Ep 147: You and Your Writing Deserve the Grand Gesture




Ann Kroeker, Writing Coach show

Summary: <br> About a month ago, I escaped the frigid late-winter temperatures of the American Midwest and headed out on a big road trip.<br> <br> By myself.<br> <br> To write.<br> <br> (And to walk on the beach.)<br> <br> ’Twas a big investment of time and resources. ’Twas a grand gesture.<br> Grand Gestures for Deep Work<br> Some big writing projects I wanted to dig into continually sank to the bottom of the jumbly piles of obligations and domestic duties. I’d try to set aside time for the ideas, the words, the keyboard, but they struggled to gain traction when I could only dedicate a few minutes here and there. I decided to find focus—and sunshine—elsewhere.<br> <br> This approach to plunging into deep work by making major investments of time, money, or space, are what Cal Newport calls “Grand Gestures.”<br> Rowling’s Grand Gesture<br> In his book Deep Work, Newport offers a few examples of people who have made grand gestures, including J.K. Rowling. When she was working on the final book in the Harry Potter series, she faced everyday interruptions that broke the creative concentration needed to pull together all the threads of the story and finish strong.<br> <br> So she decided to step away from home, where the doorbell would ring and the dogs would bark. She checked into a room in the five star Balmoral Hotel at $1,000 a night. Newport notes that she didn’t intend to continue writing there more than a night, but she accomplished so much, she kept going back and ended up finishing the book there.<br> The Boost in Importance<br> Newport explains:<br> The concept is simple: By leveraging a radical change to your normal environment, coupled perhaps with a significant investment of effort or money, all dedicated toward supporting a deep work task, you increase the perceived importance of the task. This boost in importance reduces your mind’s instinct to procrastinate and delivers an injection of motivation and energy. (122-123)<br> Let me assure you I wasn’t staying in anything close to the Balmoral Hotel for my Grand Gesture, but it was certainly a radical change from my normal environment and required a significant investment of effort.<br> <br> My tasks did indeed take on greater importance, and I sat on the balcony with my laptop and tapped out the ideas and words that got my projects either significantly under way or completed.<br> <br> And I walked on the beach.<br> <br> In the sun.<br> Less “Grand” Gestures Are Still Grand<br> Now, there have been eras of my life where an outing that radical simply would not have been possible. Just out of college, I didn’t have nearly enough money for such an adventure. When my kids were little, no way could I have taken off that many days and driven that far away. Truly, it would have been nothing but a dream—a dream deferred.<br> <br> Back then, though, I made smaller grand gestures. That sounds like an oxymoron, but though they were small, they felt grand. I would escape to the library on a Saturday and stay all day, tapping out chapters in a book or articles for magazines, stepping out only to eat a little lunch I packed.<br> <br> Or in good weather, I might head to a local park and work at a picnic table, enjoying the atmosphere, penning poetry or a blog post. Sure, I’d love to have escaped to a more inspiring locale, but I settled for a less grand alternative—it got me away from my distracting dining room table. With some creativity, I still managed to gain focus and get ‘er done.<br> It’s Worth It<br> The goal, I believe, is to find ways to convince yourself that this project you’re working on is worth it. It’s worth the time. It’s worth the effort. Even a less dramatic “grand” gesture tells the brain to stop procrastinating and do the work.<br> Creative Grand Gestures<br> One of my clients drove her RV to a beautiful campground and stayed the weekend to finish three chapter...