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I went from this... |
So, as most of you know I have been on a path of simplifying
our lives as well as our home. The girls and I have been slowly weeding through
the clutter and storage tubs of miscellaneous “Why are we keeping this?” items
and chucking things as soon as we can. We’ve even tossed furniture and I’ve
whittled down my book collection. I know, I can hear the gasps of surprise from
here. It wasn’t easy, but it was a step we needed to take.
We have also gone digital wherever we could. I have been
slowly scanning old pictures and putting them on thumb drives which fit nicely
into digital picture frames. Now we can enjoy those pictures that only took up
the space in the bottom of the closet. And yes, we have tossed the hard copies.
Don’t worry. We won’t lose them. I have several copies stored in different
places as well as in clouds and the great part is that those 1,000s of pictures
now fit snugly in my hand as I’m racing for the van to avoid the next
hurricane.
We’ve done the same with our music. I no longer have stacks
of albums, CDs, or old cassette tapes. They all shuffle nicely from the flash
drive that can sit in a case along with the digital family photo albums. Again,
everything can be grabbed quickly and nothing lost.
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....to this. |
I have said before that I have even begun this process with
my writing. I used to write everything out in dozens of notebooks before typing
it into Word. I had notebooks of character descriptions, scenes, research
notes, ideas, whatever came to mind. It took up as much room as the music and
photo albums and was scattered throughout the house in backpacks, briefcases,
laptop bags, and just sitting around on tables.
A few months ago, I decided to start typing instead of
writing out my projects and converted all of those many drafts into Word
documents. That took quite a bit of time, but was well worth it. Again, all of
my projects fit nicely on my hard drive and I could take them all with me
without breaking my back.
However, I still had notebooks of descriptions and research
to carry around in order to keep everything straight on the page. That was
still quite a bit of paper and took up some valuable time bouncing from
notebooks to the computer screen. I needed to find a way to streamline the
process even more.
Enter my friend and fellow writer, Stephanie Neighbour. She
recommended a program called Scrivener, which apparently had everything in it
that I would need. The house remodel was tapping our resources, so I didn’t
have a lot of cash to purchase another program that I might not like. However,
it came with a 30-day trial and not consecutive days. It only counted if you
actually used the program, not when you necessarily installed it. That worked
for me because I do not always work on a project every day. So, I decided to
give it a whirl.
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It even has my storyboard. |
And I love it. It has everything I need to get rid of all of
those notebooks that are still stacked in the corners of our home. I can put
all of my research in the program and with the ability of making Scrivener use a
split screen with only one monitor, I can refer to my notes while I am typing
out the story. Perfect. I never even have to look away from my laptop! It
uploads documents, pictures, graphics, webpages, whatever I need to keep my
story and characters behave as they should and not change a blond to a
brunette. It even compiles my novel for me, preparing it for a Kindle upload.
Everything I need is right there at the edge of my mouse.
This works perfect
with our getting-rid-of-clutter mentality. I have not only freed up more space
in our home and my study, but have found a more efficient way to be creative. I
can also export files into a Word document for those moments I need to print
out a copy of something or just move it around, which works for me as I still
edit with a red pen on paper. It’s easier for me to see that way.
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I love the split screen. |
And the best part is it only cost my wallet forty dollars.
That fits into my budget and is well worth the cost.
Now, before you think I am being paid for this endorsement,
I assure I’m not. It’s just when I get excited about something new, I like to
share it with others who I believe might benefit and since I know several of my
writer friends read the Mess, I knew they would come across this bit of advice.
Scrivener is well worth the time and cost because in the end, it actually saves
you time. Even if you don’t want to shuck out the $40 dollars right off the
bat, you can give it a trial run for free and free is always good.
We need to take advantage of anything that is going to
increase our productivity and make what we do easier. If it saves time and
helps you put more words to paper–or rather to computer screen–then it is well
worth the investment. Of course, now I have an abundance of office supplies I
don’t need. Maybe I can donate them at the next school supply drive. They need
a good home, just not mine anymore.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
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I'm a recent convert to Scrivener myself. I'm still learning how to use all of it. I like having things close and Scrivener means I don't have to have a stack of barely legible notebooks stacked next to me.
ReplyDeleteYou're better at decluttering than I am. I finally managed to contribute my vinyl to a library, but still have all my CDs (in sleeves, not cases now) and all my old family photos, some of which are over 100 years old. Some things you just never get rid of.
I can understand the some things part. There are a few things that will be kept no matter what.
DeleteI'm still learning quite a bit about it as well, but enjoying everything that I have come across so far. It's made my life a lot easier.
Thanks for visiting!
:) See, organization is our friend, Even if we have to watch 3,000 YouTube videos and send messages back and forth to figure it out. LOL We can now take over the world. Well um, sort of. Glad you are enjoying the app and I hope more people make use of it because I also find it very helpful. Great post.
ReplyDeleteOur friend..even if we go kicking and screaming lol....
DeleteThanks! And thanks for sharing it with me lol.
Never even heard of this! Going to have to look into it. Thanks much for sharing :D
ReplyDeleteI'm sure you're going to love it. Thanks for visiting.
DeleteEnjoyed finding your blog and reading about how you're involved in the very same things I am at the moment--weeding out storage containers, etc.! Looking forward to reading more of your posts. :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you :) It's been a great process that has led to more creativity. Thanks for visiting.
DeleteGreat post, Robbie. I agree about the typing being more effecient. Less clutter, more organization, and with a sky drive back up, who really needs a gazillion hard copies?
ReplyDeleteI'm still trying to figure Scrivener out - the compile feature in particular. I've been starting my new material in Word, then putting it on Scrivener because I'm afraid if I only save it in Scrivener I'll lose it! When I go to compile it I'm still not sure how to save the same manuscript in different file formats so someone using a Nook can read it. I need to learn more about formatting differences between epub, mobi, etc...of course, if I could've made it though the entire Scrivener tutorial I may be more informed. LOL. Got bored and just wanted to write.
Have a great messy week, my friend!
Laurie Kozlowski
I recommend the YouTube videos over their own tutorial. Shorter segments and can focus on what you need. That is how I figured it all out and in digestible bites.
DeleteThanks for visiting :)