
When I first started starlighting, I set a deadline. “I’ll finish my first draft of this novel by May 17.” That self-imposed deadline did two things: it gave me a goal and made the starlighting seem manageable. I wouldn’t have to get up early forever, just until May.
May 17 was a great deadline. I missed that goal – a first draft took me longer than I thought – but by May I had finished most of the novel and I set a new deadline. I’d finish the draft by my birthday. This time I did.
When pursuing our own dreams, we have to take charge of setting our own deadlines. It’s OK to miss, but we need something to shoot for. I set a goal of setting up this starlighting blog by the April 2012 UW-Madison Writers’ Institute conference. Whew, I just made it. I posted my first entry from the conference hotel room. Without a deadline it might have been another year or more.
Why May 17? That’s my anniversary. It was 6 months away and gave me a meaningful deadline date. Here’s ideas for generating your own deadlines:
- Pick a meaningful day – birthdays, holidays
- Tie a writing deadline to a trip or other treat (I will go to Colorado when I finish X).
- Take a writing class and use the class assignments as deadlines.
- Join a critique group. Group expectations do wonders to motivate on a deadline.
- Enter a contest. There are so many writing contests and contests give great outside deadlines.
- Try a writing marathon like NaNoWriMo. Now there’s a deadline!
What deadlines work for you? What deadline are you going to set for yourself this year? Do your writing a favor and set a date today. If you share it here, I’ll email you on your “deadline” to check in. Now there’s group accountability!




