Would any aspiring writers here take time out from work to write?
Has anyone done that? Is anyone doing that now?
I take time off to pile drive your mom all the time.
>>9341545
You do realize that a majority of this board doesn't work, right?
>>9341593
We're all fucking NEETs, but only the best ones.
>>9341593
Not true. Most are 18 year olds who think they're NEET because they're headed to college next year.
>tfw union carpenter
>tfw don't work in rain
>All this writing time white-collar fags will never have
There's at least one...
I am mostly supported by my rich parents. I go to graduate school and have time to write in my spare time, though I waste huge amounts of that time on the internet.
I keep wanting to find a way to support myself and still have time to write. I have a shitty part-time job, but I don't get enough hours in it, and I hate it anyway.
My dream would be to get by as a freelance proofreader, copywriter, and editor, but I've never been sure how to break into that field at a high level.
>>9341545
I've done it, but I find it difficult.
>>9341593
That's pathetic.
>>9342505
didnt he die?
Get a job that allows you to write on shift. Simple as that.
I work full time. 7.30-4 monday-Friday. Blue collar work. So I'm left pretty tired afterwards. Still read and right a fair bit, usually poetry or short stories, a novel would be a bit consuming
About a year ago i was working 6 hours a day, usually 4 sometimes 5 days a week and managed to write a novel with ease
Honestly find my bouts of depression much more taxing on my writing than any time constraints due to work