Feel like you’re drowning in work? So many demands and deadlines you don’t know where to start? Have the urge to stick your head in the sand?

Elephant face down in surf

The same day I received edits for a book (“How fast can you do these?”), a tearful friend called me, desperate for encouragement; another sent me an email plea: How could she fix her picture book NOW? The phone and doorbell rang incessantly and an employer needed my workshop press release TODAY.

What do you do?

As much as you’d like to respond by wearing ear buds while napping in the sun, you know the pressure will only get worse by ignoring everything.

1. Make a list. What needs to be done when?

2. Prioritize.

3. Set up your workplace. Can you find what you need when you need it?

4. Begin item #1.

5. Pace yourself. Remember to take quick breaks for stretching and hydrating.

6. Don’t beat yourself up if it’s taking longer than you thought. Your process is your process. Whether you’re writing a novel, creating a painting, or planning a presentation, it takes what it will take. Rushing only makes the quality go down.

7. At the end of your work day, replenish. Eat well, meditate, and decompress.

8. Celebrate the small steps. When you finish one goal or ten, reward yourself. Take a walk in nature, read a good story, or call a friend.

9. Is there a way to prepare for the onslaught of work the next time? If so, make a plan. If not, go with the flow. As John Lennon said, “Life is what happens while you’re busy making other plans.”

Write Page-Turning Suspense!                        FREE Young Writers Interactive Workshop

Grades 6 through 12                                                   October 20, 2014                                   4:00 – 6:00 p.m.

Clayton Public Library  

6125 Clayton Rd, Clayton

925-673-0659          

 

Dying to write a thriller? Adventure story? Discover how YOU can write a suspenseful page-turner! Author Elizabeth Koehler-Pentacoff will lead the workshop. Come and participate with fun writing games, brainstorms, conversations, & Q & A. Led by author Elizabeth Koehler-Pentacoff. www.lizbooks.com

 

 

Male hand writing

Deadline

Submissions are accepted from August 20 through November 1, 2014.

The finalists will receive a notification via e-mail by November 5, 2014.

 Only one entry per candidate is allowed.

 NO ENTRY FEE.

Guidelines

  • Your entry should be 800-1000 words long.
  • Your contact information should be provided on a separate page.
  • Please submit the essay in one of the following file types: Word (.doc, .rtf, .odt, and .docx). You can feel free to use images if you hold the rights for their distribution.
  • All entries must be free of plagiarism! You are not allowed to submit content that has been published before. The content will be checked with an advanced plagiarism checker and the candidates who don’t submit 100% unique work will be disqualified.
  • The essays must be written in English.
  • By submitting an entry to this essay contest, you agree to the terms and conditions and accept the decision of the judges as final.

Topics

Please provide an entry on one of the following topics:

  1. “Essay writing as one of the greatest trends and issues in contemporary education.”
  2. “The unbearable lightness of being: Is the accessibility of modern education a problem? Should everyone gain a degree?”
  3. “The significance of education in my life.”
  4. “How a book changed my life.”
  5. “Is college education inevitable for career readiness?”
  6. “Are contemporary educational tools diminishing the role of teachers?”
  7. “Teamwork in schools: is it inspiring or discriminating?”

 Prizes

Winner – $500

2nd place – $300

3rd place – $150

How to enter the contest

Please choose one of the provided topics and submit your entry by sending an e-mail message to [email protected], entitled “Essay Writing Contest.”

http://www.ninjaessays.com/blog/essay-writing-contest/