owlmoose: (coffee)
KJ ([personal profile] owlmoose) wrote2020-10-14 05:00 pm
Entry tags:

Writing process update

I continue to think about how to make time and space for writing while being a work-from-home employee. I've done a fair number of things improve my space for dayjob work -- two full-size monitors, a laptop dock, an adjustable keyboard tray that I talked my employer into buying (and that took some doing) -- but ways to alter the area to make it more conducive to writing when appropriate have been slower in coming. I have made one discovery, though, which pleases me: the application of coffee.

Ever since I got my first laptop, I've had a mental association between writing and coffee. Taking my computer to a cafe is one of my greatest pleasures, and one of the things I most miss from the before times. Sometimes these trips were productive, and sometimes I ended up spending most of my time socializing online, but it was always a mental recharge. And while I haven't quite figured out a way to replicate the entire experience, I can at least make coffee for myself. I need to avoid caffeine after lunch now (stupid aging), so I've taken to keeping homemade decaf cold brew on hand. It's an excellent afternoon treat, and I make a point of saving it until after I'm done with paid work for the day. As with going to the cafe, I don't always manage to write while I'm drinking it, but it still gives me a signal that it's time to switch gears, whether to fiction writing or journal writing (I have a glass right now!) or [community profile] ladybusiness work or just chatting with folks. A little thing, but it makes me happy. And hey, I have yet to find a cafe that even sells decaf cold brew, so there's even an advantage to making my own.

So that's my new trick for carving out my own space. Any other ideas? What have you tried?

zahraa: (Default)

[personal profile] zahraa 2020-10-15 05:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, one thing I have found is that, as soon as I am done with paid work for the day, I need to get *away* from my desk and go somewhere else. This means that I'm spending a lot of time using my computer in much less ergonomic setups, as I had a nice ergonomic setup at work and a nice one at home, and now I've only got one nice ergonomic setup. It also means that I'm doing all of my photography work on the small laptop monitor rather than my larger one, because I need the larger monitor for my paid work. There are huge benefits to working from home, but some real downsides as well. I sure don't miss 11 hours a week of commuting, that's for sure.