Hey folks, I’m back :)
We had a lovely family camping trip over Christmas and New
Year - I hope your end-of-year celebrations were peaceful and fun. And I hope you got lots of books for
Christmas! I managed to get a copy of The Beekeeper’s Apprentice by Laurie R.
King (if you’re a Sherlock aficionado like me, why haven’t you read it already?
– Go, go read it right now), The Rosie Effect by Graeme Simsion (yay
Graeme!), and Forensics by Val
McDermid (great, but I think I need something with more specifics).
It’s been a sobering start to the year so far. A lovely community friend died recently after
a struggle against cancer (it’s always described as a struggle, or a battle or
a war, but he really did fight so hard), which threw a great deal of
perspective on life. I’ve loved having
this rest time, but it’s made me realise how ridiculously busy I was last year.
About three years ago I read a blog post by Becca
Fitzpatrick (who is huge, and goes on book tours and stuff, so she has it way
worse than me, obvs) about how she was trying really hard to figure out a
better work/life balance, and I didn’t really get what she meant. But by Christmas last year, I was exhausted –
I finished a book (Every Word), wrote
another (Every Move), started another
(new standalone), and edited the first two for publication, as well as
launching Every Word here in
Australia and Every Breath in North
America and the Philippines. I also did
speaking and teaching gigs at schools, went to festivals and launches, did all
the other promotional stuff for the books (launching and already-released), and
spent a lot of time on social media (which is fun, I admit – I’ve made a whole
lot of new friends on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram *waves*). I also parented, worked my other job, and helped
manage a household of six.
I know I’ve got less on my plate than some other
writer-people I know, but it was hard work (and I should say to everyone who
missed out on email replies and stuff from me last year – my deepest apologies,
I’ll try harder). Somehow I still found
time for my four boys and my partner - BUT
I didn’t do lots of normal stuff. I
didn’t exercise, I didn’t watch TV, I didn’t garden. And my partner carried the can a lot (beyond the call of duty, really)
and I felt really guilty for not giving my sons more time.
This year, I’ve still got lots of stuff happening – Every Move is launching in March (omg!!!
So close now!!!), and Every Word
comes out overseas in September; I’m going to Somerset Festival in Queensland,
and Reading Matters in Melbourne, and the Romance Writers of Australia
conference (I might be teaching a workshop – will keep you posted!), and I’d
love to be invited again to Melbourne Writer’s Festival; I’m going to finish my
first post-Every-series book, and
prep it for publication; and I’m hoping to visit more schools and libraries
this year as well. But I’m going to do
my best to balance things out a bit more, and give my partner, especially, a
bit more time. He works very hard – not
just at his teaching job, but at home around the property, and most
importantly, giving so much time to our boys – and has been so amazing in
helping me achieve my own dreams for the last few years, I feel like he
deserves to have his own goals and dreams prioritised more this year. Being a couple is a commitment to negotiation
and communication, and finding a balance that works well for both of us and
keeps us both content: I’d like to make sure the balance is better this year.
I’m still excited about what's coming up :) For those of you who’ve asked if I could come
to visit your school or library or book group – sure! Just click on the link over there (*points
right*) to my speaking agency, Booked Out, or click on my webpage link for my
publishers’ contacts (*points right again*), and let them know when and
where! And for those lovely people
who’ve asked if I’m ever coming to visit in North America – well, anything
could happen! I’m still very open to the
idea if anyone wants to invite me :)
So what other stuff has been happening? Well,
I said we went camping, right? Our
annual family beach-camping trip was amazing. I turned off my phone for TWO WHOLE WEEKS –
heaven – and spent a lot of time lolling around on the beach in southern NSW. I know lots of people don’t like camping –
insects! dirt! pit toilets! – but I LOVE it.
Vikki Wakefield and I have decided that camping-loving chicks like
ourselves are an endangered species, but I think more people should just give
it a try.
What else happened on this camping trip, you ask, apart from
pit toilets, and lolling, and a delightful break from online shenanigans? Well, in a nutshell:
* We saw seals, dolphins, manta rays, goannas, wombats,
lyrebirds, and the usual complement of kangaroos and wallabies, of course. The wombats were the cutest. The seals were incredible. A goanna nearly bit me on the ankle – yeah,
gotta watch out for those goannas.
* I jumped in the sea, every morning and every evening –
LOVED it. I was hoping to do a nudie
swim on the last night, but when I got down to my swimming spot at sundown,
there were about a dozen teenage boys fishing nearby, so yeah…no.
* I started to feel a bit sticky and salty by about Day6,
and I always have about a million mosquito bites by then – that’s okay, I’m
used to it. I won’t post pics of the
mozzie bites on my butt, because that would be gross and unnecessary.
* Peeing in the bushes FTW
* I got a tick in my hair.
* Apart from ticks, hair also got very salty and
frizzy. Nobody cares when you’re
camping. I was feeling very WildGirl for
the whole trip – golden and swimming-lithe and fit – and then when I finally
got back home and looked in the mirror, I realised I actually looked like a
sunburnt, birds-nest-haired crazy person.
Oh well.
(Side note: I actually love the break from mirrors that
camping provides. If I look at myself in
a mirror every day, I start to get all self-conscious or particular about my
appearance. Having a break from mirrors,
I feel like I can return to a real sense of self-perception, and let go of self-consciousness. /End rant)
* Many fish were caught, and some were put back, and some
were eaten.
* I received a full-body wetsuit for my birthday, and it has
CHANGED MY LIFE. My god, I can
snorkel! I can swim in the ocean for
hours without my extremities freezing off!
This is such a revelation!
* I wrote every day (the pic at right was the view from my writing spot).
I wrote in little school exercise books, and added about 10,000 words to
the manuscript that is slowly turning into (working title) No Limits. It’s some of the
most tension-filled, swoony, thrilling stuff I’ve ever written (I think) – this
book is going to have all the
feels. I’m completely head over heels
for my new leading man…who I’ll tell you about later. Like, after March.
So that was camping. Since
I’ve come back home, I’ve kept up the exercise routine I tentatively began in
December, watched the first season of The100
(and now totally get the obsession), spent a week in Melbourne working on No Limits (65,000 words and counting!)
while my older boys were attending music summer school, and done plenty of
lolling. Now, I’m on fire for the New
Year! Bring it on!
And bring on the balance.
With a bit of luck – and a lot of negotiation and communication – I’m
hoping my partner and I can keep all the plates spinning this year.
Xx ellie
PS: Christmas Prize-pack Winners – I haven’t forgotten
you! I’m posting out the prizes for you
all this week, so keep your eyes out for a parcel in the mail. If you haven't sent me your contact addy - please do it now!
PPS: If you're at ALA Midwinter this year, remember to go grab an ARC of Every Word from the Tundra booth (4829)!