Thursday

Today was a pretty typical day, if you discount being woken up at five in the morning by a barking dog who wanted to go out, then nearly missing my train later that morning, and then getting on a subway that was so crowded we were all basically spooning one another. And, of course, this afternoon I received some sad news: one of our authors, on who we’ve been waiting on some revisions, passed away unexpectedly over the weekend. I didn’t know him well at all — I think we spoke directly all of once — but it’s still a huge shock and a loss. He’s co-author is going to try to pull the book together, since it’s actually finished, just not all together in his hands, but obviously and understandably it’s going to be a little delayed.

Plus, I spent the day trying to get some actual work done, so there’s that.

Otherwise, it was, as I said, a pretty typical day.

Tuesday’s child

This morning it seemed like the Long Island Railroad hadn’t quite recovered from yesterday’s weather-related madness, with a super-crowded train all the way to Jamaica and some confusing announcements once we got there. But after that, everything seemed to run as smoothly as it ever does, and I got to work around the usual time.

Which is good, because today’s sales meetings were a lot more specific and targeted to our individual books. And I worked extensively on at least two of the books we were presenting to the reps, so I was glad to be there to add my little bit of input.

And we got another free lunch out of it, so there’s that.

Then in the afternoon, we had a fire drill. I’m not sure I’ll ever get used to working again in a building where “fire drill” doesn’t translate into “testing the alarms 24/7.” Then again, as a co-worker remarked, he’d willingly trade that now for the constant drilling that’s going on around us all day. (Until the end of August, we were told. At times it’s really tough to concentrate.)

And then? A quick birthday celebration for another co-worker, with a card and some cookies.

And that’s really it for Tuesday. A decent enough day, as far as those things go.

Can’t trust that day

Sales meetings at work today, mostly for acquiring editors and the marketing team, but at least I got a free lunch out of it.

Of course, they’ll tell you there’s no such thing as a free lunch. And maybe I paid for it with my evening commute, which was pretty dreadful, thanks to the Long Island Railroad’s complete inability to deal with the weather. I’m still not entirely sure what happened — I’ve heard hail storm, I’ve heard lightening strike — and I’m still amazed that none of the bad weather made it to Manhattan.

Of course, I very nearly didn’t get out of Manhattan. I rushed to make a 4:54 train, only to discover it had been canceled, along with many other trains. I finally squeezed aboard the today-only 5:22 and made decent enough home, home a little over an hour later. Except that’s an hour of standing in very tight corner on a train that only proceeded to pick up new passengers as we went along. There was one woman, who seemed perfectly nice, but whose hair kept brushing into me. And there was the gentleman who suddenly decided to share with us his love of Creedence Clearwater Revival (or crappy headphones). Basically, we were packed like sardines for an hour…if sardines were packed standing up and fully conscious.

I was very happy to get off the train.

Oh, and I should note: I did not finish writing my short story over the weekend. It was due today, but I hit a brick wall around 10 o’clock last night, after which my brain just stopped working properly. I wasn’t entirely pleased with everything I’d written leading right up to that, and it felt like the story was going to need at least another full scene, one that was going to take me more than a couple of hours (even with a working brain) to write. I like the story enough that I want to put the effort into it, not rush it just to meet the deadline.

But, you say, isn’t that exactly what you’re going to be doing with the 3-Day Novel Competition? Well, yes, in a way. But there, that’s part of the experience, the mad rush to finish, to just keep writing. I’m almost certainly going to have plenty of terrible writing in whatever I manage to come up with over the course of those three days, lots of work that will need lots of editing, but I’ll have time for editing after. (Well, unless it’s so good that it wins the competition.) With this story, I only had that crazy rush to finish because I didn’t know about the deadline earlier.

This was good practice for that, and the 3-day competition is a good (if crazy) writing exercise, but not every story benefits by being written that way.

My brain hurts

I spent the day writing and writing and writing. I’m still writing. I’m not sure I like my chances for finishing this story in time to make tomorrow’s submission deadline, but I guess I’m going to push through and see what happens. Right now, I’m just sort of stuck, and running out of time. (Also a little worried about winding up with a crap story when I’m done.)

I also managed to do the crossword puzzle today, but that’s about it. I even skipped my weekly writing group to stay home and write. How’s that for pseudo-dedication?!

Have I mentioned, though, that my brain kind of hurts? I think the caffeine, sleep deprivation, and intense focus are starting to get to me. I’ll have all those things in spades, though, with the 3-Day Novel contest come the first weekend of September, so I guess this is good practice.