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Writing Rituals: Paty Jager

It’s interesting how over the years my “rituals” have changed. When I first started writing, I would always check my emails and respond as the first “warm up” of the day. I felt the typing of the emails warmed up my fingers and my mind.

Paty Jager Fatal Fall 5x8By Paty Jager

Thonie, thank you for having me on your blog! And I love the theme Writing Rituals.

It’s interesting how over the years my “rituals” have changed. When I first started writing, I would always check my emails and respond as the first “warm up” of the day. I felt the typing of the emails warmed up my fingers and my mind.

Then I went through a phase where I ignored emails and the internet to make sure I wrote my word quota for the day. One of the things I have always done and still do is reread the previous day’s work. I open up the document and go back a chapter or two and reread, fixing typos, adding description, or rewording sentences. It not only gets me back into the story and the character’s point of view, it also makes my first draft clean enough to send to my critique partners.

The other thing I have made a ritual and helps me to drift into the story quicker, is using music. I make a playlist of songs for each project. I use instrumental music, or in the case of my Native American books, I listen to Native American drum and flute music as well as lyrics because I can’t understand the lyrics, so it doesn’t interfere with the words in my head. 😉  For the historical western books, I listen to themes from western movies. My Shandra Higheagle Mysteries, I listen to Native American music and Jazz. For the contemporary western romance, I listen to instrumental country music. I’m like Pavlov’s dogs with the music. As soon as I hear the songs, my mind goes to the characters and pulls me into the stories.

The other thing I cannot write without is DOVE dark chocolate! I don’t eat it all day long. If I did that, I wouldn’t fit through the door. But two squares are my mid-day pick-me-up. All day as I write, I drink honey, lemon, ginseng green tea. Hot in the winter and cold in the summer.

I’m not sure how much of these rituals help my writing, but I think they are the devices I need to get my word count every day and keep coming up with interesting character’s in unique situations.

 

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Paty Jager 2017 (314x400)

Paty Jager is an award-winning author of 32+ novels, a dozen novellas, and a passel of short stories of murder mystery, western romance, and action adventure. All her work has Western or Native American elements in them along with hints of humor and engaging characters. This is what Mysteries Etc says about her Shandra Higheagle mystery series: “Mystery, romance, small town, and Native American heritage combine to make a compelling read.” blog / websiteFacebook / Paty’s Posse / Goodreads / Twitter / Pinterest

 

 

12 replies on “Writing Rituals: Paty Jager”

Sorry I’m a day late getting back to respond. I popped on the computer early yesterday morning to spread the word about being here, then watched granddaughters show their goats and drove the three hours home. So today I can comment. I’ve been told I’m a unique person. 😉

Stephanie, I hope you are getting the relief from the smoke you hoped for while at the cabin. I’ve heard others talk about Brain.fm. The music works for me, so I’ll stick with it. Thanks for stopping in and commenting!

Water, I must have water. My hubby does the same thing during the day–he comes in to check on me. Sometimes he just kisses me on the top of my head, but it’s a welcome interruption!!

Marilynn, Thanks! It’s fun to hear what everyone drinks and what inspires them. I have a dog that gets me up out of my chair to let her in and out of the house. That’s key, don’t sit too long. It not only makes you stiff, it also makes your brain sluggish. Thanks for stopping in and commenting!

Paty, you inspire me! I was just thinking the other day that I don’t listen to music enough. Maybe now I’ll get back to it. A playlist to get in the mood for a book sounds perfect.

Hi Terry, Thank you for the kind words. I have played or listened to music my whole life and it just seems natural to use it as a muse for my writing. Good luck with the playlist and putting music back into your routine. And thank you for stopping in and chatting!

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