Creating Physical Writing Space as a Grad Student/Parent
I’m cramming all of Week One of Wendy Belcher’s book into one day. I might even start on Week Two. We’ll see.
Anyway. She’s got a part about identifying the physical sites where you’re doing your writing and what you need to do to improve them.
Here are the potential sites I listed:
- Nursery/playroom
- Kitchen
- Public library
- Basement
- Coffee shop
I have fifteen hours of childcare a week and fifty-six hours of school-related commitments (including my assistantship), so obviously a lot of work has to happen outside of traditional office spaces. I work on the queen bed or in the glider we have in my son’s nursery/playroom. I work at the kitchen table. I meet a friend for communal writing time at the public library. I work at the dining table we have in our basement. And when I need a treat as motivation, I work at a local coffee shop.
With five “offices,” investing too much time, money, or effort in improving any one of them doesn’t really make a lot of sense. So I keep it all in a go bag or mobile office. This isn’t a new idea, but it’s something I’ve had to get okay with in a new way.
Here’s what has to be in my bag for me to be able to work:
- laptop
- charger
- tablet
- stylus
- notebooks
- pens
- highlighters
- readings
And then, in the nursery/playroom, at least, I have to have a lapdesk with me.
I’m a piler, not a filer, so I often have all my work stuff spread out around me and if I believe I will return to it, I just leave it out. (I’m usually wrong. I almost never return to it promptly enough to merit leaving it out.) So another shift to my process thanks to parenthood is that I’ve got to pack it all up every time, or I may find myself in bed next to a sleeping toddler with all my work stuff in a different room.