Finding a Space to Write
Marg McAlister| October 11, 2009 9:44 pmOver the years, I’ve written in many different spots around the house.
For a while I had a table set up in my bedroom, with a typewriter set up on it. The table was flimsy; the typewriter was large and noisy, and the whole setup shook as I typed. But… it was a space away from the rest of the world.
Then I simply tried getting up early and writing (with pen and paper) at the kitchen table. This worked well, since (a) I’m a morning person and (b) I preferred to write my first drafts by hand at that stage, and do the first edit when I was typing up the day’s work.
Then we added an extension to the house, and I had my first office. It was tiny – barely room for a desk and a chair. It was pretty much the size of a walk-in closet – but it was mine: equipped with files and a computer.
Next came a bigger house and a parent retreat. Well, actually, it never WAS used as a parent retreat: it was a writing space right from the start. Luxury: a whole room all to myself!
That lasted a few years, until our business grew bigger and both my husband and myself were working from home. His office was in one room of the house (a spare bedroom, after one of the kids left home) and my office was still the aforementioned parent retreat. Meanwhile, the garage had never housed the car – it was a shambles. So we had a chat, restored the spare bedroom to being a spare bedroom… and converted the garage into a huge office, equipped with three computers and four workstations. That’s where I’m writing now.
Most writers have a problem at some stage finding writing space of their own. I heard someone talking about it just the other day, and that’s what prompted my most recent article on Suite101: Find a Nook to Write a Book. Now I’m looking forward to my NEXT ‘writing nook’ – which will be a workstation built into our new caravan! Yep, a writer’s nook on the road… now that should be different!
Cheers
Marg
Categories: Home Office & Organisation
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