Lit Lessons on Flight School

Time Management + Scene Writing = Breakthrough


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Hi and welcome to Flight School:

Our first paid-subscriber Studio titled Perils & Promise was a hit. Thanks to everyone who showed up live.

REMINDER: The Second Perils and Promise with Becky and me is coming August 14th. If you are a paid-subscriber, you get in free. Look for your code in the footer of the email. ** Remember to add the bird.

Two core teachings arose from this first conversation: Managing time and writing in scene.

⏰ Let’s start with time:

Whether it was Bruce, at seventy-seven, who worried about running out of time, Lori at eighty, wondering if she has the energy to finish her novel, or our younger writers juggling kids and careers, the struggle with time was universal but we learned it isn't about time but about consistency within your capacity.

"I am a full-time believer in writing habits, pedestrian as it all may sound. You may be able to do without them if you have genius, but most of us only have talent, and this is simply something that has to be assisted all the time by physical and mental habits, or it dries up and blows away...I only write two hours every day because that's all the energy I have, but I don't let anything interfere with those two hours, at the same time and the same place."

~ Flannery O’Connor

1. Assess Your Real Capacity

Ask yourself Flannery's question: What energy do I actually have? Not what you think you should have but what you actually have available. For some of us, it’s fifteen-minute bursts, others get an hour in the morning, and still others get three. Bottom line: Find out what you CAN DO and do it.

2. Protect Your Time Fiercely

The magic isn't in the duration—it's in the reliability. Find YOUR time and then protect it like your life depends on it. Because your writing life does.

3. Trust Process Over the Product

This last is the hardest lesson of all: showing up matters more than what you produce.

For the Time-Pressed and Energy-Limited

If you're feeling overwhelmed by the enormity of your project:

Start with lists. Human beings are extraordinary list-makers. Ten moments with your father. Ten defining experiences. Ten scenes that matter.

Write big, then slim down. Give yourself permission to overwrite. Becky's father's story was once 300 pages—now it's 32. But she needed those 300 pages to find the 32 that mattered.

Trust the reader. You need less connective tissue than you think. Those moments in time will speak to each other.

📝Great writing is sensual not mental

Now you have a handle on managing your time, it’s time to discipline your method. Write in scene. Always and evermore. Amen.

Did you know that a reader needs at least three sensual cues to feel as if they are “in” your story? It’s true. If you are telling, you are not writing well. If you are showing (another way to say writing scene), you are on your way becoming a great writer. Scene-writing takes your idea into the material world and “enlivens” it. Learn how to do this NOW. Take Scene vs. Exposition. If you are a paid subscriber, you get 20% off. Do it. Once you get scene writing, watch the quality of your work rise like phoenix.

More tips on scene:

* Manageable scope: One moment in time versus an entire life story

* Natural stopping points: When the scene ends, you can rest

* Cumulative power: Each scene builds your story and your skills

* Revelation through action: As Becky noted, "Scene will corner you and take you to that moment you haven't really been wanting to write about”

REMINDER: The Second Perils and Promise Conversation with Becky and Jennifer is coming August 14th. If you are paid, you get in free. Look for your code in the footer of the email. Remember to add the bird.

✍🏻 Your turn:

What is your writing practice right now? How do you keep going when you want to give up?

Thanks for being here, and I look forward to seeing you all soon,

Jennifer ~ 🐦‍⬛



This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit jenniferlauck.substack.com/subscribe
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Lit Lessons on Flight SchoolBy NYT Bestselling Author, Jennifer Lauck