Thank
 you, Michelle, for letting me hang out on your blog today! You'd asked 
about my typical writing day, and I'm happy to describe it for you and 
your readers. 
I
 am a full-time writer, but that doesn't mean I write from 9-5. I wish I
 could, but I have found that I've got about 3-4 hours of solid 
heads-down writing in me and then I'm done for the day.
Here's
 how I generally work my schedule. In the morning before breakfast I 
figure out what I'm going to work on for the day and answer all of my 
email. (I don't go back into email except in emergencies until the next 
day - it saves me a ton of time for other things!)
After
 breakfast, my husband leaves for work and I get started too. I like to 
do my hardest work (the full-on creative part) in the morning when I'm 
fresh, so I usually spend around two hours either planning or writing 
the first draft of a new book.
At
 lunch I need to clear my head, so I usually watch an episode of some 
television show I've seen a million times. I don't have to strain my 
brain trying to keep up, and I feel like the visual aspect of it works 
better to relax me than reading does at that point. My favorite shows 
are nearly all no longer running, but I love them anyhow: the great 
Canadian series Corner Gas, the cancelled-far-too-soon Firefly, the 
wonderful Futurama, and the "as a child of the 70's/80's I am legally 
obligated to love Jason Bateman" Arrested Development.
Then
 it's time to edit. I am nearly always working on two books at once, 
because of how I like to schedule my days, and so I will now spend 
around two hours again on either the second or third draft of a 
different book. All of my books get codenames because of this process, 
so for example at the moment I am writing the first draft of Mango and 
editing the second of Llama.
An
 interesting sidenote - because the books go by codenames right up until
 I find their titles during third draft, in my head they still get 
called by their codenames long after their release dates. I have caught 
myself during get-togethers with readers referring to "Eaglet" and 
"Jasper" instead of "Blank Slate Kate" and "Everybody's Got a Story", 
and I appreciate how willing my lovely readers are to put up with me. :)
At around three to three-thirty,
 I am done for the day writing-wise. I do occasionally push further, but
 then I find it almost impossible to do four hours the next day. 
Instead, I spend the rest of my day doing things like writing this blog 
post, formatting my books for release, and investigating promotional 
opportunities. And of course I make dinner (if my best friend the 
crockpot hasn't taken care of that for me) and give the house a quick 
tidying since I am one of those horrible "walks away and leaves her 
stuff everywhere" people and my husband is not.
It's
 a constant juggling act to make sure everything gets done without 
letting the administrative things take too much time away from the 
writing, but I'm pretty happy with my schedule at this point. It's 
literally taken me years to get to this stage, and I think it's been 
worth the trip. :)
Author Bio:
Growing
 up, I was an avid (rabid?) reader. I am a natural speed reader, 
regularly clocked at about 1200 wpm (I read Harry Potter 5 in just under
 three hours), and always have several books on the go, nearly all in 
e-book form on my Kindle.
I
 have always made up stories in my head, but never considered becoming a
 writer. Instead, I intended to be a high school music teacher. I was 
sidetracked by my enjoyment of my psychology courses in university, and 
ended up with a psychology degree with a concentration in computer 
science.
This
 took me to a major Canadian bank as a software developer. I stayed 
there for just over four years, and then went back to school to become 
an elementary school teacher. After four years teaching elementary 
school computer science, I took up the National Novel Writing Month 
challenge and attempted to write a novel in a month.
I
 succeeded, and the first draft of "Life, Love, and a Polar Bear Tattoo"
 was the result. I realized I love writing. I left teaching, and I 
haven't looked back since!
In
 my non-writing time, I read, run, swim, crochet, take care of my 55 
gallon aquarium and my cat Trinity, and play drums and clarinet. 
Generally not all at once.
 
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