I find there are times for writing and times for not-writing, and then there are times when I could do either. The hard part is distinguishing the third times from the second. It's better for me to think "OK, I will do X now and write later" than to beat myself up for not writing when I can't, but then I have to watch out for getting lazy and procrastinating endlessly. Usenet is a good tool for me for this, if I can compose good usenet posts, I'll probably be able to write, if I am spluttering along incoherently, then probably not. Usenet (rasfc especially) also gets my brain in a better place for writing than playing games does.
Rasfc also teaches the "nine and sixty ways" mantra -- there are people whose best way of working is staring at it until blood forms. It's worth trying lots of things and seeing what works. But if you don't know what happens, maybe you need a little while playing games and thinking about it.
Tetris-type zen games work better than most things, for me, they give my brain enough to do to let some of it wander off and noodle with characters. Nethack (which is like Moria, yes?) would probably have too much narrative.
Oh, and it's hard to stop people interrupting you because you're working when they can plainly see you're playing tetris.
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Date: 2002-12-04 05:02 am (UTC)Rasfc also teaches the "nine and sixty ways" mantra -- there are people whose best way of working is staring at it until blood forms. It's worth trying lots of things and seeing what works. But if you don't know what happens, maybe you need a little while playing games and thinking about it.
Tetris-type zen games work better than most things, for me, they give my brain enough to do to let some of it wander off and noodle with characters. Nethack (which is like Moria, yes?) would probably have too much narrative.
Oh, and it's hard to stop people interrupting you because you're working when they can plainly see you're playing tetris.