A great setup for on-the-go writing

I admit that I've taken on or said yes to too many activities. But what am I supposed to do, though. It's the century of mad rushing for little or no benefit, right?
I take my younger boy to and from school, soccer practice and games, club events, and whatever other fun stuff is going on. I attend my older boy's races, often a long drive away. I still shop with and date my wife. Given my work flexibility, I pretty much do all the shopping for groceries and other necessities. I try to watch as little TV as possible but Manchester, Fulham and Tottenham games (okay, and Price is Right) aren't going to watch themselves. Then, I've got my critique group and my new intern.
Oh...there's more, I'm sure, but I'm bored with the list, too.
That should leave too little time for writing. But I've got the killer set-up -- a way to squeeze writing into my life. I didn't invent the idea, but I've field tested it and can say unequivocally that it does work well enough that you can make it part of your busy writing life.
Ideal setup:
- Bluetooth keyboard,
- Bluetooth compatible smart phone (or tablet)
- Plain text app -- I find the app, PlainText, to be the best because it's DropBox compatible and FREE, too
- Lap Desk (optional) -- IKEA makes great cheap ones
They keyboard is tiny and the phone fits in my pocket. The text is large enough to read while it's sitting on my steering wheel, too.
Now, instead of being personable, I sit in my car during his practices -- 1.5 hours -- and write. Same for the run-up to my older son's races. Until the bikes start rolling, there's no sense in wasting time sitting, looking at trees or clouds. Anywhere you'd otherwise be looking at the clock, whip out your keyboard and device and go to it.
I mentioned DropBox before. I find that it is what makes this sort of setup possible because whatever I write is immediately accessible on my laptop as soon as I return home. All I have to do is cut and paste the text from the PlainText document there and do some quick formatting. Or I can continue editing/adding to the PlainText document so it's ready in its latest state for the next time I'm caught in any of life's waiting room moments.

Posted on 02/16/2012 5:55 AM by Thomas McAuley