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Kelley Greene's avatar

Caitlin, this is SO incredibly helpful!! I have been trying to figure out how to organize myself since I have some extra time right now (writing full-time for a little bit after my layoff) and this is fantastic. I'm going to go through my Notion board and try to revamp today!

I have a couple of questions:

- How do you decide what to work on each day? Do you pick things you want to get done at the beginning of the week and then squeeze them in, or go by how you're feeling in the morning?

- Do you create your own deadlines for projects that don't have an outside deadline?

- Do you limit your working time each day, or do you go by how the project is going?

Thanks for sharing your processes -- always enlightening!!

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Rachel Kramer Bussel's avatar

Caitlin, thank you so much for this framing of something I've always felt overwhelmed by. I'm intrigued by the idea of formally stacking projects and that each of these types of creative energy needs their own bucket. I've I guess been doing this informally but always feeling guilty for being behind or not doing enough of one type of project, and this makes me feel like I can reframe that. I'm especially someone who LOVES to ideate (first time using it as a verb, thanks to you). I'm brainstorming a nonfiction book proposal and totally enjoying it, I think because there's no pressure to make it perfect since it's just an idea, and working on various ongoing projects, like compiling a solo collection of new and unpublished, short stories, editing two anthologies (a few months apart), and editing a weekly personal essay publication, Open Secrets, plus freelance gigs. It's a lot to juggle and sometimes overwhelming but as I was reading over your list, I was thinking about how I actually get creative energy from each of these, as long as I don't try to do them all at once.

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