable because they are numbers of poems, the targets are Achievable, but I don’t actually need a column for that, Relevant is the type of poetry (they don’t all take the same sort of thing) and Time-bound is a good column for the submission windows, though I generally rely on my submissions calendar for that. There’s a lot more admin in writing poetry than the lives of Lord Byron or Dylan Thomas would suggest.
Pictures are from September 2018, a trip round East Anglia.





Tootlepedal is wise!
I am glad to hear you have three new poems, Simon. Whatever system works for you!
I manage three more while I was waiting for Julia in a car park tonight. Creativity is on the move again. 🙂
I now know the talk was a success
It seems to have been. It’s difficult to tell at the time. The expressions on their faces could have represented rapt attention, or that they’d been bored into submission. 🙂
That table almost sounds like a spreadsheet. I love a spreadsheet.
I have never been smart with or without capital letters.
I can’t handle spreadsheets – too big, too mobile and given to doing inexplicable things. I did maths before we had calculators, I am not at home with all this computing power.
I like being able to put in a single entry and seeing things happen all over the page.
And that’s precisely what scares the life out of me – one slip and I can mess up an entire document. My primary emotion, when dealing with technology is not wonder, but fear.
This is the second blog in a row that I have read that features posts about planning. I wonder if autumn is a time for this.
It could well be. harvest is over and the new crops need to go in. 🙂