A Time to Edit isn’t listed in the beautiful Biblical passage where the writer tells us there is a time for every season under Heaven. Editing and rewriting are probably the least fun but most rewarding parts of our craft as writers. It takes focus, determination, and a willingness to slash entire paragraphs we once considered brilliant. So, I’m preparing to tackle that project by doing what I always do at deadline time. Clean the garage.
Okay, I’m not actually cleaning the garage. It is a metaphor at our house. A writer once told me when he gets a new book assignment, he goes straight to his garage and starts sorting all the loose bolts into baby food jars. By the time he quits procrastinating, he has the best-organized garage on the block.
I have the same tendency. When I finished the rough draft, I gave myself a couple of days to breathe and then set a deadline for when to start the revision process. As the deadline approached, so did my urge to clean the garage. But, I managed to persevere. Now I’m half-way through the first stage of the process, and it has been relatively painless so far. I’m not fooled, though. I remember the Biblical passage says a time to plant and a time to root up what was planted. Or something like that.
This week comes the rooting up stage. I hope the book and I both survive.