Writers Academy 7
Giving up the Day Job
This week I've asked Rob Williams (Writers Academy Graduate 2008) to write the blog for me. He finished the course just before Christmas and is in the throes of his first Holby City script...
"When people ask me what I did before the Writers Academy, I used to reply 'I had a Proper Job'. I don't say that any more. The thirteen weeks on the Academy and the period since have dispelled any notion that you can hope to be a successful television writer without thinking of it as a Proper Job. What I had, before September last year, was a Great Job. I was Creative Director at one of London's biggest publishing houses. I had an assistant who told me where to be, staff who were paid to care what I thought, a salary that comforted my Mum and a company credit card that impressed my Dad. And I genuinely loved what I did with my days. The one thing I didn't have was time to devote to my own writing - and specifically - writing television drama.
The company I worked for treated me brilliantly for five years, and six months before I left I was allowed to go to a three-day week to enable me to write. And that was great; I think if I hadn't been offered a place on the Academy I'd still be happily working at home on Thursdays and Fridays. Before that, it was evenings and weekends. Before that, bleary-eyed early mornings. I've experimented with all the permutations of managing a more-than-full-time job with the demands we place on ourselves as writers. Most of them work - but in my case, only to a larger or lesser extent. I'd reached a point in my life, personally and professionally, where I needed to decide: was I going to have a proper tilt at this, or not?
It wasn't really a decision in the end. It was an imperative. And once you've made that mental leap, I think you have to treat each stage of the Academy as a job. Getting on is a job in its own right - and you can't start preparing too early. The day I was offered a place felt like reaching some kind of summit. And I had; but I now realise that it was only the first of many. Having climbed that mountain, the classroom part of the Academy sometimes looked like an unfeasibly treacherous climb; and on the other side of that awaits the point of it all: the shows themselves. That's the stage I'm at now - and last September already feels like aeons ago. So, looking back ...
Financially, let's be honest, it has to be about taking the long view - and I realise not everybody can do that. I'd done a bit of saving and a great deal of high-level embezzlement (not really - no, honestly, I didn't) and for those thirteen weeks at Elstree, you have no life to spend your attendance fee on anyway. Interview dates mean that notice periods can result in some nail biting negotiation (I was offering five weeks rather than my contractual three months). Interestingly though, leaving for the Writers Academy rather than a bigger car allowance, my employers generally understood what I was doing and seemed to feel it wouldn't be right to stand in the way of it.
After eight years in busy offices enjoying the constant chatter and easy stimulation, the structure and the security, there was a definite sense of being 'exposed' suddenly - and in more ways than one (the trouble with getting what you say you want is that your main escape route from a Monday morning existential crisis instantly closes). Having worked hard to attain a level of expertise in my role, it came as a shock when I realised that it counted for very little in my new day-to-day. Although in saying that, it's worth adding that everybody on the Academy is to some extent starting again. However, I certainly didn't feel 'myself' for the first part of the course and I suspect at least some of that was due to just how much of my identity had become bound up with what I did rather than who I am; but before this descends into therapy, in purely practical terms, I wouldn't recommend four days between 'lives' if it can be avoided ...
There were definitely times when I wondered if I'd made a mistake - but most of those doubts sprang from whether I could really do this rather than whether I still wanted to. Fantasies of returning to my previous life never lasted long and though I certainly still miss aspects of it, I can honestly say I haven't experienced a single moment of regret.
Nobody can tell you when the perfect time is to quit your job and follow your heart - but I suspect that the hour doesn't actually exist. I can't even sit here today and say I made the 'right decision'; for one thing, there's no definitive way to measure that. Except there is really, isn't there? The only measure. Waking up in the morning, thinking about what you're going to be doing today and knowing in your gut that you're at least on the right track, wherever it goes. That's what I now call a Proper Job."

~RS~q~RS~~RS~z~RS~20~RS~)
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Sounds like such a great experience. It's great to see someone really stepping out and reaching some kind of summit. Though with things going it seems that it's not really quitting your job it's more you losing your job.
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Has anyone here tried to learn to write with The Writer's Academy? What is your experience of their programme?
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redseason: You can find links to interviews with previous graduates from the Academy page.
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Great blog, that's given me even more motivation.
last year I left a rewarding, but very stressful job to work from home, the aim being to finally kick my procrastination in to touch.
I've been writing for years, ideas galore...but keeping most of it in my head, which I suspect many people do.
Now of course, I realise the commitment required wasn't there. No regular income and the sacrifices that have to be made were just too intimidating.
I finally got my mindset around not having a regular income and made the sacrifices at the start of this year and committed myself to writing.
I'm not walking around with that big question mark in my head anymore and I know in my gut I'm on the right track as mentioned above.
The flood gates have opened, the material is flowing and I'm geared up for the long haul. I now wish I'd taken the decision earlier! Skint..but very happy.
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If you're a newbie (uncommissioned) without savings from a top job, how do you pay the bills? I suppose you can just go on the dole if you don't have any debt or family responsibilities... otherwise it means writing in your spare time, but that isn't treating it like a 'proper job' which is what it needs. So what to do?
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think_write: You've given a quest to someone, then. ;)
Slightly less WoW-in-jokey: congratulations, and best of luck.
Bloofs: If you can carve two hours every weekday out of your schedule, and six hours at the weekend, you've got sixteen hours a week. That's the equivalent of two full-time days a week, right there.
It basically means you have to go straight to the computer when you get home and start working (or get up two hours earlier in the morning and start working if you're that way inclined) but it is possible to start writing at a fair lick even with a full-time job as well.
If you can't do two hours a night, do one.
If you can't do an hour a night, do half an hour.
The answer to your implied question: If I only do it in the evenings and weekends, is it still a proper job? is yes. If you treat it like a proper job, it is a proper job, no matter when in the day you make the time for it.
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I was hoping this. Requires a lot of self-discipline, but then nothing dreamlike is ever easy.
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